* *shell*: annoying behavior with long output
@ 2004-05-17 20:27 bill
2004-05-17 21:51 ` Johan Bockgård
` (3 more replies)
0 siblings, 4 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: bill @ 2004-05-17 20:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
I'm a big fan of the Emacs shell, but one thing that really annoys
me is its behavior when a lot of output is sent to stdout. The
cursor ends up at the very bottom of the output, even though,
invariably I'm more interested in looking at the top first and then
work my way down, which means that I end up having to search
backwards for the shell prompt to see the beginning of the output.
I have not found a satisfactory solution to this. When I'm not in
the Emacs shell, the solution is simple: I pipe the output through
/usr/bin/less. But the Emacs shell can't handle less too well.
Another thing I've tried is to set the mark before executing a
command, and then C-x C-x after executing it. The problem with
this is that the top of the output gets placed in the middle of
the screen, so I have to do C-u 0 C-l to see the top screenful of
output. Besides, this works only when I know ahead of time that
the output will be long.
Is there a way to tell the Emacs shell to keep the cursor at the
top of the output in such a way that the top screenful of output
is what is visible of the *shell* buffer immediately after executing
a command?
Thanks!
-bill
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: *shell*: annoying behavior with long output
2004-05-17 20:27 *shell*: annoying behavior with long output bill
@ 2004-05-17 21:51 ` Johan Bockgård
2004-05-17 22:14 ` Barry Margolin
` (2 subsequent siblings)
3 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Johan Bockgård @ 2004-05-17 21:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
bill <please_post@nomail.com> writes:
> Another thing I've tried is to set the mark before executing a
> command, and then C-x C-x after executing it. The problem with this
> is that the top of the output gets placed in the middle of the
> screen, so I have to do C-u 0 C-l to see the top screenful of
> output. Besides, this works only when I know ahead of time that the
> output will be long.
C-M-l (`comint-show-output')
Display start of this batch of interpreter output at top of
window. Sets mark to the value of point when this command is run.
--
Johan Bockgård
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: *shell*: annoying behavior with long output
2004-05-17 20:27 *shell*: annoying behavior with long output bill
2004-05-17 21:51 ` Johan Bockgård
@ 2004-05-17 22:14 ` Barry Margolin
2004-05-17 23:07 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen
2004-05-17 23:35 ` Michael Slass
3 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Barry Margolin @ 2004-05-17 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
In article <c8b772$2uk$1@reader2.panix.com>,
bill <please_post@nomail.com> wrote:
> Is there a way to tell the Emacs shell to keep the cursor at the
> top of the output in such a way that the top screenful of output
> is what is visible of the *shell* buffer immediately after executing
> a command?
It only moves the cursor if it's already at the end of output as more
output is coming. What you can do is type C-p as soon as you press
Return to execute a command that's going to produce lots of output.
--
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: *shell*: annoying behavior with long output
2004-05-17 20:27 *shell*: annoying behavior with long output bill
2004-05-17 21:51 ` Johan Bockgård
2004-05-17 22:14 ` Barry Margolin
@ 2004-05-17 23:07 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen
2004-05-17 23:35 ` Michael Slass
3 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2004-05-17 23:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
bill <please_post@nomail.com> writes:
> Is there a way to tell the Emacs shell to keep the cursor at the
> top of the output in such a way that the top screenful of output
> is what is visible of the *shell* buffer immediately after executing
> a command?
you can try this (eval via M-: in *shell* buffer):
(local-set-key "\C-m"
'(lambda () (interactive)
(comint-send-input)
(forward-char -1)
(goto-char (if (accept-process-output nil 2)
(1+ (point))
(point-max)))))
this waits for 2 seconds. if something shows up in that time,
move point to the head of the output, else the end of the buffer
as usual. (this only works if your shell prompt is empty, since
`accept-process-output' does not distinguish between that kind of
output and output from the command. sigh, heuristics...)
thi
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: *shell*: annoying behavior with long output
2004-05-17 20:27 *shell*: annoying behavior with long output bill
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2004-05-17 23:07 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen
@ 2004-05-17 23:35 ` Michael Slass
3 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Michael Slass @ 2004-05-17 23:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
bill <please_post@nomail.com> writes:
>I'm a big fan of the Emacs shell, but one thing that really annoys
>me is its behavior when a lot of output is sent to stdout. The
>cursor ends up at the very bottom of the output, even though,
>invariably I'm more interested in looking at the top first and then
>work my way down, which means that I end up having to search
>backwards for the shell prompt to see the beginning of the output.
>
>I have not found a satisfactory solution to this. When I'm not in
>the Emacs shell, the solution is simple: I pipe the output through
>/usr/bin/less. But the Emacs shell can't handle less too well.
>
>Another thing I've tried is to set the mark before executing a
>command, and then C-x C-x after executing it. The problem with
>this is that the top of the output gets placed in the middle of
>the screen, so I have to do C-u 0 C-l to see the top screenful of
>output. Besides, this works only when I know ahead of time that
>the output will be long.
>
>Is there a way to tell the Emacs shell to keep the cursor at the
>top of the output in such a way that the top screenful of output
>is what is visible of the *shell* buffer immediately after executing
>a command?
>
>Thanks!
>
> -bill
You'd think that frobbing this variable would do it:
,----
| comint-scroll-to-bottom-on-output's value is nil
|
| Documentation:
| *Controls whether interpreter output causes window to scroll.
| If nil, then do not scroll. If t or `all', scroll all windows showing buffer.
| If `this', scroll only the selected window.
| If `others', scroll only those that are not the selected window.
|
| The default is nil.
|
| See variable `comint-scroll-show-maximum-output' and function
| `comint-postoutput-scroll-to-bottom'. This variable is buffer-local.
|
| You can customize this variable.
|
| Defined in `comint'.
`----
But I can't get any effects by changing it at all.
So, I hacked this together, which will return you to your starting
point if a prompt shows up in the shell N lines after your last
prompt, where N is your screen height. I tried the more elegant
solution of using around-advice, and a (let ...) form to set the value
of my-comint-process-start-point:
,----
| (defadvice comint-send-input (around my-comint-send-input)
| "go to beginning after comint-send-input"
| (let ((my-comint-process-start-point (point)))
| ad-do-it))
`----
but the filter function was always seeing
my-comint-process-start-point as undefined, so I've gone with the
uglier (because more global) setq.
Criticisms from gurus welcomed as always.
(defadvice comint-send-input (before my-comint-send-input)
"Set starting point variable for use in `my-comint-return-to-start-maybe'"
(setq my-comint-process-start-point (point)))
(ad-activate 'comint-send-input)
(defun my-comint-return-to-start-maybe (output)
"Return to start of shell-output if it has scrolled off-screen.
Depends on advising `comint-send-input' to set the value of
`my-comint-process-start-point' before running.
This can be done with this advice form:
\(defadvice comint-send-input (before my-comint-send-input)
\"go to beginning after comint\"
(setq my-comint-process-start-point (point)))
"
(if (and (bound-and-true-p my-comint-process-start-point)
(string-match comint-prompt-regexp output)
(> (count-screen-lines my-comint-process-start-point (point))
(cdr (assoc 'height (frame-parameters)))))
(goto-char (1+ my-comint-process-start-point))))
--
Mike Slass
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2004-05-17 20:27 *shell*: annoying behavior with long output bill
2004-05-17 21:51 ` Johan Bockgård
2004-05-17 22:14 ` Barry Margolin
2004-05-17 23:07 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen
2004-05-17 23:35 ` Michael Slass
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