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1 ;;; dialog.el --- Dialog-box support for XEmacs
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2
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3 ;; Copyright (C) 1991-4, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4 ;; Copyright (C) 2000, 2002 Ben Wing.
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5
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6 ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team
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7 ;; Keywords: extensions, internal, dumped
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8
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9 ;; This file is part of XEmacs.
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10
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11 ;; XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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12 ;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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13 ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
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14 ;; any later version.
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15
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16 ;; XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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17 ;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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18 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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19 ;; General Public License for more details.
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20
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21 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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22 ;; along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
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23 ;; Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
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24 ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
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25
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26 ;;; Synched up with: Not in FSF.
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27
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28 ;;; Authorship: Mostly written or rewritten by Ben Wing; some old old stuff
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29 ;;; that underlies some current code was written by JWZ.
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30
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31 ;;; Commentary:
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32
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33 ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs (when dialog boxes are compiled in).
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34
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35 ;; Dialog boxes are non-modal at the C level, but made modal at the
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36 ;; Lisp level via hacks in functions such as yes-or-no-p-dialog-box
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37 ;; below. Perhaps there should be truly modal dialog boxes
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38 ;; implemented at the C level for safety. All code using dialog boxes
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39 ;; should be careful to assume that the environment, for example the
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40 ;; current buffer, might be completely different after returning from
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41 ;; yes-or-no-p-dialog-box, but such code is difficult to write and test.
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42
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43 ;;; Code:
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44 (defun yes-or-no-p-dialog-box (prompt)
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45 "Ask user a yes-or-no question with a popup dialog box.
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46 Return t if the answer is \"yes\".
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47 Takes one argument, which is the string to display to ask the question."
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48 (save-selected-frame
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49 (make-dialog-box 'question
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50 :question prompt
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51 :modal t
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52 :buttons '(["Yes" (dialog-box-finish t)]
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53 ["No" (dialog-box-finish nil)]
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54 nil
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55 ["Cancel" (dialog-box-cancel)]))))
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56
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57 ;; FSF has a similar function `x-popup-dialog'.
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58 (defun get-dialog-box-response (position contents)
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59 "Pop up a dialog box and return user's selection.
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60 POSITION specifies which frame to use.
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61 This is normally an event or a window or frame.
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62 If POSITION is t or nil, it means to use the frame the mouse is on.
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63 The dialog box appears in the middle of the specified frame.
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64
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65 CONTENTS specifies the alternatives to display in the dialog box.
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66 It is a list of the form (TITLE ITEM1 ITEM2...).
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67 Each ITEM is a cons cell (STRING . VALUE).
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68 The return value is VALUE from the chosen item.
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69
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70 An ITEM may also be just a string--that makes a nonselectable item.
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71 An ITEM may also be nil--that means to put all preceding items
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72 on the left of the dialog box and all following items on the right."
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73 (cond
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74 ((eventp position)
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75 (select-frame (event-frame position)))
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76 ((framep position)
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77 (select-frame position))
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78 ((windowp position)
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79 (select-window position)))
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80 (make-dialog-box 'question
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81 :question (car contents)
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82 :modal t
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83 :buttons
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84 (mapcar #'(lambda (x)
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85 (cond
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86 ((null x)
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87 nil)
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88 ((stringp x)
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89 ;;this will never get selected
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90 `[,x 'ignore nil])
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91 (t
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92 `[,(car x) (dialog-box-finish ',(cdr x)) t])))
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93 (cdr contents))))
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94
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95 (defun message-box (fmt &rest args)
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96 "Display a message, in a dialog box if possible.
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97 If the selected device has no dialog-box support, use the echo area.
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98 The arguments are the same as to `format'.
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99
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100 If the only argument is nil, clear any existing message; let the
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101 minibuffer contents show."
