* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local @ 2009-08-05 0:17 Steve Yegge 2009-08-06 9:33 ` martin rudalics 2011-09-17 7:04 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Steve Yegge @ 2009-08-05 0:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-pretest-bug 1) emacs -q (with non-nil window-system) 2) find-file /usr/share/dict/words - any file longer than ~3x the frame height should serve to demonstrate - in remaining steps I'll call this file buffer BUF 3) (goto-char (/ (point-max) 2)) 4) (new-frame) 5) (other-frame) ; if necessary to put point in new frame 6) switch to buffer BUF 7) (goto-char (point-min)) 8) switch to buffer *scratch* (or any other buffer) 9) switch to buffer BUF Observe that point has returned to (/ (point-max) 2). In Emacs 22, buffer point behaved as if it were frame-local: at step 9, point would still be at (point-min). This change may seem innocuous, but it can be quite frustrating and mysterious if you have a multi-tty frame open at another site. The buffer point behaves as if it's "stuck": every time you switch away from the buffer and return, the point has returned to its sticky position. The behavior exhibits in both multi-tty and single-tty flavors, but is easier to trigger in a long-running multi-tty session distributed over multiple sites (e.g. home and work). It was serious enough to In GNU Emacs 23.0.92.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.9) of 2009-04-14 on stevey.krc.corp.google.com Windowing system distributor `The X.Org Foundation', version 11.0.60900000 configured using `configure '--prefix=/home/stevey/no_crawl/emacs-cvs'' Important settings: value of $LC_ALL: nil value of $LC_COLLATE: C value of $LC_CTYPE: nil value of $LC_MESSAGES: nil value of $LC_MONETARY: C value of $LC_NUMERIC: C value of $LC_TIME: C value of $LANG: en_US.UTF-8 value of $XMODIFIERS: nil locale-coding-system: utf-8-unix default-enable-multibyte-characters: t Major mode: Fundamental Minor modes in effect: shell-dirtrack-mode: t tooltip-mode: t tool-bar-mode: t mouse-wheel-mode: t menu-bar-mode: t file-name-shadow-mode: t global-font-lock-mode: t font-lock-mode: t blink-cursor-mode: t global-auto-composition-mode: t auto-composition-mode: t auto-encryption-mode: t auto-compression-mode: t line-number-mode: t transient-mark-mode: t Recent input: <help-echo> <help-echo> M-x s h e l l <return> C-x k <return> C-x b A <return> C-x k <return> C-x C-f C-a C-k / u s r / s h a r e / d i c t / w o r <tab> <return> C-x 2 C-x e M-> M-v M-v M-v C-r s t e C-a C-u C-r ^ s C-a C-x RET n e w - f r <tab> C-e C-a M-x n e w - f r <tab> <return> <switch-frame> <help-echo> <help-echo> <help-echo> C-x 2 C-x o C-x t M-< C-x b <return> C-x b w o <tab> <return> C-x o M-< C-x o C-v C-v C-v C-v C-v C-v C-v C-x o C-x 1 C-x b <return> C-x b w o <tab> <return> <switch-frame> M-x e <backspace> r e p o r t - e m a c s - b u g <tab> <return> Recent messages: For information about GNU Emacs and the GNU system, type C-h C-a. Note: file is write protected kmacro-call-macro: No kbd macro has been defined Mark set Mark saved where search started [2 times] Buffer is read-only: #<buffer words> [5 times] indent-relative: Buffer is read-only: #<buffer words> Mark set [2 times] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2009-08-05 0:17 bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local Steve Yegge @ 2009-08-06 9:33 ` martin rudalics 2011-09-17 7:04 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2009-08-06 9:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge, 4041 > This change may seem innocuous, but it can be quite frustrating and > mysterious if you have a multi-tty frame open at another site. > The buffer point behaves as if it's "stuck": every time you switch > away from the buffer and return, the point has returned to its > sticky position. > > The behavior exhibits in both multi-tty and single-tty flavors, but > is easier to trigger in a long-running multi-tty session distributed > over multiple sites (e.g. home and work). It was serious enough to No substantial contribution wrt the behavior you observe but probably installing pointback.el http://stud4.tuwien.ac.at/~e0225855/pointback/pointback.html would help you here (which is BTW yet another argument for preserving window identities during sessions). martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2009-08-05 0:17 bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local Steve Yegge 2009-08-06 9:33 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-09-17 7:04 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-09-17 8:43 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-09-17 7:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: 4041 Steve Yegge <stevey@google.com> writes: > 1) emacs -q (with non-nil window-system) > 2) find-file /usr/share/dict/words > - any file longer than ~3x the frame height should serve to demonstrate > - in remaining steps I'll call this file buffer BUF > 3) (goto-char (/ (point-max) 2)) > 4) (new-frame) > 5) (other-frame) ; if necessary to put point in new frame > 6) switch to buffer BUF > 7) (goto-char (point-min)) > 8) switch to buffer *scratch* (or any other buffer) > 9) switch to buffer BUF > > Observe that point has returned to (/ (point-max) 2). I can confirm that this behaviour is still present in Emacs 24. And it seems like an unfortunate behaviour. How difficult would it be to stash window-point (I guess) on a per-frame basis? Frame-local variables are being phased out, but it seems like this would be nice to have. -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) bloggy blog http://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-09-17 7:04 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-09-17 8:43 ` martin rudalics 2011-09-18 8:03 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-06 22:14 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-09-17 8:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen; +Cc: Steve Yegge, 4041 >> 1) emacs -q (with non-nil window-system) >> 2) find-file /usr/share/dict/words >> - any file longer than ~3x the frame height should serve to demonstrate >> - in remaining steps I'll call this file buffer BUF >> 3) (goto-char (/ (point-max) 2)) >> 4) (new-frame) >> 5) (other-frame) ; if necessary to put point in new frame >> 6) switch to buffer BUF >> 7) (goto-char (point-min)) >> 8) switch to buffer *scratch* (or any other buffer) >> 9) switch to buffer BUF >> >> Observe that point has returned to (/ (point-max) 2). > > I can confirm that this behaviour is still present in Emacs 24. > > And it seems like an unfortunate behaviour. How difficult would it be > to stash window-point (I guess) on a per-frame basis? Frame-local > variables are being phased out, but it seems like this would be nice to > have. Even if you had such a feature it would not DTRT with multiple windows showing the same buffer on the same frame. But if, in step (9) above, you do `previous-buffer' or `switch-to-prev-buffer', the window's point should show up at `point-min'. `switch-to-buffer' could, in principle, retrieve that position by scanning `window-prev-buffers' of that window. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-09-17 8:43 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-09-18 8:03 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-06 22:14 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-09-18 8:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: Steve Yegge, 4041 martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> writes: > Even if you had such a feature it would not DTRT with multiple windows > showing the same buffer on the same frame. But if, in step (9) above, > you do `previous-buffer' or `switch-to-prev-buffer', the window's point > should show up at `point-min'. `switch-to-buffer' could, in principle, > retrieve that position by scanning `window-prev-buffers' of that window. I think that that sounds like a good idea. I usually work with two frames, and this return-the-point-to-where-it-is-in-the-other-frame behaviour has annoyed me, too. If you're doing two semi-related things in each frame, "losing" the point you were at means a lot more jumping back and forth in the buffer. -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) bloggy blog http://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-09-17 8:43 ` martin rudalics 2011-09-18 8:03 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-10-06 22:14 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-07 7:07 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-10-06 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: 4041, Steve Yegge martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> writes: > Even if you had such a feature it would not DTRT with multiple windows > showing the same buffer on the same frame. But if, in step (9) above, > you do `previous-buffer' or `switch-to-prev-buffer', the window's point > should show up at `point-min'. `switch-to-buffer' could, in principle, > retrieve that position by scanning `window-prev-buffers' of that window. I think `switch-to-buffer' should do the same as `previous-buffer' here -- it seems like the obvious solution. Is there any reason not to? -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) bloggy blog http://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-06 22:14 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-10-07 7:07 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-07 10:46 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-07 7:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen; +Cc: 4041, Steve Yegge >> Even if you had such a feature it would not DTRT with multiple windows >> showing the same buffer on the same frame. But if, in step (9) above, >> you do `previous-buffer' or `switch-to-prev-buffer', the window's point >> should show up at `point-min'. `switch-to-buffer' could, in principle, >> retrieve that position by scanning `window-prev-buffers' of that window. > > I think `switch-to-buffer' should do the same as `previous-buffer' here > -- it seems like the obvious solution. Is there any reason not to? We'd have to handle two issues: (1) If a buffer is shown nowhere else and you `switch-to-buffer' to it, you probably want it to show it at the actual position of `point' - whatever that means for you. (2) If the buffer is already shown on another frame with `point' visible it makes sense to `switch-to-buffer' at some position it earlier had on the present frame. Whatever we did here, it would make `switch-to-buffer' behave inconsistently. I still think that the OP instead of > 8) switch to buffer *scratch* (or any other buffer) > 9) switch to buffer BUF should switch to the previous buffer in 9). martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 7:07 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-07 10:46 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-07 17:00 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-10-07 10:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: 4041, Steve Yegge martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> writes: > We'd have to handle two issues: > > (1) If a buffer is shown nowhere else and you `switch-to-buffer' to it, > you probably want it to show it at the actual position of `point' - > whatever that means for you. > > (2) If the buffer is already shown on another frame with `point' visible > it makes sense to `switch-to-buffer' at some position it earlier had > on the present frame. > > Whatever we did here, it would make `switch-to-buffer' behave > inconsistently. But it'd be the natural thing to do, I think. > I still think that the OP instead of > >> 8) switch to buffer *scratch* (or any other buffer) >> 9) switch to buffer BUF > > should switch to the previous buffer in 9). People commonly use `C-x b' to switch buffers... -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) bloggy blog http://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 10:46 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-10-07 17:00 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-07 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen; +Cc: 4041, Steve Yegge >> We'd have to handle two issues: >> >> (1) If a buffer is shown nowhere else and you `switch-to-buffer' to it, >> you probably want it to show it at the actual position of `point' - >> whatever that means for you. >> >> (2) If the buffer is already shown on another frame with `point' visible >> it makes sense to `switch-to-buffer' at some position it earlier had >> on the present frame. >> >> Whatever we did here, it would make `switch-to-buffer' behave >> inconsistently. > > But it'd be the natural thing to do, I think. I can't tell because I'm a single-frame user. The main argument in favor of a "retain the previous point" strategy is that it makes no sense to go to the same position already shown in another frame. But then what about doing C-x b in a window below another one already showing the buffer I want to switch to? > People commonly use `C-x b' to switch buffers... ... and that's why I'm afraid of changing its semantics. More so because I never use C-x b. We could make the behavior optional but I'd like to hear more comments from other users first. In any case this is a 24.2 project. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 17:00 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Eli Zaretskii ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Steve Yegge @ 2011-10-07 21:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5930 bytes --] On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 10:00 AM, martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> wrote: > >> Whatever we did here, it would make `switch-to-buffer' behave > >> inconsistently. > > > > But it'd be the natural thing to do, I think. > > I can't tell because I'm a single-frame user. The main argument in > favor of a "retain the previous point" strategy is that it makes no > sense to go to the same position already shown in another frame. But > then what about doing C-x b in a window below another one already > showing the buffer I want to switch to? This is an interesting question. The behavior today closely parallels the multi-frame behavior, so I can see how you feel that making my proposed change would make `switch-to-buffer' inconsistent. But you have reminded me that I have for many years wished for the multi-window-one-frame behavior to be different -- and in essentially the same way I've proposed that the multi-window-multi-frame behavior be changed. Assume you have buffer B open on frame F in windows T, U and V, respectively displaying B at positions P1, P2 and P3. Now in window W, also on F, you C-x b to switch to B. Today it takes you to P1, assuming T is next in the window-list. If no window were currently showing B, then W would display point-min. Let's call this the "existing-window" behavior, as for a new window W it will choose a position from an existing window. If you were to make my proposed multi-frame change, I think you could reasonably choose to retain the existing-window behavior within a frame, as it preserves the current intra-frame buffer-switching semantics. However, over the decades I have noticed that when I have two or more windows open to the same buffer on the same frame, it is almost always because I want to establish N > 1 persistent working locations within that buffer. In fact it is rarely useful to have two windows open to the same buffer location, as they merely echo each other. So I would posit that my "multiple persistent working locations" use case is likely to be the most common reason for users to have N > 1 windows displaying the same buffer in a given frame. The problem with today's "existing-window" behavior is that if you have window T displaying buffer B on frame F at buffer position P, then you can not sustain a *persistent* working location P' in any other window U on F. By "persistent", I specifically mean that in window U, if I switch temporarily away to another buffer and then back, I