* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' @ 2016-07-27 4:49 Drew Adams 2016-07-27 9:19 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 4:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 24085 emacs -Q In *scratch*, type and evaluate: (make-frame '((name . "AAA") (left . 800) (top . 600) (user-position . t))) In the new frame, do `M-: (frame-parameters)'. You see something like this: ((tool-bar-position . top) (parent-id) (explicit-name . t) (display . "w32") (visibility . t) (icon-name) (window-id . "265868") (top . 73) (left . 800) (buried-buffer-list) ^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ (buffer-list #<buffer *scratch*> #<buffer *Minibuf-1*>) (unsplittable) ...) And that new frame is indeed about 73 pixels from the top screen edge, and about 800 pixels from the left screen edge. What am I missing? The Elisp manual, node `Position Parameters' seems to say that `top' is just like `left'. The resulting `left' value is exactly what was prescribed to `make-frame', but the resulting `top' value is 73 instead of the prescribed 600. But I see about the same behavior in Emacs 23 and 22, so this is apparently not new. Am I misunderstanding the doc description? FWIW, Emacs 20 behaves just like the doc says (as I understand it): the resulting `top' value is exactly what you provide to `make-frame', and the frame is actually positioned with its top at that position (not at a top location that is ~10x smaller). In GNU Emacs 25.1.50.1 (i686-pc-mingw32) of 2015-12-10 Repository revision: 6148555ee5a3d0139ae517803718b3e0357933c7 Windowing system distributor 'Microsoft Corp.', version 6.1.7601 Configured using: 'configure --prefix=/c/Devel/emacs/snapshot/trunk --enable-checking=yes --enable-check-lisp-object-type --without-compress-install 'CFLAGS=-Og -ggdb3' LDFLAGS=-Lc:/Devel/emacs/lib 'CPPFLAGS=-DGC_MCHECK=1 -Ic:/Devel/emacs/include'' ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 4:49 bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 9:19 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-27 13:29 ` Drew Adams ` (4 more replies) 0 siblings, 5 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2016-07-27 9:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams, 24085 > emacs -Q > > In *scratch*, type and evaluate: > > (make-frame '((name . "AAA") > (left . 800) (top . 600) > (user-position . t))) > > In the new frame, do `M-: (frame-parameters)'. You see something like > this: > > ((tool-bar-position . top) (parent-id) (explicit-name . t) > (display . "w32") (visibility . t) (icon-name) (window-id . "265868") > (top . 73) (left . 800) (buried-buffer-list) > ^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ > (buffer-list #<buffer *scratch*> #<buffer *Minibuf-1*>) > (unsplittable) ...) > > And that new frame is indeed about 73 pixels from the top screen edge, > and about 800 pixels from the left screen edge. > > What am I missing? The Elisp manual, node `Position Parameters' seems > to say that `top' is just like `left'. The resulting `left' value is > exactly what was prescribed to `make-frame', but the resulting `top' > value is 73 instead of the prescribed 600. > > But I see about the same behavior in Emacs 23 and 22, so this is > apparently not new. Am I misunderstanding the doc description? > > FWIW, Emacs 20 behaves just like the doc says (as I understand it): the > resulting `top' value is exactly what you provide to `make-frame', and > the frame is actually positioned with its top at that position (not at > a top location that is ~10x smaller). Due to this change: 2006-06-30 Ralf Angeli <angeli@caeruleus.net> * w32term.c (x_make_frame_visible): Use SystemParametersInfo with SPI_GETWORKAREA to find the dimensions of the screen work area, and adjust vertical position of the frame in order to avoid being covered by the taskbar. See the thread starting at https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-pretest-bug/2006-06/msg00142.html for the corresponding discussion. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 9:19 ` martin rudalics @ 2016-07-27 13:29 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 16:23 ` Eli Zaretskii 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics [not found] ` <<3657859c-03f1-4eca-9a78-a9be0dee6552@default> ` (3 subsequent siblings) 4 siblings, 2 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 13:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics, 24085 > Due to this change: > 2006-06-30 Ralf Angeli <angeli@caeruleus.net> > > * w32term.c (x_make_frame_visible): Use SystemParametersInfo with > SPI_GETWORKAREA to find the dimensions of the screen work area, > and adjust vertical position of the frame in order to avoid being > covered by the taskbar. > > See the thread starting at > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-pretest-bug/2006-06/msg00142.html > for the corresponding discussion. Wow. That's a revealing thread. Thanks for finding it. Such a large, and far-reaching (and bad) change resulting from so little discussion, by only two people, who were apparently only slightly annoyed by the _initial_ positioning of the initial (startup) frame. The thread is full of I-don't-know-whether-this-change-is-bad, I'm-not-sure-if-make-frame-is-the-right-place, maybe-we-should-not-do-this-if-top-is-explicitly-specified, etc. That should have been a sign that something might be misguided here. Would someone please revert this, and let `make-frame' respect