From: Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com>
To: Thorsten Jolitz <tjolitz@gmail.com>
Cc: org mode <emacs-orgmode@gnu.org>
Subject: Re: [ANN] org-dp-wrap-in-block
Date: Sat, 7 Mar 2015 10:08:16 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAOQHXPqfiQppFbE=31=vBzM7nxfy+_JQCa2NY+fA0ZJETFMi-w@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAOQHXPrZhEmbwXYJ4mn_PvjiOnX-=NKEkeX4EHwHGzWJd_XJ_w@mail.gmail.com>
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Ok so spend all morning picking up some elisp and i made some progress :)
i can bind a key to auto warp a line. though i had to add a delete command
since it always added 2 empty spaces after the wrap for some reason., it
now looks like this (since its my first ever elisp code its probably very
ugly :) ) :
;;;;;;;;;; wrap in elisp
(defun z/wrap-in-elisp-block ()
(org-dp-wrap-in-block
nil '(src-block nil nil nil (:language "emacs-lisp"))))
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c w e")
(lambda ()
(interactive)
(beginning-of-line)
(z/wrap-in-elisp-block)
(beginning-of-line)
(delete-char 2)
; (delete-indentation)
))
this seems to work on a selection as well (with the whitespace again
appearing)
i have some more ideas and wondered if anyone knew how to extend it by
maybe creating functions that will:
1. ask how many X lines to wrap
2. paste from clip already wrapped in language X
3. auto select a region/paragraph and wrap. im thinking maybe using
expand-region.el for that
thanks alot Thorsten for this great library!
Z
On Sat, Mar 7, 2015 at 8:37 AM, Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com> wrote:
> H Thorsten
>
> i know this is a *very* late response but life/work has dragged me in last
> few months and only now i have time to take a look at org-dp :)
>
> if you remember i have near to null coding skills but i am trying to make
> sense of stuff looking at the github site and the org-dp.el examples
>
> i understand (or at least i think i do) that org-dp is very complex and
> covers not just wrapping in source code lines/areas but what i basically
> need is to assign hotkeys to specific wrapping. mainly these:
>
> 1. a hotkey to quick wrap in language X a line
> 2. a hotkey to quick wrap in language X y lines
> 3. a hotkey to quick wrap in language X a selection
>
> any tips and how to start/create these keybinds? is there a more
> comprehensive documentation on org-dp somewhere else i may have overlooked?
>
> thx alot!
>
> z
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 10:41 PM, Thorsten Jolitz <tjolitz@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com> writes:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> > will use it over the next few days and report bug (if any) that i find
>>
>> good, thanks.
>>
>> As a hint, here the global keybindings I defined in my init.el (my
>> default use-case is to simply wrap in a plain emacs-lisp src-block).
>>
>> You can define all kinds of functions that don't prompt the user anymore
>> by giving a list like
>>
>> '(elem-type contents replace affiliated args)
>>
>> as second arg to `org-dp-wrap-in-block', and in that list you can
>> specify any kind of customized block.
>>
>> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
>> (when (require 'org-dp-lib nil t)
>>
>> (defun tj/wrap-in-elisp-block ()
>> (org-dp-wrap-in-block
>> nil '(src-block nil nil nil (:language "emacs-lisp"))))
>>
>> (global-set-key (kbd "C-c w w") 'org-dp-wrap-in-block)
>>
>> (global-set-key (kbd "C-c w l")
>> (lambda ()
>> (interactive)
>> (let ((current-prefix-arg '(4)))
>> (call-interactively
>> 'org-dp-wrap-in-block))))
>>
>> (global-set-key (kbd "C-c w e")
>> (lambda ()
>> (interactive)
>> (beginning-of-line)
>> (tj/wrap-in-elisp-block)))
>>
>> (global-set-key (kbd "C-c w a")
>> (lambda ()
>> (interactive)
>> (backward-sexp)
>> (beginning-of-line)
>> (tj/wrap-in-elisp-block))) )
>> #+END_SRC
>>
>>
>> > On Tue, Aug 19, 2014 at 5:14 PM, Thorsten Jolitz <tjolitz@gmail.com>
>> > wrote:
>> >
>> > Hi List,
>> >
>> > I've written the "eierlegende Wollmilchsau" of wrap-in-block
>> > functions
>> > (i.e. the 'all-inclusive mother of all wrap-in-block functions').