want to go back to P'. Today it takes me to P: I have lost my working location in U. I have long found this behavior most unfortunate. Ironically, the best workaround is to visit B in window X on a second frame G. Then no matter what happens to the window configuration in F, X will retain its window point at your second working location P'. Trying to work around it within F requires that you disturb your window configuration, or attempt to track your working locations with the mark ring, or some other relatively unnatural workflow. At least, I find it unnatural compared to my desired workflow: - open a window T and display buffer B at position Pt - in window U switch to buffer B (it defaults to Pt, which is fine) - then in U: * move to a different position Pu in B * switch to any other buffer C (e.g. Info, shell, ...) * switch back to buffer B * continue working at Pu This workflow, which I think of as "persistent window positions", would actually be closest to how Emacs works in the most common use case of all: single-frame, single-window. If you are visiting B at position P, and you switch away, then back, you will return to P. It is easy to think of this as the window remembering where you last were in B. If you think of it this way, as I do, then you are constantly surprised that windows suffer from amnesia whenever more than one of them is displaying the same buffer. It feels to me that they should behave as if they are independent. Thus I would be happiest if there were an option such that every window tracks the buffer positions of every buffer that it visits, and when switching back to a buffer B that it has already visited, each window displays B at the same position it last displayed B. If you kill a window, its position list goes away. New windows would start with a nil position list, and the first time they visit a buffer they would use the "existing-window" semantics: use the position of the next window currently displaying the buffer, or else point-min. (It might be confusing to have them choose from the position-list of a window that has previously visited the buffer but is not currently displaying it, so I'd not do that.) Similarly if you kill a buffer, then it is removed from the position lists for all existing windows. If it is recreated, e.g. by opening the file again for file buffers, all windows would initially begin viewing it at point-min. I think "per-window visited-buffer last-position lists" would solve the multi-frame problem (4041). I believe they would also clean up the IMO rather unfortunate existing semantics for same-buffer, same-frame, multiple windows, since the current behavior (a) doesn't parallel the current single-frame, single window behavior, and (b) doesn't allow for multiple temporary "persistent" working locations in multiple windows in a single buffer on a single frame. At the very least it'd be a nice global configuration option. I'm sure you could probably do all this with a package, but it's fairly fundamental -- it would be nice, for example, to be able to enable it by setting a single variable on someone else's Emacs instance while debugging something for them. I have done an exhaustive survey of everyone sitting near me right now, and they both agreed that buffer positions should be "window-local", and that they've been annoyed by it forever as well. Just wanted to cover my bases! ;) -steve [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 7577 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge @ 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 6:32 ` Drew Adams 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Leo ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 6:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: larsi, 4041 > Date: Fri, 7 Oct 2011 14:09:14 -0700 > From: Steve Yegge <stevey@google.com> > Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen <larsi@gnus.org>, 4041@debbugs.gnu.org > > However, over the decades I have noticed that when I have two or > more windows open to the same buffer on the same frame, it is almost > always because I want to establish N > 1 persistent working locations > within that buffer. In fact it is rarely useful to have two windows open > to the same buffer location, as they merely echo each other. So > I would posit that my "multiple persistent working locations" use case > is likely to be the most common reason for users to have N > 1 > windows displaying the same buffer in a given frame. +1 > Thus I would be happiest if there were an option such that every > window tracks the buffer positions of every buffer that it visits, > and when switching back to a buffer B that it has already visited, > each window displays B at the same position it last displayed B. +1 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 6:32 ` Drew Adams 0 siblings, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Drew Adams @ 2011-10-08 6:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 'Steve Yegge'; +Cc: 4041 > > "multiple persistent working locations" use case is likely to be > > the most common reason for users to have N > 1 windows displaying > > the same buffer in a given frame. > +1 > > an option such that every window tracks the buffer positions of > > every buffer that it visits, and when switching back to a buffer > > B that it has already visited, each window displays B at the same > > position it last displayed B. > +1 incf ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Leo 2011-10-08 13:23 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-11 12:45 ` Stefan Monnier 3 siblings, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Leo @ 2011-10-08 6:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 On 2011-10-08 05:09 +0800, Steve Yegge wrote: > I have done an exhaustive survey of everyone sitting near > me right now, and they both agreed that buffer positions > should be "window-local", and that they've been annoyed > by it forever as well. Just wanted to cover my bases! ;) This is the problem the hack in http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/per-window-point.el tries to solve. It'd be nice if emacs had that by default without advising any primitives. Leo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Leo @ 2011-10-08 13:23 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 14:12 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-11 12:45 ` Stefan Monnier 3 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 > Assume you have buffer B open on frame F in windows T, U and V, > respectively displaying B at positions P1, P2 and P3. Now in window > W, also on F, you C-x b to switch to B. Today it takes you to P1, > assuming T is next in the window-list. Hardly. It takes you to P1 because presumably window T is selected and the window point of the selected window usually coincides with that window's buffer's point. > If no window were currently > showing B, then W would display point-min. Hopefully not. W should display the buffer's `point' (which, if the buffer was never shown before, would coincide with `point-min'). > Let's call this the "existing-window" behavior, as for a new window W it > will choose a position from an existing window. Not necessarily. If another window were selected and, in B you go to some other position, the next `switch-to-buffer' will display B around `point' which might not coincide with any of the other windows' positions. > If you were to make my > proposed multi-frame change, I think you could reasonably choose to > retain the existing-window behavior within a frame, as it preserves the > current intra-frame buffer-switching semantics. > > However, over the decades I have noticed that when I have two or > more windows open to the same buffer on the same frame, it is almost > always because I want to establish N > 1 persistent working locations > within that buffer. In fact it is rarely useful to have two windows open > to the same buffer location, as they merely echo each other. So > I would posit that my "multiple persistent working