the frame parameters handed to it, in particular `top'? I don't mind (I guess) if such fiddling is done only for the initial frame. The initial frame is anyway treated specially by Emacs. That would be the right place for this hack, if a place there must be. (But even for that I think that an explicit setting (e.g. in `initial-frame-alist') should be respected. And it does not make a lot of sense to assume that the task bar is in the default position, at the bottom of the screen.) But as I say, I don't mind if such fiddling is done only for the startup frame. It should not be done for other frames. `make-frame' is definitely the wrong place to do such fiddling. A user or code can (and should be able to) _move_ a frame to _any_ position, including partly or completely off screen. I see no reason why `make-frame' should not, likewise, respect `top', `left', etc. And especially when (user-position . t) is included! (It's not even clear (predictable?) exactly what fudging is done. You specify (top . 600) and you get something quite different and unpredictable.) Please, someone, reverse this (intentional) regression since Emacs 21. I haven't noticed it before because my own setup uses a standalone minibuffer and sets up other frames. I'm now testing some code with emacs -Q, and I am really surprised to see this behavior. This "fix" does not really address the problem (hiding part of the initial frame behind a Windows task bar) anyway, and it shoots Emacs in the foot in a general way (`make-frame' is a general, basic function). Pretty please, can we remove this ball-&-chain from `make-frame'? It should be a straightforward utility function, not some kind of mysterious DWIM djinn. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 13:29 ` Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 16:23 ` Eli Zaretskii 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-27 16:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 06:29:14 -0700 (PDT) > From: Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> > > Would someone please revert this, and let `make-frame' respect the > frame parameters handed to it, in particular `top'? Not a chance, sorry. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 13:29 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 16:23 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 14:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 2016-07-28 16:34 ` Drew Adams 1 sibling, 2 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 8:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams, 24085 > A user or code can (and should be able to) _move_ a frame to > _any_ position, including partly or completely off screen. Most window managers I know of refuse to make a new frame appear off screen on GNU/Linux. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 14:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 16:34 ` Drew Adams 1 sibling, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-28 14:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: 24085 > Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2016 10:57:24 +0200 > From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> > > > A user or code can (and should be able to) _move_ a frame to > > _any_ position, including partly or completely off screen. > > Most window managers I know of refuse to make a new frame appear off > screen on GNU/Linux. Do they also refuse to move a frame so that part of it is off the screen? Or is the above only enforced for the initial location of the frame? Thanks. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 14:50 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: 24085 > Do they also refuse to move a frame so that part of it is off the > screen? Or is the above only enforced for the initial location of the > frame? Only for the initial location of the frame. After that you can move the frame off screen. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 14:50 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-28 16:34 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-28 16:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics, 24085 > > A user or code can (and should be able to) _move_ a frame to > > _any_ position, including partly or completely off screen. > > Most window managers I know of refuse to make a new frame appear > off screen on GNU/Linux. 1. What the window manager does is a different question, I think. Parameter `user-position', for example, has doc that talks about what a window manager might or might not do, including perhaps not respecting `user-position' at all. It is one thing if a window manager does not do what `make-frame' specifies. It is another thing if Emacs, under the covers, silently, and without doc, does not do what `make-frame' specifies. No error, no return flag indicating what was not taken into account, just behavior that is different from what was specified, with no acknowledgment of that difference. 2. I thought that the code change responsible for this (intentional) regression was the one you cited from 2006, and I thought that was only for MS Windows (w32term.c), so I thought that change would not have any effect on other platforms. 3. Refusing to create a frame that is completely off screen is one thing. Refusing to create a frame that is even slightly off screen (e.g. echo area) is another thing. Is the former or the latter what you were referring to (by "most window managers...")