Related
I am starting to learn Emacs Lisp, and as a first project I would like to improve the fortran mode in Emacs. I would like to mark the name of a sub routine in the buffer, and then press a shortcut key. To bring up a buffer with all lines in the given source where the name of the subroutine is mentioned.
I found that I can get the marked text using:
(defun get-selected-text (beg end)
(interactive
(if (use-region-p)
(list (region-beginning) (region-end))
(list nil nil)))
(message "%s" (if (and beg end)
(buffer-substring-no-properties beg end) "")))
and can store the line numbers of the subroutines using:
(defun get-line-numbers (str)
(interactive "sEnter string: ")
(save-excursion
(goto-char 0)
(let (( sok 1) (list nil) pp)
(while sok
(setq pp (search-forward str nil t))
(if pp (push (line-number-at-pos pp) list)
(setq sok nil)))
(message "%s" list))))
I would now like to open a new buffer similar to when I use Ctrl-x Ctrl-b to execute list-buffers and then display each line number, together with the text on the line, and the user can select a given line, and press Enter to goto the given line in the original buffer..
Just wanted to show you my version of occur-dwim.
I remember spending some time to find out about the regexp-history variable.
The first function is similar to your get-selected-text.
(defun region-str-or-symbol ()
"Return the contents of region or current symbol."
(if (region-active-p)
(buffer-substring-no-properties
(region-beginning)
(region-end))
(thing-at-point 'symbol)))
(defun occur-dwim ()
"Call `occur' with a sane default."
(interactive)
(push (region-str-or-symbol) regexp-history)
(call-interactively 'occur))
To display the list-buffer you use get-buffer-create and clear it with erase-buffer (it might be that it already extisted).
To output the lines you search in the current buffer save the line in a string and put it into the list buffer via with-current-buffer and insert.
To make return special on the text or to make it clickable put a text-property with a local keymap on it.
With this guide you should be able to find everything you need in the elisp-manual.
Regarding your code, you get the beginning and end of the current region with (interactive "r"). Therewith you also get the error message if there is no active region.
is there a way to quickly browse through lots of files in Emacs (24.3)? More specifically:
Let's assume an Emacs frame is split into two windows. Suppose focus is in the left window that has an open 'dired' buffer with lots of text files (or code). I would like to go up and down the list of files (e.g. with cursor keys), while at the same time the current file is shown in the right window. Even better the file is only viewed and closed once I move in the dired buffer to the next file. This would be very useful especially together with some 'omit' mode.
Can this be done in 'dired'? I also coudn't find this functionality in dired-x or in sunrise-commander. Is it possible?
The best candidates I tried already (and why they not solve the problem):
'v' which shows the current file, but also moves the attention
'C-o' which shows the current file, but after moving up or down, I have to press C-o again, also it generates lots of buffers
Thanks a lot for your help!
A simple and generic (while not optimum) solution could be via the C-x () mechanism.
First open the two panes in Emacs, with - say - top one being dired.
Press o to open the first file in the 2nd pane.
Then you can start the repetition mechanism:
do C-x ( to start recording a macro
do C-x k and return to close the buffer
do o again to go back to dired
do down key to go to next file
do o to open next file in bottom pane
do C-x ) to end the macro
From that point (being in bottom pane, dired in top pane), doing a mere
C-x e (and then only e if there is no other operation in between)
will automatically
close bottom pane file, go to top pane, down to next file, open it in bottom pane
There is maybe a more specific way to do that, but knowing the macro mechanism is anyway very helpful in Emacs.
Here's how I do this with view-mode:
(add-hook 'view-mode-hook
(lambda()
(define-key view-mode-map (kbd "n") 'dired-view-next)
(define-key view-mode-map (kbd "p") 'dired-view-prev)))
(defun dired-view-next ()
"Move to next dired line and view ."
(interactive)
(quit-window)
(dired-next-line 1)
(dired-view-file))
(defun dired-view-prev ()
"Move to next dired line and view ."
