Merge from emacs-23; up to 2010-06-11T18:51:00Z!juri@jurta.org.
[emacs.git] / lisp / emacs-lisp / lisp.el
blobef0c49b86163bd85a84d35ac26856181a3865357
1 ;;; lisp.el --- Lisp editing commands for Emacs
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1985-1986, 1994, 2000-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 ;; Maintainer: FSF
6 ;; Keywords: lisp, languages
7 ;; Package: emacs
9 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
11 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
14 ;; (at your option) any later version.
16 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
21 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
24 ;;; Commentary:
26 ;; Lisp editing commands to go with Lisp major mode. More-or-less
27 ;; applicable in other modes too.
29 ;;; Code:
31 ;; Note that this variable is used by non-lisp modes too.
32 (defcustom defun-prompt-regexp nil
33 "If non-nil, a regexp to ignore before a defun.
34 This is only necessary if the opening paren or brace is not in column 0.
35 See function `beginning-of-defun'."
36 :type '(choice (const nil)
37 regexp)
38 :group 'lisp)
39 (make-variable-buffer-local 'defun-prompt-regexp)
41 (defcustom parens-require-spaces t
42 "If non-nil, add whitespace as needed when inserting parentheses.
43 This affects `insert-parentheses' and `insert-pair'."
44 :type 'boolean
45 :group 'lisp)
47 (defvar forward-sexp-function nil
48 "If non-nil, `forward-sexp' delegates to this function.
49 Should take the same arguments and behave similarly to `forward-sexp'.")
51 (defun forward-sexp (&optional arg)
52 "Move forward across one balanced expression (sexp).
53 With ARG, do it that many times. Negative arg -N means
54 move backward across N balanced expressions.
55 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
56 (interactive "^p")
57 (or arg (setq arg 1))
58 (if forward-sexp-function
59 (funcall forward-sexp-function arg)
60 (goto-char (or (scan-sexps (point) arg) (buffer-end arg)))
61 (if (< arg 0) (backward-prefix-chars))))
63 (defun backward-sexp (&optional arg)
64 "Move backward across one balanced expression (sexp).
65 With ARG, do it that many times. Negative arg -N means
66 move forward across N balanced expressions.
67 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
68 (interactive "^p")
69 (or arg (setq arg 1))
70 (forward-sexp (- arg)))
72 (defun mark-sexp (&optional arg allow-extend)
73 "Set mark ARG sexps from point.
74 The place mark goes is the same place \\[forward-sexp] would
75 move to with the same argument.
76 Interactively, if this command is repeated
77 or (in Transient Mark mode) if the mark is active,
78 it marks the next ARG sexps after the ones already marked.
79 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
80 (interactive "P\np")
81 (cond ((and allow-extend
82 (or (and (eq last-command this-command) (mark t))
83 (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)))
84 (setq arg (if arg (prefix-numeric-value arg)
85 (if (< (mark) (point)) -1 1)))
86 (set-mark
87 (save-excursion
88 (goto-char (mark))
89 (forward-sexp arg)
90 (point))))
92 (push-mark
93 (save-excursion
94 (forward-sexp (prefix-numeric-value arg))
95 (point))
96 nil t))))
98 (defun forward-list (&optional arg)
99 "Move forward across one balanced group of parentheses.
100 With ARG, do it that many times.
101 Negative arg -N means move backward across N groups of parentheses.
102 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
103 (interactive "^p")
104 (or arg (setq arg 1))
105 (goto-char (or (scan-lists (point) arg 0) (buffer-end arg))))
107 (defun backward-list (&optional arg)
108 "Move backward across one balanced group of parentheses.
109 With ARG, do it that many times.
110 Negative arg -N means move forward across N groups of parentheses.
111 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
112 (interactive "^p")
113 (or arg (setq arg 1))
114 (forward-list (- arg)))
116 (defun down-list (&optional arg)
117 "Move forward down one level of parentheses.
118 With ARG, do this that many times.
119 A negative argument means move backward but still go down a level.
120 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
121 (interactive "^p")
122 (or arg (setq arg 1))
123 (let ((inc (if (> arg 0) 1 -1)))
124 (while (/= arg 0)
125 (goto-char (or (scan-lists (point) inc -1) (buffer-end arg)))
126 (setq arg (- arg inc)))))
128 (defun backward-up-list (&optional arg)
129 "Move backward out of one level of parentheses.
