1 ;;; python-mode.el --- Major mode for editing Python programs
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1992,1993,1994 Tim Peters
5 ;; Author: 1995 Barry A. Warsaw
6 ;; 1992-1994 Tim Peters
7 ;; Maintainer: python-mode@python.org
10 ;; Last Modified: $Date$
11 ;; Keywords: python editing language major-mode
13 ;; This software is provided as-is, without express or implied
14 ;; warranty. Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute or sell this
15 ;; software, without fee, for any purpose and by any individual or
16 ;; organization, is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright
17 ;; notice and this paragraph appear in all copies.
21 ;; This is a major mode for editing Python programs. It was developed
22 ;; by Tim Peters <tim@ksr.com> after an original idea by Michael
23 ;; A. Guravage. Tim doesn't appear to be on the 'net any longer so I
24 ;; have undertaken maintenance of the mode.
26 ;; At some point this mode will undergo a rewrite to bring it more in
27 ;; line with GNU Emacs Lisp coding standards. But all in all, the
28 ;; mode works exceedingly well.
30 ;; The following statements, placed in your .emacs file or
31 ;; site-init.el, will cause this file to be autoloaded, and
32 ;; python-mode invoked, when visiting .py files (assuming this file is
33 ;; in your load-path):
35 ;; (autoload 'python-mode "python-mode" "Python editing mode." t)
36 ;; (setq auto-mode-alist
37 ;; (cons '("\\.py$" . python-mode) auto-mode-alist))
39 ;; Here's a brief list of recent additions/improvements:
41 ;; - Wrapping and indentation within triple quote strings should work
43 ;; - `Standard' bug reporting mechanism (use C-c C-b)
44 ;; - py-mark-block was moved to C-c C-m
45 ;; - C-c C-v shows you the python-mode version
46 ;; - a basic python-font-lock-keywords has been added for Emacs 19
47 ;; font-lock colorizations.
48 ;; - proper interaction with pending-del and del-sel modes.
49 ;; - New py-electric-colon (:) command for improved outdenting. Also
50 ;; py-indent-line (TAB) should handle outdented lines better.
51 ;; - New commands py-outdent-left (C-c C-l) and py-indent-right (C-c C-r)
53 ;; Here's a brief to do list:
55 ;; - Better integration with gud-mode for debugging.
56 ;; - Rewrite according to GNU Emacs Lisp standards.
57 ;; - py-delete-char should obey numeric arguments.
58 ;; - even better support for outdenting. Guido suggests outdents of
59 ;; at least one level after a return, raise, break, or continue
61 ;; - de-electrify colon inside literals (e.g. comments and strings)
63 ;; If you can think of more things you'd like to see, drop me a line.
64 ;; If you want to report bugs, use py-submit-bug-report (C-c C-b).
66 ;; Note that I only test things on XEmacs (currently 19.11). If you
67 ;; port stuff to FSF Emacs 19, or Emacs 18, please send me your
71 ;; python-mode|Barry A. Warsaw|python-mode@python.org
72 ;; |Major mode for editing Python programs
73 ;; |$Date$|$Revision$|
78 ;; user definable variables
79 ;; vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
81 (defvar py-python-command
"python"
82 "*Shell command used to start Python interpreter.")
84 (defvar py-indent-offset
4
85 "*Indentation increment.
86 Note that `\\[py-guess-indent-offset]' can usually guess a good value
87 when you're editing someone else's Python code.")
89 (defvar py-align-multiline-strings-p t
90 "*Flag describing how multiline triple quoted strings are aligned.
91 When this flag is non-nil, continuation lines are lined up under the
92 preceding line's indentation. When this flag is nil, continuation
93 lines are aligned to column zero.")
95 (defvar py-block-comment-prefix
"##"
96 "*String used by `py-comment-region' to comment out a block of code.
97 This should follow the convention for non-indenting comment lines so
98 that the indentation commands won't get confused (i.e., the string
99 should be of the form `#x...' where `x' is not a blank or a tab, and
100 `...' is arbitrary).")
102 (defvar py-scroll-process-buffer t
103 "*Scroll Python process buffer as output arrives.
104 If nil, the Python process buffer acts, with respect to scrolling, like
105 Shell-mode buffers normally act. This is surprisingly complicated and
106 so won't be explained here; in fact, you can't get the whole story
107 without studying the Emacs C code.
109 If non-nil, the behavior is different in two respects (which are
110 slightly inaccurate in the interest of brevity):
112 - If the buffer is in a window, and you left point at its end, the
113 window will scroll as new output arrives, and point will move to the
114 buffer's end, even if the window is not the selected window (that
115 being the one the cursor is in). The usual behavior for shell-mode
116 windows is not to scroll, and to leave point where it was, if the
117 buffer is in a window other than the selected window.
119 - If the buffer is not visible in any window, and you left point at
120 its end, the buffer will be popped into a window as soon as more
121 output arrives. This is handy if you have a long-running
122 computation and don't want to tie up screen area waiting for the
123 output. The usual behavior for a shell-mode buffer is to stay
124 invisible until you explicitly visit it.
126 Note the `and if you left point at its end' clauses in both of the
127 above: you can `turn off' the special behaviors while output is in
128 progress, by visiting the Python buffer and moving point to anywhere
129 besides the end. Then the buffer won't scroll, point will remain where
130 you leave it, and if you hide the buffer it will stay hidden until you
131 visit it again. You can enable and disable the special behaviors as
132 often as you like, while output is in progress, by (respectively) moving
133 point to, or away from, the end of the buffer.
135 Warning: If you expect a large amount of output, you'll probably be
136 happier setting this option to nil.
138 Obscure: `End of buffer' above should really say `at or beyond the
139 process mark', but if you know what that means you didn't need to be
142 (defvar py-temp-directory
143 (let ((ok '(lambda (x)
145 (setq x
(expand-file-name x
)) ; always true
149 (or (funcall ok
(getenv "TMPDIR"))
150 (funcall ok
"/usr/tmp")
154 "Couldn't find a usable temp directory -- set py-temp-directory")))
155 "*Directory used for temp files created by a *Python* process.
156 By default, the first directory from this list that exists and that you
157 can write into: the value (if any) of the environment variable TMPDIR,
158 /usr/tmp, /tmp, or the current directory.")
160 (defvar py-beep-if-tab-change t
161 "*Ring the bell if tab-width is changed.
162 If a comment of the form
164 \t# vi:set tabsize=<number>:
166 is found before the first code line when the file is entered, and the
167 current value of (the general Emacs variable) `tab-width' does not
168 equal <number>, `tab-width' is set to <number>, a message saying so is
169 displayed in the echo area, and if `py-beep-if-tab-change' is non-nil
170 the Emacs bell is also rung as a warning.")
172 ;; These were the previous font-lock keywords, but I think I now
173 ;; prefer the ones from XEmacs 19.12's font-lock.el. I've merged the
174 ;; two into the new definition below.
176 ;;(defvar python-font-lock-keywords
183 ;; '("access" "and" "break" "continue"
184 ;; "del" "elif" "else" "except"
185 ;; "exec" "finally" "for" "from"
186 ;; "global" "if" "import" "in"
187 ;; "is" "lambda" "not" "or"
188 ;; "pass" "print" "raise" "return"
189 ;; "try" "while" "def" "class"
195 ;; '("\\bdef\\s +\\(\\sw+\\)(" 1 font-lock-function-name-face)
197 ;; '("\\bclass\\s +\\(\\sw+\\)[(:]" 1 font-lock-function-name-face)
199 ;; "*Additional keywords to highlight `python-mode' buffers.")
201 ;; These are taken from XEmacs 19.12's font-lock.el file, but have the
202 ;; more complete list of keywords from the previous definition in
203 ;; python-mode.el. There are a few other minor stylistic changes as
206 (defvar python-font-lock-keywords
212 '("access" "and" "break" "continue"
213 "del" "elif" "else:" "except"
214 "except:" "exec" "finally:" "for"
215 "from" "global" "if" "import"
216 "in" "is" "lambda" "not"
217 "or" "pass" "print" "raise"
218 "return" "try:" "while"
224 '("\\bclass[ \t]+\\([a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z0-9_]*\\)"
225 1 font-lock-type-face
)
227 '("\\bdef[ \t]+\\([a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z0-9_]*\\)"
228 1 font-lock-function-name-face
)
230 "*Additional expressions to highlight in Python mode.")
232 ;; R Lindsay Todd <toddr@rpi.edu> suggests these changes to the
233 ;; original keywords, which wouldn't be necessary if we go with the
234 ;; XEmacs defaults, but which I agree makes sense without them.
237 ;; '("\\bdef\\s +\\(\\sw+\\)\\s *(" 1 font-lock-function-name-face)
239 ;; '("\\bclass\\s +\\(\\sw+\\)\\s *[(:]" 1 font-lock-type-face)
243 ;; ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
244 ;; NO USER DEFINABLE VARIABLES BEYOND THIS POINT
246 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-indent-offset
)
248 ;; Differentiate between Emacs 18, Lucid Emacs, and Emacs 19. This
249 ;; seems to be the standard way of checking this.
250 ;; BAW - This is *not* the right solution. When at all possible,
251 ;; instead of testing for the version of Emacs, use feature tests.