(interactive)
(quit-window)
(dired-next-line -1)
(dired-view-file))
UPD:
This one has two panes:
(defun dired-view-next-pane ()
(interactive)
(other-window 1)
(if view-mode
(kill-buffer))
(other-window -1)
(dired-next-line 1)
(view-file-other-window
(dired-get-file-for-visit))
(other-window -1))
Thanks a lot for all those answers. Summarizing I created the following solution (extending the answer of "abo-abo"):
;; little modification to dired-mode that let's you browse through lots of files
(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook
(lambda()
(define-key dired-mode-map (kbd "C-o") 'dired-view-current) ; was dired-display-file
(define-key dired-mode-map (kbd "n") 'dired-view-next) ; was dired-next-line
(define-key dired-mode-map (kbd "p") 'dired-view-previous))) ; was dired-previous-line
(defun dired-view-next ()
"Move down one line and view the current file in another window."
(interactive)
(dired-next-line)
(dired-view-current))
(defun dired-view-previous ()
"Move up one line and view the current file in another window."
(interactive)
(dired-previous-line)
(dired-view-current))
(defun dired-view-current ()
"View the current file in another window (possibly newly created)."
(interactive)
(if (not (window-parent))
(split-window)) ; create a new window if necessary
(let ((file (dired-get-file-for-visit))
(dbuffer (current-buffer)))
(other-window 1) ; switch to the other window
(unless (equal dbuffer (current-buffer)) ; don't kill the dired buffer
(if (or view-mode (equal major-mode 'dired-mode)) ; only if in view- or dired-mode
(kill-buffer))) ; ... kill it
(let ((filebuffer (get-file-buffer file)))
(if filebuffer ; does a buffer already look at the file
(switch-to-buffer filebuffer) ; simply switch
(view-file file)) ; ... view it
(other-window -1)))) ; give the attention back to the dired buffer
Three keys are changed:
C-o to view the current item in another window (possibly create one).
n to view the next item in another window.
p to view the previous item in another window.
This can be used in a dired buffer. Note that only dired-mode buffers and view-mode buffers get killed while moving up and down. If a file is shown that another buffer is already visiting (not in view-mode), that buffer is shown as well, but not killed when moving to the next. Another subtlety is the case when the passively shown buffer is the dired buffer used for going through the list (this can easily happen, when going inside a folder with RET). To handle this case, we first check whether we are trying to kill the initial dired buffer.
Load Icicles.
Define this command:
(defun my-find-file ()
"Like `icicle-find-file', but alt action views file temporarily.
Alternate action keys such as `C-S-down' visit the candidate file in
`view-mode' and kill the buffer of the last such viewed candidate."
(interactive)
(let ((icicle-candidate-alt-action-fn
(lambda (file)
(when (and my-last-viewed
(get-file-buffer my-last-viewed))
(kill-buffer (get-file-buffer my-last-viewed)))
(setq my-last-viewed (abbreviate-file-name file))
(view-file file)
(select-frame-set-input-focus
(window-frame (active-minibuffer-window))))))
(icicle-find-file-of-content)))
(defvar my-last-viewed nil
"Last file viewed by alternate action of `my-find-file'.")
Then you can:
Use M-x my-find-file (or bind it to a key - e.g., C-x C-f).
Optionally type part of a file name, to limit the matching names.
Optionally use down or up to cycle among file names.
Use C-S-down to visit the next file in order.
Repeat #4 to see other files in order.
Repeat #2 or #3 to see other sets of files.
End with RET to choose a file to visit or C-g to cancel.
Each file buffer you visited with C-S-down was killed when you
viewed the next one. You can also mix in C-down or C-RET to
also visit files whose buffers you do not want to kill
automatically. (Change view-file to find-file if you don't
want to visit in view-mode, which is read-only.)
[By default, the alternate action for icicle-find-file is
icicle-alt-act-fn-for-type, which prompts you for a file-
appropriate action to use on the particular candidate chosen for
the action. Command my-find-file just substitutes a different
alternate action function (for all candidates you choose).]
See also this thread from help-gnu-emacs#gnu.org. It is pretty much the same question as yours, I think. My replies there were pretty much the same as my reply here, but there are also replies from others that might help you as well.
Try
M-x speedbar
That might appeal to you
Another view-mode solution on top of ag-mode lists. I couldn't find a question for ag-mode, maybe this helps someone generalize a ffap-preview for any mode.
