* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily @ 2013-11-08 23:02 Drew Adams 2013-11-09 0:57 ` Juri Linkov ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2013-11-08 23:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 15839 1. Non-nil `isearch-allow-scroll' lets you use a scroll command (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch. Unfortunately, this is coupled with the hard-coded behavior that you cannot scroll far enough in either direction that point would be moved off screen. That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes sense. It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, however. Why? Because the search position is one thing, and it is not lost. What you might want to look at temporarily is another thing. It's a bit like using `C-SPC' in a buffer, scrolling up a couple of screenfuls to look at something, and then using `C-u C-SPC' to return. But in Isearch there is no need for `C-SPC' or `C-u C-SPC': the search position is recorded. Search resumes from that same position, no matter how far away one might have scrolled. The enhancement request is to let users choose whether non-nil `isearch-allow-scroll' should limit you to scrolling only enough to keep point in the window or should not limit you. This could be done by recognizing different non-nil values. 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can be lots of search hits that are not highlighted. One of the reasons for scrolling is to see what search hits lie beyond the currently shown text. This is already partly defeated, in that even when you scroll some of the hits are not highlighted. This seems more like a bug, but if the enhancement of #1 is done then it should (it needs to) take care of #2 as well: Whatever text is shown should have all of its search hits highlighted with lazy highlighting. In GNU Emacs 24.3.50.1 (i686-pc-mingw32) of 2013-10-19 on LEG570 Bzr revision: 114715 rgm@gnu.org-20131019023520-s8mwtib7xcx9e05w Windowing system distributor `Microsoft Corp.', version 6.1.7601 Configured using: `configure --enable-checking 'CFLAGS=-O0 -g3' CPPFLAGS=-DGLYPH_DEBUG=1' ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2013-11-08 23:02 bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily Drew Adams @ 2013-11-09 0:57 ` Juri Linkov 2013-11-09 3:09 ` Drew Adams 2013-11-10 13:46 ` Stefan Monnier 2018-11-24 22:45 ` Juri Linkov 2 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2013-11-09 0:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > 1. Non-nil `isearch-allow-scroll' lets you use a scroll command > (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch. Unfortunately, this is coupled > with the hard-coded behavior that you cannot scroll far enough in either > direction that point would be moved off screen. You can do what you want with just: (advice-add 'isearch-post-command-hook :override (lambda ())) And if you want more commands to escape this restriction: (mapc (lambda (c) (put c 'isearch-scroll t)) '(forward-char backward-char right-char left-char forward-word backward-word right-word left-word forward-sexp backward-sexp forward-paragraph backward-paragraph move-end-of-line end-of-visual-line move-beginning-of-line beginning-of-visual-line next-line previous-line)) > That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes sense. > It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, however. Why? Because it is too confusing for users. This is like leaving point in one place, and scrolling without changing the position of point (with inactive Isearch). Isearch should not be different from the default Emacs behavior. > It's a bit like using `C-SPC' in a buffer, scrolling up a couple of > screenfuls to look at something, and then using `C-u C-SPC' to return. > But in Isearch there is no need for `C-SPC' or `C-u C-SPC': the search > position is recorded. Search resumes from that same position, no > matter how far away one might have scrolled. It makes sense to resume search from a new position like you can see using code above. > The enhancement request is to let users choose whether non-nil > `isearch-allow-scroll' should limit you to scrolling only enough to keep > point in the window or should not limit you. This could be done by > recognizing different non-nil values. Maybe a new option of `isearch-allow-scroll' could allow this. > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can be > lots of search hits that are not highlighted. When scrolling outside the window boundaries will be allowed then lazy highlighting should highlight the whole buffer so you could see all matches when you quickly scroll the buffer. But in this case lazy highlighting will become more like hi-lock mode. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2013-11-09 0:57 ` Juri Linkov @ 2013-11-09 3:09 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2013-11-09 3:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > 1. Non-nil `isearch-allow-scroll' lets you use a scroll command > > (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch. Unfortunately, this is > > coupled with the hard-coded behavior that you cannot scroll far > > enough in either direction that point would be moved off screen. > > You can do what you want with just: > (advice-add 'isearch-post-command-hook :override (lambda ())) Good to know that. But see also the bug(s) mentioned below. Such advice will not suffice currently, for the reasons given there. There is neither the proper management of point nor the proper lazy highlighting of the scrolled area. But anyway, I am not looking for a way for an individual user to advise the code - in this case, dynamically neutering the post-command scrolling limitation code. That's not the point (besides not being very elegant). I am asking for a way for users to customize an option, namely the already existing option `isearch-allow-scroll'. I am asking for two scroll-allowing behaviors, giving users an easy choice. > And if you want more commands to escape this restriction: > (mapc (lambda (c) (put c 'isearch-scroll t)) > '(forward-char backward-char right-char left-char > forward-word backward-word right-word left-word > forward-sexp backward-sexp forward-paragraph backward- > paragraph > move-end-of-line end-of-visual-line move-beginning-of-line > beginning-of-visual-line next-line previous-line)) I'm not asking how to define additional scrolling commands. The problem is not insufficient commands that can scroll. The problem is the limitation of what the scrolling behavior is. > > That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes > > sense. It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, > > however. Why? Note the question (which I answered): Why does this restriction, which generally makes sense for general Emacs, NOT necessarily make sense for Isearch. Is this your answer to that question (?): > Because it is too confusing for users. This is like leaving point > in one place, and scrolling without changing the position of point > (with inactive Isearch). Isearch should not be different from the > default Emacs behavior. I gave a reason why it should be different. Or rather, why it should be allowed to be different (au choix). You gave no reason - you just repeated that it should be the same. At most, you gave the same reason as for Emacs in general, which I explained is not so relevant here. That is, it is not cut & dried. Some users can well prefer to be able to see more context, for the reasons I gave. And that is not so confusing as it is for general Emacs, for the reasons I gave - in particular, resumption from the same search position, with attendent automatic window return to that position. In Emacs in general, if scrolling moved beyond point, and if there were nothing that brought the window back to point when you acted at point (e.g., when finished temporarily scrolling) then you would not see what was happening at point. That would not be good at all, under any circumstances. But even in Emacs in general, if there were such an thing as temporary scrolling, with a well defined finish, and if the window were then automatically restored to show point, which *did not change* by scrolling, that too would not be so confusing. We do not have such a temporary-scrolling behavior in Emacs in general, however. You cannot reasonably compare general Emacs, without any such temporary scrolling and window restoration, with what I proposed for Isearch. Apples & oranges. > > It's a bit like using `C-SPC' in a buffer, scrolling up a couple > > of screenfuls to look at something, and then using `C-u C-SPC' > > to return. But in Isearch there is no need for `C-SPC' or > > `C-u C-SPC': the search position is recorded. Search resumes > > from that same position, no matter how far away one might have > > scrolled. > > It makes sense to resume search from a new position like you can > see using code above. I think you are suggesting that the search position should change when you make use of the temporary scrolling? If so, I strongly disagree. From my point of view, the current search hit (i.e., point) does not change now, and it should never change, when you scroll. The only thing that would change with my proposal is what is shown in the window. The scrolling would be temporary, and when search is resumed the window would be restored to where it will show the current search hit again. What should happen if, after scrolling, a user quits Isearch? For that case we have a design choice: either move point to somewhere inside where the window is currently (scrolled), or move the window back to show the current search hit, i.e., point (which has not changed). I would be in favor of the latter. I think the former possibility would be problematic. Move point to which position in the window, for instance? I'm open to suggestions about that. But a priori, I would suggest that in all cases when scrolling is done during Isearch the window be restored to show the current search hit. I feel more strongly about resumption of search after scrolling: it should definitely continue where it was. I think (less strongly) that if search is quit after scrolling then the behavior should be the same as quitting at the current search position. > > The enhancement request is to let users choose whether non-nil > > `isearch-allow-scroll' should limit you to scrolling only enough > > to keep point in the window or should not limit you. This could > > be done by recognizing different non-nil values. > > Maybe a new option of `isearch-allow-scroll' could allow this. That's exactly what I suggested. Non-nil always means allow scrolling, and the particular non-nil value would specify the scrolling behavior: limited or not. But see above and below about what unlimited scrolling behavior should be like (highlighting, and no change in point). > > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there > > can be lots of search hits that are not highlighted. > > When scrolling outside the window boundaries will be allowed then > lazy highlighting should highlight the whole buffer so you could see > all matches when you quickly scroll the buffer. But in this case > lazy highlighting will become more like hi-lock mode. I cannot speak to the implementation - whether it is better to highlight the whole buffer or just the part that is currently visible. I would imagine that the latter is better, especially for large buffers. But I'm no expert on the implementation of Isearch. I can say that without the continuation of lazy highlighting into the scrolled area (e.g., what happens with your advice, above), there is little use to scrolling. The point of scrolling is, especially, to see search hits farther down or up the buffer. 3. I just noticed the following problem (emacs -Q). I can file a separate bug report for it, if you prefer. a. Set `isearch-allow-scroll' to t. b. Go to the middle of a long (multi-screenful) buffer, such as isearch.el. c. Search for something common, such as "ear". d. `C-v' a couple times, until you hit the limit. e. `M-v' repeatedly. There is no such limit in this direction. Why not? There should be. Not really consistent for the user. f. `C-v'. The entire window fills with face `isearch' (which should be only for `ear' search hits). Both (e) - its difference from (d) - and (f) seem like bugs to me. With my request (#1), both `C-v' and `M-v' would allow unlimited scrolling. And the current search position would not change by scrolling. It seems that currently `M-v' (past what should be the limit) changes the search position. Whether that's a third bug - call it (g) or is part of the (e) behavior I don't know. And that is also the behavior for `C-v' when I advise the post-command hook as you suggested: point is kept in the window, instead of staying at the current search hit. Isearch behavior should always be that point remains at the current search hit. IMO, when scrolling is restricted, that restriction should apply to both `C-v' and `M-v', and the search position should not change. When scrolling is not restricted (request #1), that non-restriction should apply to both `C-v' and `M-v', and the search position should (still) not change. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2013-11-08 23:02 bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily Drew Adams 2013-11-09 0:57 ` Juri Linkov @ 2013-11-10 13:46 ` Stefan Monnier 2013-11-10 16:52 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-24 22:45 ` Juri Linkov 2 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2013-11-10 13:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes sense. It makes sense, but it would also be desirable to make it customizable. > It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, however. Why? To some extent I can see that it is slightly different in the Isearch context. I'm not sure if it is sufficiently different to justify changing the default in Isearch, but I'm not necessarily opposed to it either. IOW, I agree with both feature requests. > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can be > lots of search hits that are not highlighted. Yes, that's a bug. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2013-11-10 13:46 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2013-11-10 16:52 ` Drew Adams 2013-11-11 19:08 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2013-11-10 16:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: 15839 > > That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes > > sense. > > It makes sense, but it would also be desirable to make it > customizable. I agree. > > It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, however. Why? > > To some extent I can see that it is slightly different in the > Isearch context. I'm not sure if it is sufficiently different to > justify changing the default in Isearch, but I'm not necessarily > opposed to it either. No need to change the default. `isearch-allow-scroll' should default to nil (less confusing, probably). The only change for it would be to provide a special value, e.g., `unlimited', which would not impose a limit on how much you can scroll. (Scrolling beyond the current limit when the value is `unlimited' should lazy-highlight whatever is shown, and resuming search should resume from the search hit current before scrolling. IOW, scrolling should not change which search hit is current.) > IOW, I agree with both feature requests. Great. > > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there > > can be lots of search hits that are not highlighted. > > Yes, that's a bug. I don't see that all the time, BTW. I don't have a recipe to repro it. The more important bugs are these: a. Scrolling backwards is not limited currently (it should be unlimited only when the option value is `unlimited', i.e., after the requested enhancement). b. Forward scrolling after backward scrolling throws everything off currently: the highlighting that should apply only to the current search hit (face `isearch') is applied to the entire window (buffer?). Bug (b) is the most serious, but I'm guessing that (b) and (a) are due to the same code problem. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2013-11-10 16:52 ` Drew Adams @ 2013-11-11 19:08 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2013-11-11 19:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: 15839 > The more important bugs are these: > > a. Scrolling backwards is not limited currently (it should be > unlimited only when the option value is `unlimited', i.e., after the > requested enhancement). > > b. Forward scrolling after backward scrolling throws everything off > currently: the highlighting that should apply only to the current > search hit (face `isearch') is applied to the entire window > (buffer?). > > Bug (b) is the most serious, but I'm guessing that (b) and (a) are > due to the same code problem. (BTW, (b) is the case symmetrically: if you start searching backward and then scroll up (in the search direction) and then scroll down, you get the same extension of `isearch-overlay' across the whole window.) I've tried to look into (b) a bit. I tried adding some code that calls `isearch-dehighlight' during scrolling and `isearch-highlight' when finished scrolling, just to see. I added calls to `message' to print the value of `isearch-overlay' at various points. It turns out that (because of the call I added to dehighlight) the overlay is properly deleted (overlay in no buffer) but it is still showing. (And it extends across the window.) I tried adding (redisplay t), but that had no effect. So this is apparently a case where a deleted overlay is showing. What's a way to prevent this phenomenon? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2013-11-08 23:02 bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily Drew Adams 2013-11-09 0:57 ` Juri Linkov 2013-11-10 13:46 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2018-11-24 22:45 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-25 3:14 ` Drew Adams 2 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-24 22:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can be > lots of search hits that are not highlighted. > > One of the reasons for scrolling is to see what search hits lie beyond > the currently shown text. This is already partly defeated, in that > even when you scroll some of the hits are not highlighted. This seems > more like a bug, but if the enhancement of #1 is done then it should > (it needs to) take care of #2 as well: Whatever text is shown should > have all of its search hits highlighted with lazy highlighting. Drew, do you agree that this your request is implemented now with lazy-highlight-buffer, so bug#15839 could be closed? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-24 22:45 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-25 3:14 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-25 20:15 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-25 3:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can be > > lots of search hits that are not highlighted. > > > > One of the reasons for scrolling is to see what search hits lie beyond > > the currently shown text. This is already partly defeated, in that > > even when you scroll some of the hits are not highlighted. This seems > > more like a bug, but if the enhancement of #1 is done then it should > > (it needs to) take care of #2 as well: Whatever text is shown should > > have all of its search hits highlighted with lazy highlighting. > > Drew, do you agree that this your request is implemented now > with lazy-highlight-buffer, so bug#15839 could be closed? Not as far as I understand. That #2 is only one point (one part) of several making up the bug report. If scrolling forward and backward always shows all search hits lazy-highlighted, then that one part of the bug would seem to be fixed. But that fixed behavior is (needs to be) anyway independent of any customization of `lazy-highlight-buffer'. So no, the addition of option `lazy-highlight-buffer' in no way fixes this bug. Perhaps some infrastructure that has been added now provides for a way to fix part of this bug - dunno. By that I mean only that now Isearch has ways of highlighting more than just a windowful of the buffer. Dunno whether that is helpful here. And as I said in the bug report, even for this one part of it (all visible search hits are not necessarily lazy-highlighted), the lazy-highlighting needed for scrolling could be limited to what is actually made visible by scrolling - not the whole buffer. Dunno whether that is a good optimization to make or not. What counts is the user perspective: scrolling should show all hits highlighted, no matter how far you scroll and no matter which directions. And to get that behavior a user should not need to change option `lazy-highlight-buffer'. That option should have no effect on this behavior, and vice versa. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-25 3:14 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-11-25 20:15 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-26 0:16 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-25 20:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > What counts is the user perspective: scrolling should show all > hits highlighted, no matter how far you scroll and no matter > which directions. And to get that behavior a user should not > need to change option `lazy-highlight-buffer'. That option > should have no effect on this behavior, and vice versa. The first part of your request is already implemented as well: you can customize `search-exit-option' to the value `nil' (its tag text is "Don't terminate incremental search"), then it works exactly like you want. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-25 20:15 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-26 0:16 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-26 23:35 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-26 0:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > What counts is the user perspective: scrolling should show all > > hits highlighted, no matter how far you scroll and no matter > > which directions. And to get that behavior a user should not > > need to change option `lazy-highlight-buffer'. That option > > should have no effect on this behavior, and vice versa. > > The first part of your request is already implemented as well: > you can customize `search-exit-option' to the value `nil' > (its tag text is "Don't terminate incremental search"), > then it works exactly like you want. Sorry, but I don't really understand. There are several parts to this bug report. I don't know what "the first part" refers to. I don't want to have to customize anything (other than a new specific `isearch-allow-scroll' value) to work around the problem. In the Emacs release I have (26.1) there is no such value for `search-exit-option'. And it's not clear to me why I would want to change the value of this option. (I don't even understand the (Emacs 26) doc string of the option: "Non-nil means random control characters terminate incremental search." Random control characters? I think I described the problem pretty clearly. I don't find your description of the solution (or solutions, to parts apparently) clear. What I mean is I don't understand the proposed solution(s), to start with. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-26 0:16 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-11-26 23:35 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-27 0:49 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-26 23:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > Sorry, but I don't really understand. > > There are several parts to this bug report. I don't know > what "the first part" refers to. It refers to your original request cited below: > 1. Non-nil `isearch-allow-scroll' lets you use a scroll command > (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch. Unfortunately, this is coupled > with the hard-coded behavior that you cannot scroll far enough in either > direction that point would be moved off screen. > > That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes sense. > It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, however. Why? > > Because the search position is one thing, and it is not lost. What you > might want to look at temporarily is another thing. > > It's a bit like using `C-SPC' in a buffer, scrolling up a couple of > screenfuls to look at something, and then using `C-u C-SPC' to return. > But in Isearch there is no need for `C-SPC' or `C-u C-SPC': the search > position is recorded. Search resumes from that same position, no > matter how far away one might have scrolled. This is implemented now with an option `nil' of the customizable variable `search-exit-option'. It lets you use a scroll command (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch, so you can scroll far enough in either direction that point would be moved off screen. > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can be > lots of search hits that are not highlighted. > > One of the reasons for scrolling is to see what search hits lie beyond > the currently shown text. This is already partly defeated, in that > even when you scroll some of the hits are not highlighted. This seems > more like a bug, but if the enhancement of #1 is done then it should > (it needs to) take care of #2 as well: Whatever text is shown should > have all of its search hits highlighted with lazy highlighting. This is implemented now with the customizable variable `lazy-highlight-buffer'. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-26 23:35 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-27 0:49 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-28 0:35 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-27 0:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > Sorry, but I don't really understand. > > > > There are several parts to this bug report. I don't know > > what "the first part" refers to. > > It refers to your original request cited below: Thanks for clarifying what you meant. But those points 1,2,... in the bug report are not independent. They are meant to make a logical argument for what's being requested. They are all of a piece. They describe different, but related, aspects of the inconvenience that the requested feature would alleviate. I don't want to customize one variable to be able to scroll farther, and another variable to have what's shown by that scrolling have lazy-highlighting (especially if the latter requires lazy-highlighting the entire buffer, rather than just what I see when scrolling). I want to be able to use `isearch-allow-scroll' to let me scroll as far as I want, and see search hits lazy-highlighted in what parts of the buffer I scroll to. > > 1. Non-nil `isearch-allow-scroll' lets you use a scroll command > > (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch. Unfortunately, this is coupled > > with the hard-coded behavior that you cannot scroll far enough in > > either direction that point would be moved off screen. > > > > That restriction is general for Emacs, and it generally makes sense. > > It does not necessarily make sense during Isearch, however. Why? > > > > Because the search position is one thing, and it is not lost. What > > you might want to look at temporarily is another thing. > > > > It's a bit like using `C-SPC' in a buffer, scrolling up a couple of > > screenfuls to look at something, and then using `C-u C-SPC' to > > return. But in Isearch there is no need for `C-SPC' or `C-u C-SPC': > > the search position is recorded. Search resumes from that same > > position, no matter how far away one might have scrolled. > > This is implemented now with an option `nil' of the customizable > variable `search-exit-option'. It lets you use a scroll command > (e.g. `C-v') without exiting Isearch, so you can scroll far enough > in either direction that point would be moved off screen. > > > 2. What's more, the lazy highlighting of search hits is even more > > limited currently. When you scroll to the current limit, there can > > be lots of search hits that are not highlighted. > > > > One of the reasons for scrolling is to see what search hits lie > > beyond the currently shown text. This is already partly defeated, > > in that even when you scroll some of the hits are not highlighted. > > This seems more like a bug, but if the enhancement of #1 is done > > then it should (it needs to) take care of #2 as well: Whatever > > text is shown should have all of its search hits highlighted with > > lazy highlighting. > > This is implemented now with the customizable variable > `lazy-highlight-buffer'. I do appreciate your letting me know what's newly available; thanks. And thanks for making those improvements. But no, I don't think we have what I requested, and I don't think this bug (enhancement request) should be closed. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-27 0:49 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-11-28 0:35 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-28 15:15 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-28 0:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > I don't want to customize one variable to be able to > scroll farther, and another variable to have what's > shown by that scrolling have lazy-highlighting > (especially if the latter requires lazy-highlighting > the entire buffer, rather than just what I see when > scrolling). Fine. If you are lazy to customize two variables, after you customize one variable we could automatically change the value of the second variable. > I want to be able to use `isearch-allow-scroll' to > let me scroll as far as I want, and see search hits > lazy-highlighted in what parts of the buffer I > scroll to. Fine, we could allow the same feature to be enabled by two different variables. diff --git a/lisp/isearch.el b/lisp/isearch.el index eb0b25f9b1..ac809e4980 100644 --- a/lisp/isearch.el +++ b/lisp/isearch.el @@ -2747,8 +2747,15 @@ isearch-allow-scroll "Whether scrolling is allowed during incremental search. If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. +If `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. +This has the same effect as the value `nil' of `search-exit-option'. If nil, scrolling commands will first cancel Isearch mode." - :type 'boolean + :type '(choice boolean + (const :tag "Can scroll offscreen" unlimited)) + :set (lambda (sym val) + (set sym val) + (when (eq val 'unlimited) + (setq lazy-highlight-buffer t))) :group 'isearch) (defcustom isearch-allow-prefix t @@ -2841,11 +2848,11 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook ((or (and isearch-allow-prefix (memq this-command '(universal-argument universal-argument-more digit-argument negative-argument))) - (and isearch-allow-scroll + (and isearch-allow-scroll (not (eq isearch-allow-scroll 'unlimited)) (symbolp this-command) (or (eq (get this-command 'isearch-scroll) t) (eq (get this-command 'scroll-command) t)))) - (when isearch-allow-scroll + (when (and isearch-allow-scroll (not (eq isearch-allow-scroll 'unlimited))) (setq isearch-pre-scroll-point (point)))) ;; A mouse click on the isearch message starts editing the search string. ((and (eq (car-safe main-event) 'down-mouse-1) @@ -2853,6 +2860,7 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook ;; Swallow the up-event. (read-event) (setq this-command 'isearch-edit-string)) + ((eq isearch-allow-scroll 'unlimited)) ;; Don't terminate the search for motion commands. ((or (and (eq search-exit-option 'move) (symbolp this-command) ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-28 0:35 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-28 15:15 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-28 23:01 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-28 15:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > I don't want to customize one variable to be able to > > scroll farther, and another variable to have what's > > shown by that scrolling have lazy-highlighting > > (especially if the latter requires lazy-highlighting > > the entire buffer, rather than just what I see when > > scrolling). > > Fine. If you are lazy to customize two variables, > after you customize one variable we could automatically > change the value of the second variable. That was not my point. First is a question: Would customizing those two variables in that way affect ONLY the specific behavior I requested? I don't expect so. But even if the answer to that question is yes, it's not clear from the descriptions of those variables that that behavior follows as the only, specific behavior. If you implement code that does what I requested, providing a single place for users to control it (which should logically be `isearch-allow-scroll', I think) - and that controls only it (does not affect some other behavior) that will be great. (Maybe you've done that - if you say so then I'll take a closer look.) IOW, how that implementation gets done under the covers is not so important to a user. If it's best that it somehow make use of existing code - even existing user options, that's OK. It's not clear to me that the purpose of those two variables is to realize the feature requested here. Is it, really? But users should preferably not need to worry about variable interactions. The doc for a given variable should make clear just what it does, and each variable should preferably have one behavior (per value chosen). You should not, e.g., discover that by choosing a var value to make a background red you have also inadvertently turned off the ability to have blue foreground text. > > I want to be able to use `isearch-allow-scroll' to > > let me scroll as far as I want, and see search hits > > lazy-highlighted in what parts of the buffer I > > scroll to. > > Fine, we could allow the same feature to be enabled > by two different variables. > > @@ -2747,8 +2747,15 @@ isearch-allow-scroll > "Whether scrolling is allowed during incremental search. > If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. > However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. > +If `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. Those last two sentences should be rephrased in the usual manner: `unlimited' means... Any other non-nil value means... > +This has the same effect as the value `nil' > of `search-exit-option'. Does it really? If that's the only effect of `search-exit-option' then yes, we don't need a separate option. But if that were true then why did `search-exit-option' exist previously, and why didn't it do this previously? And why was it called `search...' and not `isearch...'? I'm guessing that nil `search-exit-option' does not just have "the same effect". But (see above) even if it does, that doesn't mean that option `search-exit-option' has the same effect, because setting it to non-nil, ONLY to NOT have the effect of `unlimited' `isearch-allow-scroll', would presumably also have some other effect unrelated to allowing scrolling. Sorry that I'm arguing from ignorance here so far, and not bothering to get informed in detail about these existing options. I'm essentially guessing that trying to repurpose some combination of them to achieve this request is not a great idea. If I'm wrong, please try to present the counter argument straightforwardly. I'm open to being convinced, but a first sense is that this is likely not the right approach. If you just tell me I'm wrong then I'll take a closer look at what you're proposing. But first please consider what I say here, in case it's valid. > If nil, scrolling commands will first cancel > Isearch mode." BTW, why do we say "first" there? First before what? There is no other action after this, is there? I.e., there is no "second" or "and" that follows this "first", right? Or is there some additional context that makes that "first" mean something? Thanks for working on this. Let me know, if you think I'm wrong and should just take a closer look at what you've proposed. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-28 15:15 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-11-28 23:01 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-29 3:36 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-28 23:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1173 bytes --] > But users should preferably not need to worry > about variable interactions. The doc for a given > variable should make clear just what it does, and > each variable should preferably have one behavior > (per value chosen). I agree that it's better to make it clear in the docstring. Fixed in a new patch below. > I'm guessing that nil `search-exit-option' does > not just have "the same effect". But (see above) > even if it does, that doesn't mean that option > `search-exit-option' has the same effect, because > setting it to non-nil, ONLY to NOT have the > effect of `unlimited' `isearch-allow-scroll', > would presumably also have some other effect > unrelated to allowing scrolling. I agree that `search-exit-option' is too confusing variable for such features. So we have to offload it from all unrelated features. As the first step, I moved the recently added shift-select feature from `search-exit-option' to its own clearly named customizable variable `isearch-allow-shift-select'. For the same reason, unlimited scrolling was moved to the new option `unlimited' of `isearch-allow-scroll'. Now finally everything looks right. Please try a new patch: [-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --] [-- Attachment #2: isearch-allow-scroll-offscreen.2.patch --] [-- Type: text/x-diff, Size: 5033 bytes --] diff --git a/lisp/isearch.el b/lisp/isearch.el index eb0b25f9b1..8c54ab92db 100644 --- a/lisp/isearch.el +++ b/lisp/isearch.el @@ -72,21 +72,11 @@ search-exit-option If t, random control and meta characters terminate the search and are then executed normally. If `edit', edit the search string instead of exiting. -If `move', extend the search string by motion commands -that have the `isearch-move' property on their symbols -equal to `enabled', or the shift-translated command is -not disabled by the value `disabled' of the same property. -If `shift-move', extend the search string by motion commands -while holding down the shift key. -Both `move' and `shift-move' extend the search string by yanking text -that ends at the new position after moving point in the current buffer. If `append', the characters which you type that are not interpreted by the incremental search are simply appended to the search string. If nil, run the command without exiting Isearch." :type '(choice (const :tag "Terminate incremental search" t) (const :tag "Edit the search string" edit) - (const :tag "Extend the search string by motion commands" move) - (const :tag "Extend the search string by shifted motion keys" shift-move) (const :tag "Append control characters to the search string" append) (const :tag "Don't terminate incremental