253 (setq py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p
(string-match "Lucid\\|XEmacs" emacs-version
))
254 (setq py-this-is-emacs-19-p
256 (not py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p
)
257 (string-match "^19\\." emacs-version
)))
259 ;; have to bind py-file-queue before installing the kill-emacs hook
260 (defvar py-file-queue nil
261 "Queue of Python temp files awaiting execution.
262 Currently-active file is at the head of the list.")
264 ;; define a mode-specific abbrev table for those who use such things
265 (defvar python-mode-abbrev-table nil
266 "Abbrev table in use in `python-mode' buffers.")
267 (define-abbrev-table 'python-mode-abbrev-table nil
)
269 (defvar python-mode-hook nil
270 "*Hook called by `python-mode'.")
272 ;; in previous version of python-mode.el, the hook was incorrectly
273 ;; called py-mode-hook, and was not defvar'd. deprecate its use.
274 (and (fboundp 'make-obsolete-variable
)
275 (make-obsolete-variable 'py-mode-hook
'python-mode-hook
))
277 (defvar py-mode-map
()
278 "Keymap used in `python-mode' buffers.")
282 (setq py-mode-map
(make-sparse-keymap))
284 ;; shadow global bindings for newline-and-indent w/ the py- version.
285 ;; BAW - this is extremely bad form, but I'm not going to change it
287 (mapcar (function (lambda (key)
289 py-mode-map key
'py-newline-and-indent
)))
290 (where-is-internal 'newline-and-indent
))
292 ;; BAW - you could do it this way, but its not considered proper
296 (define-key py-mode-map
(car x
) (cdr x
))))
297 '((":" . py-electric-colon
)
298 ("\C-c\C-c" . py-execute-buffer
)
299 ("\C-c|" . py-execute-region
)
301 ("\177" . py-delete-char
)
302 ("\n" . py-newline-and-indent
)
303 ("\C-c:" . py-guess-indent-offset
)
304 ("\C-c\t" . py-indent-region
)
305 ("\C-c\C-l" . py-outdent-left
)
306 ("\C-c\C-r" . py-indent-right
)
307 ("\C-c<" . py-shift-region-left
)
308 ("\C-c>" . py-shift-region-right
)
309 ("\C-c\C-n" . py-next-statement
)
310 ("\C-c\C-p" . py-previous-statement
)
311 ("\C-c\C-u" . py-goto-block-up
)
312 ("\C-c\C-m" . py-mark-block
)
313 ("\C-c#" . py-comment-region
)
314 ("\C-c?" . py-describe-mode
)
315 ("\C-c\C-hm" . py-describe-mode
)
316 ("\e\C-a" . beginning-of-python-def-or-class
)
317 ("\e\C-e" . end-of-python-def-or-class
)
318 ( "\e\C-h" . mark-python-def-or-class
)))
319 ;; should do all keybindings this way
320 (define-key py-mode-map
"\C-c\C-b" 'py-submit-bug-report
)
321 (define-key py-mode-map
"\C-c\C-v" 'py-version
)
324 (defvar py-mode-syntax-table nil
325 "Syntax table used in `python-mode' buffers.")
327 (if py-mode-syntax-table
329 (setq py-mode-syntax-table
(make-syntax-table))
330 ;; BAW - again, blech.
332 (lambda (x) (modify-syntax-entry
333 (car x
) (cdr x
) py-mode-syntax-table
)))
334 '(( ?\
( .
"()" ) ( ?\
) .
")(" )
335 ( ?\
[ .
"(]" ) ( ?\
] .
")[" )
336 ( ?\
{ .
"(}" ) ( ?\
} .
"){" )
337 ;; fix operator symbols misassigned in the std table
338 ( ?\$ .
"." ) ( ?\% .
"." ) ( ?\
& .
"." )
339 ( ?\
* .
"." ) ( ?\
+ .
"." ) ( ?\- .
"." )
340 ( ?\
/ .
"." ) ( ?\
< .
"." ) ( ?\
= .
"." )
341 ( ?\
> .
"." ) ( ?\| .
"." )
342 ( ?\_ .
"_" ) ; underscore is legit in symbols, but not words
343 ( ?
\' .
"\"") ; single quote is string quote
344 ( ?
\" .
"\"" ) ; double quote is string quote too
345 ( ?\
` .
"$") ; backquote is open and close paren
346 ( ?\
# .
"<") ; hash starts comment
347 ( ?
\n .
">")))) ; newline ends comment
349 (defconst py-stringlit-re
351 "'\\([^'\n\\]\\|\\\\.\\)*'" ; single-quoted
353 "\"\\([^\"\n\\]\\|\\\\.\\)*\"") ; double-quoted
354 "Regexp matching a Python string literal.")
356 ;; this is tricky because a trailing backslash does not mean
357 ;; continuation if it's in a comment
358 (defconst py-continued-re
360 "\\(" "[^#'\"\n\\]" "\\|" py-stringlit-re
"\\)*"
362 "Regexp matching Python lines that are continued via backslash.")
364 (defconst py-blank-or-comment-re
"[ \t]*\\($\\|#\\)"
365 "Regexp matching blank or comment lines.")
367 (defconst py-outdent-re
368 (concat "\\(" (mapconcat 'identity
370 "except\\(\\s +.*\\)?:"
375 "Regexp matching clauses to be outdented one level.")
377 (defconst py-no-outdent-re
378 (concat "\\(" (mapconcat 'identity
380 "except\\(\\s +.*\\)?:"
387 "Regexp matching lines to not outdent after.")
391 (defun python-mode ()
392 "Major mode for editing Python files.
393 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[py-submit-bug-report]' from a
394 `python-mode' buffer. Do `\\[py-describe-mode]' for detailed
395 documentation. To see what version of `python-mode' you are running,
396 enter `\\[py-version]'.
398 This mode knows about Python indentation, tokens, comments and
399 continuation lines. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
405 py-indent-offset\tindentation increment
406 py-block-comment-prefix\tcomment string used by py-comment-region
407 py-python-command\tshell command to invoke Python interpreter
408 py-scroll-process-buffer\talways scroll Python process buffer
409 py-temp-directory\tdirectory used for temp files (if needed)
410 py-beep-if-tab-change\tring the bell if tab-width is changed"
412 (kill-all-local-variables)
413 (set-syntax-table py-mode-syntax-table
)
414 (setq major-mode
'python-mode
416 local-abbrev-table python-mode-abbrev-table
)
417 (use-local-map py-mode-map
)
418 ;; Emacs 19 requires this
419 (if (or py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p py-this-is-emacs-19-p
)
420 (setq comment-multi-line nil
))
422 (mapcar (function (lambda (x)
423 (make-local-variable (car x
))
424 (set (car x
) (cdr x
))))
425 '((paragraph-separate .
"^[ \t]*$")
426 (paragraph-start .
"^[ \t]*$")
427 (require-final-newline . t
)
428 (comment-start .
"# ")
429 (comment-start-skip .
"# *")
430 (comment-column .
40)
431 (indent-region-function . py-indent-region
)
432 (indent-line-function . py-indent-line
)))
433 ;; hack to allow overriding the tabsize in the file (see tokenizer.c)
435 ;; not sure where the magic comment has to be; to save time
436 ;; searching for a rarity, we give up if it's not found prior to the
437 ;; first executable statement.
439 ;; BAW - on first glance, this seems like complete hackery. Why was
440 ;; this necessary, and is it still necessary?
441 (let ((case-fold-search nil
)
444 (if (re-search-forward
445 "^[ \t]*#[ \t]*vi:set[ \t]+tabsize=\\([0-9]+\\):"
446 (prog2 (py-next-statement 1) (point) (goto-char 1))
451 (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))))
452 (if (= tab-width new-tab-width
)
454 (setq tab-width new-tab-width
)
455 (message "Caution: tab-width changed to %d" new-tab-width
)
456 (if py-beep-if-tab-change
(beep)))))
459 ;; run the mode hook. py-mode-hook use is deprecated
461 (run-hooks 'python-mode-hook
)
462 (run-hooks 'py-mode-hook
)))
465 ;; electric characters
466 (defun py-outdent-p ()
467 ;; returns non-nil if the current line should outdent one level
469 (and (progn (back-to-indentation)
470 (looking-at py-outdent-re
))
471 (progn (backward-to-indentation 1)
472 (while (or (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re
)
474 (backward-to-indentation 1))
475 (not (looking-at py-no-outdent-re
)))
479 (defun py-electric-colon (arg)
481 In certain cases the line is outdented appropriately. If a numeric
482 argument is provided, that many colons are inserted non-electrically.
483 Electric behavior is inhibited inside a string or comment."
485 (self-insert-command (prefix-numeric-value arg
))
486 ;; are we in a string or comment?
488 (let ((pps (parse-partial-sexp (save-excursion
489 (beginning-of-python-def-or-class)
492 (not (or (nth 3 pps
) (nth 4 pps
)))))
496 (indent (py-compute-indentation)))
499 (= indent
(save-excursion
501 (py-compute-indentation)))
503 (setq outdent py-indent-offset
))
504 ;; Don't indent, only outdent. This assumes that any lines that
505 ;; are already outdented relative to py-compute-indentation were
506 ;; put there on purpose. Its highly annoying to have `:' indent
507 ;; for you. Use TAB, C-c C-l or C-c C-r to adjust. TBD: Is
508 ;; there a better way to determine this???
509 (if (< (current-indentation) indent
) nil
512 (delete-horizontal-space)
513 (indent-to (- indent outdent
))
516 (defun py-indent-right (arg)
517 "Indent the line by one `py-indent-offset' level.