(defun directory-ag-results ()
(save-excursion
(goto-char (point-min))
(search-forward "\"")
(setq a (point))
(search-forward "\"")
(setq b (- (point) 1))
(buffer-substring-no-properties a b)))
(defun search-item-path ()
(let ((dir (directory-ag-results))
(file-parts (split-string (substring-no-properties (thing-at-point 'filename)) ":")))
(concat dir (nth 0 file-parts))))
(defun search-item-line ()
(let ((file-parts (split-string (substring-no-properties (thing-at-point 'filename)) ":")))
(- (string-to-number (nth 1 file-parts)) 1)))
(defun view-current ()
"Quickly view the current file in another window."
(if (not (window-parent))
(split-window)) ; create a new window if necessary
(let ((file (search-item-path))
(line (search-item-line))
(dbuffer (current-buffer)))
(other-window 1) ; switch to the other window
(unless (equal dbuffer (current-buffer)) ; don't kill the dired buffer
(if (or view-mode (equal major-mode 'dired-mode)) ; only if in view- or dired-mode
(kill-buffer))) ; ... kill it
(let ((filebuffer (get-file-buffer file)))
(if filebuffer ; does a buffer already look at the file
(switch-to-buffer filebuffer) ; simply switch
(progn
(view-file file) ; ... view it
(goto-char (point-min))
(next-line line)))
(other-window -1))))
(defun next-view-current ()
(interactive)
(next-line)
(view-current))
(defun previous-view-current ()
(interactive)
(previous-line)
(view-current))
(define-key ag-mode-map (kbd "M-p") 'previous-view-current)
(define-key ag-mode-map (kbd "M-n") 'next-view-current)
This is the one thing I think Sublime does better than Emacs. Blasphemy, I know! I like the "q to exit" feel of view-mode, rather than timer-based solutions, and like scrolling around a previewed file. This snippet navigates to the line number found in the search results, optimizing for browsing speed.
Note about the code: I tried polyfilling vc-root-dir from Emacs 25, but it doesn't really make sense for ag-mode since ag-mode's buffer is outside the repo you're searching in. I ended up pulling the root dir from the top of the "ag search" buffer.
Early stages. Improvements welcome.
Demo
Edit: It works for ag-mode, not dired. Demo gif.
Credits: abo-abo, user2979331
In the interest of keeping StackOverflow up to date, the package peep-dired does everything posted in the other answers, and I’m sure there are other packages as well. You don’t have to maintain copypasted or home-rolled lisp for this job.
Many times I find myself in need of pasting a path from wherever to emacs' minibuffer. To clear the minibuffer fast I navigate to the beginning and do C-k (kill line).
This effectively overrides whatever path I had in the system clipboard with the temporary path I just killed in the minibuffer. Navigating the kill ring with M-y won't bring the path I had in the system clipboard.
Is there a way to delete the current line without killing it( i.e. removing it and adding it to the kill ring)?
So far I'm marking the line and pressing delete having delete-selection-mote active. I would like a one key solution similar to C-k.
As of Emacs 23.2, you can set save-interprogram-paste-before-kill to a non-nil value (hat tip Tyler) to copy the clipboard selection onto the kill ring, so that it is available via C-y M-y:
(setq save-interprogram-paste-before-kill t)
If you're on an older Emacs, the following advice has the same functionality:
(defadvice kill-new (before kill-new-push-xselection-on-kill-ring activate)
"Before putting new kill onto the kill-ring, add the clipboard/external selection to the kill ring"
(let ((have-paste (and interprogram-paste-function
(funcall interprogram-paste-function))))
(when have-paste (push have-paste kill-ring))))
And, you could do something like this (horrible keybinding, customize to suit) to delete the line from the point forward:
(define-key minibuffer-local-map (kbd "C-S-d") 'delete-line)
(defun delete-line (&optional arg)
(interactive "P")
;; taken from kill-line
(delete-region (point)
;; It is better to move point to the other end of the kill
;; before killing. That way, in a read-only buffer, point
;; moves across the text that is copied to the kill ring.