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102 (if (and (null fmt) (null args))
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103 (progn
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104 (clear-message nil)
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105 nil)
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106 (let ((str (apply 'format fmt args)))
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107 (if (device-on-window-system-p)
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108 (get-dialog-box-response nil (list str (cons "%_OK" t)))
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109 (display-message 'message str))
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110 str)))
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111
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112 (defun message-or-box (fmt &rest args)
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113 "Display a message in a dialog box or in the echo area.
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114 If this command was invoked with the mouse, use a dialog box.
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115 Otherwise, use the echo area.
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116 The arguments are the same as to `format'.
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117
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118 If the only argument is nil, clear any existing message; let the
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119 minibuffer contents show."
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120 (if (should-use-dialog-box-p)
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121 (apply 'message-box fmt args)
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122 (apply 'message fmt args)))
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123
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124 (defun make-dialog-box (type &rest cl-keys)
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125 "Pop up a dialog box.
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126 TYPE is a symbol, the type of dialog box. Remaining arguments are
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127 keyword-value pairs, specifying the particular characteristics of the
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128 dialog box. The allowed keywords are particular to each type, but
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129 some standard keywords are common to many types:
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130
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131 :title
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132 The title of the dialog box's window.
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133
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134 :modal
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135 If true, indicates that XEmacs will wait until the user is \"done\"
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136 with the dialog box (usually, this means that a response has been
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137 given). Typically, the response is returned. NOTE: Some dialog
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138 boxes are always modal. If the dialog box is modal, `make-dialog-box'
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139 returns immediately. The return value will be either nil or a
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140 dialog box handle of some sort, e.g. a frame for type `general'.
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141
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142 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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143
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144 Recognized types are
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145
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146 general
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147 A dialog box consisting of an XEmacs glyph, typically a `layout'
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148 widget specifying a dialog box arrangement. This is the most
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149 general and powerful dialog box type, but requires more work than
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150 the other types below.
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151
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152 question
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153 A simple dialog box that displays a question and contains one or
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154 more user-defined buttons to specify possible responses. (This is
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155 compatible with the old built-in dialog boxes formerly specified
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156 using `popup-dialog-box'.)
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157
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158 file
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159 A file dialog box, of the type typically used in the window system
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160 XEmacs is running on.
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161
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162 color
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163 A color picker.
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164
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165 find
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166 A find dialog box.
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167
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168 font
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169 A font chooser.
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170
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171 print
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172 A dialog box used when printing (e.g. number of pages, printer).
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173
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174 page-setup
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175 A dialog box for setting page options (e.g. margins) for printing.
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176
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177 replace
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178 A find/replace dialog box.
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179
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180 mswindows-message
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181 An MS Windows-specific standard dialog box type similar to `question'.
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182
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183 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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184
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185 For type `general':
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186
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187 This type creates a frame and puts the specified widget layout in it.
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188 \(Currently this is done by eliminating all areas but the gutter and placing
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189 the layout there; but this is an implementation detail and may change.)
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190
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191 The keywords allowed for `general' are
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192
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193 :spec
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194 The widget spec -- anything that can be passed to `make-glyph'.
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195 :title
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196 The title of the frame.
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197 :parent
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198 The frame is made a child of this frame (defaults to the selected frame).
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199 :properties
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200 Additional properties of the frame, as well as `dialog-frame-plist'.
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201 :autosize
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202 If t the frame is sized to exactly fit the widgets given by :spec.
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203
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204 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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205
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206 For type `question':
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207
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208 The keywords allowed are
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209
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210 :modal
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211 t or nil. When t, the dialog box callback should exit the dialog box
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212 using the functions `dialog-box-finish' or `dialog-box-cancel'.
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213 :title
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214 The title of the frame.
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215 :question
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216 A string, the question.
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217 :buttons
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218 A list, describing the buttons below the question. Each of these is a
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219 vector, the syntax of which is essentially the same as that of popup menu
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220 items. They may have any of the following forms:
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221
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222 [ \"name\" callback <active-p> ]
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223 [ \"name\" callback <active-p> \"suffix\" ]
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224 [ \"name\" callback :<keyword> <value> :<keyword> <value> ... ]
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225
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226 The name is the string to display on the button; it is filtered through the
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227 resource database, so it is possible for resources to override what string
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228 is actually displayed.