518 With numeric arg, indent by that many levels. You cannot indent
519 farther right than the distance the line would be indented by
522 (let ((col (current-indentation))
523 (want (* arg py-indent-offset
))
524 (indent (py-compute-indentation))
525 (pos (- (point-max) (point)))
526 (bol (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (point))))
527 (if (<= (+ col want
) indent
)
530 (delete-horizontal-space)
531 (indent-to (+ col want
))
532 (if (> (- (point-max) pos
) (point))
533 (goto-char (- (point-max) pos
)))
536 (defun py-outdent-left (arg)
537 "Outdent the line by one `py-indent-offset' level.
538 With numeric arg, outdent by that many levels. You cannot outdent
539 farther left than column zero."
541 (let ((col (current-indentation))
542 (want (* arg py-indent-offset
))
543 (pos (- (point-max) (point)))
544 (bol (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (point))))
545 (if (<= 0 (- col want
))
548 (delete-horizontal-space)
549 (indent-to (- col want
))
550 (if (> (- (point-max) pos
) (point))
551 (goto-char (- (point-max) pos
)))
555 ;;; Functions that execute Python commands in a subprocess
557 "Start an interactive Python interpreter in another window.
558 This is like Shell mode, except that Python is running in the window
559 instead of a shell. See the `Interactive Shell' and `Shell Mode'
560 sections of the Emacs manual for details, especially for the key
561 bindings active in the `*Python*' buffer.
563 See the docs for variable `py-scroll-buffer' for info on scrolling
564 behavior in the process window.
566 Warning: Don't use an interactive Python if you change sys.ps1 or
567 sys.ps2 from their default values, or if you're running code that
568 prints `>>> ' or `... ' at the start of a line. `python-mode' can't
569 distinguish your output from Python's output, and assumes that `>>> '
570 at the start of a line is a prompt from Python. Similarly, the Emacs
571 Shell mode code assumes that both `>>> ' and `... ' at the start of a
572 line are Python prompts. Bad things can happen if you fool either
575 Warning: If you do any editing *in* the process buffer *while* the
576 buffer is accepting output from Python, do NOT attempt to `undo' the
577 changes. Some of the output (nowhere near the parts you changed!) may
578 be lost if you do. This appears to be an Emacs bug, an unfortunate
579 interaction between undo and process filters; the same problem exists in
580 non-Python process buffers using the default (Emacs-supplied) process
582 ;; BAW - should undo be disabled in the python process buffer, if
583 ;; this bug still exists?
585 (if py-this-is-emacs-19-p
588 (switch-to-buffer-other-window
589 (make-comint "Python" py-python-command
)))
592 (switch-to-buffer-other-window
593 (apply (if (fboundp 'make-shell
) 'make-shell
'make-comint
)
594 "Python" py-python-command nil
))))
595 (make-local-variable 'shell-prompt-pattern
)
596 (setq shell-prompt-pattern
"^>>> \\|^\\.\\.\\. ")
597 (set-process-filter (get-buffer-process (current-buffer))
599 (set-syntax-table py-mode-syntax-table
))
601 (defun py-execute-region (start end
)
602 "Send the region between START and END to a Python interpreter.
603 If there is a *Python* process it is used.
605 Hint: If you want to execute part of a Python file several times
606 \(e.g., perhaps you're developing a function and want to flesh it out
607 a bit at a time), use `\\[narrow-to-region]' to restrict the buffer to
608 the region of interest, and send the code to a *Python* process via
609 `\\[py-execute-buffer]' instead.
611 Following are subtleties to note when using a *Python* process:
613 If a *Python* process is used, the region is copied into a temporary
614 file (in directory `py-temp-directory'), and an `execfile' command is
615 sent to Python naming that file. If you send regions faster than
616 Python can execute them, `python-mode' will save them into distinct
617 temp files, and execute the next one in the queue the next time it
618 sees a `>>> ' prompt from Python. Each time this happens, the process
619 buffer is popped into a window (if it's not already in some window) so
620 you can see it, and a comment of the form
622 \t## working on region in file <name> ...
624 is inserted at the end.
626 Caution: No more than 26 regions can be pending at any given time.
627 This limit is (indirectly) inherited from libc's mktemp(3).
628 `python-mode' does not try to protect you from exceeding the limit.
629 It's extremely unlikely that you'll get anywhere close to the limit in
630 practice, unless you're trying to be a jerk <grin>.
632 See the `\\[py-shell]' docs for additional warnings."
634 (or (< start end
) (error "Region is empty"))
635 (let ((pyproc (get-process "Python"))
638 (shell-command-on-region start end py-python-command
)
639 ;; else feed it thru a temp file
640 (setq fname
(py-make-temp-name))
641 (write-region start end fname nil
'no-msg
)
642 (setq py-file-queue
(append py-file-queue
(list fname
)))
643 (if (cdr py-file-queue
)
644 (message "File %s queued for execution" fname
)
646 (py-execute-file pyproc fname
)))))
648 (defun py-execute-file (pyproc fname
)
649 (py-append-to-process-buffer
651 (format "## working on region in file %s ...\n" fname
))
652 (process-send-string pyproc
(format "execfile('%s')\n" fname
)))
654 (defun py-process-filter (pyproc string
)
655 (let ((curbuf (current-buffer))
656 (pbuf (process-buffer pyproc
))
657 (pmark (process-mark pyproc
))
660 ;; make sure we switch to a different buffer at least once. if we
661 ;; *don't* do this, then if the process buffer is in the selected
662 ;; window, and point is before the end, and lots of output is
663 ;; coming at a fast pace, then (a) simple cursor-movement commands
664 ;; like C-p, C-n, C-f, C-b, C-a, C-e take an incredibly long time
665 ;; to have a visible effect (the window just doesn't get updated,
666 ;; sometimes for minutes(!)), and (b) it takes about 5x longer to
667 ;; get all the process output (until the next python prompt).
669 ;; #b makes no sense to me at all. #a almost makes sense: unless
670 ;; we actually change buffers, set_buffer_internal in buffer.c
671 ;; doesn't set windows_or_buffers_changed to 1, & that in turn
672 ;; seems to make the Emacs command loop reluctant to update the
673 ;; display. Perhaps the default process filter in process.c's
674 ;; read_process_output has update_mode_lines++ for a similar
675 ;; reason? beats me ...
677 ;; BAW - we want to check to see if this still applies
678 (if (eq curbuf pbuf
) ; mysterious ugly hack
679 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create "*scratch*")))
682 (let* ((start (point))
683 (goback (< start pmark
))
684 (goend (and (not goback
) (= start
(point-max))))
685 (buffer-read-only nil
))
688 (move-marker pmark
(point))
693 (prog2 (beginning-of-line) (point)
696 (if goback
(goto-char start
)
698 (if py-scroll-process-buffer
699 (let* ((pop-up-windows t
)
700 (pwin (display-buffer pbuf
)))
701 (set-window-point pwin
(point)))))
705 (py-delete-file-silently (car py-file-queue
))
706 (setq py-file-queue
(cdr py-file-queue
))
708 (py-execute-file pyproc
(car py-file-queue
)))))
710 (progn (set-buffer pbuf
)
711 (goto-char (point-max))))
714 (defun py-execute-buffer ()
715 "Send the contents of the buffer to a Python interpreter.
716 If there is a *Python* process buffer it is used. If a clipping
717 restriction is in effect, only the accessible portion of the buffer is
718 sent. A trailing newline will be supplied if needed.
720 See the `\\[py-execute-region]' docs for an account of some subtleties."
722 (py-execute-region (point-min) (point-max)))
726 ;; Functions for Python style indentation
727 (defun py-delete-char ()
728 "Reduce indentation or delete character.
729 If point is at the leftmost column, deletes the preceding newline.
731 Else if point is at the leftmost non-blank character of a line that is
732 neither a continuation line nor a non-indenting comment line, or if
733 point is at the end of a blank line, reduces the indentation to match
734 that of the line that opened the current block of code. The line that
735 opened the block is displayed in the echo area to help you keep track
738 Else the preceding character is deleted, converting a tab to spaces if
739 needed so that only a single column position is deleted."
741 (if (or (/= (current-indentation) (current-column))
743 (py-continuation-line-p)
744 (looking-at "#[^ \t\n]")) ; non-indenting #
745 (backward-delete-char-untabify 1)
746 ;; else indent the same as the colon line that opened the block
748 ;; force non-blank so py-goto-block-up doesn't ignore it
751 (let ((base-indent 0) ; indentation of base line
752 (base-text "") ; and text of base line
754 (condition-case nil
; in case no enclosing block
756 (py-goto-block-up 'no-mark
)
757 (setq base-indent
(current-indentation)
758 base-text
(py-suck-up-leading-text)
761 (delete-char 1) ; toss the dummy character
762 (delete-horizontal-space)
763 (indent-to base-indent
)
765 (message "Closes block: %s" base-text
)))))
767 ;; required for pending-del and delsel modes
768 (put 'py-delete-char
'delete-selection
'supersede
)
769 (put 'py-delete-char
'pending-delete
'supersede
)
771 (defun py-indent-line ()
772 "Fix the indentation of the current line according to Python rules."