;; The choice has no effect on undo now that undo records
;; the value of point from before the command was run.
(progn
(if arg
(forward-visible-line (prefix-numeric-value arg))
(if (eobp)
(signal 'end-of-buffer nil))
(let ((end
(save-excursion
(end-of-visible-line) (point))))
(if (or (save-excursion
;; If trailing whitespace is visible,
;; don't treat it as nothing.
(unless show-trailing-whitespace
(skip-chars-forward " \t" end))
(= (point) end))
(and kill-whole-line (bolp)))
(forward-visible-line 1)
(goto-char end))))
(point))))
As of Emacs 23.2, this problem can be addressed with save-interprogram-paste-before-kill. If you set this variable to t then stuff in the clipboard gets added to the kill-ring, and isn't discarded by your next kill.
The documentation:
Save clipboard strings into kill ring before replacing them.
When one selects something in another program to paste it into Emacs,
but kills something in Emacs before actually pasting it,
this selection is gone unless this variable is non-nil,
in which case the other program's selection is saved in the `kill-ring'
before the Emacs kill and one can still paste it using C-y M-y.
From Xahlee's page, it shows several commands that are annoying.
(defun my-delete-word (arg)
"Delete characters forward until encountering the end of a word.
With argument, do this that many times.
This command does not push erased text to kill-ring."
(interactive "p")
(delete-region (point) (progn (forward-word arg) (point))))
(defun my-backward-delete-word (arg)
"Delete characters backward until encountering the beginning of a word.
With argument, do this that many times.
This command does not push erased text to kill-ring."
(interactive "p")
(my-delete-word (- arg)))
(defun my-delete-line ()
"Delete text from current position to end of line char."
(interactive)
(delete-region
(point)
(save-excursion (move-end-of-line 1) (point)))
(delete-char 1)
)
(defun my-delete-line-backward ()
"Delete text between the beginning of the line to the cursor position."
(interactive)
(let (x1 x2)
(setq x1 (point))
(move-beginning-of-line 1)
(setq x2 (point))
(delete-region x1 x2)))
; Here's the code to bind them with emacs's default shortcut keys:
(global-set-key (kbd "M-d") 'my-delete-word)
(global-set-key (kbd "<M-backspace>") 'my-backward-delete-word)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-k") 'my-delete-line)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-S-k") 'my-delete-line-backward)
There isn't.
from the GNU Emacs Manual:
We have already described the basic deletion commands C-d
(delete-char) and (delete-backward-char). See Erasing.
The other delete commands are those that delete only whitespace
characters: spaces, tabs and newlines. M-\ (delete-horizontal-space)
deletes all the spaces and tab characters before and after point. With
a prefix argument, this only deletes spaces and tab characters before
point. M- (just-one-space) does likewise but leaves a single
space after point, regardless of the number of spaces that existed
previously (even if there were none before). With a numeric argument
n, it leaves n spaces after point.
What about something like:
(defun del-line (p1)
(interactive "d")
(move-end-of-line 1)
(when (eq p1 (point)) ; special case when p1 is already at the end of the line
(forward-line))
(delete-region p1 (point)))
The behavior should be similar to C-k but without affecting the system clipboard or the kill-ring.
ETA: I read Trey's solution more carefully, and it looks like this is just a simple case of his solution. It worked in my (very!) limited tests, but probably fails for some special cases where the more complicated kill-line code works correctly.
Found an answer to this.
Posted it first here: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/26360/emacs-deleting-a-line-without-sending-it-to-the-kill-ring/136581#136581
;; Ctrl-K with no kill
(defun delete-line-no-kill ()
(interactive)
(delete-region
(point)
(save-excursion (move-end-of-line 1) (point)))
(delete-char 1)
)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-k") 'delete-line-no-kill)
How do I close all but the current buffer in Emacs? Similar to "Close other tabs" feature in modern web browsers?
For a more manual approach, you can list all buffers with C-x C-b, mark buffers in the list for deletion with d, and then use x to remove them.
