;;; prog-mode.el --- Generic major mode for programming -*- lexical-binding: t -*- ;; Copyright (C) 2013-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org ;; Keywords: internal ;; Package: emacs ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or ;; (at your option) any later version. ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see . ;;; Commentary: ;; This major mode is mostly intended as a parent of other programming ;; modes. All major modes for programming languages should derive from this ;; mode so that users can put generic customization on prog-mode-hook. ;;; Code: (eval-when-compile (require 'cl-lib) (require 'subr-x)) (defgroup prog-mode nil "Generic programming mode, from which others derive." :group 'languages) (defcustom prog-mode-hook nil "Normal hook run when entering programming modes." :type 'hook :options '(flyspell-prog-mode abbrev-mode flymake-mode linum-mode prettify-symbols-mode) :group 'prog-mode) (defvar prog-mode-map (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) (define-key map [?\C-\M-q] 'prog-indent-sexp) map) "Keymap used for programming modes.") (defvar prog-indentation-context nil "When non-nil, provides context for indenting embedded code chunks. There are languages where part of the code is actually written in a sub language, e.g., a Yacc/Bison or ANTLR grammar also consists of plain C code. This variable enables the major mode of the main language to use the indentation engine of the sub-mode for lines in code chunks written in the sub-mode's language. When a major mode of such a main language decides to delegate the indentation of a line/region to the indentation engine of the sub mode, it should bind this variable to non-nil around the call. The non-nil value should be a list of the form: (FIRST-COLUMN (START . END) PREVIOUS-CHUNKS) FIRST-COLUMN is the column the indentation engine of the sub-mode should use for top-level language constructs inside the code chunk (instead of 0). START and END specify the region of the code chunk. END can be nil, which stands for the value of `point-max'. The function `prog-widen' uses this to restore restrictions imposed by the sub-mode's indentation engine. PREVIOUS-CHUNKS, if non-nil, provides the indentation engine of the sub-mode with the virtual context of the code chunk. Valid values are: - A string containing text which the indentation engine can consider as standing in front of the code chunk. To cache the string's calculated syntactic information for repeated calls with the same string, the sub-mode can add text-properties to the string. A typical use case is for grammars with code chunks which are to be indented like function bodies -- the string would contain the corresponding function preamble. - A function, to be called with the start position of the current chunk. It should return either the region of the previous chunk as (PREV-START . PREV-END), or nil if there is no previous chunk. A typical use case are literate programming sources -- the function would successively return the previous code chunks.") (defun prog-indent-sexp (&optional defun) "Indent the expression after point. When interactively called with prefix, indent the enclosing defun instead." (interactive "P") (save-excursion (when defun (end-of-line) (beginning-of-defun)) (let ((start (point)) (end (progn (forward-sexp 1) (point)))) (indent-region start end nil)))) (defun prog-first-column () "Return the indentation column normally used for top-level constructs." (or (car prog-indentation-context) 0)) (defun prog-widen () "Remove restrictions (narrowing) from current code chunk or buffer. This function should be used instead of `widen' in any function used by the indentation engine to make it respect the value of `prog-indentation-context'. This function (like `widen') is useful inside a `save-restriction' to make the indentation correctly work when narrowing is in effect." (let ((chunk (cadr prog-indentation-context))) (if chunk ;; No call to `widen' is necessary here, as narrow-to-region ;; changes (not just narrows) the existing restrictions (narrow-to-region (car chunk) (or (cdr chunk) (point-max))) (widen)))) (defun prog-mode-do-auto-fill () "Like `do-auto-fill' but respect `comment-auto-fill-only-comments'." (when (or (not comment-auto-fill-only-comments) (nth 4 (syntax-ppss))) (do-auto-fill))) (defvar-local prettify-symbols-alist nil "Alist of symbol prettifications. Each element looks like (SYMBOL . CHARACTER), where the symbol matching SYMBOL (a string, not a regexp) will be shown as CHARACTER instead. CHARACTER can be a character, or it can be a list or vector, in which case it will be used to compose the new symbol as per the third argument of `compose-region'.") (defun prettify-symbols-default-compose-p (start end _match) "Return true iff the symbol MATCH should be composed. The symbol starts at position START and ends at position END. This is the default for `prettify-symbols-compose-predicate' which is suitable for most programming languages such as C or Lisp." ;; Check that the chars should really be composed into a symbol. (let* ((syntaxes-beg (if (memq (char-syntax (char-after start)) '(?w ?_)) '(?w ?_) '(?. ?\\))) (syntaxes-end (if (memq (char-syntax (char-before end)) '(?w ?_)) '(?w ?_) '(?. ?\\)))) (not (or (memq (char-syntax (or (char-before start) ?\s)) syntaxes-beg) (memq (char-syntax (or (char-after end) ?