* show binary in hexidecimal not octal @ 2006-12-25 20:25 Dan Jacobson 2006-12-27 17:45 ` Kevin Rodgers 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Dan Jacobson @ 2006-12-25 20:25 UTC (permalink / raw) In emacs binary content is shown in octal notation. There is no way to make it shown in hexidecimal notation. No I'm not talking about hexl mode or whatever. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: show binary in hexidecimal not octal 2006-12-25 20:25 show binary in hexidecimal not octal Dan Jacobson @ 2006-12-27 17:45 ` Kevin Rodgers 2007-01-03 18:32 ` Dan Jacobson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2006-12-27 17:45 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Jacobson wrote: > In emacs binary content is shown in octal notation. > There is no way to make it shown in hexidecimal notation. Sure there is: (defvar hex-display-table-prefix "\\") (defvar hex-display-table-suffix nil) (defvar hex-display-table (let ((table (make-display-table)) (char ?\x00)) (while (<= char ?\xFF) (unless (equal char ?\n) (aset table char (vconcat hex-display-table-prefix (format "%02X" char) hex-display-table-suffix))) (setq char (1+ char))) table)) (setq buffer-display-table hex-display-table) > No I'm not talking about hexl mode or whatever. -- Kevin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: show binary in hexidecimal not octal 2006-12-27 17:45 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2007-01-03 18:32 ` Dan Jacobson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread From: Dan Jacobson @ 2007-01-03 18:32 UTC (permalink / raw) Do (compile "perl -e 'for(0..99999){print chr}' 2>&-" nil) I see ^@^A^B...^Z^[^\^]^^^_ !"#$%&'()*+,-./01...wxyz{|}~^? \200\201\202\203\204...\374\375\376\377 then Unicode etc. I am happy with what I see, except that I want the octal shown in hex instead. I.e. I am only unhappy about \200...\377. Kevin> (setq buffer-display-table ... I believe the solution instead lies in a new variable that controls a deeper down C code item, without the user needing to fiddle with buffer-display-table nor standard-display-table etc. No need to target any specific characters, all I am saying is deep down when emacs feels the urge to send a octal representation to the screen, it sends instead a hex representation. I am saying "emacs old buddy, you are doing a perfect job at selecting what bytes or characters or whatever to send to the screen as (the four byte) \222, etc. Now just allow the user the choice of how he wants them shown: hex, octal (current), binary, decimal, etc." Also there should be a way to paste the e.g., \222 that we see into another buffer as the four bytes, not one, without having to resort to emacs -nw and the mouse. (By the way (compile "perl -e 'for(0..99999){print chr}' 2>&-" nil) causes error in process filter: font-lock-fontify-keywords-region: Stack overflow in regexp matcher. Probably for good reason. But that is not what I'm worried about here.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-01-03 18:32 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 3+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-12-25 20:25 show binary in hexidecimal not octal Dan Jacobson 2006-12-27 17:45 ` Kevin Rodgers 2007-01-03 18:32 ` Dan Jacobson
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