(and (not (use-region-p))
- (<= orig-pos (point))))))
+ ;; Corrent line is properly indented
+ (= (current-column)
+ (let ((indent (calculate-lisp-indent)))
+ (if (listp indent)
+ (car indent)
+ indent)))
+ ;; Point at indentation
+ (= orig-pos (point))))))
Revising the diff to account for nil indent and to put the most
expensive check last:
- (and (not (use-region-p))
- (<= orig-pos (point))))))
+ (and (= orig-pos (point))
+ (not (use-region-p))
+ ;; Corrent line is properly indented
+ (let ((indent (calculate-lisp-indent)))
+ (and indent
+ (= (current-column)
+ (if (listp indent)
+ (car indent)
+ indent))))))))
Regarding:
+ ;; Only pass an explicit numeric prefix, not `C-u' prefix.
+ (unless (listp parg)
+ (prefix-numeric-value parg)))
What sort of use cases do prefix args as lists normally serve? From
what I see, they come in powers of four, which doesn't seem applicable
to adjust-parens. The Elisp manual entry doesn't really cover the
"why" of this kind of prefix arg.
+ (cl-callf or parg 1)
+ ;; Negative prefix arg inverts the behavior
+ (when (< parg 0)
+ (setq parg (- parg)
+ adjust-function
+ (cl-case adjust-function
+ (adjust-close-paren-for-indent 'adjust-close-paren-for-dedent)
+ (adjust-close-paren-for-dedent 'adjust-close-paren-for-indent)
+ (otherwise (error "Unknown adjust-function: %s" adjust-function)))))
+ (when (> parg 0)
Processing negative prefix arg makes sense. I think it is cleaner to
do it one level higher and pass the right function as the
adjust-function argument. eg:
(adjust-parens-and-indent
(if (< parg 0)
'adjust-close-paren-for-dedent
'adjust-close-paren-for-indent)
(abs parg))
+ ;; Move forward (but not back) to end of indentation (but don't
+ ;; change the indentation unlike `indent-for-tab-command'.
+ (when (< (current-column) (current-indentation))
+ (back-to-indentation))))
I figured since <backtab> is unbound in 'emacs -Q', adjust-parens
should do nothing in this case. The analogous <backtab> in Python
appears to also do nothing if it does not dedent.
It might be easier to decide what to do here with better perspective
about how people use <backtab>.
+(define-globalized-minor-mode global-adjust-parens-mode adjust-parens-mode
(lambda ()
- (local-set-key (kbd "TAB") 'lisp-indent-adjust-parens)
- (local-set-key (kbd "<backtab>") 'lisp-dedent-adjust-parens)))
+ ;; Add or remove hook
+ (funcall (if global-adjust-parens-mode #'add-hook #'remove-hook)
+ 'after-change-major-mode-hook
+ #'adjust-parens-after-change-mm-hook)
+ ;; Run the hook in existing buffers to enable/disable the mode
+ (dolist (buf (buffer-list))
+ (with-current-buffer buf
+ (adjust-parens-after-change-mm-hook)))))
adjust-parens doesn't seem global in nature, so I'm uncertain about
the choice of a global minor mode. I think a local minor mode makes
sense though. Then the user would enable it in major modes by eg:
(add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook #'adjust-parens-mode)