I also recommend replacing list-buffers with the more advanced ibuffer: (global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-b") 'ibuffer). The above will work with ibuffer, but you could also do this:
m (mark the buffer you want to keep)
t (toggle marks)
D (kill all marked buffers)
I also use this snippet from the Emacs Wiki, which would further streamline this manual approach:
;; Ensure ibuffer opens with point at the current buffer's entry.
(defadvice ibuffer
(around ibuffer-point-to-most-recent) ()
"Open ibuffer with cursor pointed to most recent buffer name."
(let ((recent-buffer-name (buffer-name)))
ad-do-it
(ibuffer-jump-to-buffer recent-buffer-name)))
(ad-activate 'ibuffer)
From EmacsWiki: Killing Buffers:
(defun kill-other-buffers ()
"Kill all other buffers."
(interactive)
(mapc 'kill-buffer
(delq (current-buffer)
(remove-if-not 'buffer-file-name (buffer-list)))))
Edit: updated with feedback from Gilles
There isn't a way directly in emacs to do this.
You could write a function to do this. The following will close all the buffers:
(defun close-all-buffers ()
(interactive)
(mapc 'kill-buffer (buffer-list)))
There is a built in command m-x kill-some-buffers (I'm using 24.3.50) In my nextstep gui (not tried in a terminal but sure it's similar) you can then approve which buffers to kill.
(defun only-current-buffer ()
(interactive)
(let ((tobe-killed (cdr (buffer-list (current-buffer)))))
(while tobe-killed
(kill-buffer (car tobe-killed))
(setq tobe-killed (cdr tobe-killed)))))
It works as you expected.
And after reading #Starkey's answer, I think this will be better:
(defun only-current-buffer ()
(interactive)
(mapc 'kill-buffer (cdr (buffer-list (current-buffer)))))
(buffer-list (current-buffer)) will return a list that contains all the existing buffers, with the current buffer at the head of the list.
This is my first answer on StackOverflow. Hope it helps :)
I found this solution to be the simplest one. This deletes every buffer except the current one. You have to add this code to your .emacs file
(defun kill-other-buffers ()
"Kill all other buffers."
(interactive)
(mapc 'kill-buffer (delq (current-buffer) (buffer-list))))
Of course, then you use it with M-x kill-other-buffers RET or you paste the following code in the .emacs file too and then just press C-xC-b
(global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-b") 'kill-other-buffers)
You can like this one as well - kill all buffers except current one, *Messages* and *scratch* (which are handy to have, I call them "toolkit"), close redundant windows as well, living you which one window which current buffer.
(defun my/kill-all-buffers-except-toolbox ()
"Kill all buffers except current one and toolkit (*Messages*, *scratch*). Close other windows."
(interactive)
(mapc 'kill-buffer (remove-if
(lambda (x)
(or
(eq x (current-buffer))
(member (buffer-name x) '("*Messages*" "*scratch*"))))
(buffer-list)))
(delete-other-windows))
I've use crux-kill-other-buffers for some months.
But I want dired buffers get deleted too. #Euge's and #wenjun.yan's answers solve this. But it will delete special buffers (e.g *git-credential-cache--daemon*, *scratch*, helm operation, and etc). So I came up with this (current) solution.
(defun aza-kill-other-buffers ()
"Kill all buffers but current buffer and special buffers"
(interactive)
(dolist (buffer (delq (current-buffer) (buffer-list)))
(let ((name (buffer-name buffer)))
(when (and name (not (string-equal name ""))
(/= (aref name 0) ?\s)
(string-match "^[^\*]" name))
(funcall 'kill-buffer buffer)))))
Inspired from kill-matching-buffers. You can add more condition on other buffer-name to exclude, if you want to.
Hope it helps :)
I've used one of the solutions in this list for years, but now I have a new one of my own.
(defun kill-all-file-buffers ()
"Kills all buffers that are open to files. Does not kill
modified buffers or special buffers."
(interactive)
(mapc 'kill-buffer (cl-loop for buffer being the buffers
when (and (buffer-file-name buffer)
(not (buffer-modified-p buffer)))
unless (eq buffer (current-buffer))
collect buffer)))
cl-loop has buffers built in as a collection that you can iterate over. It gives you a chance to parse out anything you don't want to close. Here, I've made sure that it doesn't close anything you've modified, and it uses buffer-file-name instead of just buffer-name so it doesn't kill special buffers. I also added an 'unless' to take out the current buffer (though you could obviously add it to the 'when', I just thought this was clearer).