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229
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230 Accelerators can be indicated in the string by putting the sequence
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231 \"%_\" before the character corresponding to the key that will invoke
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232 the button. Uppercase and lowercase accelerators are equivalent. The
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233 sequence \"%%\" is also special, and is translated into a single %.
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234
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235 If the `callback' of a button is a symbol, then it must name a command.
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236 It will be invoked with `call-interactively'. If it is a list, then it is
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237 evaluated with `eval'.
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238
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239 One (and only one) of the buttons may be `nil'. This marker means that all
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240 following buttons should be flushright instead of flushleft.
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241
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242 Though the keyword/value syntax is supported for dialog boxes just as in
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243 popup menus, the only keyword which is both meaningful and fully implemented
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244 for dialog box buttons is `:active'.
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245
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246 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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247
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248 For type `file':
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249
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250 The keywords allowed are
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251
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252 :initial-filename
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253 The initial filename to be placed in the dialog box (defaults to nothing).
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254 :initial-directory
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255 The initial directory to be selected in the dialog box (defaults to the
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256 current buffer's `default-directory).
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257 :filter-list
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258 A list of (filter-desc filter ...)
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259 :title
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260 The title of the dialog box (defaults to \"Open\").
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261 :allow-multi-select t or nil
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262 :create-prompt-on-nonexistent t or nil
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263 :overwrite-prompt t or nil
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264 :file-must-exist t or nil
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265 :no-network-button t or nil
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266 :no-read-only-return t or nil
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267
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268 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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269
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270 For type `directory':
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271
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272 The keywords allowed are
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273
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274 :initial-directory
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275 The initial directory to be selected in the dialog box (defaults to the
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276 current buffer's `default-directory).
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277 :title
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278 The title of the dialog box (defaults to \"Open\").
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279
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280 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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281
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282 For type `print':
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283
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284 This invokes the Windows standard Print dialog.
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285 This dialog is usually invoked when the user selects the Print command.
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286 After the user presses OK, the program should start actual printout.
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287
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288 The keywords allowed are
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289
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290 :device
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291 An 'msprinter device.
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292 :print-settings
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293 A printer settings object.
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294 :allow-selection
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295 t or nil -- whether the \"Selection\" button is enabled (defaults to nil).
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296 :allow-pages
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297 t or nil -- whether the \"Pages\" button and associated edit controls
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298 are enabled (defaults to t).
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299 :selected-page-button
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300 `all', `selection', or `pages' -- which page button is initially
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301 selected.
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302
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303 Exactly one of :device and :print-settings must be given.
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304
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305 The function brings up the Print dialog, where the user can
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306 select a different printer and/or change printer options. Connection
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307 name can change as a result of selecting a different printer device. If
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308 a device is specified, then changes are stored into the settings object
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309 currently selected into that printer. If a settings object is supplied,
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310 then changes are recorded into it, and, it is selected into a
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311 printer, then changes are propagated to that printer
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312 too.
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313
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314 Return value is nil if the user has canceled the dialog. Otherwise, it
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315 is a new plist, with the following properties:
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316 name Printer device name, even if unchanged by the user.
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317 from-page First page to print, 1-based. Returned if
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318 `selected-page-button' is `pages'.
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319 user, then this value is not included in the plist.
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320 to-page Last page to print, inclusive, 1-based. Returned if
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321 `selected-page-button' is `pages'.
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322 copies Number of copies to print. Always returned.
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323 selected-page-button Which page button was selected (`all', `selection',
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324 or `pages').
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325
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326 The DEVICE is destroyed and an error is signaled in case of
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327 initialization problem with the new printer.
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328
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329 See also the `page-setup' dialog box type.
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330
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331 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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332
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333 For type `page-setup':
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334
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335 This invokes the Windows standard Page Setup dialog.