774 (let* ((ci (current-indentation))
775 (move-to-indentation-p (<= (current-column) ci
))
776 (need (py-compute-indentation)))
777 ;; see if we need to outdent
779 (setq need
(- need py-indent-offset
)))
783 (delete-horizontal-space)
785 (if move-to-indentation-p
(back-to-indentation))))
787 (defun py-newline-and-indent ()
788 "Strives to act like the Emacs `newline-and-indent'.
789 This is just `strives to' because correct indentation can't be computed
790 from scratch for Python code. In general, deletes the whitespace before
791 point, inserts a newline, and takes an educated guess as to how you want
792 the new line indented."
794 (let ((ci (current-indentation)))
795 (if (< ci
(current-column)) ; if point beyond indentation
797 ;; else try to act like newline-and-indent "normally" acts
800 (move-to-column ci
))))
802 (defun py-compute-indentation ()
804 (let ((pps (parse-partial-sexp (save-excursion
805 (beginning-of-python-def-or-class)
810 ;; are we inside a string or comment?
811 ((or (nth 3 pps
) (nth 4 pps
))
813 (if (not py-align-multiline-strings-p
) 0
814 ;; skip back over blank & non-indenting comment lines
815 ;; note: will skip a blank or non-indenting comment line
816 ;; that happens to be a continuation line too
817 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*\\([^ \t\n#]\\|#[ \t\n]\\)" nil
'move
)
818 (back-to-indentation)
820 ;; are we on a continuation line?
821 ((py-continuation-line-p)
822 (let ((startpos (point))
823 (open-bracket-pos (py-nesting-level))
824 endpos searching found
)
827 ;; align with first item in list; else a normal
828 ;; indent beyond the line with the open bracket
829 (goto-char (1+ open-bracket-pos
)) ; just beyond bracket
830 ;; is the first list item on the same line?
831 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
832 (if (null (memq (following-char) '(?
\n ?
# ?
\\)))
833 ; yes, so line up with it
835 ;; first list item on another line, or doesn't exist yet
837 (while (and (< (point) startpos
)
838 (looking-at "[ \t]*[#\n\\\\]")) ; skip noise
840 (if (< (point) startpos
)
841 ;; again mimic the first list item
842 (current-indentation)
843 ;; else they're about to enter the first item
844 (goto-char open-bracket-pos
)
845 (+ (current-indentation) py-indent-offset
))))
847 ;; else on backslash continuation line
849 (if (py-continuation-line-p) ; on at least 3rd line in block
850 (current-indentation) ; so just continue the pattern
851 ;; else started on 2nd line in block, so indent more.
852 ;; if base line is an assignment with a start on a RHS,
853 ;; indent to 2 beyond the leftmost "="; else skip first
854 ;; chunk of non-whitespace characters on base line, + 1 more
857 (setq endpos
(point) searching t
)
858 (back-to-indentation)
859 (setq startpos
(point))
860 ;; look at all "=" from left to right, stopping at first
861 ;; one not nested in a list or string
863 (skip-chars-forward "^=" endpos
)
864 (if (= (point) endpos
)
867 (setq state
(parse-partial-sexp startpos
(point)))
868 (if (and (zerop (car state
)) ; not in a bracket
869 (null (nth 3 state
))) ; & not in a string
871 (setq searching nil
) ; done searching in any case
874 (eq (following-char) ?
=)
875 (memq (char-after (- (point) 2))
877 (if (or (not found
) ; not an assignment
878 (looking-at "[ \t]*\\\\")) ; <=><spaces><backslash>
881 (skip-chars-forward "^ \t\n")))
882 (1+ (current-column))))))
884 ;; not on a continuation line
886 ;; if at start of restriction, or on a non-indenting comment
887 ;; line, assume they intended whatever's there
888 ((or (bobp) (looking-at "[ \t]*#[^ \t\n]"))
889 (current-indentation))
891 ;; else indentation based on that of the statement that
892 ;; precedes us; use the first line of that statement to
893 ;; establish the base, in case the user forced a non-std
894 ;; indentation for the continuation lines (if any)
896 ;; skip back over blank & non-indenting comment lines note:
897 ;; will skip a blank or non-indenting comment line that
898 ;; happens to be a continuation line too
899 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*\\([^ \t\n#]\\|#[ \t\n]\\)" nil
'move
)
900 ;; if we landed inside a string, go to the beginning of that
901 ;; string. this handles triple quoted, multi-line spanning
903 (py-goto-initial-line)
904 (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
905 (+ (current-indentation) py-indent-offset
)
906 (current-indentation)))))))
908 (defun py-guess-indent-offset (&optional global
)
909 "Guess a good value for, and change, `py-indent-offset'.
910 By default (without a prefix arg), makes a buffer-local copy of
911 `py-indent-offset' with the new value. This will not affect any other
912 Python buffers. With a prefix arg, changes the global value of
913 `py-indent-offset'. This affects all Python buffers (that don't have
914 their own buffer-local copy), both those currently existing and those
915 created later in the Emacs session.
917 Some people use a different value for `py-indent-offset' than you use.
918 There's no excuse for such foolishness, but sometimes you have to deal
919 with their ugly code anyway. This function examines the file and sets
920 `py-indent-offset' to what it thinks it was when they created the
923 Specifically, it searches forward from the statement containing point,
924 looking for a line that opens a block of code. `py-indent-offset' is
925 set to the difference in indentation between that line and the Python
926 statement following it. If the search doesn't succeed going forward,
927 it's tried again going backward."
928 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
934 (py-goto-initial-line)
935 (while (not (or found
(eobp)))
936 (if (re-search-forward ":[ \t]*\\($\\|[#\\]\\)" nil
'move
)
938 (setq restart
(point))
939 (py-goto-initial-line)
940 (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
942 (goto-char restart
)))))
946 (py-goto-initial-line)
947 (while (not (or found
(bobp)))
950 (re-search-backward ":[ \t]*\\($\\|[#\\]\\)" nil
'move
)
951 (or (py-goto-initial-line) t
) ; always true -- side effect
952 (py-statement-opens-block-p)))))
953 (setq colon-indent
(current-indentation)
954 found
(and found
(zerop (py-next-statement 1)))
955 new-value
(- (current-indentation) colon-indent
))
959 (funcall (if global
'kill-local-variable
'make-local-variable
)
961 (setq py-indent-offset new-value
)
962 (message "%s value of py-indent-offset set to %d"
963 (if global
"Global" "Local")
965 (error "Sorry, couldn't guess a value for py-indent-offset"))))
967 (defun py-shift-region (start end count
)
969 (goto-char end
) (beginning-of-line) (setq end
(point))
970 (goto-char start
) (beginning-of-line) (setq start
(point))
971 (indent-rigidly start end count
)))
973 (defun py-shift-region-left (start end
&optional count
)
974 "Shift region of Python code to the left.
975 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
976 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
977 shifted to the left, by `py-indent-offset' columns.
979 If a prefix argument is given, the region is instead shifted by that
981 (interactive "*r\nP") ; region; raw prefix arg
982 (py-shift-region start end
983 (- (prefix-numeric-value
984 (or count py-indent-offset
)))))
986 (defun py-shift-region-right (start end
&optional count
)
987 "Shift region of Python code to the right.
988 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
989 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
990 shifted to the right, by `py-indent-offset' columns.
992 If a prefix argument is given, the region is instead shifted by that
994 (interactive "*r\nP") ; region; raw prefix arg
995 (py-shift-region start end
(prefix-numeric-value
996 (or count py-indent-offset
))))
998 (defun py-indent-region (start end
&optional indent-offset
)
999 "Reindent a region of Python code.
1000 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
1001 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
1002 reindented. If the first line of the region has a non-whitespace
1003 character in the first column, the first line is left alone and the
1004 rest of the region is reindented with respect to it. Else the entire
1005 region is reindented with respect to the (closest code or
1006 indenting-comment) statement immediately preceding the region.
1008 This is useful when code blocks are moved or yanked, when enclosing
1009 control structures are introduced or removed, or to reformat code
1010 using a new value for the indentation offset.
1012 If a numeric prefix argument is given, it will be used as the value of
1013 the indentation offset. Else the value of `py-indent-offset' will be
1016 Warning: The region must be consistently indented before this function
1017 is called! This function does not compute proper indentation from
1018 scratch (that's impossible in Python), it merely adjusts the existing
1019 indentation to be correct in context.
1021 Warning: This function really has no idea what to do with
1022 non-indenting comment lines, and shifts them as if they were indenting
1023 comment lines. Fixing this appears to require telepathy.
1025 Special cases: whitespace is deleted from blank lines; continuation
1026 lines are shifted by the same amount their initial line was shifted,
1027 in order to preserve their relative indentation with respect to their
1028 initial line; and comment lines beginning in column 1 are ignored."
1029 (interactive "*r\nP") ; region; raw prefix arg
1031 (goto-char end
) (beginning-of-line) (setq end
(point-marker))
1032 (goto-char start
) (beginning-of-line)
1033 (let ((py-indent-offset (prefix-numeric-value
1034 (or indent-offset py-indent-offset
)))
1035 (indents '(-1)) ; stack of active indent levels
1036 (target-column 0) ; column to which to indent
1037 (base-shifted-by 0) ; amount last base line was shifted
1038 (indent-base (if (looking-at "[ \t\n]")
1039 (py-compute-indentation)
1042 (while (< (point) end
)
1043 (setq ci
(current-indentation))
1044 ;; figure out appropriate target column
1046 ((or (eq (following-char) ?