But for an even more generic solution, we can define this as a macro, and pass in a function that will apply to all these buffers.
(defmacro operate-on-file-buffers (func)
"Takes any function that takes a single buffer as an argument
and applies that to all open file buffers that haven't been
modified, and aren't the current one."
`(mapc ,func (cl-loop for buffer being the buffers
when (and (buffer-file-name buffer)
(not (buffer-modified-p buffer)))
unless (eq buffer (current-buffer))
collect buffer)))
Now if you want to kill all buffers that match this, you can call it like this
(operate-on-file-buffers 'kill-buffer)
This is what you want:
C-x 1
source: https://blasphemousbits.wordpress.com/2007/05/04/learning-emacs-part-4-buffers-windows-and-frames/
I've seen at least two recommendations on StackOverflow to insert newlines between sentences when editing LaTeX documents. The reason being that the practice facilitates source control, diffing, and collaborative editing.
I'm basically convinced, but I'm lazy, and I don't want to have to think about it.
So I'm searching for some emacs incantation to handle it for me. Could be a minor mode, could be a set of variables that need to be set.
I think what I don't want is
Soft wrapping of text (say using the longlines and (set long-lines-auto-wrap 't)). This is because I don't want to impose requirements on my collaborators' editors, and I sometimes use other unix tools to examine these files.
I think what I do want is
For fill-paragraph to fill between newlines that look like they mark the end of a sentence.
A solution that works with auto-fill-mode would be a bonus.
That is:
chat chat chat.
A new sentence
with goofed up wrapping that needs to be fixed.
Mumble mumble
Transformed to:
chat chat chat.
A new sentence with goofed up wrapping that needs to be fixed.
Mumble mumble
Your comments and suggestions are appreciated.
Edit: The suggestion by Jouni K. Seppänen pointed me at LaTeX-fill-break-at-separators, which suggests that emacs almost knows how to do this already. Anyway, I'm off to read some code, and will report back. Thanks again.
More general version of the same question: Editor showdown: Maintain newlines at the ends of sentences. Thanks, dreeves.
Here's what I use, which was mostly cribbed from Luca de Alfaro:
(defun fill-sentence ()
(interactive)
(save-excursion
(or (eq (point) (point-max)) (forward-char))
(forward-sentence -1)
(indent-relative t)
(let ((beg (point))
(ix (string-match "LaTeX" mode-name)))
(forward-sentence)
(if (and ix (equal "LaTeX" (substring mode-name ix)))
(LaTeX-fill-region-as-paragraph beg (point))
(fill-region-as-paragraph beg (point))))))
I bind this to M-j with
(global-set-key (kbd "M-j") 'fill-sentence)
The references to "LaTeX" are for AUCTeX support. If you don't use AUCTeX, the let can be simplified to
(let (beg (point))
(forward-sentence)
(fill-region-as-paragraph beg (point)))
I have been meaning to do this forever and I recently found this blog post which worked fairly well for me. So here is (a slightly modified version of) what I have been using for a few days.
(defun auto-fill-by-sentences ()
(if (looking-back (sentence-end))
;; Break at a sentence
(progn
(LaTeX-newline)
t)
;; Fall back to the default
(do-auto-fill)))
(add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook (lambda () (setq auto-fill-function 'auto-fill-by-sentences)))
;; Modified from http://pleasefindattached.blogspot.com/2011/12/emacsauctex-sentence-fill-greatly.html
(defadvice LaTeX-fill-region-as-paragraph (around LaTeX-sentence-filling)
"Start each sentence on a new line."