130 With ARG, do this that many times.
131 A negative argument means move forward but still to a less deep spot.
132 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
133 (interactive "^p")
134 (up-list (- (or arg 1))))
136 (defun up-list (&optional arg)
137 "Move forward out of one level of parentheses.
138 With ARG, do this that many times.
139 A negative argument means move backward but still to a less deep spot.
140 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
141 (interactive "^p")
142 (or arg (setq arg 1))
143 (let ((inc (if (> arg 0) 1 -1))
144 pos)
145 (while (/= arg 0)
146 (if (null forward-sexp-function)
147 (goto-char (or (scan-lists (point) inc 1) (buffer-end arg)))
148 (condition-case err
149 (while (progn (setq pos (point))
150 (forward-sexp inc)
151 (/= (point) pos)))
152 (scan-error (goto-char (nth 2 err))))
153 (if (= (point) pos)
154 (signal 'scan-error
155 (list "Unbalanced parentheses" (point) (point)))))
156 (setq arg (- arg inc)))))
158 (defun kill-sexp (&optional arg)
159 "Kill the sexp (balanced expression) following point.
160 With ARG, kill that many sexps after point.
161 Negative arg -N means kill N sexps before point.
162 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
163 (interactive "p")
164 (let ((opoint (point)))
165 (forward-sexp (or arg 1))
166 (kill-region opoint (point))))
168 (defun backward-kill-sexp (&optional arg)
169 "Kill the sexp (balanced expression) preceding point.
170 With ARG, kill that many sexps before point.
171 Negative arg -N means kill N sexps after point.
172 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
173 (interactive "p")
174 (kill-sexp (- (or arg 1))))
176 ;; After Zmacs:
177 (defun kill-backward-up-list (&optional arg)
178 "Kill the form containing the current sexp, leaving the sexp itself.
179 A prefix argument ARG causes the relevant number of surrounding
180 forms to be removed.
181 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
182 (interactive "*p")
183 (let ((current-sexp (thing-at-point 'sexp)))
184 (if current-sexp
185 (save-excursion
186 (backward-up-list arg)
187 (kill-sexp)
188 (insert current-sexp))
189 (error "Not at a sexp"))))
191 (defvar beginning-of-defun-function nil
192 "If non-nil, function for `beginning-of-defun-raw' to call.
193 This is used to find the beginning of the defun instead of using the
194 normal recipe (see `beginning-of-defun'). Major modes can define this
195 if defining `defun-prompt-regexp' is not sufficient to handle the mode's
196 needs.
198 The function takes the same argument as `beginning-of-defun' and should
199 behave similarly, returning non-nil if it found the beginning of a defun.
200 Ideally it should move to a point right before an open-paren which encloses
201 the body of the defun.")
203 (defun beginning-of-defun (&optional arg)
204 "Move backward to the beginning of a defun.
205 With ARG, do it that many times. Negative ARG means move forward
206 to the ARGth following beginning of defun.
208 If search is successful, return t; point ends up at the beginning
209 of the line where the search succeeded. Otherwise, return nil.
211 When `open-paren-in-column-0-is-defun-start' is non-nil, a defun
212 is assumed to start where there is a char with open-parenthesis
213 syntax at the beginning of a line. If `defun-prompt-regexp' is
214 non-nil, then a string which matches that regexp may also precede
215 the open-parenthesis. If `defun-prompt-regexp' and
216 `open-paren-in-column-0-is-defun-start' are both nil, this
217 function instead finds an open-paren at the outermost level.
219 If the variable `beginning-of-defun-function' is non-nil, its
220 value is called as a function, with argument ARG, to find the
221 defun's beginning.
223 Regardless of the values of `defun-prompt-regexp' and
224 `beginning-of-defun-function', point always moves to the
225 beginning of the line whenever the search is successful."
226 (interactive "^p")
227 (or (not (eq this-command 'beginning-of-defun))
228 (eq last-command 'beginning-of-defun)
229 (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)
230 (push-mark))
231 (and (beginning-of-defun-raw arg)
232 (progn (beginning-of-line) t)))
234 (defun beginning-of-defun-raw (&optional arg)
235 "Move point to the character that starts a defun.
236 This is identical to function `beginning-of-defun', except that point
237 does not move to the beginning of the line when `defun-prompt-regexp'
238 is non-nil.
240 If variable `beginning-of-defun-function' is non-nil, its value
241 is called as a function to find the defun's beginning."
242 (interactive "^p") ; change this to "P", maybe, if we ever come to pass ARG
243 ; to beginning-of-defun-function.