#) ; comment in column 1
1047 (looking-at "[ \t]*$")) ; entirely blank
1048 (setq target-column
0))
1049 ((py-continuation-line-p) ; shift relative to base line
1050 (setq target-column
(+ ci base-shifted-by
)))
1052 (if (> ci
(car indents
)) ; going deeper; push it
1053 (setq indents
(cons ci indents
))
1054 ;; else we should have seen this indent before
1055 (setq indents
(memq ci indents
)) ; pop deeper indents
1057 (error "Bad indentation in region, at line %d"
1060 (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))
1061 (setq target-column
(+ indent-base
1063 (- (length indents
) 2))))
1064 (setq base-shifted-by
(- target-column ci
))))
1066 (if (/= ci target-column
)
1068 (delete-horizontal-space)
1069 (indent-to target-column
)))
1071 (set-marker end nil
))
1074 ;; Functions for moving point
1075 (defun py-previous-statement (count)
1076 "Go to the start of previous Python statement.
1077 If the statement at point is the i'th Python statement, goes to the
1078 start of statement i-COUNT. If there is no such statement, goes to the
1079 first statement. Returns count of statements left to move.
1080 `Statements' do not include blank, comment, or continuation lines."
1081 (interactive "p") ; numeric prefix arg
1082 (if (< count
0) (py-next-statement (- count
))
1083 (py-goto-initial-line)
1086 (setq start
(point)) ; always true -- side effect
1088 (zerop (forward-line -
1))
1089 (py-goto-statement-at-or-above))
1090 (setq count
(1- count
)))
1091 (if (> count
0) (goto-char start
)))
1094 (defun py-next-statement (count)
1095 "Go to the start of next Python statement.
1096 If the statement at point is the i'th Python statement, goes to the
1097 start of statement i+COUNT. If there is no such statement, goes to the
1098 last statement. Returns count of statements left to move. `Statements'
1099 do not include blank, comment, or continuation lines."
1100 (interactive "p") ; numeric prefix arg
1101 (if (< count
0) (py-previous-statement (- count
))
1105 (setq start
(point)) ; always true -- side effect
1107 (py-goto-statement-below))
1108 (setq count
(1- count
)))
1109 (if (> count
0) (goto-char start
)))
1112 (defun py-goto-block-up (&optional nomark
)
1113 "Move up to start of current block.
1114 Go to the statement that starts the smallest enclosing block; roughly
1115 speaking, this will be the closest preceding statement that ends with a
1116 colon and is indented less than the statement you started on. If
1117 successful, also sets the mark to the starting point.
1119 `\\[py-mark-block]' can be used afterward to mark the whole code
1122 If called from a program, the mark will not be set if optional argument
1125 (let ((start (point))
1128 (py-goto-initial-line)
1129 ;; if on blank or non-indenting comment line, use the preceding stmt
1130 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*\\($\\|#[^ \t\n]\\)")
1132 (py-goto-statement-at-or-above)
1133 (setq found
(py-statement-opens-block-p))))
1134 ;; search back for colon line indented less
1135 (setq initial-indent
(current-indentation))
1136 (if (zerop initial-indent
)
1138 (goto-char (point-min)))
1139 (while (not (or found
(bobp)))
1142 (re-search-backward ":[ \t]*\\($\\|[#\\]\\)" nil
'move
)
1143 (or (py-goto-initial-line) t
) ; always true -- side effect
1144 (< (current-indentation) initial-indent
)
1145 (py-statement-opens-block-p))))
1148 (or nomark
(push-mark start
))
1149 (back-to-indentation))
1151 (error "Enclosing block not found"))))
1153 (defun beginning-of-python-def-or-class (&optional class
)
1154 "Move point to start of def (or class, with prefix arg).
1156 Searches back for the closest preceding `def'. If you supply a prefix
1157 arg, looks for a `class' instead. The docs assume the `def' case;
1158 just substitute `class' for `def' for the other case.
1160 If point is in a def statement already, and after the `d', simply
1161 moves point to the start of the statement.
1163 Else (point is not in a def statement, or at or before the `d' of a
1164 def statement), searches for the closest preceding def statement, and
1165 leaves point at its start. If no such statement can be found, leaves
1166 point at the start of the buffer.
1168 Returns t iff a def statement is found by these rules.
1170 Note that doing this command repeatedly will take you closer to the
1171 start of the buffer each time.
1173 If you want to mark the current def/class, see
1174 `\\[mark-python-def-or-class]'."
1175 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
1176 (let ((at-or-before-p (<= (current-column) (current-indentation)))
1177 (start-of-line (progn (beginning-of-line) (point)))
1178 (start-of-stmt (progn (py-goto-initial-line) (point))))
1179 (if (or (/= start-of-stmt start-of-line
)
1180 (not at-or-before-p
))
1181 (end-of-line)) ; OK to match on this line
1182 (re-search-backward (if class
"^[ \t]*class\\>" "^[ \t]*def\\>")
1185 (defun end-of-python-def-or-class (&optional class
)
1186 "Move point beyond end of def (or class, with prefix arg) body.
1188 By default, looks for an appropriate `def'. If you supply a prefix arg,
1189 looks for a `class' instead. The docs assume the `def' case; just
1190 substitute `class' for `def' for the other case.
1192 If point is in a def statement already, this is the def we use.
1194 Else if the def found by `\\[beginning-of-python-def-or-class]'
1195 contains the statement you started on, that's the def we use.
1197 Else we search forward for the closest following def, and use that.
1199 If a def can be found by these rules, point is moved to the start of
1200 the line immediately following the def block, and the position of the
1201 start of the def is returned.
1203 Else point is moved to the end of the buffer, and nil is returned.
1205 Note that doing this command repeatedly will take you closer to the
1206 end of the buffer each time.
1208 If you want to mark the current def/class, see
1209 `\\[mark-python-def-or-class]'."
1210 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
1211 (let ((start (progn (py-goto-initial-line) (point)))
1212 (which (if class
"class" "def"))
1214 ;; move point to start of appropriate def/class
1215 (if (looking-at (concat "[ \t]*" which
"\\>")) ; already on one
1216 (setq state
'at-beginning
)
1217 ;; else see if beginning-of-python-def-or-class hits container
1218 (if (and (beginning-of-python-def-or-class class
)
1219 (progn (py-goto-beyond-block)
1221 (setq state
'at-end
)
1222 ;; else search forward
1224 (if (re-search-forward (concat "^[ \t]*" which
"\\>") nil
'move
)
1225 (progn (setq state
'at-beginning
)
1226 (beginning-of-line)))))
1228 ((eq state
'at-beginning
) (py-goto-beyond-block) t
)
1229 ((eq state
'at-end
) t
)
1230 ((eq state
'not-found
) nil
)
1231 (t (error "internal error in end-of-python-def-or-class")))))
1234 ;; Functions for marking regions
1235 (defun py-mark-block (&optional extend just-move
)
1236 "Mark following block of lines. With prefix arg, mark structure.
1237 Easier to use than explain. It sets the region to an `interesting'
1238 block of succeeding lines. If point is on a blank line, it goes down to
1239 the next non-blank line. That will be the start of the region. The end
1240 of the region depends on the kind of line at the start:
1242 - If a comment, the region will include all succeeding comment lines up
1243 to (but not including) the next non-comment line (if any).
1245 - Else if a prefix arg is given, and the line begins one of these
1248 if elif else try except finally for while def class
1250 the region will be set to the body of the structure, including
1251 following blocks that `belong' to it, but excluding trailing blank
1252 and comment lines. E.g., if on a `try' statement, the `try' block
1253 and all (if any) of the following `except' and `finally' blocks
1254 that belong to the `try' structure will be in the region. Ditto
1255 for if/elif/else, for/else and while/else structures, and (a bit
1256 degenerate, since they're always one-block structures) def and
1259 - Else if no prefix argument is given, and the line begins a Python
1260 block (see list above), and the block is not a `one-liner' (i.e.,
1261 the statement ends with a colon, not with code), the region will
1262 include all succeeding lines up to (but not including) the next
1263 code statement (if any) that's indented no more than the starting
1264 line, except that trailing blank and comment lines are excluded.
1265 E.g., if the starting line begins a multi-statement `def'
1266 structure, the region will be set to the full function definition,
1267 but without any trailing `noise' lines.
1269 - Else the region will include all succeeding lines up to (but not
1270 including) the next blank line, or code or indenting-comment line
1271 indented strictly less than the starting line. Trailing indenting
1272 comment lines are included in this case, but not trailing blank
1275 A msg identifying the location of the mark is displayed in the echo
1276 area; or do `\\[exchange-point-and-mark]' to flip down to the end.
1278 If called from a program, optional argument EXTEND plays the role of
1279 the prefix arg, and if optional argument JUST-MOVE is not nil, just
1280 moves to the end of the block (& does not set mark or display a msg)."