? And in the case concerning MS Windows, IIUC, it was about the echo area not being off screen necessarily, but even just being hidden behind the task bar (which is on screen). But the main point I want to make here is #1: Emacs should at least try to respect what `make-frame' specifies in a given call. If the window manager cannot respect that, that's a separate problem, I think. In that case perhaps Emacs can raise an error, which a programmer could handle using `condition-case' etc. But Emacs should, I think, at least try to DTRT, even if that might not always be possible. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 16:34 ` Drew Adams @ 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics 2022-04-22 13:22 ` Lars Ingebrigtsen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams, 24085 > 2. I thought that the code change responsible for this > (intentional) regression was the one you cited from 2006, > and I thought that was only for MS Windows (w32term.c), so > I thought that change would not have any effect on other > platforms. There was no need. The behavior on GNU/Linux preceded that on MS Windows. I can't tell about the behavior on other systems. > 3. Refusing to create a frame that is completely off screen > is one thing. Refusing to create a frame that is even slightly > off screen (e.g. echo area) is another thing. Is the former or > the latter what you were referring to (by "most window > managers...")? Here xfce positions the frame exactly like Windows does, right above the taskbar. I have no idea whether this similarity was intentional. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics @ 2022-04-22 13:22 ` Lars Ingebrigtsen 2022-04-22 15:28 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Lars Ingebrigtsen @ 2022-04-22 13:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: 24085 Skimming this bug report, it seems the conclusion was that we don't want to change anything here, and that the user can use `set-frame-position' to move the frame around to a more precise location (which is what you have to do in many window managers anyway, because they refuse to create frames that are partially off-screen). So I'm closing the bug report. -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) bloggy blog: http://lars.ingebrigtsen.no ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2022-04-22 13:22 ` Lars Ingebrigtsen @ 2022-04-22 15:28 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2022-04-22 15:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lars Ingebrigtsen, martin rudalics; +Cc: 24085@debbugs.gnu.org > Skimming this bug report, it seems the conclusion was that we don't > want to change anything here, and that the user can use `set-frame-position' > to move the frame around to a more precise location (which is what you > have to do in many window managers anyway, because they refuse to > create frames that are partially off-screen). So I'm closing the bug report. Too bad. So much for your skimming. `set-frame-position' isn't even mentioned in the bug thread - not once. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
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* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' [not found] ` <<83h9bbrqx5.fsf@gnu.org> @ 2016-07-27 16:57 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 17:37 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 16:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: 24085 > > Would someone please revert this, and let `make-frame' respect the > > frame parameters handed to it, in particular `top'? > > Not a chance, sorry. Huh? What's that all about? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 16:57 ` Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 17:37 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-27 17:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 09:57:44 -0700 (PDT) > From: Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> > Cc: rudalics@gmx.at, 24085@debbugs.gnu.org > > > > Would someone please revert this, and let `make-frame' respect the > > > frame parameters handed to it, in particular `top'? > > > > Not a chance, sorry. > > Huh? What's that all about? Reverting the change will reintroduce the bug it fixed, so doing that is out of the question. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
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* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' [not found] ` <<838twnrngr.fsf@gnu.org> @ 2016-07-27 18:39 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 19:00 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 18:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii, Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > > > > Would someone please revert this, and let `make-frame' respect the > > > > frame parameters handed to it, in particular `top'? > > > > > > Not a chance, sorry. > > > > Huh? What's that all about? > > Reverting the change will reintroduce the bug it fixed Obviously, as I indicated in my earlier message, I meant that the bug that it fixed should be fixed properly, without treading on `make-frame'. If on MS Windows you think the first Emacs frame should be positioned so that it does not overlap the task bar, then do that. But do it without affecting what `make-frame' does. > so doing that is out of the question. What _is_ in the question, then? If you are unwilling to fix the code, will you fix the doc? Will you update the doc