search" nil)) :version "27.1") @@ -2747,8 +2737,12 @@ isearch-allow-scroll "Whether scrolling is allowed during incremental search. If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. +If `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. +You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' as well. If nil, scrolling commands will first cancel Isearch mode." - :type 'boolean + :type '(choice (const :tag "Disable scrolling" nil) + (const :tag "Allow scrolling within screen" t) + (const :tag "Allow scrolling offscreen" unlimited)) :group 'isearch) (defcustom isearch-allow-prefix t @@ -2812,6 +2806,21 @@ isearch-back-into-window (defvar isearch-pre-scroll-point nil) (defvar isearch-pre-move-point nil) +(defcustom isearch-allow-shift-select nil + "Whether motion is allowed to select text during incremental search. +If t, extend the search string by motion commands while holding down +the shift key. The search string is extended by yanking text that +ends at the new position after moving point in the current buffer. +If `move', extend the search string without the shift key pressed +by motion commands that have the `isearch-move' property on their +symbols equal to `enabled', or the shift-translated command is +not disabled by the value `disabled' of the same property." + :type '(choice (const :tag "Disable shift selection" nil) + (const :tag "Shifted motion keys extend the search string" t) + (const :tag "Motion keys extend the search string" move)) + :group 'isearch + :version "27.1") + (defun isearch-pre-command-hook () "Decide whether to exit Isearch mode before executing the command. Don't exit Isearch if the key sequence that invoked this command @@ -2845,7 +2854,7 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook (symbolp this-command) (or (eq (get this-command 'isearch-scroll) t) (eq (get this-command 'scroll-command) t)))) - (when isearch-allow-scroll + (when (and isearch-allow-scroll (not (eq isearch-allow-scroll 'unlimited))) (setq isearch-pre-scroll-point (point)))) ;; A mouse click on the isearch message starts editing the search string. ((and (eq (car-safe main-event) 'down-mouse-1) @@ -2854,13 +2863,13 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook (read-event) (setq this-command 'isearch-edit-string)) ;; Don't terminate the search for motion commands. - ((or (and (eq search-exit-option 'move) + ((or (and (eq isearch-allow-shift-select 'move) (symbolp this-command) (or (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'enabled) (and (not (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'disabled)) (stringp (nth 1 (interactive-form this-command))) (string-match-p "^^" (nth 1 (interactive-form this-command)))))) - (and (eq search-exit-option 'shift-move) + (and isearch-allow-shift-select (not (eq isearch-allow-shift-select 'move)) this-command-keys-shift-translated)) (setq this-command-keys-shift-translated nil) (setq isearch-pre-move-point (point))) @@ -2883,7 +2892,7 @@ isearch-post-command-hook (goto-char isearch-pre-scroll-point))) (setq isearch-pre-scroll-point nil) (isearch-update)) - ((memq search-exit-option '(move shift-move)) + (isearch-allow-shift-select (when (and isearch-pre-move-point (not (eq isearch-pre-move-point (point)))) (let ((string (buffer-substring-no-properties ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-28 23:01 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-29 3:36 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-29 22:23 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-29 3:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > But users should preferably not need to worry > > about variable interactions. The doc for a given > > variable should make clear just what it does, and > > each variable should preferably have one behavior > > (per value chosen). > > I agree that it's better to make it clear in the docstring. > Fixed in a new patch below. > > > I'm guessing that nil `search-exit-option' does > > not just have "the same effect". But (see above) > > even if it does, that doesn't mean that option > > `search-exit-option' has the same effect, because > > setting it to non-nil, ONLY to NOT have the > > effect of `unlimited' `isearch-allow-scroll', > > would presumably also have some other effect > > unrelated to allowing scrolling. > > I agree that `search-exit-option' is too confusing variable > for such features. So we have to offload it from all > unrelated features. > > As the first step, I moved the recently added shift-select > feature from `search-exit-option' to its own clearly named > customizable variable `isearch-allow-shift-select'. > > For the same reason, unlimited scrolling was moved to the new option > `unlimited' of `isearch-allow-scroll'. > > Now finally everything looks right. Please try a new patch: I agree with your summary here, that is, I think we're in agreement. I didn't try to apply your patch, but I took a quick look at it. Here are some questions/comments, in case they help. 1. I'm still puzzled about this: However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. If `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. Those two sentences don't make sense together. If the current match never scrolls offscreen then it can't be true that the current match can scroll offscreen. Something different needs to be said here. 2. And the term "offscreen" doesn't seem like a good choice. Don't we mean just off the window, i.e., out of view? So this too bothers/confuses me: "Allow scrolling within screen" I don't know what is meant by "screen" here. What are the limits of the "screen" within which I can scroll with this option value? 3. I'm also puzzled by this: You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' as well. Why say that? I think it confuses people, by suggesting that for some reason you might need to do that, in order to see such highlighting if you scroll (e.g. "offscreen"). That's not the case, is it? (I hope not.) I thought that the implementation of `unlimited' automatically lazy-highlights everything that you scroll to. Is that not the case? That's part of this enhancement request: scroll as far as you want, and have search hits highlighted no matter how far you scroll. If that highlighting-as-needed is implemented then I see no need to mention `lazy-highlight-buffer', and I think it's wrong to do so. There should be no more need to enable full-buffer highlighting in the `unlimited' scroll case than in any other case. You enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' when you want to ensure that all search hits are highlighted, even ones you may never look at. If `unlimited' does NOT highlight all hits that come in view then this enhancement request is still not realized, as that's a necessary part of it. 4. I think it would be better for the :tag "Disable scrolling" to say something like this: "Scrolling exits Isearch". It's not that you cannot scroll. It's just that if you do scroll you stop searching. You could say "Disable scrolling while searching", if you prefer to keep the parallel structure of the :tags. 5. Doc string of `*-allow-shift-selection': Whether motion is allowed to select text during incremental search. That will possibly make users think that this is about activating the region (selecting text). The first doc-string line should kind of stand on its own, to give an overall idea. I'd say something more like this: Motion keys yank text to the search string. 6. `*-allow-shift-selection' behavior: Why is the value `move'? Is that the best word? What happens with `move' if you use a shifted motion key? If it acts the same as `t' then what you call "shifted" is really "-only_ when shifted". What you call just "motion" seems like just both shifted and unshifted. Why do we even have two such choices? Why would someone who wants to yank chars by moving over them want to have to use Shift, ever? Is it so that they can use unshifted to exit Isearch and move the cursor? I guess so. Maybe that could be made clearer (dunno). 7. OK, no, `move' is apparently more complicated than that (all the more reason why it shouldn't be called `move'.) This text is a mouthful: by motion commands that have the `isearch-move' property on their symbols equal to `enabled', or [for which] the shift-translated command is not disabled by the value `disabled' of the same property. That sounds a bit like a legal text. You can just repeat "property `isearch-move'" instead of saying "the same property" - that would be clearer. But the sentence probably needs to be split. And it may be a sign that the behavior is too complicated. Why do we have this complicated behavior? Why not just have a `move' value that lets you yank text without having to use Shift (i.e. using Shift or not)? What's the point of having to put such a property on some command symbols? And if there really is a use case for doing that to certain commands, so that _only they_ manifest a difference between `t' and `move' behavior, then why not have only the `move' behavior (no `t' behavior)? I really don't understand the motivations here, sorry. What problem is this option trying to solve? 8.This option should not be called `*-shift-selection' if it is not necessarily about Shift selection. The option is apparently about yanking text you move the cursor over. 9. Again, I'm not crazy about this :tag, for the same reason as above: Disable shift selection A nil option value doesn't disable anything. It just means that cursor motion ends Isearch, so you just move over the buffer text. I apologize in advance for not following some of this. Probably at least some of what I wrote is nonsense based on misunderstanding. At the very least, though, perhaps some of that misunderstanding might indicate that some of the descriptions, or some of the behaviors, are more complicated than necessary. Hope this helps, and thanks for all your work on this stuff. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-29 3:36 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-11-29 22:23 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-30 0:27 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-29 22:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5043 bytes --] > 1. I'm still puzzled about this: > > However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. > If `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. > > Those two sentences don't make sense together. > If the current match never scrolls offscreen then > it can't be true that the current match can scroll > offscreen. Something different needs to be said > here. Do you think this is better? "If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. However, the current match can't scroll offscreen if the value is t. But if it's `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case. If nil, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode." If you don't agree, please suggest a better wording. > 2. And the term "offscreen" doesn't seem like a > good choice. Don't we mean just off the window, > i.e., out of view? So this too bothers/confuses me: > > "Allow scrolling within screen" > > I don't know what is meant by "screen" here. > What are the limits of the "screen" within > which I can scroll with this option value? I guess a screen is part of the buffer visible in the window. We use the word "screen" in other docstrings as well. > 3. I'm also puzzled by this: > > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' > as well. > > Why say that? I think it confuses people, by > suggesting that for some reason you might need > to do that, in order to see such highlighting > if you scroll (e.g. "offscreen"). > > That's not the case, is it? (I hope not.) I > thought that the implementation of `unlimited' > automatically lazy-highlights everything that > you scroll to. Is that not the case? No, this is not the case. This is very difficult to implement, and not worth the effort because this feature is already available by customizing lazy-highlight-buffer. Moreover, even if implemented, it still makes no sense because it can't highlight as quick as you scroll thru the buffer. The problem is that you haven't tried my patch with lazy-highlight-buffer enabled. If you tried you wouldn't want any other implementation. > 4. I think it would be better for the :tag > "Disable scrolling" to say something like this: > "Scrolling exits Isearch". Thanks, fixed. > 5. Doc string of `*-allow-shift-selection': > > Whether motion is allowed to select text during > incremental search. > > That will possibly make users think that this is > about activating the region (selecting text). > > The first doc-string line should kind of stand on > its own, to give an overall idea. I'd say > something more like this: > > Motion keys yank text to the search string. Thanks, fixed. > 6. `*-allow-shift-selection' behavior: > > Why is the value `move'? Is that the best word? > > What happens with `move' if you use a shifted > motion key? If it acts the same as `t' then what > you call "shifted" is really "-only_ when shifted". > What you call just "motion" seems like just both > shifted and unshifted. > > Why do we even have two such choices? Why would > someone who wants to yank chars by moving over > them want to have to use Shift, ever? Is it so > that they can use unshifted to exit Isearch and > move the cursor? I guess so. Maybe that could > be made clearer (dunno). > > 7. OK, no, `move' is apparently more complicated > than that (all the more reason why it shouldn't > be called `move'.) This text is a mouthful: > > by motion commands that have the `isearch-move' > property on their symbols equal to `enabled', > or [for which] the shift-translated command is > not disabled by the value `disabled' of the same > property. > > That sounds a bit like a legal text. You can just > repeat "property `isearch-move'" instead of saying > "the same property" - that would be clearer. But > the sentence probably needs to be split. And it > may be a sign that the behavior is too complicated. > > Why do we have this complicated behavior? Why > not just have a `move' value that lets you yank > text without having to use Shift (i.e. using Shift > or not)? What's the point of having to put such a > property on some command symbols? > > And if there really is a use case for doing that > to certain commands, so that _only they_ manifest > a difference between `t' and `move' behavior, > then why not have only the `move' behavior (no `t' > behavior)? Sorry, I don't understand what do you suggest here. > 8.This option should not be called `*-shift-selection' > if it is not necessarily about Shift selection. > The option is apparently about yanking text you > move the cursor over. So I renamed it to `isearch-allow-yank-on-move', and its options to `no-shift' and `shift'. > 9. Again, I'm not crazy about this :tag, for the > same reason as above: > > Disable shift selection > > A nil option value doesn't disable anything. It > just means that cursor motion ends Isearch, so you > just move over the buffer text. Thanks for the suggestion, I changed it to "Motion keys exits Isearch". [-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --] [-- Attachment #2: isearch-allow-scroll-offscreen.3.patch --] [-- Type: text/x-diff, Size: 5185 bytes --] diff --git a/lisp/isearch.el b/lisp/isearch.el index eb0b25f9b1..b0284a5972 100644 --- a/lisp/isearch.el +++ b/lisp/isearch.el @@ -72,21 +72,11 @@ search-exit-option If t, random control and meta characters terminate the search and are then executed normally. If `edit', edit the search string instead of exiting. -If `move', extend the search string by motion commands -that have the `isearch-move' property on their symbols -equal to `enabled', or the shift-translated command is -not disabled by the value `disabled' of the same property. -If `shift-move', extend the search string by motion commands -while holding down the shift key. -Both `move' and `shift-move' extend the search string by yanking text -that ends at the new position after moving point in the current buffer. If `append', the characters which you type that are not interpreted by the incremental search are simply appended to the search string. If nil, run the command without exiting Isearch." :type '(choice (const :tag "Terminate incremental search" t) (const :tag "Edit the search string" edit) - (const :tag "Extend the search string by motion commands" move) - (const :tag "Extend the search string by shifted motion keys" shift-move) (const :tag "Append control characters to the search string" append) (const :tag "Don't terminate incremental search" nil)) :version "27.1") @@ -2746,9 +2736,13 @@ isearch-fallback (defcustom isearch-allow-scroll nil "Whether scrolling is allowed during incremental search. If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. -However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. -If nil, scrolling commands will first cancel Isearch mode." - :type 'boolean +However, the current match can't scroll offscreen if the value is t. +But if it's `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. +You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case. +If nil, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode." + :type '(choice (const :tag "Scrolling exits Isearch" nil) + (const :tag "Allow scrolling within screen" t) + (const :tag "Allow scrolling offscreen" unlimited)) :group 'isearch) (defcustom isearch-allow-prefix t @@ -2812,6 +2806,21 @@ isearch-back-into-window (defvar isearch-pre-scroll-point nil) (defvar isearch-pre-move-point nil) +(defcustom isearch-allow-yank-on-move nil + "Motion keys yank text to the search string. +If t, extend the search string by motion commands while holding down +the shift key. The search string is extended by yanking text that +ends at the new position after moving point in the current buffer. +If `move', extend the search string without the shift key pressed +by motion commands that have the `isearch-move' property on their +symbols equal to `enabled', or for which the shift-translated command +is not disabled by the value `disabled' of property `isearch-move'." + :type '(choice (const :tag "Motion keys exits Isearch" nil) + (const :tag "Motion keys extend the search string" no-shift) + (const :tag "Shifted motion keys extend the search string" shift)) + :group 'isearch + :version "27.1") + (defun isearch-pre-command-hook () "Decide whether to exit Isearch mode before executing the command. Don't exit Isearch if the key sequence that invoked this command @@ -2845,7 +2854,7 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook (symbolp this-command) (or (eq (get this-command 'isearch-scroll) t) (eq (get this-command 'scroll-command) t)))) - (when isearch-allow-scroll + (when (and isearch-allow-scroll (not (eq isearch-allow-scroll 'unlimited))) (setq isearch-pre-scroll-point (point)))) ;; A mouse click on the isearch message starts editing the search string. ((and (eq (car-safe main-event) 'down-mouse-1) @@ -2854,13 +2863,13 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook (read-event) (setq this-command 'isearch-edit-string)) ;; Don't terminate the search for motion commands. - ((or (and (eq search-exit-option 'move) + ((or (and (eq isearch-allow-yank-on-move 'no-shift) (symbolp this-command) (or (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'enabled) (and (not (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'disabled)) (stringp (nth 1 (interactive-form this-command))) (string-match-p "^^" (nth 1 (interactive-form this-command)))))) - (and (eq search-exit-option 'shift-move) + (and (eq isearch-allow-yank-on-move 'shift) this-command-keys-shift-translated)) (setq this-command-keys-shift-translated nil) (setq isearch-pre-move-point (point))) @@ -2883,7 +2892,7 @@ isearch-post-command-hook (goto-char isearch-pre-scroll-point))) (setq isearch-pre-scroll-point nil) (isearch-update)) - ((memq search-exit-option '(move shift-move)) + (isearch-allow-yank-on-move (when (and isearch-pre-move-point (not (eq isearch-pre-move-point (point)))) (let ((string (buffer-substring-no-properties ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-29 22:23 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-11-30 0:27 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-30 7:28 ` Eli Zaretskii ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-30 0:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > 1. I'm still puzzled about this: > > > > However, the current match will never scroll offscreen. > > If `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. > > > > Those two sentences don't make sense together. > > If the current match never scrolls offscreen then > > it can't be true that the current match can scroll > > offscreen. Something different needs to be said > > here. > > Do you think this is better? > > "If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. > However, the current match can't scroll offscreen if the value is t. > But if it's `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case. > If nil, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode." > > If you don't agree, please suggest a better wording. I prefer the standard approach: say first what the default (nil) does. Then say what non-nil does. Then state that specific non-nil values have specific non-nil behaviors - IOW, they all do what the non-nil description says, but with some differences. For example: By default (nil value) scrolling exits Isearch mode. Non-nil means you can scroll while searching, as follows: `unlimited' You can scroll any distance. other non-nil value You cannot scroll far enough that the current search hit is no longer visible (is off screen). (BTW, is it only t or is it any other non-nil value?) > > 2. And the term "offscreen" doesn't seem like a > > good choice. Don't we mean just off the window, > > i.e., out of view? So this too bothers/confuses me: > > > > "Allow scrolling within screen" > > > > I don't know what is meant by "screen" here. > > What are the limits of the "screen" within > > which I can scroll with this option value? > > I guess a screen is part of the buffer visible in the window. > We use the word "screen" in other docstrings as well. Yes, but here I think we need to be clear that the part of the buffer visible in the window is any part that _includes the current search hit_, no? Isn't that what this is about - scrolling so far that that hit is "off screen" means scrolling so far that it is no longer visible in the window. The "screenful" that defines the scrolling limits is not something defined independently of the position of the current search hit. > > 3. I'm also puzzled by this: > > > > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' > > as well. > > > > Why say that? I think it confuses people, by > > suggesting that for some reason you might need > > to do that, in order to see such highlighting > > if you scroll (e.g. "offscreen"). > > > > That's not the case, is it? (I hope not.) I > > thought that the implementation of `unlimited' > > automatically lazy-highlights everything that > > you scroll to. Is that not the case? > > No, this is not the case. This is very difficult > to implement, and not worth the effort because this feature > is already available by customizing lazy-highlight-buffer. I see. That disappoints me. We have lazy highlighting but we can't use it lazily, except for the original design of being limited to a windowful? Can't we "just" let scrolling move the "window limits" as you scroll? (Yes, I'm making this up, without looking at the code.) This highlight-as-you-go should really be considered part of this enhancement request, IMO. And I mentioned it as such. But if you don't want to tackle that part initially, or if indeed it ends up being too complex in the end, then so be it, for now. > Moreover, even if implemented, it still makes no sense > because it can't highlight as quick as you scroll > thru the buffer. I don't think I agree that it "makes no sense". 1. You might well scroll slowly sometimes, looking closely at search hits. Being able to see hits highlighted is always better than not. 2. If lazy highlighting can generally keep up with holding down `C-s', which it does pretty well now, then it should be able to do about the same wrt scrolling. Sure, there can be many search hits within a small area of text, but even so, I don't see this as a problem. And just as we (I guess) do for fast highlighting when you hold `C-s' down, we can presumably skip highlighting any hits that are no longer on the screen because you've moved past them. 3. Even if highlighting were sometimes slower than what you might scroll, it would catch up when you stop. Heck, if the alternative is full-buffer highlighting, that has to be even slower, no? > The problem is that you haven't tried my patch > with lazy-highlight-buffer enabled. If you tried > you wouldn't want any other implementation. OK, I'll take your word for it, I guess. But I don't see why highlighting only a portion of the buffer (and it might often be a tiny portion) should be less performant than highlighting the entire buffer. Is that really the case? > > 6. `*-allow-shift-selection' behavior: > > > > Why is the value `move'? Is that the best word? > > > > What happens with `move' if you use a shifted > > motion key? If it acts the same as `t' then what > > you call "shifted" is really "-only_ when shifted". > > What you call just "motion" seems like just both > > shifted and unshifted. > > > > Why do we even have two such choices? Why would > > someone who wants to yank chars by moving over > > them want to have to use Shift, ever? Is it so > > that they can use unshifted to exit Isearch and > > move the cursor? I guess so. Maybe that could > > be made clearer (dunno). > > > > 7. OK, no, `move' is apparently more complicated > > than that (all the more reason why it shouldn't > > be called `move'.) This text is a mouthful: > > > > by motion commands that have the `isearch-move' > > property on their symbols