1281 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
1282 (py-goto-initial-line)
1283 ;; skip over blank lines
1285 (looking-at "[ \t]*$") ; while blank line
1286 (not (eobp))) ; & somewhere to go
1289 (error "Hit end of buffer without finding a non-blank stmt"))
1290 (let ((initial-pos (point))
1291 (initial-indent (current-indentation))
1292 last-pos
; position of last stmt in region
1294 '((if elif else
) (elif elif else
) (else)
1295 (try except finally
) (except except
) (finally)
1296 (for else
) (while else
)
1298 first-symbol next-symbol
)
1301 ;; if comment line, suck up the following comment lines
1302 ((looking-at "[ \t]*#")
1303 (re-search-forward "^[ \t]*[^ \t#]" nil
'move
) ; look for non-comment
1304 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*#") ; and back to last comment in block
1305 (setq last-pos
(point)))
1307 ;; else if line is a block line and EXTEND given, suck up
1308 ;; the whole structure
1310 (setq first-symbol
(py-suck-up-first-keyword) )
1311 (assq first-symbol followers
))
1313 (or (py-goto-beyond-block) t
) ; side effect
1314 (forward-line -
1) ; side effect
1315 (setq last-pos
(point)) ; side effect
1316 (py-goto-statement-below)
1317 (= (current-indentation) initial-indent
)
1318 (setq next-symbol
(py-suck-up-first-keyword))
1319 (memq next-symbol
(cdr (assq first-symbol followers
))))
1320 (setq first-symbol next-symbol
)))
1322 ;; else if line *opens* a block, search for next stmt indented <=
1323 ((py-statement-opens-block-p)
1325 (setq last-pos
(point)) ; always true -- side effect
1326 (py-goto-statement-below)
1327 (> (current-indentation) initial-indent
))
1330 ;; else plain code line; stop at next blank line, or stmt or
1331 ;; indenting comment line indented <
1334 (setq last-pos
(point)) ; always true -- side effect
1335 (or (py-goto-beyond-final-line) t
)
1336 (not (looking-at "[ \t]*$")) ; stop at blank line
1338 (>= (current-indentation) initial-indent
)
1339 (looking-at "[ \t]*#[^ \t\n]"))) ; ignore non-indenting #
1342 ;; skip to end of last stmt
1343 (goto-char last-pos
)
1344 (py-goto-beyond-final-line)
1346 ;; set mark & display
1349 (push-mark (point) 'no-msg
)
1351 (message "Mark set after: %s" (py-suck-up-leading-text))
1352 (goto-char initial-pos
))))
1354 (defun mark-python-def-or-class (&optional class
)
1355 "Set region to body of def (or class, with prefix arg) enclosing point.
1356 Pushes the current mark, then point, on the mark ring (all language
1357 modes do this, but although it's handy it's never documented ...).
1359 In most Emacs language modes, this function bears at least a
1360 hallucinogenic resemblance to `\\[end-of-python-def-or-class]' and
1361 `\\[beginning-of-python-def-or-class]'.
1363 And in earlier versions of Python mode, all 3 were tightly connected.
1364 Turned out that was more confusing than useful: the `goto start' and
1365 `goto end' commands are usually used to search through a file, and
1366 people expect them to act a lot like `search backward' and `search
1367 forward' string-search commands. But because Python `def' and `class'
1368 can nest to arbitrary levels, finding the smallest def containing
1369 point cannot be done via a simple backward search: the def containing
1370 point may not be the closest preceding def, or even the closest
1371 preceding def that's indented less. The fancy algorithm required is
1372 appropriate for the usual uses of this `mark' command, but not for the
1375 So the def marked by this command may not be the one either of the
1376 `goto' commands find: If point is on a blank or non-indenting comment
1377 line, moves back to start of the closest preceding code statement or
1378 indenting comment line. If this is a `def' statement, that's the def
1379 we use. Else searches for the smallest enclosing `def' block and uses
1380 that. Else signals an error.
1382 When an enclosing def is found: The mark is left immediately beyond
1383 the last line of the def block. Point is left at the start of the
1384 def, except that: if the def is preceded by a number of comment lines
1385 followed by (at most) one optional blank line, point is left at the
1386 start of the comments; else if the def is preceded by a blank line,
1387 point is left at its start.
1389 The intent is to mark the containing def/class and its associated
1390 documentation, to make moving and duplicating functions and classes
1392 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
1393 (let ((start (point))
1394 (which (if class
"class" "def")))
1396 (if (not (py-go-up-tree-to-keyword which
))
1397 (progn (goto-char start
)
1398 (error "Enclosing %s not found" which
))
1399 ;; else enclosing def/class found
1400 (setq start
(point))
1401 (py-goto-beyond-block)
1404 (if (zerop (forward-line -
1)) ; if there is a preceding line
1406 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*$") ; it's blank
1407 (setq start
(point)) ; so reset start point
1408 (goto-char start
)) ; else try again
1409 (if (zerop (forward-line -
1))
1410 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*#") ; a comment
1411 ;; look back for non-comment line
1412 ;; tricky: note that the regexp matches a blank
1413 ;; line, cuz \n is in the 2nd character class
1415 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*[^ \t#]" nil
'move
)
1417 ;; no comment, so go back
1418 (goto-char start
))))))))
1420 (defun py-comment-region (start end
&optional uncomment-p
)
1421 "Comment out region of code; with prefix arg, uncomment region.
1422 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
1423 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
1424 commented out, by inserting the string `py-block-comment-prefix' at
1425 the start of each line. With a prefix arg, removes
1426 `py-block-comment-prefix' from the start of each line instead."
1427 (interactive "*r\nP") ; region; raw prefix arg
1428 (goto-char end
) (beginning-of-line) (setq end
(point))
1429 (goto-char start
) (beginning-of-line) (setq start
(point))
1430 (let ((prefix-len (length py-block-comment-prefix
)) )
1433 (narrow-to-region start end
)
1436 (and (string= py-block-comment-prefix
1438 (point) (+ (point) prefix-len
)))
1439 (delete-char prefix-len
))
1440 (insert py-block-comment-prefix
))
1441 (forward-line 1))))))
1444 ;; Documentation functions
1446 ;; dump the long form of the mode blurb; does the usual doc escapes,
1447 ;; plus lines of the form ^[vc]:name$ to suck variable & command docs
1448 ;; out of the right places, along with the keys they're on & current
1450 (defun py-dump-help-string (str)
1451 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Help*"
1452 (let ((locals (buffer-local-variables))
1453 funckind funcname func funcdoc
1454 (start 0) mstart end
1456 (while (string-match "^%\\([vc]\\):\\(.+\\)\n" str start
)
1457 (setq mstart
(match-beginning 0) end
(match-end 0)
1458 funckind
(substring str
(match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))
1459 funcname
(substring str
(match-beginning 2) (match-end 2))
1460 func
(intern funcname
))
1461 (princ (substitute-command-keys (substring str start mstart
)))
1463 ((equal funckind
"c") ; command
1464 (setq funcdoc
(documentation func
)
1467 (mapconcat 'key-description
1468 (where-is-internal func py-mode-map
)
1470 ((equal funckind
"v") ; variable
1471 (setq funcdoc
(substitute-command-keys
1472 (get func
'variable-documentation
))
1473 keys
(if (assq func locals
)
1475 "Local/Global values: "
1476 (prin1-to-string (symbol-value func
))
1478 (prin1-to-string (default-value func
)))
1481 (prin1-to-string (symbol-value func
))))))
1483 (error "Error in py-dump-help-string, tag `%s'" funckind
)))
1484 (princ (format "\n-> %s:\t%s\t%s\n\n"
1485 (if (equal funckind
"c") "Command" "Variable")
1490 (princ (substitute-command-keys (substring str start
))))
1491 (print-help-return-message)))
1493 (defun py-describe-mode ()
1494 "Dump long form of Python-mode docs."
1496 (py-dump-help-string "Major mode for editing Python files.
1497 Knows about Python indentation, tokens, comments and continuation lines.
1498 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
1500 Major sections below begin with the string `@'; specific function and
1501 variable docs begin with `->'.
1503 @EXECUTING PYTHON CODE
1505 \\[py-execute-buffer]\tsends the entire buffer to the Python interpreter
1506 \\[py-execute-region]\tsends the current region
1507 \\[py-shell]\tstarts a Python interpreter window; this will be used by
1508 \tsubsequent \\[py-execute-buffer] or \\[py-execute-region] commands
1509 %c:py-execute-buffer
1510 %c:py-execute-region
1515 py-indent-offset\tindentation increment
1516 py-block-comment-prefix\tcomment string used by py-comment-region
1518 py-python-command\tshell command to invoke Python interpreter
1519 py-scroll-process-buffer\talways scroll Python process buffer
1520 py-temp-directory\tdirectory used for temp files (if needed)
1522 py-beep-if-tab-change\tring the bell if tab-width is changed
1524 %v:py-block-comment-prefix
1525 %v:py-python-command
1526 %v:py-scroll-process-buffer
1527 %v:py-temp-directory
1528 %v:py-beep-if-tab-change
1532 Each physical line in the file is either a `continuation line' (the
1533 preceding line ends with a backslash that's not part of a comment, or
1534 the paren/bracket/brace nesting level at the start of the line is
1535 non-zero, or both) or an `initial line' (everything else).
1537 An initial line is in turn a `blank line' (contains nothing except
1538 possibly blanks or tabs), a `comment line' (leftmost non-blank
1539 character is `#'), or a `code line' (everything else).
1543 Although all comment lines are treated alike by Python, Python mode
1544 recognizes two kinds that act differently with respect to indentation.
1546 An `indenting comment line' is a comment line with a blank, tab or
1547 nothing after the initial `#'. The indentation commands (see below)
1548 treat these exactly as if they were code lines: a line following an
1549 indenting comment line will be indented like the comment line. All
1550 other comment lines (those with a non-whitespace character immediately
1551 following the initial `#') are `non-indenting comment lines', and
1552 their indentation is ignored by the indentation commands.