244 (unless arg (setq arg 1))
245 (cond
246 (beginning-of-defun-function
247 (condition-case nil
248 (funcall beginning-of-defun-function arg)
249 ;; We used to define beginning-of-defun-function as taking no argument
250 ;; but that makes it impossible to implement correct forward motion:
251 ;; we used to use end-of-defun for that, but it's not supposed to do
252 ;; the same thing (it moves to the end of a defun not to the beginning
253 ;; of the next).
254 ;; In case the beginning-of-defun-function uses the old calling
255 ;; convention, fallback on the old implementation.
256 (wrong-number-of-arguments
257 (if (> arg 0)
258 (dotimes (i arg)
259 (funcall beginning-of-defun-function))
260 ;; Better not call end-of-defun-function directly, in case
261 ;; it's not defined.
262 (end-of-defun (- arg))))))
264 ((or defun-prompt-regexp open-paren-in-column-0-is-defun-start)
265 (and (< arg 0) (not (eobp)) (forward-char 1))
266 (and (re-search-backward (if defun-prompt-regexp
267 (concat (if open-paren-in-column-0-is-defun-start
268 "^\\s(\\|" "")
269 "\\(?:" defun-prompt-regexp "\\)\\s(")
270 "^\\s(")
271 nil 'move arg)
272 (progn (goto-char (1- (match-end 0)))
273 t)))
275 ;; If open-paren-in-column-0-is-defun-start and defun-prompt-regexp
276 ;; are both nil, column 0 has no significance - so scan forward
277 ;; from BOB to see how nested point is, then carry on from there.
279 ;; It is generally not a good idea to land up here, because the
280 ;; call to scan-lists below can be extremely slow. This is because
281 ;; back_comment in syntax.c may have to scan from bob to find the
282 ;; beginning of each comment. Fixing this is not trivial -- cyd.
284 ((eq arg 0))
286 (let ((floor (point-min))
287 (ceiling (point-max))
288 (arg-+ve (> arg 0)))
289 (save-restriction
290 (widen)
291 (let ((ppss (let (syntax-begin-function
292 font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function)
293 (syntax-ppss)))
294 ;; position of least enclosing paren, or nil.
295 encl-pos)
296 ;; Back out of any comment/string, so that encl-pos will always
297 ;; become nil if we're at top-level.
298 (when (nth 8 ppss)
299 (goto-char (nth 8 ppss))
300 (setq ppss (syntax-ppss))) ; should be fast, due to cache.
301 (setq encl-pos (syntax-ppss-toplevel-pos ppss))
302 (if encl-pos (goto-char encl-pos))
304 (and encl-pos arg-+ve (setq arg (1- arg)))
305 (and (not encl-pos) (not arg-+ve) (not (looking-at "\\s("))
306 (setq arg (1+ arg)))
308 (condition-case nil ; to catch crazy parens.
309 (progn
310 (goto-char (scan-lists (point) (- arg) 0))
311 (if arg-+ve
312 (if (>= (point) floor)
314 (goto-char floor)
315 nil)
316 ;; forward to next (, or trigger the c-c
317 (goto-char (1- (scan-lists (point) 1 -1)))
318 (if (<= (point) ceiling)
320 (goto-char ceiling)
321 nil)))
322 (error
323 (goto-char (if arg-+ve floor ceiling))
324 nil))))))))
326 (defvar end-of-defun-function
327 (lambda () (forward-sexp 1))
328 "Function for `end-of-defun' to call.
329 This is used to find the end of the defun at point.
330 It is called with no argument, right after calling `beginning-of-defun-raw'.
331 So the function can assume that point is at the beginning of the defun body.
332 It should move point to the first position after the defun.")
334 (defun buffer-end (arg)
335 "Return the \"far end\" position of the buffer, in direction ARG.
336 If ARG is positive, that's the end of the buffer.
337 Otherwise, that's the beginning of the buffer."
338 (if (> arg 0) (point-max) (point-min)))
340 (defun end-of-defun (&optional arg)
341 "Move forward to next end of defun.
342 With argument, do it that many times.
343 Negative argument -N means move back to Nth preceding end of defun.
345 An end of a defun occurs right after the close-parenthesis that
346 matches the open-parenthesis that starts a defun; see function
347 `beginning-of-defun'.
349 If variable `end-of-defun-function' is non-nil, its value
350 is called as a function to find the defun's end."