to say that `make-frame' does not (or might not, or does not in the following cases...) respect this and that parameter (whichever parameters it does not respect)? Will you tell users in the doc that if they want (this or that part of) the PARAMETERS argument to have any effect they will need to call `set-frame-parameter' after `make-frame', to set those parameters as they expected `make-frame' would have done? IOW, PARAMETERS, or at least some of it, might have no effect, so users had better find some other way to set the frame parameters? I find your reaction here to be dismissive and overreactive, so far. Just what bug did this change seek to fix? Wasn't it only the default, initial behavior of Emacs for the initial frame? If so, how is this general change to `make-frame' the right fix for that bug? And how would it hurt for `make-frame' to at least respect an _explicit_ frame alist argument, which is, after all, optional? Why does it have such an argument, if it no longer respects it? It seems to me that a proper fix for the problem described in the bug report that this "fix" was for is to do something specific for the initial Emacs frame only - which is _anyway_ special-cased. Take some code from the existing `make-frame' and give it another name for that special case, for example. But why take over the single, general-purpose frame-creation Lisp function we have, changing its behavior to ignore parts of optional arg PARAMETERS (on one platform, no less), just to accommodate the special case of the initial frame? This makes no sense to me. And I find it hard to believe that you would not consider fixing that bug properly and restoring `make-frame' to a general-purpose function that respects whatever optional frame parameters are specified. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 18:39 ` Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 19:00 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-27 19:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 11:39:49 -0700 (PDT) > From: Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> > Cc: rudalics@gmx.at, 24085@debbugs.gnu.org > > > > > > Would someone please revert this, and let `make-frame' respect the > > > > > frame parameters handed to it, in particular `top'? > > > > > > > > Not a chance, sorry. > > > > > > Huh? What's that all about? > > > > Reverting the change will reintroduce the bug it fixed > > Obviously, as I indicated in my earlier message, I meant that the > bug that it fixed should be fixed properly, without treading on > `make-frame'. If on MS Windows you think the first Emacs frame > should be positioned so that it does not overlap the task bar, > then do that. But do it without affecting what `make-frame' does. > > > so doing that is out of the question. > > What _is_ in the question, then? Anything else. > If you are unwilling to fix the code, will you fix the doc? If that's the best we can do, yes. > Just what bug did this change seek to fix? Wasn't it only the default, > initial behavior of Emacs for the initial frame? If so, how is this > general change to `make-frame' the right fix for that bug? Please re-read the discussion, the answers are there. > And how would it hurt for `make-frame' to at least respect an _explicit_ > frame alist argument, which is, after all, optional? Why does it have > such an argument, if it no longer respects it? The code that bothers you is not in make-frame. > But why take over the single, general-purpose frame-creation Lisp > function we have, changing its behavior to ignore parts of optional > arg PARAMETERS (on one platform, no less), just to accommodate the > special case of the initial frame? No one took over any Lisp function. The code in question is deep in the low-level support for creating frames on Windows. What it does is make sure a frame, any frame, is not displayed with its echo area's view obstructed by the task bar. > This makes no sense to me. And I find it hard to believe that you > would not consider fixing that bug properly and restoring `make-frame' > to a general-purpose function that respects whatever optional frame > parameters are specified. You put in my mouth things I didn't say. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
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* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' [not found] ` <<8360rqsy7i.fsf@gnu.org> @ 2016-07-27 20:55 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 2:12 ` Clément Pit--Claudel ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-27 20:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii, Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > > > Reverting the change will reintroduce the bug it fixed > > > > Obviously, as I indicated in my earlier message, I meant that the > > bug that it fixed should be fixed properly, without treading on > > `make-frame'. If on MS Windows you think the first Emacs frame > > should be positioned so that it does not overlap the task bar, > > then do that. But do it without affecting what `make-frame' does. > > > > > so doing that is out of the question. > > > > What _is_ in the question, then? > > Anything else. Good! > > If you are unwilling to fix the code, will you fix the doc? > > If that's the best we can do, yes. Also good - better than nothing. > > Just what bug did this change seek to fix? Wasn't it only the default, > > initial behavior of Emacs for the initial frame? If so, how is this > > general change to `make-frame' the right fix for that bug? > > Please re-read the discussion, the answers are there. > > > And how would it hurt for `make-frame' to at least respect an _explicit_ > > frame alist argument, which is, after all, optional? Why does it have > > such an argument, if it no longer respects it? > > The code that bothers you is not in make-frame. What bothers me is the effect on `make-frame', regardless of where the culprit code may be. > > But why take over the single, general-purpose frame-creation Lisp > > function we have, changing its behavior to ignore parts of optional > > arg PARAMETERS (on one platform, no less), just to accommodate the > > special case of the initial frame? > > No one took over any Lisp function. The behavior of `make-frame' (this bug) was altered drastically, so that its optional PARAMETERS argument is at best problematic, and at worst nearly useless. The intention of the fix might not have been to do that, but that was the effect on `make-frame', which is what this bug report is about. > The code in question is deep in > the low-level support for creating frames on Windows. What it does is > make sure a frame, any frame, is not displayed with its echo area's > view obstructed by the task bar. That's a mistake (misguided), I think. Why was that the solution (or is the solution) to the problem reported, which was about the initial frame? As I said, it is entirely possible (and thank goodness) for either a user or Lisp code to _move_ a frame into positions that you want to avoid for the initial frame. Not just positions that don't show the echo area, but positions that can place any part - or all - of a frame off screen. Can we not fix Emacs so that its avoidance of such positions is for the initial frame only? And if we can, let's please do that. The initial-frame case is a special (unique) case in this and other ways. Why should the behavior of a general function such as `make-frame' need to be sacrificed to fix that unique use case? And if there _were_ a good reason for `make-frame' to avoid such positions in a general, default case (which I would disagree with, FWIW), why would that be the case also for the non-default cases where you pass an explicit PARAMETERS list to `make-frame'? Surely, at least in that case the coder's intention should be respected. And a fortiori if (user-position . t) is in PARAMETERS. I cannot see any argument for _never_ being able to have `make-frame' respect PARAMETERS. I think (hope) you are saying that there is no good argument for not respecting PARAMETERS, but because of the previous, low-level fix, that's unfortunately where we are today. In that case, let's please try to do better. If `set-frame-parameter' can in a sense "override" or work around that low-level dictation of frame positioning, then I imagine it should be possible for `make-frame' to do the same. If nothing else, if PARAMETERS is present, shouldn't `make-frame' be able to at least update the frame parameters, respecting PARAMETERS, immediately after the low-level code creates it in the (wrong) position that it uses to avoid hiding the echo area? > > This makes no sense to me. And I find it hard to believe that you > > would not consider fixing that bug properly and restoring `make-frame' > > to a general-purpose function that respects whatever optional frame > > parameters are specified. > > You put in my mouth things I didn't say. I'm glad to hear that, and I apologize if I misunderstood you. It must be said that you did not say much - hardly much to go on, to decipher your meaning or intention. Anyway, I take it now that you will seriously consider trying to fix this problem for `make-frame'? That would be great, and all that anyone could ask. I'll say again that this is not something that annoys me in my own use of Emacs, in general. I stumbled on it now, with emacs -Q, after it having been introduced 10 years ago apparently. But I think that Emacs's `make-frame' should behave as it did before, even if something should be done to ensure that the initial frame is not occluded. --- Since I have your attention, and if it doesn't take too much of your time, could you or Martin perhaps please recommend a way of getting the screen-relative pixel coordinates of a given buffer position in a given window of a given Emacs frame? I've been fiddling a bit with test code like this, but haven't really found anything reasonable yet: ;; Try to get screen-relative X, Y (pixels) for current point (let* ((posn-at-pt (posn-at-point)) (x-y (and posn-at-pt (posn-x-y posn-at-pt))) (win-edges (and x-y (window-inside-absolute-pixel-edges))) (x (and x-y (+ (car x-y) (car win-edges)))) (y (and x-y (+ (cdr x-y) (cadr win-edges)))) (y (and y (top-fudge-pixels y)))) ...) (defun top-fudge-pixels (y) (let ((y2 y)) (when tool-bar-mode (setq y2 (+ 40 tp))) (when menu-bar-mode (setq y2 (+ 25 tp))) (setq y2 (+ y2 28)) ; Frame title bar y2)) Just hoping I'm missing something simple, like a function `screen-relative-x-y-pixels-at-point'... Thanks, if you can point the way. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 20:55 ` Drew Adams @ 2016-07-28 2:12 ` Clément Pit--Claudel 2016-07-28 16:35 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 14:40 ` Eli Zaretskii 2 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: Clément Pit--Claudel @ 2016-07-28 2:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 24085 [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5918 bytes --] On 2016-07-27 16:55, Drew Adams wrote: > Just hoping I'm missing something simple, like a function > `screen-relative-x-y-pixels-at-point'... Thanks, if you can > point the way. Hey Drew, There was a discussion about this on the Wiki page for pos-tip (back then you suggested filing an enhancement request). The following function, from pos-tip.el, seems to do more or less what you're looking for. Does it? I'm not sure how well it works in Windows. In any case, it would be nice if this was easily feasible. Cheers, Clément. (defun pos-tip-compute-pixel-position (&optional pos window pixel-width pixel-height frame-coordinates dx dy) "Return pixel position of POS in WINDOW like (X . Y), which indicates the absolute or relative coordinates of bottom left corner of the object. Omitting POS and WINDOW means use current position and selected window, respectively. If PIXEL-WIDTH and PIXEL-HEIGHT are given, this function assumes these values as the size of small window like tooltip which is located around the object at POS. These values are used to adjust the location in order that the tooltip won't disappear by sticking out of the display. By referring the variable `pos-tip-upperside-p' after calling this function, user can examine whether the tooltip will be located above the specified position. If FRAME-COORDINATES is omitted or nil, automatically obtain the absolute coordinates of the top left corner of frame which WINDOW is on. Here, `top left corner of frame' represents the origin of `window-pixel-edges' and its coordinates are essential for calculating the return value as absolute coordinates. If a cons cell like (LEFT . TOP), specifies the frame absolute location and makes the calculation slightly faster, but can be used only when it's clear that frame is in the specified position. Users can get the latest values of frame coordinates for using in the next call by referring the variable `pos-tip-saved-frame-coordinates' just after calling this function. Otherwise, FRAME-COORDINATES `relative' means return pixel coordinates of the object relative to the top left corner of the frame. This is the same effect as `pos-tip-use-relative-coordinates' is non-nil. DX specifies horizontal offset in pixel. DY specifies vertical offset in pixel. This makes the calculations done without considering the height of object at POS, so the object might be hidden by the tooltip." (let* ((frame (window-frame (or window (selected-window)))) (w32-frame (eq (pos-tip-window-system frame) 'w32)) (relative (or pos-tip-use-relative-coordinates (eq frame-coordinates 'relative) (and w32-frame (null pos-tip-w32-saved-max-width-height)))) (frame-coord (or (and relative '(0 . 0)) frame-coordinates (pos-tip-frame-top-left-coordinates frame) (progn (setq relative t pos-tip-use-relative-coordinates t) '(0 . 0)))) (posn (posn-at-point (or pos (window-point window)) window)) (line (cdr (posn-actual-col-row posn))) (line-height (and line (or (window-line-height line window) (and (redisplay t) (window-line-height line window))))) (x-y (or (posn-x-y posn) (let ((geom (pos-visible-in-window-p (or pos (window-point window)) window t))) (and geom (cons (car geom) (cadr geom)))) '(0 . 0))) (x (+ (car frame-coord) (car (window-inside-pixel-edges window)) (car x-y) (or dx 0))) (y0 (+ (cdr frame-coord) (cadr (window-pixel-edges window)) (or (nth 2 line-height) (cdr x-y)))) (y (+ y0 (or dy (car line-height) (with-current-buffer (window-buffer window) (cond ;; `posn-object-width-height' returns an incorrect value ;; when the header line is displayed (Emacs bug #4426). ((and posn (null header-line-format)) (cdr (posn-object-width-height posn))) ((and (bound-and-true-p text-scale-mode) (not (zerop (with-no-warnings text-scale-mode-amount)))) (round (* (frame-char-height frame) (with-no-warnings (expt text-scale-mode-step text-scale-mode-amount))))) (t (frame-char-height frame))))))) xmax ymax) (cond (relative (setq xmax (frame-pixel-width frame) ymax (frame-pixel-height frame))) (w32-frame (setq xmax (car pos-tip-w32-saved-max-width-height) ymax (cdr pos-tip-w32-saved-max-width-height))) (t (setq xmax (x-display-pixel-width frame) ymax (x-display-pixel-height frame)))) (setq pos-tip-upperside-p (> (+ y (or pixel-height 0)) ymax)) (cons (max 0 (min x (- xmax (or pixel-width 0)))) (max 0 (if pos-tip-upperside-p (- (if dy ymax y0) (or pixel-height 0)) y))))) (defun pos-tip-w32-max-width-height (&optional keep-maximize) "Maximize the currently selected frame temporarily and set `pos-tip-w32-saved-max-width-height' the effective display size in order to become possible to calculate the absolute location of tooltip. KEEP-MAXIMIZE non-nil means leave the frame maximized. Note that this function is usable only in Emacs 23 for MS-Windows." (interactive) (unless (eq window-system 'w32) (error "`pos-tip-w32-max-width-height' can be used only in w32 frame.")) ;; Maximize frame (with-no-warnings (w32-send-sys-command 61488)) (sit-for 0) (let ((offset (pos-tip-calibrate-frame-offset))) (prog1 (setq pos-tip-w32-saved-max-width-height (cons (frame-pixel-width) (+ (frame-pixel-height) (- (cdr offset) (car offset))))) (if (called-interactively-p 'interactive) (message "%S" pos-tip-w32-saved-max-width-height)) (unless keep-maximize ;; Restore frame (with-no-warnings (w32-send-sys-command 61728)))))) [-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 819 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 2:12 ` Clément Pit--Claudel @ 2016-07-28 16:35 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-28 16:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: clement.pit, 24085 Hi Clément, Thanks for reminding me of that pos-tip thread, which I found here: https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/PosTip. And thanks for posting a possible solution. I'll take a look at it. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 20:55 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 2:12 ` Clément Pit--Claudel @ 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 16:35 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 14:40 ` Eli Zaretskii 2 siblings, 1 reply; 22+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 8:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams, Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: 24085 > Since I have your attention, and if it doesn't take too much of > your time, could you or Martin perhaps please recommend a way of > getting the screen-relative pixel coordinates of a given buffer > position in a given window of a given Emacs frame? With Emacs 25 you can combine ‘pos-visible-in-window-p’ with ‘window-absolute-body-pixel-edges’. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 16:35 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-28 16:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics, Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: 24085 > > Since I have your attention, and if it doesn't take too much of > > your time, could you or Martin perhaps please recommend a way of > > getting the screen-relative pixel coordinates of a given buffer > > position in a given window of a given Emacs frame? > > With Emacs 25 you can combine ‘pos-visible-in-window-p’ with > ‘window-absolute-body-pixel-edges’. Thanks. It's not clear to me how `pos-visible-in-window-p' would enter the picture (except to confirm that a position is visible before asking for its pixel coordinates, and for `point' that is always the case), but I guess I can see how `window-absolute-body-pixel-edges' might help. --- Unfortunately for me, I cannot use anything from Emacs 25, as it is hopelessly broken, so far, at least in my context. At this point I can only hope that someone else eventually reports problems similar to those I've reported (e.g. crashes) and has better luck than I in tracking down the causes and getting them fixed. But I continue to follow Emacs development, and I continue to try new builds of 25, just in case. (I make no claim that my case is typical, obviously.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' 2016-07-27 20:55 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 2:12 ` Clément Pit--Claudel 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics @ 2016-07-28 14:40 ` Eli Zaretskii 2 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2016-07-28 14:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 13:55:33 -0700 (PDT) > From: Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> > Cc: rudalics@gmx.at, 24085@debbugs.gnu.org > > > The code in question is deep in > > the low-level support for creating frames on Windows. What it does is > > make sure a frame, any frame, is not displayed with its echo area's > > view obstructed by the task bar. > > That's a mistake (misguided), I think. Why was that the solution > (or is the solution) to the problem reported, which was about the > initial frame? Because I think the issue exists not only for the initial frame. See the 10-year old discussion, it's all there. > Can we not fix Emacs so that its avoidance of such positions is for > the initial frame only? I don't think this would be a step in the right direction. Having a frame obscured by window-system or window-manager decorations is a bad screw that IMO we should try to avoid. > Why should the behavior of a general function such as `make-frame' > need to be sacrificed to fix that unique use case? The solution wasn't intended to affect only the initial frame. Once again, please read the past discussion, as the implementation you see now is not an accident, it was intended to do what you see. > And if there _were_ a good reason for `make-frame' to avoid such > positions in a general, default case (which I would disagree with, > FWIW), why would that be the case also for the non-default cases > where you pass an explicit PARAMETERS list to `make-frame'? Surely, > at least in that case the coder's intention should be respected. > And a fortiori if (user-position . t) is in PARAMETERS. I cannot > see any argument for _never_ being able to have `make-frame' respect > PARAMETERS. This could be an idea worth considering, although I'm not necessarily sure it's the best or even a right one. Patches and discussion are welcome. > I think (hope) you are saying that there is no good argument for > not respecting PARAMETERS, but because of the previous, low-level fix, > that's unfortunately where we are today. In that case, let's please > try to do better. If `set-frame-parameter' can in a sense "override" > or work around that low-level dictation of frame positioning, then > I imagine it should be possible for `make-frame' to do the same. The problem is not only technical, it's also a problem of our intent. Do we _want_ to let frames have their echo area obscured? If not, then the fact that set-frame-parameter allows that would be a bug that needs to be fixed. Also, what happens on other window-systems? Martin says most