Release this as Muse 3.00.90 (RC1).
[muse-el.git] / muse.el
blob62e9cdf2153444296865c1523051441575e3cf9e
1 ;;; muse.el --- An authoring and publishing tool for Emacs.
3 ;; Copyright (C) 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 ;; Emacs Lisp Archive Entry
6 ;; Filename: muse.el
7 ;; Version: 3.00.90 (RC1)
8 ;; Date: Thu 15-Jun-2005
9 ;; Keywords: hypermedia
10 ;; Author: John Wiegley (johnw AT gnu DOT org)
11 ;; Maintainer: Michael Olson (mwolson AT gnu DOT org)
12 ;; Description: An authoring and publishing tool for Emacs
13 ;; URL: http://www.mwolson.org/projects/MuseMode.html
14 ;; Compatibility: Emacs21
16 ;; This file is not part of GNU Emacs.
18 ;; This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
19 ;; the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
20 ;; Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later
21 ;; version.
23 ;; This is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
24 ;; ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
25 ;; FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
26 ;; for more details.
28 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
29 ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
30 ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
31 ;; Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
33 ;;; Commentary:
35 ;; Muse is a tool for easily authoring and publishing documents. It
36 ;; allows for rapid prototyping of hyperlinked text, which may then be
37 ;; exported to multiple output formats -- such as HTML, LaTeX,
38 ;; Texinfo, etc.
40 ;; The markup rules used by Muse are intended to be very friendly to
41 ;; people familiar with Emacs. See the included QuickStart file in
42 ;; the `examples' directory for more information.
44 ;;; Contributors:
46 ;;; Code:
48 (defvar muse-version "3.00.90 (RC1)"
49 "The version of Muse currently loaded")
51 (defun muse-version ()
52 "Display the version of Muse that is currently loaded."
53 (interactive)
54 (message muse-version))
56 (defgroup muse nil
57 "Options controlling the behavior of Muse.
58 The markup used by Muse is intended to be very friendly to people
59 familiar with Emacs."
60 :group 'hypermedia)
62 (defvar muse-under-windows-p (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt)))
64 (require 'muse-regexps)
66 ;;; Return an list of known wiki names and the files they represent.
68 (defsubst muse-delete-file-if-exists (file)
69 (when (file-exists-p file)
70 (delete-file file)
71 (message "Removed %s" file)))
73 (defsubst muse-time-less-p (t1 t2)
74 "Say whether time T1 is less than time T2."
75 (or (< (car t1) (car t2))
76 (and (= (car t1) (car t2))
77 (< (nth 1 t1) (nth 1 t2)))))
79 (defun muse-page-name (&optional name)
80 "Return the canonical form of a Muse page name.
81 All this means is that certain extensions, like .gz, are removed."
82 (save-match-data
83 (unless name
84 (setq name buffer-file-name))
85 (if name
86 (let ((page (file-name-nondirectory name)))
87 (if (string-match muse-ignored-extensions-regexp page)
88 (replace-match "" t t page)
89 page)))))
91 (defun muse-eval-lisp (form)
92 "Evaluate the given form and return the result as a string."
93 (require 'pp)
94 (save-match-data
95 (let ((object (eval (read form))))
96 (cond
97 ((stringp object) object)
98 ((and (listp object)
99 (not (eq object nil)))
100 (let ((string (pp-to-string object)))
101 (substring string 0 (1- (length string)))))
102 ((numberp object)
103 (number-to-string object))
104 ((eq object nil) "")
106 (pp-to-string object))))))
108 ;; The following code was extracted from cl
110 (defun muse-const-expr-p (x)
111 (cond ((consp x)
112 (or (eq (car x) 'quote)
113 (and (memq (car x) '(function function*))
114 (or (symbolp (nth 1 x))
115 (and (eq (and (consp (nth 1 x))
116 (car (nth 1 x))) 'lambda) 'func)))))
117 ((symbolp x) (and (memq x '(nil t)) t))
118 (t t)))
120 (put 'muse-assertion-failed 'error-conditions '(error))
121 (put 'muse-assertion-failed 'error-message "Assertion failed")
123 (defun muse-list* (arg &rest rest)
124 "Return a new list with specified args as elements, cons'd to last arg.
125 Thus, `(list* A B C D)' is equivalent to `(nconc (list A B C) D)', or to
126 `(cons A (cons B (cons C D)))'."
127 (cond ((not rest) arg)
128 ((not (cdr rest)) (cons arg (car rest)))
129 (t (let* ((n (length rest))
130 (copy (copy-sequence rest))
131 (last (nthcdr (- n 2) copy)))
132 (setcdr last (car (cdr last)))
133 (cons arg copy)))))
135 (defmacro muse-assert (form &optional show-args string &rest args)
136 "Verify that FORM returns non-nil; signal an error if not.
137 Second arg SHOW-ARGS means to include arguments of FORM in message.
138 Other args STRING and ARGS... are arguments to be passed to `error'.
139 They are not evaluated unless the assertion fails. If STRING is
140 omitted, a default message listing FORM itself is used."
141 (let ((sargs
142 (and show-args
143 (delq nil (mapcar
144 (function
145 (lambda (x)
146 (and (not (muse-const-expr-p x)) x)))
147 (cdr form))))))
148 (list 'progn
149 (list 'or form
150 (if string
151 (muse-list* 'error string (append sargs args))
152 (list 'signal '(quote muse-assertion-failed)
153 (muse-list* 'list (list 'quote form) sargs))))
154 nil)))
156 ;; Compatibility functions
158 (defun muse-looking-back (regexp &optional limit)
159 (if (fboundp 'looking-back)
160 (looking-back regexp limit)
161 (save-excursion
162 (re-search-backward (concat "\\(?:" regexp "\\)\\=") limit t))))
164 (provide 'muse)
166 ;;; muse.el ends here