equal to `enabled', > > or [for which] the shift-translated command is > > not disabled by the value `disabled' of the same > > property. > > > > That sounds a bit like a legal text. You can just > > repeat "property `isearch-move'" instead of saying > > "the same property" - that would be clearer. But > > the sentence probably needs to be split. And it > > may be a sign that the behavior is too complicated. Is that part of what I wrote not clear, at least? I do advise splitting that sentence up, at a minimum. > > Why do we have this complicated behavior? Why > > not just have a `move' value that lets you yank > > text without having to use Shift (i.e. using Shift > > or not)? What's the point of having to put such a > > property on some command symbols? > > > > And if there really is a use case for doing that > > to certain commands, so that _only they_ manifest > > a difference between `t' and `move' behavior, > > then why not have only the `move' behavior (no `t' > > behavior)? > > Sorry, I don't understand what do you suggest here. It's not clear to me what the behavior is or what problem it's trying to solve. You want to be able to yank text, that you move the cursor over in the buffer, onto the search string. Case `t': Some people want to do that using Shift selection. Why shift? Why wouldn't they just want to do it by moving the cursor (without bothering to shift)? Is it because they want to be able to, separately, move the unshifted cursor to exit Isearch and move over buffer text? Is that the idea? I guess so. Case `move': And for those people who don't want to give up having cursor movement exit Isearch, and who don't want to have to use Shift, we offer another way to yank to the search string by moving the cursor: Users or libraries can specify, for certain cursor movement commands, that mere unshifted cursor movement will yank. Is that right? This all sounds complicated, but if there really are such use cases (e.g., different users) then OK. For case `move', why do we have two different ways to specify the motion commands that we want to let yank text? 1. commands that have the `isearch-move' property on their symbols equal to `enabled' 2. shift-translated commands that have the `isearch-move' property on their symbols not equal to `disabled' I don't even follow that, especially #2. I guess there are at least 4 possibilities for property `isearch-move'? * `enabled' * not `disabled' (on symbol of shift-translated command) * nil * something else What other values for symbol of shift-translated command, besides `disabled', and what do they do? Why two ways to specify the commands that we let yank by moving the cursor? And what about the use case I mentioned: just be able to use any motion commands to yank text, without using Shift? Why assume that everyone wants to be able to use at least some cursor-motion commands to exit Isearch? This case is like implicitly putting the required `isearch-move' value on all commands. I'm not really arguing for any given behavior. I'm saying I don't really understand where all of this is coming from. Have different users actually requested something for these different possible use cases? Is some other library involved perhaps? What's behind this? It seems like a lot, just to let you yank buffer text by moving the cursor. FWIW, I can give an example of something a bit similar that I have in my code. (I don't know how useful it is.) I mention it because your use of a property value on a command made me think of it. I can see the value of letting only some motion commands (chosen by a user) do something other than exit Isearch. It's option `isearchp-initiate-edit-commands'. Default: (backward-char left-char backward-sexp backward-word left-word) Commands whose key bindings initiate Isearch edit. When invoked by a key sequence, Isearch edits the search string, applying the command to it immediately. Commands you might want to include here are typically commands that move point to the left, possibly deleting text along the way. Set this to `nil' if you always want all such commands to exit Isearch and act on the buffer text. IOW, `C-b' (by default), does not exit Isearch but instead, it's short for `M-e C-b'. The option is intended only for backward motion commands. But the idea seems similar to what you have for value `move': limit the behavior to particular commands. You do it with a symbol property; I did it with a list-valued option. (BTW, with `*-allow-shift-selection', if a user moves the cursor backward do you yank those chars onto the search string? I guess so. In which order: order of traversal or order of appearance in the buffer?) My questions about `*-allow-shift-selection' are first about the use cases, only secondarily about the doc. Both seem complicated to me, and I particularly wonder why the use cases. But I don't really need to understand. I reviewed what you wrote about that only because you included it in a reply to this (other) bug report. Ignore my feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection' if you like - no problem. > > The option is apparently about yanking text you > > move the cursor over. > > So I renamed it to `isearch-allow-yank-on-move', > and its options to `no-shift' and `shift'. I would remove the "allow". The option is named after the non-nil behavior (as is common), which is to yank whatever you move the cursor over. > Thanks for the suggestion, I changed it to > "Motion keys exits Isearch". exits -> exit Thx - Drew ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-30 0:27 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-11-30 7:28 ` Eli Zaretskii [not found] ` <<83lg5bc9d6.fsf@gnu.org> 2018-12-04 0:29 ` Juri Linkov 2 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2018-11-30 7:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839, juri > Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2018 16:27:13 -0800 (PST) > From: Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> > Cc: 15839@debbugs.gnu.org > > > "If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. > > However, the current match can't scroll offscreen if the value is t. > > But if it's `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. > > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case. > > If nil, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode." > > > > If you don't agree, please suggest a better wording. > > I prefer the standard approach: say first what the default > (nil) does. Then say what non-nil does. I disagree that this should be a guideline. The following two variants are equivalently good documentation, IMO: Variant 1: "If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. If nil, the default, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode. If the value is t, the current match cannot be scrolled off-screen, but that limitation is removed if the value is `unlimited'. You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case." Variant 2: "If nil, the default, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode. If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. If the value is t, the current match cannot be scrolled off-screen, but that limitation is removed if the value is `unlimited'. You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case." And I think I slightly prefer the first one. Note that I rephrased the last part. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <<83lg5bc9d6.fsf@gnu.org>]
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily [not found] ` <<83lg5bc9d6.fsf@gnu.org> @ 2018-11-30 15:33 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-11-30 15:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii, Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839, juri > > > "If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. > > > However, the current match can't scroll offscreen if the value is > > > t. > > > But if it's `unlimited', the current match can scroll offscreen. > > > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case. > > > If nil, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode." > > > > > > If you don't agree, please suggest a better wording. > > > > I prefer the standard approach: say first what the default > > (nil) does. Then say what non-nil does. > > I disagree that this should be a guideline. I should have said "a more typical approach". > The following two variants are equivalently good documentation, IMO: > > Variant 1: > > "If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. > If nil, the default, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode. > > If the value is t, the current match cannot be scrolled off-screen, > but that limitation is removed if the value is `unlimited'. > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case." > > Variant 2: > > "If nil, the default, scrolling commands will cancel Isearch mode. > If non-nil, scrolling commands can be used in Isearch mode. > > If the value is t, the current match cannot be scrolled off-screen, > but that limitation is removed if the value is `unlimited'. > You may want to enable `lazy-highlight-buffer' in this case." > > And I think I slightly prefer the first one. Note that I rephrased > the last part. Yes, both of those variants are also clear. In any case, the fact that nil is the default should be stated clearly, and the nil and non-nil cases should be stated up front. That different non-nil cases exist comes afterward, so it is clear that they have a common non-nil behavior. I think it's can sometimes be clearer to put all of the description(s) of non-nil behavior together, but it's not a requirement for a clear description. Describing the general nil vs non-nil together is usually helpful, I think, before mentioning any particular non-nil behavior (unless it is the default). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-11-30 0:27 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-30 7:28 ` Eli Zaretskii [not found] ` <<83lg5bc9d6.fsf@gnu.org> @ 2018-12-04 0:29 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-04 14:46 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-05 12:59 ` Michael Heerdegen 2 siblings, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-04 0:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839-done > But I don't really need to understand. I reviewed > what you wrote about that only because you included > it in a reply to this (other) bug report. Ignore my > feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection' if you like > - no problem. Thank you for your feedback, all your remarks were taken into consideration, committed to master, and this enhancement request closed. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-04 0:29 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-04 14:46 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-04 20:46 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-05 12:59 ` Michael Heerdegen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-12-04 14:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839-done > > But I don't really need to understand. I reviewed > > what you wrote about that only because you included > > it in a reply to this (other) bug report. Ignore my > > feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection' if you like > > - no problem. > > Thank you for your feedback, all your remarks were > taken into consideration, committed to master, and > this enhancement request closed. I'm amazed by this, Juri. You introduced stuff into this bug thread that is about another bug entirely (`*-allow-shift-selection'). I replied to your feedback about this bug, point by point. And, hoping to help, I also provided some feedback about that other, unrelated bug. What you quote above is about that _other_ bug, not this one. I said that you can, if you like, ignore my feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection'. That bug is not something I'm really concerned about - my feedback about it was just trying to be helpful. As for this bug, I made clear that all that it calls for does not yet seem to be provided by your proposed changes. Yet you reply (only) to my comment that you can ignore my feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection', to say that you have therefore closed _this_ bug. I'm amazed - unless you did this accidentally, confusing the two bugs and meaning to close the other bug instead. If you really intended to close this bug, please say how "all [my] remarks were taken into consideration" and how this enhancement request has been entirely fulfilled. That's not clear to me. From my point of view, it seems like you've made changes to fix other bugs that incidentally make progress toward also realizing the enhancement requested by this bug. That's all good. But I don't see that this enhancement has been realized. I addressed this in specific ways, none of which you've responded to in this closure message. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-04 14:46 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-12-04 20:46 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-04 21:38 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-12-04 20:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839-done > -----Original Message----- > From: Drew Adams > Sent: Tuesday, December 4, 2018 6:46 AM > To: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: 15839-done@debbugs.gnu.org > Subject: bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll > point off screen temporarily > > > > But I don't really need to understand. I reviewed > > > what you wrote about that only because you included > > > it in a reply to this (other) bug report. Ignore my > > > feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection' if you like > > > - no problem. > > > > Thank you for your feedback, all your remarks were > > taken into consideration, committed to master, and > > this enhancement request closed. > > I'm amazed by this, Juri. You introduced stuff > into this bug thread that is about another bug > entirely (`*-allow-shift-selection'). > > I replied to your feedback about this bug, point by > point. And, hoping to help, I also provided some > feedback about that other, unrelated bug. > > What you quote above is about that _other_ bug, not > this one. I said that you can, if you like, ignore > my feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection'. That > bug is not something I'm really concerned about - > my feedback about it was just trying to be helpful. > > As for this bug, I made clear that all that it > calls for does not yet seem to be provided by > your proposed changes. > > Yet you reply (only) to my comment that you can > ignore my feedback about `*-allow-shift-selection', > to say that you have therefore closed _this_ bug. > > I'm amazed - unless you did this accidentally, > confusing the two bugs and meaning to close the > other bug instead. > > If you really intended to close this bug, please > say how "all [my] remarks were taken into > consideration" and how this enhancement request > has been entirely fulfilled. That's not clear > to me. > > From my point of view, it seems like you've made > changes to fix other bugs that incidentally make > progress toward also realizing the enhancement > requested by this bug. That's all good. > > But I don't see that this enhancement has been > realized. I addressed this in specific ways, > none of which you've responded to in this > closure message. Apologies, as I seem to have misunderstood. I thought that you were just saying that what you had come up with last time is what you installed. Regarding that, this is what I thought was unfinished: >> No, this is not the case. This is very difficult >> to implement, and not worth the effort because this feature >> is already available by customizing lazy-highlight-buffer. > > I see. That disappoints me. We have lazy > highlighting but we can't use it lazily, except for > the original design of being limited to a windowful? > > Can't we "just" let scrolling move the "window limits" > as you scroll? (Yes, I'm making this up, without > looking at the code.) > > This highlight-as-you-go should really be considered > part of this enhancement request, IMO. And I mentioned > it as such. But if you don't want to tackle that part > initially, or if indeed it ends up being too complex in > the end, then so be it, for now. I thought what you installed still included that telling users that to ensure they get lazy highlighting everywhere they scroll they may need to customize `lazy-highlight-buffer. As you didn't say anything different I assumed that the "very difficult to implement, and not worth the effort" was what was reflected in what you installed. I've now tried what you ended up installing, and I see that that's not the case (and that you removed the advice that you might need to set `lazy-highlight-buffer' to t to see highlighting when scrolling). What you installed does indeed seem to implement this enhancement. Thank you for that, and sorry for not understanding and reacting negatively. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-04 20:46 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-12-04 21:38 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-05 0:32 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-04 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 > I've now tried what you ended up installing, and I see > that that's not the case (and that you removed the advice > that you might need to set `lazy-highlight-buffer' to t > to see highlighting when scrolling). > > What you installed does indeed seem to implement this > enhancement. Thank you for that, and sorry for not > understanding and reacting negatively. Sorry for replying to a wrong comment when closing this request, there are so many comments that I picked a wrong one. I completely implemented all points from your original request, and this new feature works so well, that I already customized `isearch-allow-scroll' to `unlimited' and started using it even without enabling `lazy-highlight-buffer'. BTW, regarding another feature that you helped to develop, I just realized that the variable name `isearch-yank-on-move' is not the best one. I propose a better name `isearch-move-to-yank'. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-04 21:38 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-05 0:32 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-05 23:44 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-12-05 0:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > I've now tried what you ended up installing, and I see > > that that's not the case (and that you removed the advice > > that you might need to set `lazy-highlight-buffer' to t > > to see highlighting when scrolling). > > > > What you installed does indeed seem to implement this > > enhancement. Thank you for that, and sorry for not > > understanding and reacting negatively. > > Sorry for replying to a wrong comment when closing this request, > there are so many comments that I picked a wrong one. I understand. I too am lost in several threads (not to mention work ;-)). > I completely implemented all points from your original request, > and this new feature works so well, that I already customized > `isearch-allow-scroll' to `unlimited' and started using it > even without enabling `lazy-highlight-buffer'. Yes, it works fine without `lazy-highlight-buffer', AFAICT. What happened to "This is very difficult to implement"? You seem to have silently (and quickly) solved that one somehow. > BTW, regarding another feature that you helped to develop, > I just realized that the variable name `isearch-yank-on-move' is not > the best one. I propose a better name `isearch-move-to-yank'. Sounds good. Except that "move to" has a connotation of moving to some place, e.g., move to a place where something was yanked or will be yanked. What about something like `cursor-movement-yanks' or `movement-yanks' or `moving-yanks'? --- FWIW, all such names, including `move-to-yank' would be clearer with the RMS convention of having suffix `-flag'. That was the Emacs convention, until Stefan I think. I still follow it. And I use suffix `-p' for a non-option variable. (And yes, a Boolean variable can be thought of as a (nullary) predicate.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-05 0:32 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-12-05 23:44 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-06 1:20 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-05 23:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Drew Adams; +Cc: 15839 >> > I've now tried what you ended up installing, and I see >> > that that's not the case (and that you removed the advice >> > that you might need to set `lazy-highlight-buffer' to t >> > to see highlighting when scrolling). >> > >> > What you installed does indeed seem to implement this >> > enhancement. Thank you for that, and sorry for not >> > understanding and reacting negatively. >> >> Sorry for replying to a wrong comment when closing this request, >> there are so many comments that I picked a wrong one. > > I understand. I too am lost in several threads (not to mention work ;-)). > >> I completely implemented all points from your original request, >> and this new feature works so well, that I already customized >> `isearch-allow-scroll' to `unlimited' and started using it >> even without enabling `lazy-highlight-buffer'. > > Yes, it works fine without `lazy-highlight-buffer', AFAICT. > > What happened to "This is very difficult to > implement"? You seem to have silently (and > quickly) solved that one somehow. This is because I misunderstood what you described at first. Later I realized what it's about. >> BTW, regarding another feature that you helped to develop, >> I just realized that the variable name `isearch-yank-on-move' is not >> the best one. I propose a better name `isearch-move-to-yank'. > > Sounds good. > > Except that "move to" has a connotation of moving > to some place, e.g., move to a place where something > was yanked or will be yanked. I see, its ambiguity is like in `move-to-column'. > What about something like `cursor-movement-yanks' > or `movement-yanks' or `moving-yanks'? > > --- > > FWIW, all such names, including `move-to-yank' would > be clearer with the RMS convention of having suffix > `-flag'. > > That was the Emacs convention, until Stefan I think. > I still follow it. And I use suffix `-p' for a > non-option variable. (And yes, a Boolean variable > can be thought of as a (nullary) predicate.) Isn't the suffix `-p' allowed only for predicate functions? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-05 23:44 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-06 1:20 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2018-12-06 1:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 > > FWIW, all such names, including `move-to-yank' would > > be clearer with the RMS convention of having suffix > > `-flag'. > > > > That was the Emacs convention, until Stefan I think. > > I still follow it. And I use suffix `-p' for a > > non-option variable. (And yes, a Boolean variable > > can be thought of as a (nullary) predicate.) > > Isn't the suffix `-p' allowed only for predicate functions? I believe that's the Emacs argument, yes. In particular, I believe it's Stefan's argument - dunno whether it is in some way "official". What I was saying was the _I_ use suffix `-flag' for an option and suffix `-p' (or `p') for a non-option variable. That makes things very clear (to me). Add `-flag' to any of the names considered above, and the ambiguity and lack of clarity is diminished, if not dispelled altogether. And suffix `-flag' is not "disallowed", AFAIK. Of course, Isearch already has other boolean options that do not use such a suffix. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-04 0:29 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-04 14:46 ` Drew Adams @ 2018-12-05 12:59 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-05 23:49 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-05 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 15839; +Cc: juri Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> writes: > Thank you for your feedback, all your remarks were taken into > consideration, committed to master, and this enhancement request > closed. Thank you for working on this. I have a question: I customized isearch-yank-on-move now to shift, but left and right still exit isearch, I think because I (well, I guess, not only I) have a global binding of shift-left and shift-right. Is there a way to make shift-left and shift-right work nonetheless? I tried #+begin_src emacs-lisp (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift left)] nil) (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift right)] nil) #+end_src but that doesn't seem to do it. Thanks, Michael. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-05 12:59 ` Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-05 23:49 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-06 12:15 ` Michael Heerdegen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-05 23:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Heerdegen; +Cc: 15839 > I have a question: I customized isearch-yank-on-move now to shift, but > left and right still exit isearch, I think because I (well, I guess, not > only I) have a global binding of shift-left and shift-right. Isn't this binding of shift-left and shift-right from Org mode? I still have no solution how to use this feature in Org mode. Or maybe your shift-left and shift-right bindings come from windmove-default-keybindings? There is still no solution because windmove's global shift-binding exits Isearch and moves to another window. > Is there a way to make shift-left and shift-right work nonetheless? I > tried > > #+begin_src emacs-lisp > (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift left)] nil) > (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift right)] nil) > #+end_src > > but that doesn't seem to do it. I tried their original keybindings (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift left)] 'left-char) (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift right)] 'right-char) but it still doesn't work. Maybe we should support shift-key in isearch explicitly, not relying on this-command-keys-shift-translated. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-05 23:49 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-06 12:15 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-06 23:03 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-06 12:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> writes: > Isn't this binding of shift-left and shift-right from Org mode? No, I simply have personal global bindings for these: (global-set-key [(shift left)] #'backward-char) (global-set-key [(shift right)] #'forward-char) > I tried their original keybindings > > (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift left)] 'left-char) > (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift right)] 'right-char) > > but it still doesn't work. Maybe we should support shift-key in > isearch explicitly, not relying on this-command-keys-shift-translated. Maybe, I dunno. If something prominent as org-mode interferes with that, it would probably good to find a solution. Michael. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-06 12:15 ` Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-06 23:03 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-07 12:42 ` Michael Heerdegen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-06 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Heerdegen; +Cc: 15839 >> Isn't this binding of shift-left and shift-right from Org mode? > > No, I simply have personal global bindings for these: > > (global-set-key [(shift left)] #'backward-char) > (global-set-key [(shift right)] #'forward-char) Your keybindings are related to cursor motion, so it makes sense to allow them to work in isearch-mode. One way to do this: (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift left)] (lambda (&optional n) (interactive "^p") (setq isearch-pre-move-point (point)) (call-interactively 'backward-char))) (define-key isearch-mode-map [(shift right)] (lambda (&optional n) (interactive "^p") (setq isearch-pre-move-point (point)) (call-interactively 'forward-char))) Or do you want to be able to put properties to allow a command, e.g.: (put 'backward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) (put 'forward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) with such patch diff --git a/lisp/isearch.el b/lisp/isearch.el index dcd119a517..6b0d9f03af 100644 --- a/lisp/isearch.el +++ b/lisp/isearch.el @@ -2871,7 +2871,11 @@ isearch-pre-command-hook (stringp (nth 1 (interactive-form this-command))) (string-match-p "^^" (nth 1 (interactive-form this-command)))))) (and (eq isearch-yank-on-move 'shift) - this-command-keys-shift-translated)) + (or (and this-command-keys-shift-translated + (symbolp this-command) + (not (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'disabled))) + (and (symbolp this-command) + (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'enabled))))) (setq this-command-keys-shift-translated nil) (setq isearch-pre-move-point (point))) ;; Append control characters to the search string I'm still not sure if this needed to be generalized more, and how far. For example, I think that shift-left and shift-right from org-mode should exit Isearch as well as windmove shift-keys should exit Isearch and move focus to another window. ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-06 23:03 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-07 12:42 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-08 23:38 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-07 12:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> writes: > + (or (and this-command-keys-shift-translated > + (symbolp this-command) > + (not (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'disabled))) > + (and (symbolp this-command) > + (eq (get this-command 'isearch-move) 'enabled))))) Yes, that would probably be nice. > I'm still not sure if this needed to be generalized more, and how far. > For example, I think that shift-left and shift-right > from org-mode should exit Isearch as well as windmove shift-keys > should exit Isearch and move focus to another window. This isearch-yank-on-move -> 'shift thing is a difficult matter. I'm not sure any more if it's a good idea. It's confusing if I get a different behavior depending on the current major mode. As a user I would rather expect that the rule would be that Isearch would test any shift binding to see what the binding without shift is doing, and invoke that if it is a moving command. Thanks, Michael. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-07 12:42 ` Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-08 23:38 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-09 1:13 ` Michael Heerdegen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-08 23:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Heerdegen; +Cc: 15839 >> I'm still not sure if this needed to be generalized more, and how far. >> For example, I think that shift-left and shift-right >> from org-mode should exit Isearch as well as windmove shift-keys >> should exit Isearch and move focus to another window. > > This isearch-yank-on-move -> 'shift thing is a difficult matter. I'm > not sure any more if it's a good idea. It's confusing if I get a > different behavior depending on the current major mode. As a user I > would rather expect that the rule would be that Isearch would test any > shift binding to see what the binding without shift is doing, and invoke > that if it is a moving command. This is what this-command-keys-shift-translated was intended to do together with ^ in interactive spec. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-08 23:38 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-09 1:13 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-10 0:21 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-09 1:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> writes: > > This isearch-yank-on-move -> 'shift thing is a difficult matter. > > I'm not sure any more if it's a good idea. It's confusing if I get > > a different behavior depending on the current major mode. As a user > > I would rather expect that the rule would be that Isearch would test > > any shift binding to see what the binding without shift is doing, > > and invoke that if it is a moving command. > > This is what this-command-keys-shift-translated was intended to do > together with ^ in interactive spec. I don't follow. If a shifted key, like shift-left, is bound, there is no shift translation happening. So your code doesn't kick in because your condition isn't met, instead of calling the binding of the unshifted key (left in my example). Michael. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-09 1:13 ` Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-10 0:21 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-10 0:58 ` Michael Heerdegen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-10 0:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Heerdegen; +Cc: 15839 >> > This isearch-yank-on-move -> 'shift thing is a difficult matter. >> > I'm not sure any more if it's a good idea. It's confusing if I get >> > a different behavior depending on the current major mode. As a user >> > I would rather expect that the rule would be that Isearch would test >> > any shift binding to see what the binding without shift is doing, >> > and invoke that if it is a moving command. >> >> This is what this-command-keys-shift-translated was intended to do >> together with ^ in interactive spec. > > I don't follow. If a shifted key, like shift-left, is bound, there is > no shift translation happening. So your code doesn't kick in because > your condition isn't met, instead of calling the binding of the > unshifted key (left in my example). The problem is that some commands that are called with shift-key are unsuitable for isearch, e.g. S-M-< (beginning-of-buffer) should not put all text from the beginning of the buffer to the search string. It seems we can't detect such commands automatically, so one way to support a command is to put a property with the patch that I sent recently, e.g. (put 'backward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) (put 'forward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-10 0:21 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-10 0:58 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-11 0:37 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-10 0:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> writes: > The problem is that some commands that are called with shift-key > are unsuitable for isearch, e.g. S-M-< (beginning-of-buffer) > should not put all text from the beginning of the buffer > to the search string. > > It seems we can't detect such commands automatically, > so one way to support a command is to put a property > with the patch that I sent recently, e.g. > > (put 'backward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) > (put 'forward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) That sounds ok to me. It would even give the user a way to configure which commands are ok. Michael. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-10 0:58 ` Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-11 0:37 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-11 18:22 ` Michael Heerdegen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-11 0:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Heerdegen; +Cc: 15839 tags 15839 fixed close 15839 27.1 thanks >> It seems we can't detect such commands automatically, >> so one way to support a command is to put a property >> with the patch that I sent recently, e.g. >> >> (put 'backward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) >> (put 'forward-char 'isearch-move 'enabled) > > That sounds ok to me. It would even give the user a way to configure > which commands are ok. Pushed to master. Please try. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily 2018-12-11 0:37 ` Juri Linkov @ 2018-12-11 18:22 ` Michael Heerdegen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Michael Heerdegen @ 2018-12-11 18:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: 15839 Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> writes: > Pushed to master. Please try. Works for me - thanks! Michael. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2018-12-11 18:22 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 38+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2013-11-08 23:02 bug#15839: 24.3.50; `isearch-allow-scroll': be able to scroll point off screen temporarily Drew Adams 2013-11-09 0:57 ` Juri Linkov 2013-11-09 3:09 ` Drew Adams 2013-11-10 13:46 ` Stefan Monnier 2013-11-10 16:52 ` Drew Adams 2013-11-11 19:08 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-24 22:45 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-25 3:14 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-25 20:15 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-26 0:16 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-26 23:35 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-27 0:49 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-28 0:35 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-28 15:15 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-28 23:01 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-29 3:36 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-29 22:23 ` Juri Linkov 2018-11-30 0:27 ` Drew Adams 2018-11-30 7:28 ` Eli Zaretskii [not found] ` <<83lg5bc9d6.fsf@gnu.org> 2018-11-30 15:33 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-04 0:29 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-04 14:46 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-04 20:46 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-04 21:38 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-05 0:32 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-05 23:44 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-06 1:20 ` Drew Adams 2018-12-05 12:59 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-05 23:49 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-06 12:15 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-06 23:03 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-07 12:42 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-08 23:38 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-09 1:13 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-10 0:21 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-10 0:58 ` Michael Heerdegen 2018-12-11 0:37 ` Juri Linkov 2018-12-11 18:22 ` Michael Heerdegen
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