locations" use case > is likely to be the most common reason for users to have N > 1 > windows displaying the same buffer in a given frame. Having "two or more windows open to the same buffer" sounds like a reasonable condition. The problem is that you might have no window showing the buffer and still want to restore the previous window position. That's why `switch-to-prev-buffer' is superior to any `switch-to-buffer' changing solution. Notwithstanding Lars' argument that people are used to C-x b, tell me why `switch-to-prev-buffer' (combined with `switch-to-next-buffer') doesn't do what you want. > The problem with today's "existing-window" behavior is that if you > have window T displaying buffer B on frame F at buffer position P, > then you can not sustain a *persistent* working location P' in any > other window U on F. By "persistent", I specifically mean that in > window U, if I switch temporarily away to another buffer and then > back, I want to go back to P'. Today it takes me to P: I have lost > my working location in U. Not with `switch-to-prev-buffer' ;-) > I have long found this behavior most unfortunate. Ironically, the > best workaround is to visit B in window X on a second frame G. > Then no matter what happens to the window configuration in F, > X will retain its window point at your second working location P'. > > Trying to work around it within F requires that you disturb your > window configuration, or attempt to track your working locations > with the mark ring, or some other relatively unnatural workflow. > At least, I find it unnatural compared to my desired workflow: > > - open a window T and display buffer B at position Pt > - in window U switch to buffer B (it defaults to Pt, which is fine) > - then in U: > * move to a different position Pu in B > * switch to any other buffer C (e.g. Info, shell, ...) > * switch back to buffer B This should be `switch-to-prev-buffer'. > * continue working at Pu > > This workflow, which I think of as "persistent window positions", > would actually be closest to how Emacs works in the most > common use case of all: single-frame, single-window. If you are > visiting B at position P, and you switch away, then back, you will > return to P. It is easy to think of this as the window remembering > where you last were in B. If you think of it this way, as I do, then > you are constantly surprised that windows suffer from amnesia > whenever more than one of them is displaying the same buffer. > It feels to me that they should behave as if they are independent. > > Thus I would be happiest if there were an option such that every > window tracks the buffer positions of every buffer that it visits, You can get these positions via `window-prev-buffers'. > and when switching back to a buffer B that it has already visited, > each window displays B at the same position it last displayed B. > > If you kill a window, its position list goes away. New windows > would start with a nil position list, and the first time they visit a > buffer they would use the "existing-window" semantics: use > the position of the next window currently displaying the buffer, > or else point-min. (It might be confusing to have them choose > from the position-list of a window that has previously visited > the buffer but is not currently displaying it, so I'd not do that.) > > Similarly if you kill a buffer, then it is removed from the position > lists for all existing windows. If it is recreated, e.g. by opening > the file again for file buffers, all windows would initially begin > viewing it at point-min. > > I think "per-window visited-buffer last-position lists" would solve > the multi-frame problem (4041). I believe they would also > clean up the IMO rather unfortunate existing semantics for > same-buffer, same-frame, multiple windows, since the current > behavior (a) doesn't parallel the current single-frame, single > window behavior, and (b) doesn't allow for multiple temporary > "persistent" working locations in multiple windows in a single > buffer on a single frame. > > At the very least it'd be a nice global configuration option. > I'm sure you could probably do all this with a package, but > it's fairly fundamental -- it would be nice, for example, to be > able to enable it by setting a single variable on someone > else's Emacs instance while debugging something for them. > > I have done an exhaustive survey of everyone sitting near > me right now, and they both agreed that buffer positions > should be "window-local", and that they've been annoyed > by it forever as well. Just wanted to cover my bases! ;) All this has been implemented - see section 28.14 Window History in the Elisp manual. If you still insist on having C-x b return to the previous position, try the definition below. martin (defun switch-to-buffer (buffer-or-name &optional norecord force-same-window) "Switch to buffer BUFFER-OR-NAME in the selected window. If called interactively, prompt for the buffer name using the minibuffer. The variable `confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer' determines whether to request confirmation before creating a new buffer. BUFFER-OR-NAME may be a buffer, a string \(a buffer name), or nil. If BUFFER-OR-NAME is a string that does not identify an existing buffer, create a buffer with that name. If BUFFER-OR-NAME is nil, switch to the buffer returned by `other-buffer'. Optional argument NORECORD non-nil means do not put the buffer specified by BUFFER-OR-NAME at the front of the buffer list and do not make the window displaying it the most recently selected one. If FORCE-SAME-WINDOW is non-nil, BUFFER-OR-NAME must be displayed in the selected window; signal an error if that is impossible (e.g. if the selected window is minibuffer-only). If nil, BUFFER-OR-NAME may be displayed in another window. Return the buffer switched to." (interactive (list (read-buffer-to-switch "Switch to buffer: ") nil t)) (let ((buffer (window-normalize-buffer-to-switch-to buffer-or-name))) (if (null force-same-window) (pop-to-buffer buffer display-buffer--same-window-action norecord) (cond ;; Don't call set-window-buffer if it's not needed since it ;; might signal an error (e.g. if the window is dedicated). ((eq buffer (window-buffer))) ((window-minibuffer-p) (error "Cannot switch buffers in minibuffer window")) ((eq (window-dedicated-p) t) (error "Cannot switch buffers in a dedicated window")) (t (let* ((entry (and (get-buffer-window buffer 0) (assq buffer (window-prev-buffers)))) (start (and entry (nth 1 entry))) (pos (and entry (nth 2 entry)))) (set-window-buffer nil buffer) (when entry ;; If BUFFER-OR-NAME (1) was shown in the selected window ;; before and (2) is currently displayed in some other ;; visible window, try to restore start and point of buffer ;; in the selected window. (set-window-start (selected-window) start t) (set-window-point-1 nil pos))))) (unless norecord (select-window (selected-window))) (set-buffer buffer)))) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 13:23 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 14:12 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 15:00 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 14:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > Date: Sat, 08 Oct 2011 15:23:29 +0200 > From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> > Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen <larsi@gnus.org>, 4041@debbugs.gnu.org > > Having "two or more windows open to the same buffer" sounds like a > reasonable condition. The problem is that you might have no window > showing the buffer and still want to restore the previous window > position. That's why `switch-to-prev-buffer' is superior to any > `switch-to-buffer' changing solution. Notwithstanding Lars' argument > that people are used to C-x b, tell me why `switch-to-prev-buffer' > (combined with `switch-to-next-buffer') doesn't do what you want. It doesn't do what I want because it doesn't accept a buffer argument. So I'm forced to try the previous buffers one by one, in the