From: dalanicolai <dalanicolai@gmail.com>
To: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org
Subject: Re: Two questions about overlays
Date: Tue, 21 Feb 2023 14:57:04 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CACJP=3mygFJq_+NP5bDV4dLDYTiBiP45F85iq_zYCYECyGsWyg@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CACJP=3=fGjLo03T+P-zstDdi9-ySpd41s4KJnNsCjepCgP7wjw@mail.gmail.com>
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B.t.w. I am using Emacs 29 (and 30), and the overlay-recenter is still
there.
Maybe it would be handy to remove it then?
On Tue, 21 Feb 2023 at 14:50, dalanicolai <dalanicolai@gmail.com> wrote:
> Let me, additionally, very briefly explain what the code is doing, and
> what I am expecting (as an attempt to make it immediately clear what I
> mean).
>
> So the code is first simply creating (for my dir) 108 overlays. Then
> in 'scrap-dir-images' are made to display the images from the
> directory. Immediately, after the
> '(seq-do-indexed (lambda (im n) (overlay-put ... 'display ...)'
> the function print the value of '(overlays-in (window-start)
> (window-end))',
> which return 108. However, I expect it to print 2, as the overlays should
> have the size of the images now (and I see only two images simultaneously
> on
> screen). Indeed when doing 'M-: (overlays-in (window-start) (window-end))'
> immediately after creating the 'image gallery', it returns 2.
>
> On Tue, 21 Feb 2023 at 14:39, dalanicolai <dalanicolai@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> In this example code, I am simply displaying all images at once,
>> because I am assuming that the images in the directory are not too
>> many and that they are small (which is not a very reasonable
>> assumption, but this is just my personal 'test' function).
>>
>> Indeed, the example does not call sit-for, because it should show that
>> the printed number of overlays, is the number of all images in the
>> directory (instead of only the number of images currently on the
>> screen, i.e. within '(overlays-in (window-start) (window-end))' ).
>>
>> For example, I have a directory with 108 images, when I run 'M-x
>> scrap-dir-images' it print 108, although it should print the number of
>> images on screen i.e. by '(overlays-in (window-start) (window-end))',
>> which value is what 'scrap-dir-images' prints. However, the images
>> are normal 'foto' size, so that I only see two images on screen, and
>> indeed doing 'M-: (overlays-in (window-start) (window-end))' manually
>> now prints 2. If I had added the '(sit-for)' in the example
>> code, then I would have 'fixed' the problem, and 'scrap-dir-images'
>> would have printed 2 immediately because the display property
>> ('expansion of the overlays') got enough time to take effect.
>>
>> I hope this clears things up, but of course I would be happy to try
>> another explanation (e.g. sending by adding an animated gif).
>>
>> But this function is a no-op in Emacs 29 and later, since the overlays
>>> were reimplemented in a way that makes it unnecessary to "center" the
>>> list of overlays. So you can forget about that and ignore this
>>> function.
>>>
>>
>> Thanks, that is indeed handy to know.
>>
>> On Tue, 21 Feb 2023 at 14:21, Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> wrote:
>>
>>> > From: dalanicolai <dalanicolai@gmail.com>
>>> > Date: Tue, 21 Feb 2023 13:46:56 +0100
>>> >
>>> > So now here are the questions:
>>> >
>>> > - when displaying multiple pages in columns, I would like to use the
>>> > overlays-in function to determine which overlays should display
>>> > images. So I am creating a full 'book roll' by giving the overlays a
>>> > size via the 'space' display property, after which I use overlays-in
>>> > to determine which overlays are actually visible. However, after it
>>> > takes some time for the 'space' display property to take effect, so I
>>> > am manuall adding a 'sit-for' with some reasonable delay
>>> > time. However, I would like to ask if there is someone has an idea for
>>> > a 'better' mechanism to wait until/detect if the 'overlay expansion'
>>> > has finished.
>>> >
>>> > If the explanation is not clear then please load the following file
>>> > and do 'M-x scrap-dir-images' on a directory that contains enough
>>> > images to not fit all on a single screen. It will print the number of
>>> > overlays found via 'overlays-in' directly after 'displaying the
>>> > images' (here by assigning the image as display property instead of
>>> > space). You will find it prints all overlays in the buffer (instead of
>>> > only the ones on screen). To find what I expect it to print now
>>> > (again) do 'M-: (overlays-in (window-start) (window-end))'.
>>>
>>> I did all that, and I still don't understand the question. In
>>> particular, your code doesn't call sit-for, so I'm unsure what exactly
>>> is the problem you are asking about here.
>>>
>>> > My second question is about the function 'overlay-recenter' I don't
>>> > really understand its docstring. What kind of 'overlay lookup' would
>>> > go faster? What is 'overlay-lookup' anyway?
>>>
>>> Looking up overlays that are relevant to a particular buffer position.
>>>
>>> But this function is a no-op in Emacs 29 and later, since the overlays
>>> were reimplemented in a way that makes it unnecessary to "center" the
>>> list of overlays. So you can forget about that and ignore this
>>> function.
>>>
>>
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2023-02-21 13:57 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2023-02-21 12:46 Two questions about overlays dalanicolai
2023-02-21 13:21 ` Eli Zaretskii
2023-02-21 13:39 ` dalanicolai
2023-02-21 13:50 ` dalanicolai
2023-02-21 13:57 ` dalanicolai [this message]
2023-02-21 14:16 ` dalanicolai
2023-02-21 14:52 ` dalanicolai
2023-02-21 15:03 ` Eli Zaretskii
2023-02-21 15:17 ` dalanicolai
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