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336 This dialog is usually invoked in response to the Page Setup command,
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337 and used to choose such parameters as page orientation, print margins
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338 etc. Note that this dialog contains the \"Printer\" button, which
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339 invokes the Printer Setup dialog so that the user can update the
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340 printer options or even select a different printer as well.
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341
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342 The keywords allowed are
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343
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344 :device
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345 An 'msprinter device.
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346 :print-settings
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347 A printer settings object.
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348 :properties
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349 A plist of job properties.
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350
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351 Exactly one of these keywords must be given.
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352
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353 The function brings up the Page Setup dialog, where the user
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354 can select a different printer and/or change printer options.
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355 Connection name can change as a result of selecting a different printer
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356 device. If a device is specified, then changes are stored into the
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357 settings object currently selected into that printer. If a settings
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358 object is supplied, then changes are recorded into it, and, it is
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359 selected into a printer, then changes are propagated to that printer
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360 too.
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361
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362 :properties specifies a plist of job properties;
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363 see `default-msprinter-frame-plist' for the complete list. The plist
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364 is used to initialize the dialog.
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365
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366 Return value is nil if the user has canceled the dialog. Otherwise,
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367 it is a new plist, containing the new list of properties.
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368
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369 NOTE: The margin properties (returned by this function) are *NOT* stored
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370 into the print-settings or device object.
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371
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372 The DEVICE is destroyed and an error is signaled in case of
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373 initialization problem with the new printer.
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374
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375 See also the `print' dialog box type.
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376
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377 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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378
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379 For type `mswindows-message':
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380
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381 The keywords allowed are
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382
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383 :title
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384 The title of the dialog box.
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385 :message
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386 The string to display.
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387 :flags
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388 A symbol or list of symbols:
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389
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390 -- To specify the buttons in the message box:
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391
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392 abortretryignore
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393 The message box contains three push buttons: Abort, Retry, and Ignore.
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394 ok
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395 The message box contains one push button: OK. This is the default.
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396 okcancel
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397 The message box contains two push buttons: OK and Cancel.
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398 retrycancel
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399 The message box contains two push buttons: Retry and Cancel.
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400 yesno
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401 The message box contains two push buttons: Yes and No.
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402 yesnocancel
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403 The message box contains three push buttons: Yes, No, and Cancel.
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404
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405
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406 -- To display an icon in the message box:
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407
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408 iconexclamation, iconwarning
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409 An exclamation-point icon appears in the message box.
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410 iconinformation, iconasterisk
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411 An icon consisting of a lowercase letter i in a circle appears in
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412 the message box.
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413 iconquestion
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414 A question-mark icon appears in the message box.
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415 iconstop, iconerror, iconhand
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416 A stop-sign icon appears in the message box.
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417
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418
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419 -- To indicate the default button:
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420
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421 defbutton1
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422 The first button is the default button. This is the default.
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423 defbutton2
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424 The second button is the default button.
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425 defbutton3
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426 The third button is the default button.
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427 defbutton4
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428 The fourth button is the default button.
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429
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430
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431 -- To indicate the modality of the dialog box:
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432
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433 applmodal
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434 The user must respond to the message box before continuing work in
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435 the window identified by the hWnd parameter. However, the user can
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436 move to the windows of other applications and work in those windows.
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437 Depending on the hierarchy of windows in the application, the user
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438 may be able to move to other windows within the application. All
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439 child windows of the parent of the message box are automatically
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440 disabled, but popup windows are not. This is the default.
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441 systemmodal
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442 Same as applmodal except that the message box has the WS_EX_TOPMOST
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443 style. Use system-modal message boxes to notify the user of serious,
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444 potentially damaging errors that require immediate attention (for
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445 example, running out of memory). This flag has no effect on the
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446 user's ability to interact with windows other than those associated
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447 with hWnd.
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448 taskmodal
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449 Same as applmodal except that all the top-level windows belonging to
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450 the current task are disabled if the hWnd parameter is NULL. Use
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451 this flag when the calling application or library does not have a
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452 window handle available but still needs to prevent input to other
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453 windows in the current application without suspending other
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454 applications.