1554 Indenting comment lines are by far the usual case, and should be used
1555 whenever possible. Non-indenting comment lines are useful in cases
1558 \ta = b # a very wordy single-line comment that ends up being
1559 \t #... continued onto another line
1562 ##\t\tprint 'panic!' # old code we've `commented out'
1565 Since the `#...' and `##' comment lines have a non-whitespace
1566 character following the initial `#', Python mode ignores them when
1567 computing the proper indentation for the next line.
1569 Continuation Lines and Statements
1571 The Python-mode commands generally work on statements instead of on
1572 individual lines, where a `statement' is a comment or blank line, or a
1573 code line and all of its following continuation lines (if any)
1574 considered as a single logical unit. The commands in this mode
1575 generally (when it makes sense) automatically move to the start of the
1576 statement containing point, even if point happens to be in the middle
1577 of some continuation line.
1582 Primarily for entering new code:
1583 \t\\[indent-for-tab-command]\t indent line appropriately
1584 \t\\[py-newline-and-indent]\t insert newline, then indent
1585 \t\\[py-delete-char]\t reduce indentation, or delete single character
1587 Primarily for reindenting existing code:
1588 \t\\[py-guess-indent-offset]\t guess py-indent-offset from file content; change locally
1589 \t\\[universal-argument] \\[py-guess-indent-offset]\t ditto, but change globally
1591 \t\\[py-indent-region]\t reindent region to match its context
1592 \t\\[py-shift-region-left]\t shift region left by py-indent-offset
1593 \t\\[py-shift-region-right]\t shift region right by py-indent-offset
1595 Unlike most programming languages, Python uses indentation, and only
1596 indentation, to specify block structure. Hence the indentation supplied
1597 automatically by Python-mode is just an educated guess: only you know
1598 the block structure you intend, so only you can supply correct
1601 The \\[indent-for-tab-command] and \\[py-newline-and-indent] keys try to suggest plausible indentation, based on
1602 the indentation of preceding statements. E.g., assuming
1603 py-indent-offset is 4, after you enter
1604 \tif a > 0: \\[py-newline-and-indent]
1605 the cursor will be moved to the position of the `_' (_ is not a
1606 character in the file, it's just used here to indicate the location of
1610 If you then enter `c = d' \\[py-newline-and-indent], the cursor will move
1615 Python-mode cannot know whether that's what you intended, or whether
1619 was your intent. In general, Python-mode either reproduces the
1620 indentation of the (closest code or indenting-comment) preceding
1621 statement, or adds an extra py-indent-offset blanks if the preceding
1622 statement has `:' as its last significant (non-whitespace and non-
1623 comment) character. If the suggested indentation is too much, use
1624 \\[py-delete-char] to reduce it.
1626 Continuation lines are given extra indentation. If you don't like the
1627 suggested indentation, change it to something you do like, and Python-
1628 mode will strive to indent later lines of the statement in the same way.
1630 If a line is a continuation line by virtue of being in an unclosed
1631 paren/bracket/brace structure (`list', for short), the suggested
1632 indentation depends on whether the current line contains the first item
1633 in the list. If it does, it's indented py-indent-offset columns beyond
1634 the indentation of the line containing the open bracket. If you don't
1635 like that, change it by hand. The remaining items in the list will mimic
1636 whatever indentation you give to the first item.
1638 If a line is a continuation line because the line preceding it ends with
1639 a backslash, the third and following lines of the statement inherit their
1640 indentation from the line preceding them. The indentation of the second
1641 line in the statement depends on the form of the first (base) line: if
1642 the base line is an assignment statement with anything more interesting
1643 than the backslash following the leftmost assigning `=', the second line
1644 is indented two columns beyond that `='. Else it's indented to two
1645 columns beyond the leftmost solid chunk of non-whitespace characters on
1648 Warning: indent-region should not normally be used! It calls \\[indent-for-tab-command]
1649 repeatedly, and as explained above, \\[indent-for-tab-command] can't guess the block
1650 structure you intend.
1651 %c:indent-for-tab-command
1652 %c:py-newline-and-indent
1656 The next function may be handy when editing code you didn't write:
1657 %c:py-guess-indent-offset
1660 The remaining `indent' functions apply to a region of Python code. They
1661 assume the block structure (equals indentation, in Python) of the region
1662 is correct, and alter the indentation in various ways while preserving
1663 the block structure:
1665 %c:py-shift-region-left
1666 %c:py-shift-region-right
1668 @MARKING & MANIPULATING REGIONS OF CODE
1670 \\[py-mark-block]\t mark block of lines
1671 \\[mark-python-def-or-class]\t mark smallest enclosing def
1672 \\[universal-argument] \\[mark-python-def-or-class]\t mark smallest enclosing class
1673 \\[py-comment-region]\t comment out region of code
1674 \\[universal-argument] \\[py-comment-region]\t uncomment region of code
1676 %c:mark-python-def-or-class
1677 %c:py-comment-region
1681 \\[py-previous-statement]\t move to statement preceding point
1682 \\[py-next-statement]\t move to statement following point
1683 \\[py-goto-block-up]\t move up to start of current block
1684 \\[beginning-of-python-def-or-class]\t move to start of def
1685 \\[universal-argument] \\[beginning-of-python-def-or-class]\t move to start of class
1686 \\[end-of-python-def-or-class]\t move to end of def
1687 \\[universal-argument] \\[end-of-python-def-or-class]\t move to end of class
1689 The first two move to one statement beyond the statement that contains
1690 point. A numeric prefix argument tells them to move that many
1691 statements instead. Blank lines, comment lines, and continuation lines
1692 do not count as `statements' for these commands. So, e.g., you can go
1693 to the first code statement in a file by entering
1694 \t\\[beginning-of-buffer]\t to move to the top of the file
1695 \t\\[py-next-statement]\t to skip over initial comments and blank lines
1696 Or do `\\[py-previous-statement]' with a huge prefix argument.
1697 %c:py-previous-statement
1698 %c:py-next-statement
1700 %c:beginning-of-python-def-or-class
1701 %c:end-of-python-def-or-class
1703 @LITTLE-KNOWN EMACS COMMANDS PARTICULARLY USEFUL IN PYTHON MODE
1705 `\\[indent-new-comment-line]' is handy for entering a multi-line comment.
1707 `\\[set-selective-display]' with a `small' prefix arg is ideally suited for viewing the
1708 overall class and def structure of a module.
1710 `\\[back-to-indentation]' moves point to a line's first non-blank character.
1712 `\\[indent-relative]' is handy for creating odd indentation.
1716 If you don't like the default value of a variable, change its value to
1717 whatever you do like by putting a `setq' line in your .emacs file.
1718 E.g., to set the indentation increment to 4, put this line in your
1720 \t(setq py-indent-offset 4)
1721 To see the value of a variable, do `\\[describe-variable]' and enter the variable
1724 When entering a key sequence like `C-c C-n', it is not necessary to
1725 release the CONTROL key after doing the `C-c' part -- it suffices to
1726 press the CONTROL key, press and release `c' (while still holding down
1727 CONTROL), press and release `n' (while still holding down CONTROL), &
1728 then release CONTROL.
1730 Entering Python mode calls with no arguments the value of the variable
1731 `python-mode-hook', if that value exists and is not nil; for backward
1732 compatibility it also tries `py-mode-hook'; see the `Hooks' section of
1733 the Elisp manual for details.
1735 Obscure: When python-mode is first loaded, it looks for all bindings
1736 to newline-and-indent in the global keymap, and shadows them with
1737 local bindings to py-newline-and-indent."))
1741 (defvar py-parse-state-re
1743 "^[ \t]*\\(if\\|elif\\|else\\|while\\|def\\|class\\)\\>"
1747 ;; returns the parse state at point (see parse-partial-sexp docs)
1748 (defun py-parse-state ()
1750 (let ((here (point)) )
1751 ;; back up to the first preceding line (if any; else start of
1752 ;; buffer) that begins with a popular Python keyword, or a non-
1753 ;; whitespace and non-comment character. These are good places
1754 ;; to start parsing to see whether where we started is at a
1755 ;; non-zero nesting level. It may be slow for people who write
1756 ;; huge code blocks or huge lists ... tough beans.
1757 (re-search-backward py-parse-state-re nil
'move
)
1759 (parse-partial-sexp (point) here
))))
1761 ;; if point is at a non-zero nesting level, returns the number of the
1762 ;; character that opens the smallest enclosing unclosed list; else
1764 (defun py-nesting-level ()
1765 (let ((status (py-parse-state)) )
1766 (if (zerop (car status
))
1768 (car (cdr status
))))) ; char# of open bracket
1770 ;; t iff preceding line ends with backslash that's not in a comment
1771 (defun py-backslash-continuation-line-p ()
1775 ;; use a cheap test first to avoid the regexp if possible
1776 ;; use 'eq' because char-after may return nil
1777 (eq (char-after (- (point) 2)) ?