LIFO order, until I find the one I have in mind. And if I then want to go back to one of those I visited on the way, I need either use switch-to-next-buffer (if I happen to remember how far "forward" that buffer is) or make the full circle, including *scratch* and *Messages*, before I get there. So I don't think switch-to-next/prev-buffer can be a convenient solution to this problem. What is necessary is a way to switch to a buffer by name and have the window remember its previous window-point. If the buffer was never displayed in this window, "C-x b" should choose some value of window-point that was used before and is not already displayed in some other window. (If there's a window for every possible value of window-point for the buffer, i.e. the user opens yet another window with the same buffer, just choose one of the values, e.g., the first or the last.) For the important use case of having 2 windows with the same buffer, this strategy will do _exactly_ what the user wants. > > The problem with today's "existing-window" behavior is that if you > > have window T displaying buffer B on frame F at buffer position P, > > then you can not sustain a *persistent* working location P' in any > > other window U on F. By "persistent", I specifically mean that in > > window U, if I switch temporarily away to another buffer and then > > back, I want to go back to P'. Today it takes me to P: I have lost > > my working location in U. > > Not with `switch-to-prev-buffer' ;-) Yes, but it works satisfactorily only if you switch between 2 buffers in the same window. Switch to a third, and you are screwed. (And, btw, why aren't those 2 functions documented in the user manual?) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 14:12 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 15:00 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 15:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 15:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > So I don't think switch-to-next/prev-buffer can be a convenient > solution to this problem. Did you try it in practice? With some convenient binding? In my experience, the buffer isn't too far away, usually. > What is necessary is a way to switch to a buffer by name and have the > window remember its previous window-point. If the buffer was never > displayed in this window, "C-x b" should choose some value of > window-point that was used before and is not already displayed in some > other window. (If there's a window for every possible value of > window-point for the buffer, i.e. the user opens yet another window > with the same buffer, just choose one of the values, e.g., the first > or the last.) For the important use case of having 2 windows with the > same buffer, this strategy will do _exactly_ what the user wants. Using the window-point from some other window will be utterly disconcerting if you later want to display the buffer in _that_ other window. Recording window-points of deleted windows to implement the "used before" approach might be expensive - these are markers into that buffer. > Yes, but it works satisfactorily only if you switch between 2 buffers > in the same window. Switch to a third, and you are screwed. Try them. I have bound `switch-to-prev-buffer' and `switch-to-next-buffer' to M-left and M-right respectively and use them all of the time. Especially, because I usually tend to forget the names of buffers I'm working on. When you grow old enough you will eventually even appreciate that. Till then try the version of `switch-to-buffer' I attached to the last mail and tell me whether you really need more. > (And, btw, why aren't those 2 functions documented in the user > manual?) Because I haven't looked into that yet. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 15:00 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 15:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 15:55 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 15:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > Date: Sat, 08 Oct 2011 17:00:42 +0200 > From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> > CC: stevey@google.com, larsi@gnus.org, 4041@debbugs.gnu.org > > > So I don't think switch-to-next/prev-buffer can be a convenient > > solution to this problem. > > Did you try it in practice? Of course, I did. What makes you think I didn't? > With some convenient binding? How inconvenient can "M-x <up> RET" be? > In my experience, the buffer isn't too far away, usually. Maybe so, but I don't want to waste my time wading through buffers I am not interested in. If I need to see dispextern.h, I want to get there, pronto. > > What is necessary is a way to switch to a buffer by name and have the > > window remember its previous window-point. If the buffer was never > > displayed in this window, "C-x b" should choose some value of > > window-point that was used before and is not already displayed in some > > other window. (If there's a window for every possible value of > > window-point for the buffer, i.e. the user opens yet another window > > with the same buffer, just choose one of the values, e.g., the first > > or the last.) For the important use case of having 2 windows with the > > same buffer, this strategy will do _exactly_ what the user wants. > > Using the window-point from some other window will be utterly > disconcerting if you later want to display the buffer in _that_ other > window. Are you talking about the rare case in parentheses? That's a marginal use case. Let's not destroy convenience in 90% of cases for the sake of 10%. > Recording window-points of deleted windows to implement the "used > before" approach might be expensive - these are markers into that > buffer. So let's record only a few, up to a limit. Again, having a lot of such deleted windows is a rare case. > > Yes, but it works satisfactorily only if you switch between 2 buffers > > in the same window. Switch to a third, and you are screwed. > > Try them. I did, before I responded. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 15:34 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 15:55 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 17:07 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 15:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > How inconvenient can "M-x <up> RET" be? Very because it's not auto-repeatable. >> In my experience, the buffer isn't too far away, usually. > > Maybe so, but I don't want to waste my time wading through buffers I > am not interested in. If I need to see dispextern.h, I want to get > there, pronto. It's not about "If I need to see dispextern.h". It's about "If I need to see the dispextern.h where I left off in the same window." >> > What is necessary is a way to switch to a buffer by name and have the >> > window remember its previous window-point. If the buffer was never >> > displayed in this window, "C-x b" should choose some value of >> > window-point that was used before and is not already displayed in some >> > other window. (If there's a window for every possible value of >> > window-point for the buffer, i.e. the user opens yet another window >> > with the same buffer, just choose one of the values, e.g., the first >> > or the last.) For the important use case of having 2 windows with the >> > same buffer, this strategy will do _exactly_ what the user wants. >> >> Using the window-point from some other window will be utterly >> disconcerting if you later want to display the buffer in _that_ other >> window. > > Are you talking about the rare case in parentheses? No. I was talking about choosing "some value of window-point that was used before" when switching to a buffer that was not shown in the selected window yet. If you next switch to the buffer in the window where window-point was stolen from, you get the window-point from yet another window. > That's a marginal > use case. Let's not destroy convenience in 90% of cases for the sake > of 10%. > >> Recording window-points of deleted windows to implement the "used >> before" approach might be expensive - these are markers into that >> buffer. > > So let's record only a few, up to a limit. Again, having a lot of > such deleted windows is a rare case. So we record only a few but `switch-to-prev-buffer' isn't good enough to get you to your buffer quickly. >> > Yes, but it works satisfactorily only if you switch between 2 buffers >> > in the same window. Switch to a third, and you are screwed. >> >> Try them. > > I did, before I responded. If you have auto-repeatable bindings it works very well. I use them for quite some time now and never had any complaints from my side so far. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 15:55 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 17:07 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 17:53 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 17:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > Date: Sat, 08 Oct 2011 17:55:59 +0200 > From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> > CC: stevey@google.com, larsi@gnus.org, 4041@debbugs.gnu.org > > [arguments] To me, the current operation of "C-x b" is inconvenient, and switch-to-prev/next-buffer is not a satisfactory solution. But I'm evidently unable to get the message across. So I give up. I lived with this inconvenience for 20 years, I can live a bit longer. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 17:07 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 17:53 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 20:35 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 17:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > To me, the current operation of "C-x b" is inconvenient, and > switch-to-prev/next-buffer is not a satisfactory solution. But I'm > evidently unable to get the message across. So I give up. I lived > with this inconvenience for 20 years, I can live a bit longer. You could have at least told me why the version of `switch-to-buffer' I attached to my first mail does not resolve most of that inconvenience. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 17:53 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-08 20:35 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-09 8:33 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-08 20:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > Date: Sat, 08 Oct 2011 19:53:07 +0200 > From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> > CC: stevey@google.com, larsi@gnus.org, 4041@debbugs.gnu.org > > You could have at least told me why the version of `switch-to-buffer' I > attached to my first mail does not resolve most of that inconvenience. I didn't try it, because you kept talking about the 2 other functions. If it is supposed to take care of my gripes, why not commit it? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-08 20:35 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-09 8:33 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-09 17:45 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-09 8:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > I didn't try it, because you kept talking about the 2 other functions. > If it is supposed to take care of my gripes, why not commit it? Because I hate reverting commits for reasons like "Emacs never did that". martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-09 8:33 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-09 17:45 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-10 12:57 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-09 17:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > Date: Sun, 09 Oct 2011 10:33:30 +0200 > From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> > CC: stevey@google.com, larsi@gnus.org, 4041@debbugs.gnu.org > > > I didn't try it, because you kept talking about the 2 other functions. I tried it now. It seems to do a good job, but it sometimes loses one of the 2 places in one of the files I visited. E.g., visit xdisp.c and window.c, display each one in turn in 2 separate windows at 2 different places. Then start switching buffers in both windows, and after a few switches I can only see one place in window.c. Still, this looks better than the current operation, so I recommend to install it, perhaps as an optional behavior conditioned on some customization. Thanks. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-09 17:45 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2011-10-10 12:57 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-10 12:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: larsi, stevey, 4041 > I tried it now. It seems to do a good job, but it sometimes loses one > of the 2 places in one of the files I visited. E.g., visit xdisp.c > and window.c, display each one in turn in 2 separate windows at 2 > different places. Then start switching buffers in both windows, and > after a few switches I can only see one place in window.c. My crystal ball tells me that you did the following: (1) Remove one of these buffers from the last window that shows it - `point' goes to its `window-point'. (2) Show this buffer in the other window. In this case the test (let* ((entry (and (get-buffer-window buffer 0) (assq buffer (window-prev-buffers)))) will fail and the buffer will be shown at the position of its `point'. Try (let* ((entry (and ; (get-buffer-window buffer 0) (assq buffer (window-prev-buffers)))) and I'm sure the function will do what you want. Unfortunately, omitting that conjunct might give surprising results when you switch to a buffer that you haven't seen for quite some time, in a window where this buffer was shown earlier. In this case you probably do want to show the buffer at the position of `point'. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2011-10-08 13:23 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-11 12:45 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 0:35 ` Steve Yegge 3 siblings, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-11 12:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 > I have done an exhaustive survey of everyone sitting near > me right now, and they both agreed that buffer positions > should be "window-local", and that they've been annoyed > by it forever as well. Just wanted to cover my bases! ;) FWIW that's what I implemented for doc-view's "pseudo point". It was largely done because that was easier than trying to reproduce the behavior of point. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-11 12:45 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 0:35 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-12 1:19 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 6:52 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 2 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Steve Yegge @ 2011-10-12 0:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1391 bytes --] I don't know if anyone's expecting me to weigh in, as I've already used way too many words to explain how I think it should work, and none of the intervening discussion has given me a reason to reconsider that position. But I'll add that defending the current behavior of switch-to-buffer is a bit odd, since it doesn't do anything meaningful or useful as-is. In particular, if you are switching to a buffer that is already showing in another window, it currently takes you to to a location in that buffer that can best be described as "arbitrary". I was generously assuming that it was some deterministic function of how the buffer is already being displayed in other windows, but Martin claims that no, it just shows you "somewhere" in the buffer, wherever that window-point happens to be. It's certainly not semantically meaningful to the contents of the buffer. My proposal -- which people sound like they agree with, and Leo has even implemented as an add-on -- takes the default behavior from arbitrary to not only predictable but in fact useful. The only way anyone would even notice that you've changed something is if they were somehow relying on the arbitrary default behavior, but as