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455
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456
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457 In addition, you can specify the following flags:
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458
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459 default-desktop-only
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460 The desktop currently receiving input must be a default desktop;
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461 otherwise, the function fails. A default desktop is one an
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462 application runs on after the user has logged on.
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463 help
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464 Adds a Help button to the message box. Choosing the Help button or
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465 pressing F1 generates a Help event.
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466 right
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467 The text is right-justified.
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468 rtlreading
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469 Displays message and caption text using right-to-left reading order
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470 on Hebrew and Arabic systems.
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471 setforeground
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472 The message box becomes the foreground window. Internally, Windows
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473 calls the SetForegroundWindow function for the message box.
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474 topmost
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475 The message box is created with the WS_EX_TOPMOST window style.
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476 service-notification
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477 Windows NT only: The caller is a service notifying the user of an
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478 event. The function displays a message box on the current active
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479 desktop, even if there is no user logged on to the computer. If
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480 this flag is set, the hWnd parameter must be NULL. This is so the
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481 message box can appear on a desktop other than the desktop
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482 corresponding to the hWnd.
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483
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484
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485 The return value is one of the following menu-item values returned by
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486 the dialog box:
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487
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488 abort
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489 Abort button was selected.
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490 cancel
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491 Cancel button was selected.
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492 ignore
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493 Ignore button was selected.
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494 no
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495 No button was selected.
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496 ok
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497 OK button was selected.
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498 retry
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499 Retry button was selected.
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500 yes
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501 Yes button was selected.
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502
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503 If a message box has a Cancel button, the function returns the
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504 `cancel' value if either the ESC key is pressed or the Cancel button
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505 is selected. If the message box has no Cancel button, pressing ESC has
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506 no effect."
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507 (flet ((dialog-box-modal-loop (thunk)
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508 (let* ((frames (frame-list))
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509 (result
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510 ;; ok, this is extremely tricky. normally a modal
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511 ;; dialog will pop itself down using (dialog-box-finish)
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512 ;; or (dialog-box-cancel), which throws back to this
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513 ;; catch. but question dialog boxes pop down themselves
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514 ;; regardless, so a badly written question dialog box
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515 ;; that does not use (dialog-box-finish) could seriously
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516 ;; wedge us. furthermore, we disable all other frames
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517 ;; in order to implement modality; we need to restore
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518 ;; them before the dialog box is destroyed, because
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519 ;; otherwise windows at least will notice that no top-
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520 ;; level window can have the focus and will shift the
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521 ;; focus to a different app, raising it and obscuring us.
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522 ;; so we create `delete-dialog-box-hook', which is
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523 ;; called right *before* the dialog box gets destroyed.
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524 ;; here, we put a hook on it, and when it's our dialog
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525 ;; box and not someone else's that's being destroyed,
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526 ;; we reenable all the frames and remove the hook.
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527 ;; BUT ... we still have to deal with exiting the
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528 ;; modal loop in case it doesn't happen before us.
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529 ;; we can't do this until after the callbacks for this
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530 ;; dialog box get executed, and that doesn't happen until
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531 ;; after the dialog box is destroyed. so to keep things
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532 ;; synchronous, we enqueue an eval event, which goes into
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533 ;; the same queue as the misc-user events encapsulating
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534 ;; the dialog callbacks and will go after it (because
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535 ;; destroying the dialog box happens after processing
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536 ;; its selection). if the dialog boxes are written
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537 ;; properly, we don't see this eval event, because we've
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538 ;; already exited our modal loop. (Thus, we make sure the
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539 ;; function given in this eval event is actually defined
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540 ;; and does nothing.) If we do see it, though, we know
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541 ;; that we encountered a badly written dialog box and
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542 ;; need to exit now. Currently we just return nil, but
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543 ;; maybe we should signal an error or issue a warning.
