Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
annotate lib-src/emacs.csh @ 5855:0bddb59072b6
Look for cased character classes when deciding on case-fold-search, #'isearch
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2015-03-11 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* isearch-mode.el:
* isearch-mode.el (isearch-fix-case):
Use the new #'no-case-regexp-p function if treating ISEARCH-STRING
as a regular expression; otherwise, use the [[:upper:]] character
class.
* isearch-mode.el (isearch-no-upper-case-p): Removed.
* isearch-mode.el (with-caps-disable-folding): Removed.
These two haven't been used since 1998.
* occur.el (occur-1):
Use #'no-case-regexp-p here.
* replace.el (perform-replace):
Don't use #'no-upper-case-p, use #'no-case-regexp-p or
(string-match "[[:upper:]]" ...) as appropriate.
* simple.el:
* simple.el (no-upper-case-p): Removed. This did two different
things, and its secondary function (examining regular expressions)
just became much more complicated; move the regular expression
functionality to its own function, use character classes when
examining non-regular-expressions instead.
The code to look for character classes, and the design decision
that this should be done, are from GNU, thank you Stefan Monnier.
* simple.el (no-case-regexp-p): New.
Given a REGEXP, return non-nil if it has nothing to suggest an
interactive user wants a case-sensitive search.
* simple.el (with-search-caps-disable-folding):
* simple.el (with-interactive-search-caps-disable-folding):
Update both these macros to use #'no-case-regexp-p.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 11 Mar 2015 18:06:15 +0000 |
parents | 06dd936cde16 |
children |
rev | line source |
---|---|
5491 | 1 ### emacs.csh |
2 | |
3 ## Add legal notice if non-trivial amounts of code are added. | |
4 | |
5 ## Author: Michael DeCorte | |
6 | |
7 ### Commentary: | |
8 | |
9 # Synced up with: GNU 23.1.92. | |
10 # Synced by: Ben Wing, 2-17-10. | |
0 | 11 |
5491 | 12 ## This file is obsolete. Use emacsclient -a instead. |
13 | |
14 ## This defines a csh command named `edit' which resumes an | |
15 ## existing Emacs or starts a new one if none exists. | |
16 ## One way or another, any arguments are passed to Emacs to specify files | |
17 ## (provided you have loaded `resume.el'). | |
18 | |
19 ## These are the possible values of $whichjob | |
20 ## 1 = new ordinary emacs (the -nw is so that it doesn't try to do X) | |
21 ## 2 = resume emacs | |
22 ## 3 = new emacs under X (-i is so that you get a reasonable icon) | |
23 ## 4 = resume emacs under X | |
0 | 24 set EMACS_PATTERN="^\[[0-9]\] . Stopped ............ $EMACS" |
25 | |
26 alias edit 'set emacs_command=("emacs -nw \!*" "fg %emacs" "emacs -i \!* &"\ | |
27 "emacsclient \!* &") ; \ | |
28 jobs >! $HOME/.jobs; grep "$EMACS_PATTERN" < $HOME/.jobs >& /dev/null; \ | |
29 @ isjob = ! $status; \ | |
30 @ whichjob = 1 + $isjob + $?DISPLAY * 2 + $?WINDOW_PARENT * 4; \ | |
31 test -S ~/.emacs_server && emacsclient \!* \ | |
32 || echo `pwd` \!* >! ~/.emacs_args && eval $emacs_command[$whichjob]' | |
5491 | 33 |
34 # arch-tag: 433d58df-15b9-446f-ad37-f0393e3a23d4 |