351 (interactive "^p")
352 (or (not (eq this-command 'end-of-defun))
353 (eq last-command 'end-of-defun)
354 (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)
355 (push-mark))
356 (if (or (null arg) (= arg 0)) (setq arg 1))
357 (let ((pos (point))
358 (beg (progn (end-of-line 1) (beginning-of-defun-raw 1) (point))))
359 (funcall end-of-defun-function)
360 ;; When comparing point against pos, we want to consider that if
361 ;; point was right after the end of the function, it's still
362 ;; considered as "in that function".
363 ;; E.g. `eval-defun' from right after the last close-paren.
364 (unless (bolp)
365 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
366 (if (looking-at "\\s<\\|\n")
367 (forward-line 1)))
368 (cond
369 ((> arg 0)
370 ;; Moving forward.
371 (if (> (point) pos)
372 ;; We already moved forward by one because we started from
373 ;; within a function.
374 (setq arg (1- arg))
375 ;; We started from after the end of the previous function.
376 (goto-char pos))
377 (unless (zerop arg)
378 (beginning-of-defun-raw (- arg))
379 (funcall end-of-defun-function)))
380 ((< arg 0)
381 ;; Moving backward.
382 (if (< (point) pos)
383 ;; We already moved backward because we started from between
384 ;; two functions.
385 (setq arg (1+ arg))
386 ;; We started from inside a function.
387 (goto-char beg))
388 (unless (zerop arg)
389 (beginning-of-defun-raw (- arg))
390 (funcall end-of-defun-function))))
391 (unless (bolp)
392 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
393 (if (looking-at "\\s<\\|\n")
394 (forward-line 1)))))
396 (defun mark-defun (&optional allow-extend)
397 "Put mark at end of this defun, point at beginning.
398 The defun marked is the one that contains point or follows point.
400 Interactively, if this command is repeated
401 or (in Transient Mark mode) if the mark is active,
402 it marks the next defun after the ones already marked."
403 (interactive "p")
404 (cond ((and allow-extend
405 (or (and (eq last-command this-command) (mark t))
406 (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)))
407 (set-mark
408 (save-excursion
409 (goto-char (mark))
410 (end-of-defun)
411 (point))))
413 (let ((opoint (point))
414 beg end)
415 (push-mark opoint)
416 ;; Try first in this order for the sake of languages with nested
417 ;; functions where several can end at the same place as with
418 ;; the offside rule, e.g. Python.
419 (beginning-of-defun)
420 (setq beg (point))
421 (end-of-defun)
422 (setq end (point))
423 (while (looking-at "^\n")
424 (forward-line 1))
425 (if (> (point) opoint)
426 (progn
427 ;; We got the right defun.
428 (push-mark beg nil t)
429 (goto-char end)
430 (exchange-point-and-mark))
431 ;; beginning-of-defun moved back one defun
432 ;; so we got the wrong one.
433 (goto-char opoint)
434 (end-of-defun)
435 (push-mark (point) nil t)
436 (beginning-of-defun))
437 (re-search-backward "^\n" (- (point) 1) t)))))
439 (defun narrow-to-defun (&optional arg)
440 "Make text outside current defun invisible.
441 The defun visible is the one that contains point or follows point.
442 Optional ARG is ignored."
443 (interactive)
444 (save-excursion
445 (widen)
446 (let ((opoint (point))
447 beg end)
448 ;; Try first in this order for the sake of languages with nested
449 ;; functions where several can end at the same place as with
450 ;; the offside rule, e.g. Python.
451 (beginning-of-defun)
452 (setq beg (point))
453 (end-of-defun)
454 (setq end (point))
455 (while (looking-at "^\n")
456 (forward-line 1))
457 (unless (> (point) opoint)
458 ;; beginning-of-defun moved back one defun
459 ;; so we got the wrong one.
460 (goto-char opoint)
461 (end-of-defun)
462 (setq end (point))
463 (beginning-of-defun)
464 (setq beg (point)))
465 (goto-char end)
466 (re-search-backward "^\n" (- (point) 1) t)
467 (narrow-to-region beg end))))
469 (defvar insert-pair-alist
470 '((?\( ?\)) (?\[ ?\]) (?\{ ?\}) (?\< ?\>) (?\" ?\") (?\' ?\') (?\` ?\'))
471 "Alist of paired characters inserted by `insert-pair'.