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544 (catch 'internal-dialog-box-finish
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545 (let ((id (eval thunk))
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546 (sym (gensym)))
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547 (fset sym
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548 `(lambda (did)
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549 (when (eq ',id did)
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550 (mapc 'enable-frame ',frames)
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551 (enqueue-eval-event
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552 'internal-make-dialog-box-exit did)
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553 (remove-hook 'delete-dialog-box-hook
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554 ',sym))))
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1066
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555 (if (framep id)
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556 (add-hook 'delete-frame-hook sym)
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557 (add-hook 'delete-dialog-box-hook sym))
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442
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558 (mapc 'disable-frame frames)
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559 (block nil
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560 (while t
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561 (let ((event (next-event)))
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562 (if (and (eval-event-p event)
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563 (eq (event-function event)
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564 'internal-make-dialog-box-exit)
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565 (eq (event-object event) id))
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566 (return '(nil))
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567 (dispatch-event event)))))))))
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568 (if (listp result)
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569 (car result)
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570 (signal 'quit nil)))))
|
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571 (case type
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572 (general
|
|
573 (cl-parsing-keywords
|
|
574 ((:title "XEmacs")
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575 (:parent (selected-frame))
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576 :modal
|
|
577 :properties
|
863
|
578 :autosize
|
442
|
579 :spec)
|
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580 ()
|
|
581 (flet ((create-dialog-box-frame ()
|
|
582 (let* ((ftop (frame-property cl-parent 'top))
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|
583 (fleft (frame-property cl-parent 'left))
|
|
584 (fwidth (frame-pixel-width cl-parent))
|
|
585 (fheight (frame-pixel-height cl-parent))
|
|
586 (fonth (font-height (face-font 'default)))
|
|
587 (fontw (font-width (face-font 'default)))
|
|
588 (cl-properties (append cl-properties
|
|
589 dialog-frame-plist))
|
|
590 (dfheight (plist-get cl-properties 'height))
|
|
591 (dfwidth (plist-get cl-properties 'width))
|
|
592 (unmapped (plist-get cl-properties
|
|
593 'initially-unmapped))
|
|
594 (gutter-spec cl-spec)
|
|
595 (name (or (plist-get cl-properties 'name) "XEmacs"))
|
|
596 (frame nil))
|
|
597 (plist-remprop cl-properties 'initially-unmapped)
|
|
598 ;; allow the user to just provide a glyph
|
|
599 (or (glyphp cl-spec) (setq cl-spec (make-glyph cl-spec)))
|
|
600 (setq gutter-spec (copy-sequence "\n"))
|
|
601 (set-extent-begin-glyph (make-extent 0 1 gutter-spec)
|
|
602 cl-spec)
|
|
603 ;; under FVWM at least, if I don't specify the
|
|
604 ;; initial position, it ends up always at (0, 0).
|
|
605 ;; xwininfo doesn't tell me that there are any
|
|
606 ;; program-specified position hints, so it must be
|
|
607 ;; an FVWM bug. So just be smashing and position in
|
|
608 ;; the center of the selected frame.