\\ )
1778 ;; make sure; since eq test passed, there is a preceding line
1779 (forward-line -
1) ; always true -- side effect
1780 (looking-at py-continued-re
))))
1782 ;; t iff current line is a continuation line
1783 (defun py-continuation-line-p ()
1786 (or (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
1787 (py-nesting-level))))
1789 ;; go to initial line of current statement; usually this is the line
1790 ;; we're on, but if we're on the 2nd or following lines of a
1791 ;; continuation block, we need to go up to the first line of the
1794 ;; Tricky: We want to avoid quadratic-time behavior for long continued
1795 ;; blocks, whether of the backslash or open-bracket varieties, or a
1796 ;; mix of the two. The following manages to do that in the usual
1798 (defun py-goto-initial-line ()
1799 (let ( open-bracket-pos
)
1800 (while (py-continuation-line-p)
1802 (if (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
1803 (while (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
1805 ;; else zip out of nested brackets/braces/parens
1806 (while (setq open-bracket-pos
(py-nesting-level))
1807 (goto-char open-bracket-pos
)))))
1808 (beginning-of-line))
1810 ;; go to point right beyond final line of current statement; usually
1811 ;; this is the start of the next line, but if this is a multi-line
1812 ;; statement we need to skip over the continuation lines. Tricky:
1813 ;; Again we need to be clever to avoid quadratic time behavior.
1814 (defun py-goto-beyond-final-line ()
1817 (while (and (py-continuation-line-p)
1819 ;; skip over the backslash flavor
1820 (while (and (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
1823 ;; if in nest, zip to the end of the nest
1824 (setq state
(py-parse-state))
1825 (if (and (not (zerop (car state
)))
1828 ;; BUG ALERT: I could swear, from reading the docs, that
1829 ;; the 3rd argument should be plain 0
1830 (parse-partial-sexp (point) (point-max) (- 0 (car state
))
1832 (forward-line 1))))))
1834 ;; t iff statement opens a block == iff it ends with a colon that's
1835 ;; not in a comment. point should be at the start of a statement
1836 (defun py-statement-opens-block-p ()
1838 (let ((start (point))
1839 (finish (progn (py-goto-beyond-final-line) (1- (point))))
1845 ;; look for a colon with nothing after it except whitespace, and
1847 (if (re-search-forward ":\\([ \t]\\|\\\\\n\\)*\\(#.*\\)?$"
1849 (if (eq (point) finish
) ; note: no `else' clause; just
1850 ; keep searching if we're not at
1852 ;; sure looks like it opens a block -- but it might
1855 (setq searching nil
) ; search is done either way
1856 (setq state
(parse-partial-sexp start
1857 (match-beginning 0)))
1858 (setq answer
(not (nth 4 state
)))))
1859 ;; search failed: couldn't find another interesting colon
1860 (setq searching nil
)))
1863 ;; go to point right beyond final line of block begun by the current
1864 ;; line. This is the same as where py-goto-beyond-final-line goes
1865 ;; unless we're on colon line, in which case we go to the end of the
1866 ;; block. assumes point is at bolp
1867 (defun py-goto-beyond-block ()
1868 (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
1869 (py-mark-block nil
'just-move
)
1870 (py-goto-beyond-final-line)))
1872 ;; go to start of first statement (not blank or comment or
1873 ;; continuation line) at or preceding point. returns t if there is
1875 (defun py-goto-statement-at-or-above ()
1876 (py-goto-initial-line)
1877 (if (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re
)
1878 ;; skip back over blank & comment lines
1879 ;; note: will skip a blank or comment line that happens to be
1880 ;; a continuation line too
1881 (if (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*[^ \t#\n]" nil t
)
1882 (progn (py-goto-initial-line) t
)
1886 ;; go to start of first statement (not blank or comment or
1887 ;; continuation line) following the statement containing point returns
1888 ;; t if there is one, else nil
1889 (defun py-goto-statement-below ()
1891 (let ((start (point)))
1892 (py-goto-beyond-final-line)
1894 (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re
)
1898 (progn (goto-char start
) nil
)
1901 ;; go to start of statement, at or preceding point, starting with
1902 ;; keyword KEY. Skips blank lines and non-indenting comments upward
1903 ;; first. If that statement starts with KEY, done, else go back to
1904 ;; first enclosing block starting with KEY. If successful, leaves
1905 ;; point at the start of the KEY line & returns t. Else leaves point
1906 ;; at an undefined place & returns nil.
1907 (defun py-go-up-tree-to-keyword (key)
1908 ;; skip blanks and non-indenting #
1909 (py-goto-initial-line)
1911 (looking-at "[ \t]*\\($\\|#[^ \t\n]\\)")
1912 (zerop (forward-line -
1))) ; go back
1914 (py-goto-initial-line)
1915 (let* ((re (concat "[ \t]*" key
"\\b"))
1916 (case-fold-search nil
) ; let* so looking-at sees this
1917 (found (looking-at re
))
1919 (while (not (or found dead
))
1920 (condition-case nil
; in case no enclosing block
1921 (py-goto-block-up 'no-mark
)
1922 (error (setq dead t
)))
1923 (or dead
(setq found
(looking-at re
))))
1927 ;; return string in buffer from start of indentation to end of line;
1928 ;; prefix "..." if leading whitespace was skipped
1929 (defun py-suck-up-leading-text ()
1931 (back-to-indentation)
1933 (if (bolp) "" "...")
1934 (buffer-substring (point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))))
1936 ;; assuming point at bolp, return first keyword ([a-z]+) on the line,
1937 ;; as a Lisp symbol; return nil if none
1938 (defun py-suck-up-first-keyword ()
1939 (let ((case-fold-search nil
))
1940 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*\\([a-z]+\\)\\b")
1941 (intern (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))
1944 (defun py-make-temp-name ()
1946 (concat (file-name-as-directory py-temp-directory
) "python")))
1948 (defun py-delete-file-silently (fname)
1953 (defun py-kill-emacs-hook ()
1954 ;; delete our temp files
1955 (while py-file-queue
1956 (py-delete-file-silently (car py-file-queue
))
1957 (setq py-file-queue
(cdr py-file-queue
)))
1958 (if (not (or py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p py-this-is-emacs-19-p
))
1959 ;; run the hook we inherited, if any
1960 (and py-inherited-kill-emacs-hook
1961 (funcall py-inherited-kill-emacs-hook
))))
1963 ;; make PROCESS's buffer visible, append STRING to it, and force
1964 ;; display; also make shell-mode believe the user typed this string,
1965 ;; so that kill-output-from-shell and show-output-from-shell work
1967 (defun py-append-to-process-buffer (process string
)
1968 (let ((cbuf (current-buffer))
1969 (pbuf (process-buffer process
))
1970 (py-scroll-process-buffer t
))
1972 (goto-char (point-max))
1973 (move-marker (process-mark process
) (point))
1974 (if (not (or py-this-is-emacs-19-p
1975 py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p
))
1976 (move-marker last-input-start
(point))) ; muck w/ shell-mode
1977 (funcall (process-filter process
) process string
)
1978 (if (not (or py-this-is-emacs-19-p
1979 py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p
))
1980 (move-marker last-input-end
(point))) ; muck w/ shell-mode
1984 (defun py-keep-region-active ()
1985 ;; do whatever is necessary to keep the region active in XEmacs.
1986 ;; Ignore byte-compiler warnings you might see. Also note that
1987 ;; FSF's Emacs 19 does it differently and doesn't its policy doesn't
1988 ;; require us to take explicit action.
1989 (and (boundp 'zmacs-region-stays
)
1990 (setq zmacs-region-stays t
)))
1993 (defconst py-version
"$Revision$"
1994 "`python-mode' version number.")
1995 (defconst py-help-address
"python-mode@python.org"
1996 "Address accepting submission of bug reports.")
1998 (defun py-version ()
1999 "Echo the current version of `python-mode' in the minibuffer."
2001 (message "Using `python-mode' version %s" py-version
)
2002 (py-keep-region-active))
2004 ;; only works under Emacs 19
2006 ; (require 'reporter))
2008 (defun py-submit-bug-report (enhancement-p)
2009 "Submit via mail a bug report on `python-mode'.
2010 With \\[universal-argument] just submit an enhancement request."
2012 (list (not (y-or-n-p
2013 "Is this a bug report? (hit `n' to send other comments) "))))
2014 (let ((reporter-prompt-for-summary-p (if enhancement-p
2015 "(Very) brief summary: "
2018 (reporter-submit-bug-report
2019 py-help-address
;address
2020 (concat "python-mode " py-version
) ;pkgname
2022 (if enhancement-p nil
2025 py-block-comment-prefix
2026 py-scroll-process-buffer
2028 py-beep-if-tab-change
))
2031 "Dear Barry,") ;salutation
2032 (if enhancement-p nil
2035 "Please replace this text with a sufficiently large code sample\n\
2036 and an exact recipe so that I can reproduce your problem. Failure\n\
2037 to do so may mean a greater delay in fixing your bug.\n\n")
2038 (exchange-point-and-mark)
2039 (py-keep-region-active))))
2042 ;; arrange to kill temp files when Emacs exists
2043 (if (or py-this-is-emacs-19-p py-this-is-lucid-emacs-p
)
2044 (add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook
'py-kill-emacs-hook
)
2045 ;; have to trust that other people are as respectful of our hook
2046 ;; fiddling as we are of theirs
2047 (if (boundp 'py-inherited-kill-emacs-hook
)
2048 ;; we were loaded before -- trust others not to have screwed us
2049 ;; in the meantime (no choice, really)
2051 ;; else arrange for our hook to run theirs
2052 (setq py-inherited-kill-emacs-hook kill-emacs-hook
)
2053 (setq kill-emacs-hook
'py-kill-emacs-hook
)))
2057 (provide 'python-mode
)
2058 ;;; python-mode.el ends here