472 Each element looks like (OPEN-CHAR CLOSE-CHAR) or (COMMAND-CHAR
473 OPEN-CHAR CLOSE-CHAR). The characters OPEN-CHAR and CLOSE-CHAR
474 of the pair whose key is equal to the last input character with
475 or without modifiers, are inserted by `insert-pair'.")
477 (defun insert-pair (&optional arg open close)
478 "Enclose following ARG sexps in a pair of OPEN and CLOSE characters.
479 Leave point after the first character.
480 A negative ARG encloses the preceding ARG sexps instead.
481 No argument is equivalent to zero: just insert characters
482 and leave point between.
483 If `parens-require-spaces' is non-nil, this command also inserts a space
484 before and after, depending on the surrounding characters.
485 If region is active, insert enclosing characters at region boundaries.
487 If arguments OPEN and CLOSE are nil, the character pair is found
488 from the variable `insert-pair-alist' according to the last input
489 character with or without modifiers. If no character pair is
490 found in the variable `insert-pair-alist', then the last input
491 character is inserted ARG times.
493 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
494 (interactive "P")
495 (if (not (and open close))
496 (let ((pair (or (assq last-command-event insert-pair-alist)
497 (assq (event-basic-type last-command-event)
498 insert-pair-alist))))
499 (if pair
500 (if (nth 2 pair)
501 (setq open (nth 1 pair) close (nth 2 pair))
502 (setq open (nth 0 pair) close (nth 1 pair))))))
503 (if (and open close)
504 (if (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)
505 (progn
506 (save-excursion (goto-char (region-end)) (insert close))
507 (save-excursion (goto-char (region-beginning)) (insert open)))
508 (if arg (setq arg (prefix-numeric-value arg))
509 (setq arg 0))
510 (cond ((> arg 0) (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
511 ((< arg 0) (forward-sexp arg) (setq arg (- arg))))
512 (and parens-require-spaces
513 (not (bobp))
514 (memq (char-syntax (preceding-char)) (list ?w ?_ (char-syntax close)))
515 (insert " "))
516 (insert open)
517 (save-excursion
518 (or (eq arg 0) (forward-sexp arg))
519 (insert close)
520 (and parens-require-spaces
521 (not (eobp))
522 (memq (char-syntax (following-char)) (list ?w ?_ (char-syntax open)))
523 (insert " "))))
524 (insert-char (event-basic-type last-command-event)
525 (prefix-numeric-value arg))))
527 (defun insert-parentheses (&optional arg)
528 "Enclose following ARG sexps in parentheses.
529 Leave point after open-paren.
530 A negative ARG encloses the preceding ARG sexps instead.
531 No argument is equivalent to zero: just insert `()' and leave point between.
532 If `parens-require-spaces' is non-nil, this command also inserts a space
533 before and after, depending on the surrounding characters.
534 If region is active, insert enclosing characters at region boundaries.
536 This command assumes point is not in a string or comment."
537 (interactive "P")
538 (insert-pair arg ?\( ?\)))
540 (defun delete-pair ()
541 "Delete a pair of characters enclosing the sexp that follows point."
542 (interactive)
543 (save-excursion (forward-sexp 1) (delete-char -1))
544 (delete-char 1))
546 (defun raise-sexp (&optional arg)
547 "Raise ARG sexps higher up the tree."
548 (interactive "p")
549 (let ((s (if (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)
550 (buffer-substring (region-beginning) (region-end))
551 (buffer-substring
552 (point)
553 (save-excursion (forward-sexp arg) (point))))))
554 (backward-up-list 1)
555 (delete-region (point) (save-excursion (forward-sexp 1) (point)))
556 (save-excursion (insert s))))
558 (defun move-past-close-and-reindent ()
559 "Move past next `)', delete indentation before it, then indent after it."
560 (interactive)
561 (up-list 1)
562 (forward-char -1)
563 (while (save-excursion ; this is my contribution
564 (let ((before-paren (point)))
565 (back-to-indentation)
566 (and (= (point) before-paren)
567 (progn
568 ;; Move to end of previous line.
569 (beginning-of-line)
570 (forward-char -1)
571 ;; Verify it doesn't end within a string or comment.
572 (let ((end (point))
573 state)
574 (beginning-of-line)
575 ;; Get state at start of line.
576 (setq state (list 0 nil nil
577 (null (calculate-lisp-indent))
578 nil nil nil nil
579 nil))
580 ;; Parse state across the line to get state at end.