GNU/Linux window managers will behave the same as Emacs on Windows behaves now. > > You put in my mouth things I didn't say. > > I'm glad to hear that, and I apologize if I misunderstood you. > It must be said that you did not say much - hardly much to go on, > to decipher your meaning or intention. What I wrote was very clear, and didn't need any deciphering: reverting that change is out of the question. No more, no less. > Anyway, I take it now that you will seriously consider trying to > fix this problem for `make-frame'? Did I ever say I won't? Why would you even consider such a ridiculous (to say the least) possibility? > I'll say again that this is not something that annoys me in my own > use of Emacs, in general. It basically annoys no one, since the change was made 10 years ago, and we had no complaints. One more factor to consider while discussing this issue, I guess. > Since I have your attention, and if it doesn't take too much of > your time, could you or Martin perhaps please recommend a way of > getting the screen-relative pixel coordinates of a given buffer > position in a given window of a given Emacs frame? This is not the place to ask such question, so I will respond on emacs-devel. Please everybody, don't continue this sub-thread here. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
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* bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' [not found] ` <<8337mtsu54.fsf@gnu.org> @ 2016-07-28 16:36 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 22+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2016-07-28 16:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii, Drew Adams; +Cc: 24085 > > I think (hope) you are saying that there is no good argument for > > not respecting PARAMETERS, but because of the previous, low-level fix, > > that's unfortunately where we are today. In that case, let's please > > try to do better. If `set-frame-parameter' can in a sense "override" > > or work around that low-level dictation of frame positioning, then > > I imagine it should be possible for `make-frame' to do the same. > > The problem is not only technical, it's also a problem of our intent. > Do we _want_ to let frames have their echo area obscured? I certainly do. I have commands that rely on it, including commands that incrementally move frames around (e.g., holding a key pressed moves a frame right, left, up, or down, incrementally), and they wrap around the display or from one monitor to another. And a frame does not necessarily even have an echo area. None of my frames do, apart from my standalone minibuffer frame. Basic Emacs functions should not be DWIM. A user or code should definitely be able to position a frame anywhere. Similarly, we have the ability to make frames invisible. Would you take that away, using as argument that a user cannot see the echo area on such a frame? > If not, then the fact that set-frame-parameter allows that would be > a bug that needs to be fixed. Sheesh. Maybe I'd better stop filing bug reports, if when I do so it encourages you to remove some other longstanding Emacs feature I use. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 22+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2022-04-22 15:28 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 22+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2016-07-27 4:49 bug#24085: 25.1.50; `make-frame' given `top' param creates frame with ~10x smaller `top' Drew Adams 2016-07-27 9:19 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-27 13:29 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 16:23 ` Eli Zaretskii 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 14:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 16:34 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 19:07 ` martin rudalics 2022-04-22 13:22 ` Lars Ingebrigtsen 2022-04-22 15:28 ` Drew Adams [not found] ` <<3657859c-03f1-4eca-9a78-a9be0dee6552@default> [not found] ` <<83h9bbrqx5.fsf@gnu.org> 2016-07-27 16:57 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 17:37 ` Eli Zaretskii [not found] ` <<<3657859c-03f1-4eca-9a78-a9be0dee6552@default> [not found] ` <<<83h9bbrqx5.fsf@gnu.org> [not found] ` <<06a3fb2a-b975-41cf-8aa3-c2cbe207057f@default> [not found] ` <<838twnrngr.fsf@gnu.org> 2016-07-27 18:39 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-27 19:00 ` Eli Zaretskii [not found] ` <<<<3657859c-03f1-4eca-9a78-a9be0dee6552@default> [not found] ` <<<<83h9bbrqx5.fsf@gnu.org> [not found] ` <<<06a3fb2a-b975-41cf-8aa3-c2cbe207057f@default> [not found] ` <<<838twnrngr.fsf@gnu.org> [not found] ` <<325b79e8-c40b-46f7-a89a-11f0888b0a68@default> [not found] ` <<8360rqsy7i.fsf@gnu.org> 2016-07-27 20:55 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 2:12 ` Clément Pit--Claudel 2016-07-28 16:35 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 8:57 ` martin rudalics 2016-07-28 16:35 ` Drew Adams 2016-07-28 14:40 ` Eli Zaretskii [not found] ` <<<<<3657859c-03f1-4eca-9a78-a9be0dee6552@default> [not found] ` <<<<<83h9bbrqx5.fsf@gnu.org> [not found] ` <<<<06a3fb2a-b975-41cf-8aa3-c2cbe207057f@default> [not found] ` <<<<838twnrngr.fsf@gnu.org> [not found] ` <<<325b79e8-c40b-46f7-a89a-11f0888b0a68@default> [not found] ` <<<8360rqsy7i.fsf@gnu.org> [not found] ` <<6336b8b4-49c0-4ce6-9044-cf558f12c16e@default> [not found] ` <<8337mtsu54.fsf@gnu.org> 2016-07-28 16:36 ` Drew Adams
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