|
|
609 (setq frame
|
|
610 (make-frame
|
|
611 (append cl-properties
|
502
|
612 `(popup
|
|
613 ,cl-parent initially-unmapped t
|
|
614 menubar-visible-p nil
|
|
615 has-modeline-p nil
|
|
616 default-toolbar-visible-p nil
|
|
617 top-gutter-visible-p t
|
|
618 top-gutter-height ,(* dfheight fonth)
|
|
619 top-gutter ,gutter-spec
|
|
620 minibuffer none
|
|
621 name ,name
|
|
622 modeline-shadow-thickness 0
|
|
623 vertical-scrollbar-visible-p nil
|
|
624 horizontal-scrollbar-visible-p nil
|
|
625 unsplittable t
|
863
|
626 internal-border-width 8
|
502
|
627 left ,(+ fleft (- (/ fwidth 2)
|
|
628 (/ (* dfwidth
|
|
629 fontw)
|
|
630 2)))
|
|
631 top ,(+ ftop (- (/ fheight 2)
|
|
632 (/ (* dfheight
|
|
633 fonth)
|
|
634 2)))))))
|
442
|
635 (set-face-foreground 'modeline [default foreground] frame)
|
|
636 (set-face-background 'modeline [default background] frame)
|
863
|
637 ;; resize before mapping
|
|
638 (when cl-autosize
|
1126
|
639 (set-frame-displayable-pixel-size
|
863
|
640 frame
|
|
641 (image-instance-width
|
|
642 (glyph-image-instance cl-spec
|
|
643 (frame-selected-window frame)))
|
|
644 (image-instance-height
|
|
645 (glyph-image-instance cl-spec
|
|
646 (frame-selected-window frame)))))
|
|
647 ;; somehow, even though the resizing is supposed
|
|
648 ;; to be while the frame is not visible, a
|
|
649 ;; visible resize is perceptible
|
442
|
650 (unless unmapped (make-frame-visible frame))
|
|
651 (let ((newbuf (generate-new-buffer " *dialog box*")))
|
|
652 (set-buffer-dedicated-frame newbuf frame)
|
|
653 (set-frame-property frame 'dialog-box-buffer newbuf)
|
502
|
654 (set-window-buffer (frame-root-window frame) newbuf)
|
442
|
655 (with-current-buffer newbuf
|
502
|
656 (set (make-local-variable 'frame-title-format)
|
|
657 cl-title)
|
|
658 (add-local-hook 'delete-frame-hook
|
|
659 #'(lambda (frame)
|
|
660 (kill-buffer
|
|
661 (frame-property
|
|
662 frame
|
|
663 'dialog-box-buffer))))))
|
442
|
664 frame)))
|
|
665 (if cl-modal
|
|
666 (dialog-box-modal-loop '(create-dialog-box-frame))
|
|
667 (create-dialog-box-frame)))))
|
|
668 (question
|
|
669 (cl-parsing-keywords
|
|
670 ((:modal nil))
|
|
671 t
|
|
672 (remf cl-keys :modal)
|
|
673 (if cl-modal
|
|
674 (dialog-box-modal-loop `(make-dialog-box-internal ',type
|
|
675 ',cl-keys))
|
|
676 (make-dialog-box-internal type cl-keys))))
|
|
677 (t
|
|
678 (make-dialog-box-internal type cl-keys)))))
|
|
679
|
|
680 (defun dialog-box-finish (result)
|
|
681 "Exit a modal dialog box, returning RESULT.
|
|
682 This is meant to be executed from a dialog box callback function."
|
|
683 (throw 'internal-dialog-box-finish (list result)))
|
|
684
|
|
685 (defun dialog-box-cancel ()
|
|
686 "Cancel a modal dialog box.
|
|
687 This is meant to be executed from a dialog box callback function."
|
|
688 (throw 'internal-dialog-box-finish 'cancel))
|
|
689
|
|
690 ;; an eval event, used as a trigger inside of the dialog modal loop.
|
|
691 (defun internal-make-dialog-box-exit (did)
|
|
692 nil)
|
|
693
|
|
694 (make-obsolete 'popup-dialog-box 'make-dialog-box)
|
|
695 (defun popup-dialog-box (desc)
|
|
696 "Obsolete equivalent of (make-dialog-box 'question ...).
|
|
697
|
|
698 \(popup-dialog-box (QUESTION BUTTONS ...)
|
|
699
|
|
700 is equivalent to
|
|
701
|
|
702 \(make-dialog-box 'question :question QUESTION :buttons BUTTONS)"
|
|
703 (check-argument-type 'stringp (car desc))
|
|
704 (or (consp (cdr desc))
|
|
705 (error 'syntax-error
|
|
706 "Dialog descriptor must supply at least one button"
|
|
707 desc))
|
|
708 (make-dialog-box 'question :question (car desc) :buttons (cdr desc)))
|
|
709
|
209
|
710 ;;; dialog.el ends here
|