we've determined that it's not especially predictable, I don't see how anyone could have been relying on it. If we're really worried about it, we can make a compatibility variable. -steve [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1558 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 0:35 ` Steve Yegge @ 2011-10-12 1:19 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 3:52 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-12 9:48 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-12 6:52 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 2 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 1:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 > My proposal -- which people sound like they agree with, and Leo has even > implemented as an add-on -- takes the default behavior from arbitrary to not > only predictable but in fact useful. The only way anyone would even notice > that you've changed something is if they were somehow relying on the > arbitrary default behavior, but as we've determined that it's not especially > predictable, I don't see how anyone could have been relying on it. If we're > really worried about it, we can make a compatibility variable. I think I generally agree it would be a good change. But without an actual patch, it's difficult to assess how reliable and backward compatible we can make it. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 1:19 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 3:52 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-12 9:48 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Steve Yegge @ 2011-10-12 3:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 388 bytes --] On Tue, Oct 11, 2011 at 6:19 PM, Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>wrote: > > I think I generally agree it would be a good change. But without an > actual patch, it's difficult to assess how reliable and backward > compatible we can make it. > > Ah well, sadly I'm still on the hook for a couple other patches for you, so it'd be unwise for me to volunteer for this one. -steve [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 728 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 1:19 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 3:52 ` Steve Yegge @ 2011-10-12 9:48 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-12 13:11 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-12 9:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, Steve Yegge, 4041 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 260 bytes --] > I think I generally agree it would be a good change. But without an > actual patch, it's difficult to assess how reliable and backward > compatible we can make it. Attached find a diff with a new option `switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point'. martin [-- Attachment #2: stbpwp.diff --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 2151 bytes --] === modified file 'lisp/window.el' --- lisp/window.el 2011-10-10 17:52:03 +0000 +++ lisp/window.el 2011-10-12 09:23:47 +0000 @@ -4976,6 +4976,19 @@ buffer)) (other-buffer))) +(defcustom switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point nil + "If non-nil, `switch-to-buffer' tries to preserve `window-point'. +If nil, `switch-to-buffer' displays the buffer at that buffer's +`point'. If non-nil, it tries to display the buffer at the last +position of `window-point' in the window used for display. + +If the window used for display is either new, or the buffer +already appears in it, or the buffer never appeared in that +window, this variable has no impact." + :type 'boolean + :group 'windows + :version "24.1") + (defun switch-to-buffer (buffer-or-name &optional norecord force-same-window) "Switch to buffer BUFFER-OR-NAME in the selected window. If called interactively, prompt for the buffer name using the @@ -5001,7 +5014,7 @@ Return the buffer switched to." (interactive - (list (read-buffer-to-switch "Switch to buffer: ") nil nil)) + (list (read-buffer-to-switch "Switch to buffer: ") nil t)) (let ((buffer (window-normalize-buffer-to-switch-to buffer-or-name))) (if (null force-same-window) (pop-to-buffer buffer display-buffer--same-window-action norecord) @@ -5013,7 +5026,19 @@ (error "Cannot switch buffers in minibuffer window")) ((eq (window-dedicated-p) t) (error "Cannot switch buffers in a dedicated window")) - (t (set-window-buffer nil buffer))) + (t + (let* ((entry (and switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point + (assq buffer (window-prev-buffers)))) + (start (and entry (nth 1 entry))) + (pos (and entry (nth 2 entry)))) + (set-window-buffer nil buffer) + (when entry + ;; If BUFFER-OR-NAME (1) was shown in the selected window + ;; before and (2) is currently displayed in some other + ;; visible window, try to restore start and point of buffer + ;; in the selected window. + (set-window-start (selected-window) start t) + (set-window-point-1 nil pos))))) (unless norecord (select-window (selected-window))) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 9:48 ` martin rudalics @ 2011-10-12 13:11 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 13:39 ` Stefan Monnier 2012-10-05 10:08 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 2 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 13:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, Steve Yegge, 4041 > Attached find a diff with a new option > `switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point'. That looks pretty good. I'd be willing to try and turn it on by default in something like Emacs-25 or maybe even 24.2. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 13:11 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 13:39 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 14:25 ` martin rudalics 2012-10-05 10:08 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 13:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: martin rudalics; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, Steve Yegge, 4041 >> Attached find a diff with a new option `switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point'. > That looks pretty good. I'd be willing to try and turn it on by default > in something like Emacs-25 or maybe even 24.2. One thing bothers me, tho: why not do it in set-window-buffer? Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 13:39 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 14:25 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-12 14:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, Steve Yegge, 4041 > One thing bothers me, tho: why not do it in set-window-buffer? No particular reason but that an Elisp function is easier to experiment with than a C function. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 13:11 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 13:39 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2012-10-05 10:08 ` martin rudalics 2012-10-10 10:22 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 1 reply; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2012-10-05 10:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, Steve Yegge, 4041 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 574 bytes --] > That looks pretty good. I'd be willing to try and turn it on by default > in something like Emacs-25 or maybe even 24.2. I completely forgot about this. Any objections to install the attached version for 24.3? > One thing bothers me, tho: why not do it in set-window-buffer? I'm still not sure whether this would be safe in all cases. I wouldn't even do that for plain `display-buffer'. The current patch addresses all requests raised in the current thread. If there's real need to provide this option for other functions as well, we can still do that. martin [-- Attachment #2: switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point.diff --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 3025 bytes --] === modified file 'lisp/ChangeLog' --- lisp/ChangeLog 2012-10-04 12:56:14 +0000 +++ lisp/ChangeLog 2012-10-05 09:40:16 +0000 @@ -1,3 +1,10 @@ +2012-10-05 Martin Rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> + + * window.el (switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point): New + option. + (switch-to-buffer): Optionally preserve window point if buffer + appeared earlier in the selected window (Bug#4041). + 2012-10-04 Martin Rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at> * emacs-lisp/edebug.el (edebug-pop-to-buffer): Select window === modified file 'lisp/window.el' --- lisp/window.el 2012-09-30 10:44:43 +0000 +++ lisp/window.el 2012-10-05 09:47:10 +0000 @@ -5812,6 +5812,25 @@ buffer)) (other-buffer))) +(defcustom switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point nil + "If non-nil, `switch-to-buffer' tries to preserve `window-point'. +If this is nil, `switch-to-buffer' displays the buffer at that +buffer's `point'. If this is `already-displayed', it tries to +display the buffer at its last position in the selected window +provided the buffer is curently displayed in some other window on +a visible or iconified frame. If this is t, it always tries to +display the buffer at its last position in the selected window. + +If the window used for display is either new, or the buffer +already appears in it, or the buffer never appeared in that +window, the setting of this variable has no impact." + :type '(choice + (const :tag "Never" nil) + (const :tag "If already displayed elsewhere" already-displayed) + (const :tag "Always" t)) + :group 'windows + :version "24.3") + (defun switch-to-buffer (buffer-or-name &optional norecord force-same-window) "Switch to buffer BUFFER-OR-NAME in the selected window. If the selected window cannot display the specified @@ -5837,6 +5856,10 @@ must be displayed in the selected window; if that is impossible, signal an error rather than calling `pop-to-buffer'. +The option `switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point' can be used +to make the buffer appear at its last position in the selected +window. + Return the buffer switched to." (interactive (list (read-buffer-to-switch "Switch to buffer: ") nil 'force-same-window)) @@ -5853,7 +5876,21 @@ (if force-same-window (user-error "Cannot switch buffers in a dedicated window") (pop-to-buffer buffer norecord))) - (t (set-window-buffer nil buffer))) + (t + (let* ((entry (assq buffer (window-prev-buffers))) + (displayed (and (eq switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point + 'already-displayed) + (get-buffer-window buffer 0))) + (start (and entry (nth 1 entry))) + (pos (and entry (nth 2 entry)))) + (set-window-buffer nil buffer) + (when (and entry + (or (eq switch-to-buffer-preserve-window-point t) + displayed)) + ;; Try to restore start and point of buffer in the selected + ;; window (Bug#4041). + (set-window-start (selected-window) start t) + (set-window-point nil pos))))) (unless norecord (select-window (selected-window))) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2012-10-05 10:08 ` martin rudalics @ 2012-10-10 10:22 ` martin rudalics 0 siblings, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2012-10-10 10:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 4041-done; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, Steve Yegge > > That looks pretty good. I'd be willing to try and turn it on by default > > in something like Emacs-25 or maybe even 24.2. > > I completely forgot about this. Any objections to install the attached > version for 24.3? Installed. Bug closed. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
* bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local 2011-10-12 0:35 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-12 1:19 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2011-10-12 6:52 ` martin rudalics 1 sibling, 0 replies; 35+ messages in thread From: martin rudalics @ 2011-10-12 6:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Steve Yegge; +Cc: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen, 4041 > In particular, if you are switching to a buffer that is already showing in > another window, it currently takes you to to a location in that buffer that > can best be described as "arbitrary". I was generously assuming that it was > some deterministic function of how the buffer is already being displayed in > other windows, but Martin claims that no, it just shows you "somewhere" in > the buffer, wherever that window-point happens to be. It's certainly not > semantically meaningful to the contents of the buffer. I never claimed that it just shows you "somewhere" in the buffer, wherever that window-point happens to be Such a sentence doesn't make sense. To clarify: If `switch-to-buffer' shows a buffer in a new window or in a window that showed another buffer before, it takes you to the position of `point' of the buffer you switch to. This is not an arbitrary position. > My proposal -- which people sound like they agree with, and Leo has even > implemented as an add-on -- takes the default behavior from arbitrary to not > only predictable but in fact useful. The only way anyone would even notice > that you've changed something is if they were somehow relying on the > arbitrary default behavior, but as we've determined that it's not especially > predictable, I don't see how anyone could have been relying on it. If we're > really worried about it, we can make a compatibility variable. If you can specify a behavior that is predictable I'll be all ears. Meanwhile I invite you to test the function I attached in my answer to your earlier post, maybe together with the change I posted later in a response to Eli, and tell me why the one or the other does not do what you proposed. martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 35+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2012-10-10 10:22 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 35+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2009-08-05 0:17 bug#4041: 23.0.92; Emacs 23: buffer point is no longer frame-local Steve Yegge 2009-08-06 9:33 ` martin rudalics 2011-09-17 7:04 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-09-17 8:43 ` martin rudalics 2011-09-18 8:03 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-06 22:14 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-07 7:07 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-07 10:46 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-10-07 17:00 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-07 21:09 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 6:32 ` Drew Adams 2011-10-08 6:23 ` Leo 2011-10-08 13:23 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 14:12 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 15:00 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 15:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 15:55 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 17:07 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-08 17:53 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-08 20:35 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-09 8:33 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-09 17:45 ` Eli Zaretskii 2011-10-10 12:57 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-11 12:45 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 0:35 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-12 1:19 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 3:52 ` Steve Yegge 2011-10-12 9:48 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-12 13:11 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 13:39 ` Stefan Monnier 2011-10-12 14:25 ` martin rudalics 2012-10-05 10:08 ` martin rudalics 2012-10-10 10:22 ` martin rudalics 2011-10-12 6:52 ` martin rudalics
Code repositories for project(s) associated with this external index https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs.git https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs/org-mode.git This is an external index of several public inboxes, see mirroring instructions on how to clone and mirror all data and code used by this external index.