\s)) syntaxes-end) (nth 8 (syntax-ppss)))))) (defvar-local prettify-symbols-compose-predicate #'prettify-symbols-default-compose-p "A predicate for deciding if the currently matched symbol is to be composed. The matched symbol is the car of one entry in `prettify-symbols-alist'. The predicate receives the match's start and end positions as well as the match-string as arguments.") (defun prettify-symbols--compose-symbol (alist) "Compose a sequence of characters into a symbol. Regexp match data 0 specifies the characters to be composed." ;; Check that the chars should really be composed into a symbol. (let ((start (match-beginning 0)) (end (match-end 0)) (match (match-string 0))) (if (and (not (equal prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds (list start end))) (funcall prettify-symbols-compose-predicate start end match)) ;; That's a symbol alright, so add the composition. (with-silent-modifications (compose-region start end (cdr (assoc match alist))) (add-text-properties start end `(prettify-symbols-start ,start prettify-symbols-end ,end))) ;; No composition for you. Let's actually remove any ;; composition we may have added earlier and which is now ;; incorrect. (remove-text-properties start end '(composition prettify-symbols-start prettify-symbols-end)))) ;; Return nil because we're not adding any face property. nil) (defun prettify-symbols--make-keywords () (if prettify-symbols-alist `((,(regexp-opt (mapcar 'car prettify-symbols-alist) t) (0 (prettify-symbols--compose-symbol ',prettify-symbols-alist)))) nil)) (defvar-local prettify-symbols--keywords nil) (defvar-local prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds nil) (defcustom prettify-symbols-unprettify-at-point nil "If non-nil, show the non-prettified version of a symbol when point is on it. If set to the symbol `right-edge', also unprettify if point is immediately after the symbol. The prettification will be reapplied as soon as point moves away from the symbol. If set to nil, the prettification persists even when point is on the symbol." :version "25.1" :type '(choice (const :tag "Never unprettify" nil) (const :tag "Unprettify when point is inside" t) (const :tag "Unprettify when point is inside or at right edge" right-edge)) :group 'prog-mode) (defun prettify-symbols--post-command-hook () (cl-labels ((get-prop-as-list (prop) (remove nil (list (get-text-property (point) prop) (when (and (eq prettify-symbols-unprettify-at-point 'right-edge) (not (bobp))) (get-text-property (1- (point)) prop)))))) ;; Re-apply prettification to the previous symbol. (when (and prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds (or (< (point) (car prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds)) (> (point) (cadr prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds)) (and (not (eq prettify-symbols-unprettify-at-point 'right-edge)) (= (point) (cadr prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds))))) (apply #'font-lock-flush prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds) (setq prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds nil)) ;; Unprettify the current symbol. (when-let ((c (get-prop-as-list 'composition)) (s (get-prop-as-list 'prettify-symbols-start)) (e (get-prop-as-list 'prettify-symbols-end)) (s (apply #'min s)) (e (apply #'max e))) (with-silent-modifications (setq prettify-symbols--current-symbol-bounds (list s e)) (remove-text-properties s e '(composition)))))) ;;;###autoload (define-minor-mode prettify-symbols-mode "Toggle Prettify Symbols mode. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Prettify Symbols mode if ARG is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil. When Prettify Symbols mode and font-locking are enabled, symbols are prettified (displayed as composed characters) according to the rules in `prettify-symbols-alist' (which see), which are locally defined by major modes supporting prettifying. To add further customizations for a given major mode, you can modify `prettify-symbols-alist' thus: (add-hook \\='emacs-lisp-mode-hook (lambda () (push \\='(\"<=\" . ?≤) prettify-symbols-alist))) You can enable this mode locally in desired buffers, or use `global-prettify-symbols-mode' to enable it for all modes that support it." :init-value nil (if prettify-symbols-mode ;; Turn on (when (setq prettify-symbols--keywords (prettify-symbols--make-keywords)) (font-lock-add-keywords nil prettify-symbols--keywords) (setq-local font-lock-extra-managed-props (append font-lock-extra-managed-props '(composition prettify-symbols-start prettify-symbols-end))) (when prettify-symbols-unprettify-at-point (add-hook 'post-command-hook #'prettify-symbols--post-command-hook nil t)) (font-lock-flush)) ;; Turn off (remove-hook 'post-command-hook #'prettify-symbols--post-command-hook t) (when prettify-symbols--keywords (font-lock-remove-keywords nil prettify-symbols--keywords) (setq prettify-symbols--keywords nil)) (when (memq 'composition font-lock-extra-managed-props) (setq font-lock-extra-managed-props (delq 'composition font-lock-extra-managed-props)) (with-silent-modifications (remove-text-properties (point-min) (point-max) '(composition nil)))))) (defun turn-on-prettify-symbols-mode () (when (and (not prettify-symbols-mode) (local-variable-p 'prettify-symbols-alist)) (prettify-symbols-mode 1))) ;;;###autoload (define-globalized-minor-mode global-prettify-symbols-mode prettify-symbols-mode turn-on-prettify-symbols-mode) ;;;###autoload (define-derived-mode prog-mode fundamental-mode "Prog" "Major mode for editing programming language source code." (setq-local require-final-newline mode-require-final-newline) (setq-local parse-sexp-ignore-comments t) (setq-local normal-auto-fill-function #'prog-mode-do-auto-fill) ;; Any programming language is always written left to right. (setq bidi-paragraph-direction 'left-to-right)) (provide 'prog-mode) ;;; prog-mode.el ends here