>> >
>> > To check it out, you need to
>> > 1. Clone or fork the git repo (https://github.com/tj64/org-dp)
>> > 2. (add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/org-dp/") and
>> > 3. (require 'org-dp-lib') in your init file
>> >
>> > `org-dp-wrap-in-block' works on/with all kinds of Org blocks, and
>> > can be
>> > called interactively or non-interactively.
>> >
>> > It
>> >
>> > - inserts a new block when called on an empty line without
>> > arguments
>> >
>> > - wraps sexp or region or '+/- X lines from point' into a newly
>> > created
>> > block
>> >
>> > - when called with point inside a block, it either
>> >
>> > + unwraps the blocks content, i.e. deletes the surrounding block
>> > or
>> >
>> > + replaces the surrounding block with a different block
>> >
>> > It takes full account of affiliated keywords. In case of
>> > src-blocks,
>> > it puts src-block parameters on the block's headline, but with
>> > `org-dp-toggle-headers' its easy to toggle between parameters
>> >
>> > ,----
>> > | #+begin_src R :noweb yes
>> > `----
>> >
>> > and headers
>> >
>> > ,----
>> > | #+header: :noweb yes
>> > | #+begin_src R
>> > `----
>> >
>> > This function takes into account so many options that
>> > combinatorics hits
>> > you badly when trying to test all of them. Everything I tried
>> > works now
>> > with the current version, but its not unlikely that daily usage
>> > will
>> > discover some bugs or untreated corner cases. Please report them
>> > with
>> > backtrace.
>> >
>> > The good news is that besides its complexity, its not one
>> > mega-convoluted monolithic function for a single task only.
>> > Instead I
>> > outfactored the core functionality into the 'org-dp.el' library
>> > ("Declarative Programming with Org Elements") which offers
>> > potentially
>> > massive time (and headache) savings when programming with Org
>> > Elements
>> > on the local level.
>> >
>> > 'org-dp' acts on the internal representation of Org elements, and
>> > due to
>> > the total uniformity of this representation it is possible to do
>> > diverse
>> > actions on diverse elements in a very uniform way, thus the 3
>> > functions
>> >
>> > - `org-dp-create'
>> >
>> > - `org-dp-rewire'
>> >
>> > - `org-dp-prompt'
>> >
>> > should be all you need for all kinds of programming
>> > tasks. `org-dp-wrap-in-block' is one example of how to program
>> > with
>> > org-dp, `org-dp-toggle-headers' is another one.
>> >
>> > Hope that this is useful.
>> >
>> > PS
>> >
>> > For the sake of completeness, here the docstring of
>> > `org-dp-wrap-in-block':
>> >
>> > ,----[ C-h f org-dp-wrap-in-block RET ]
>> > | org-dp-wrap-in-block is an interactive Lisp function in
>> > | `org-dp-lib.el'.
>> > |
>> > | It is bound to C-c w w.
>> > |
>> > | (org-dp-wrap-in-block &optional LINES USER-INFO)
>> > |
>> > | Wrap sexp-at-point or region in Org block.
>> > |
>> > | A region instead of the sexp-at-point is wrapped if either
>> > |
>> > | - optional arg LINES is an (positive or negative) integer or
>> > |
>> > | - the region is active
>> > |
>> > | In the first case the region is determined by moving +/- LINES
>> > | forward/backward from point using `forward-line', in the second
>> > | case the active region is used.
>> > |
>> > | If point is already inside of a block, modify it or unwrap its
>> > | content/value instead of wrapping it in another block, except if
>> > | explicitly asked for by user.
>> > |
>> > | If USER-INFO is given, it should be a list in the format
>> > returned by
>> > | `org-dp-prompt', i.e.
>> > |
>> > | (elem-type contents replace affiliated args)
>> > |
>> > | Look up that function's docstring for more information about the
>> > | list's elements. A non-nil USER-INFO suppresses calls to
>> > | `org-dp-prompt' and is used instead of its return value.
>> > `----
>> >
>> > --
>> > cheers,
>> > Thorsten
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>> --
>> cheers,
>> Thorsten
>>
>>
>>
>
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2015-03-07 8:08 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2014-08-19 14:14 [ANN] org-dp-wrap-in-block Thorsten Jolitz
2014-08-19 17:15 ` Xebar Saram
2014-08-19 19:41 ` Thorsten Jolitz
2015-03-07 6:37 ` Xebar Saram
2015-03-07 8:08 ` Xebar Saram [this message]
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