581 (setq state (parse-partial-sexp (point) end nil nil
582 state))
583 ;; Check not in string or comment.
584 (and (not (elt state 3)) (not (elt state 4))))))))
585 (delete-indentation))
586 (forward-char 1)
587 (newline-and-indent))
589 (defun check-parens () ; lame name?
590 "Check for unbalanced parentheses in the current buffer.
591 More accurately, check the narrowed part of the buffer for unbalanced
592 expressions (\"sexps\") in general. This is done according to the
593 current syntax table and will find unbalanced brackets or quotes as
594 appropriate. (See Info node `(emacs)Parentheses'.) If imbalance is
595 found, an error is signaled and point is left at the first unbalanced
596 character."
597 (interactive)
598 (condition-case data
599 ;; Buffer can't have more than (point-max) sexps.
600 (scan-sexps (point-min) (point-max))
601 (scan-error (goto-char (nth 2 data))
602 ;; Could print (nth 1 data), which is either
603 ;; "Containing expression ends prematurely" or
604 ;; "Unbalanced parentheses", but those may not be so
605 ;; accurate/helpful, e.g. quotes may actually be
606 ;; mismatched.
607 (error "Unmatched bracket or quote"))))
609 (defun field-complete (table &optional predicate)
610 (let ((minibuffer-completion-table table)
611 (minibuffer-completion-predicate predicate)
612 ;; This made sense for lisp-complete-symbol, but for
613 ;; field-complete, this is out of place. --Stef
614 ;; (completion-annotate-function
615 ;; (unless (eq predicate 'fboundp)
616 ;; (lambda (str)
617 ;; (if (fboundp (intern-soft str)) " <f>"))))
619 (call-interactively 'minibuffer-complete)))
621 (defun lisp-complete-symbol (&optional predicate)
622 "Perform completion on Lisp symbol preceding point.
623 Compare that symbol against the known Lisp symbols.
624 If no characters can be completed, display a list of possible completions.
625 Repeating the command at that point scrolls the list.
627 When called from a program, optional arg PREDICATE is a predicate
628 determining which symbols are considered, e.g. `commandp'.
629 If PREDICATE is nil, the context determines which symbols are
630 considered. If the symbol starts just after an open-parenthesis, only
631 symbols with function definitions are considered. Otherwise, all
632 symbols with function definitions, values or properties are
633 considered."
634 (interactive)
635 (let* ((data (lisp-completion-at-point predicate))
636 (plist (nthcdr 3 data)))
637 (if (null data)
638 (minibuffer-message "Nothing to complete")
639 (let ((completion-annotate-function
640 (plist-get plist :annotation-function)))
641 (completion-in-region (nth 0 data) (nth 1 data) (nth 2 data)
642 (plist-get plist :predicate))))))
645 (defun lisp-completion-at-point (&optional predicate)
646 "Function used for `completion-at-point-functions' in `emacs-lisp-mode'."
647 ;; FIXME: the `end' could be after point?
648 (with-syntax-table emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table
649 (let* ((pos (point))
650 (beg (condition-case nil
651 (save-excursion
652 (backward-sexp 1)
653 (skip-syntax-forward "'")
654 (point))
655 (scan-error pos)))
656 (predicate
657 (or predicate
658 (save-excursion
659 (goto-char beg)
660 (if (not (eq (char-before) ?\())
661 (lambda (sym) ;why not just nil ? -sm
662 (or (boundp sym) (fboundp sym)
663 (symbol-plist sym)))
664 ;; Looks like a funcall position. Let's double check.
665 (if (condition-case nil
666 (progn (up-list -2) (forward-char 1)
667 (eq (char-after) ?\())
668 (error nil))
669 ;; If the first element of the parent list is an open
670 ;; paren we are probably not in a funcall position.
671 ;; Maybe a `let' varlist or something.
673 ;; Else, we assume that a function name is expected.
674 'fboundp)))))
675 (end
676 (unless (or (eq beg (point-max))
677 (member (char-syntax (char-after beg)) '(?\" ?\( ?\))))
678 (condition-case nil
679 (save-excursion
680 (goto-char beg)
681 (forward-sexp 1)
682 (when (>= (point) pos)
683 (point)))
684 (scan-error pos)))))
685 (when end
686 (list beg end obarray
687 :predicate predicate
688 :annotation-function
689 (unless (eq predicate 'fboundp)
690 (lambda (str) (if (fboundp (intern-soft str)) " <f>"))))))))
692 ;;; lisp.el ends here