From: Alan Mackenzie <acm@muc.de>
To: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at>
Cc: 48674@debbugs.gnu.org, "Iris García" <iris.garcia.desebastian@gmail.com>
Subject: bug#48674: Frames and minibuffer bug
Date: Sat, 29 May 2021 17:00:04 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <YLJzFKD2JLcuGj8J@ACM> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3dba4122-30e3-99a7-2326-263f3f7023cf@gmx.at>
Hello, Martin.
On Sat, May 29, 2021 at 17:12:58 +0200, martin rudalics wrote:
> > When the user switches from F1 to F2 with C-x 5 o, and there was an
> > active minibuffer on F1, that MB gets moved to F2. The user then
> > terminnates the MB....then switches back to F1. There is no longer an
> > active MB.
> >> As a user I can always do
> >> (select-window (minibuffer-window))
> >> regardless of whether a minibuffer is active. Switching away from that
> >> window's frame and back to it is problematic in Emacs 27 - no window has
> >> the active cursor. You apparently fixed this by selecting the frame's
> >> first window when switching back. Right?
> > Yes.
> This is safe but not quite right. The last window on that frame
> selected before the minibuffer window got selected should be selected
> instead - that's the window returned by `minibuffer-selected-window'
> immediately after selecting the minibuffer window. We'd probably have
> to put that into the frame structure to make it work but this can wait.
I agree, this can wait. ;-)
> >> One reason why I ask is because with emacs -Q and the present patch
> >> (setq default-frame-alist '((minibuffer . nil)))
> >> followed by C-x 5 2 and
> >> (select-window (minibuffer-window))
> >> in the new frame violates the assertion on line 548 of window.c
> >> /* Fselect_frame called us back so we've done all the work already. */
> >> eassert (EQ (window, selected_window));
> >> with the backtrace below.
> > Just as a quick aside, how do I configure Emacs so as to generate these
> > easserts? At the moment I've got CFLAGS='-O0 -g3' and --enable-checking
> I use
> --enable-checking='yes,glyphs' --enable-check-lisp-object-type=yes
> but cannot tell which ones are right, which matter and from where I
> obtained them.
Thanks. It was just me being a bit stupid. I had
minibuffer-follows-selected-frame set to nil, so I didn't get to the code
which easserts. On setting that variable to t, I did get it.
[ .... ]
> > Maybe the best workaround would be to create a new flag in struct frame,
> > which when set means "select mini-window if "possible" when selecting
> > this frame". "Possible" meaning there's an active MB.
> > (i) This flag would be set, somehow, by with-selected-frame when moving
> > away from F1.
> I doubt that anyone knows when we move away from a frame. With
> emacs -Q --eval "(setq default-frame-alist '((minibuffer)))"
> do in the normal, non-minibuffer frame
> (select-window (minibuffer-window))
> You will see that the previous window remains selected but its mode line
> changes to inactive. So even the display engine doesn't know which
> frame is selected here. Maybe on purpose ...
I've been thinking about my proposed mechanism. There is no need for
with-selected-frame to set that new flag in struct frame. More simply,
do_switch_frame can set it whenever the old frame has the mini-window
selected. In the new frame it will check the flag and if appropriate
select the MW. Functions such as Fselect_window and
Fset_frame_selected_window which want to select a specific window would
clear the flag.
This mechanism could be implemented entirely in the C code, without
affecting any Lisp interfaces.
> > (ii) do_switch_frame would test this flag, act on it, and clear it.
> > f->flag would always be clear when f is the selected frame.
> > With this, F1's selected window would be moved away from the mini-window
> > and the flag set, when F2 gets selected. Or something like that.
> do_switch_frame is called by (i) and (ii) - so how would you "set" this
> flag in (i) and "test this flag and act on it" in (ii)? How would
> do_switch_frame distinguish between (i) and (ii)?
Sorry, I think I was a bit unclear. The flag would be in struct frame,
so (i) and (ii) would be acting on the flags for different frames.
> OTOH what would go wrong if we did always auto-select a minibuffer
> window in do_switch_frame when it is its `frame-selected-window' and
> `minibuffer-depth' is non-zero regardless of whether the window's
> minibuffer is on live_minibuffer_p or not? If it is not, then this
> frame would just become the next participant in moving the minibuffer
> from one frame to another.
I don't think that situation can arise. We're talking exclusively about
the (eq minibuffer-follows-selected-frame t) case, and in this case there
will always be a live minibuffer moved onto the target frame when
minibuffer-depth is non-zero.
I think I'm going to discard yesterday's attempted patch, and write
another patch along the lines sketched above. This will likely take me
longer than just this evening.
> martin
--
Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2021-05-29 17:00 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 21+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2021-05-26 11:23 bug#48674: Frames and minibuffer bug Iris García
2021-05-26 17:45 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-27 10:34 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-05-27 16:33 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-27 19:56 ` Iris García
2021-05-28 8:25 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-28 9:34 ` Iris García
2021-05-28 9:51 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-31 16:36 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-06-01 11:29 ` Iris García
2021-05-27 20:01 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-05-28 8:26 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-28 17:15 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-05-28 20:14 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-05-29 9:20 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-29 13:10 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-05-29 15:12 ` martin rudalics
2021-05-29 15:24 ` Eli Zaretskii
2021-05-29 17:00 ` Alan Mackenzie [this message]
2021-05-30 13:58 ` Alan Mackenzie
2021-05-31 7:55 ` martin rudalics
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