(let ((from (ad-get-arg 0))
(to-marker (set-marker (make-marker) (ad-get-arg 1)))
tmp-end)
(while (< from (marker-position to-marker))
(forward-sentence)
;; might have gone beyond to-marker---use whichever is smaller:
(ad-set-arg 1 (setq tmp-end (min (point) (marker-position to-marker))))
ad-do-it
(ad-set-arg 0 (setq from (point)))
(unless (or (looking-back "^\\s *")
(looking-at "\\s *$"))
(LaTeX-newline)))
(set-marker to-marker nil)))
(ad-activate 'LaTeX-fill-region-as-paragraph)
If you put a comment marker at the end of each sentence, Emacs knows not to move the next line inside the comment:
chat chat chat.%
A new sentence
with goofed up wrapping that needs to be fixed.%
Mumble mumble%
Then M-q fills each sentence separately, at least in AUCTeX 11.85. (If you test this in Emacs, there seems to be a bug where if this is the first paragraph in the buffer and you type M-q, you get an error message. Just put a newline before the text to work around it.)
If you don't want to type the comment characters, you could take LaTeX-fill-paragraph and modify it so that sentence-ending punctuation at end of line works similarly to comments.
(defun wrap-at-sentences ()
"Fills the current paragraph, but starts each sentence on a new line."
(interactive)
(save-excursion
;; Select the entire paragraph.
(mark-paragraph)
;; Move to the start of the paragraph.
(goto-char (region-beginning))
;; Record the location of the end of the paragraph.
(setq end-of-paragraph (region-end))
;; Wrap lines with 'hard' newlines (i.e., real line breaks).
(let ((use-hard-newlines 't))
;; Loop over each sentence in the paragraph.
(while (< (point) end-of-paragraph)
;; Determine the region spanned by the sentence.
(setq start-of-sentence (point))
(forward-sentence)
;; Wrap the sentence with hard newlines.
(fill-region start-of-sentence (point))
;; Delete the whitespace following the period, if any.
(while (char-equal (char-syntax (preceding-char)) ?\s)
(delete-char -1))
;; Insert a newline before the next sentence.
(insert "\n")))))
(global-set-key (kbd "M-q") 'wrap-at-sentences)
May not work in all circumstances, but:
(defun my-fill-sentence ()
"Fill sentence separated by punctuation or blank lines."
(interactive)
(let (start end)
(save-excursion
(re-search-backward "\\(^\\s-*$\\|[.?!]\\)" nil t)
(skip-syntax-forward "^w")
(setq start (point-at-bol)))
(save-excursion
(re-search-forward "\\(^\\s-*$\\|[.?!]\\)" nil t)
(setq end (point-at-eol)))
(save-restriction
(narrow-to-region start end)
(fill-paragraph nil))))
To make it work with auto-fill-mode, add (setq normal-auto-fill-function 'my-fill-sentence) to your LaTeX mode hook (I think).
I am assuming you know elisp.
There are a few approaches you can take:
Hook into auto-fill-mode. There are a lot of hard-coded
conditionals there, so it might not work for you. You can
potentially play with auto-fill-function and see if you have
the hook you need there.
Make a character (probably .) "electric" so that when you press
it, it inserts itself and then calls a function to determine how
to fill the line you're on.
Set an after-change-hook to call a function that determines how
to fill the sentence. This function will be called after every
change to the buffer, so do it efficiently. (This mechanism is
used by font-lock, so don't worry about it too much. It sounds
slow, but really isn't -- people type slowly.)
Once you have hooked in at the right place, you just have to implement
the filling logic. The source for sentence-at-point (from thingatpt) may be
instructive.
Anyway, I've never heard of anyone doing this... but it is definitely possible. Like most things in Emacs, it's just a Simple Matter Of Programming.
If the other answers are too automatic, here's a semiautomatic approach.
It's basically what you would do repeatedly if you were going to manually reformat, but condensed so you can hit a single key repeatedly instead.
;; - go to the end of the line,
;; - do ^d to suck the previous line onto this one,
;; - make sure there's only one space between the now-concatenated
;; lines, and then
;; - jump to the end and hit space so that (with auto-fill-mode)
;; the line nicely rewraps itself:
;; (turn on auto-fill-mode with M-x auto-fill-mode)
(defalias 'fill-sentence
(read-kbd-macro "C-e C-d SPC M-x just- one- space RET C-e SPC <backspace>"))
(define-key global-map [f4] 'fill-sentence) ; or whatever key you like
I like Chris Conway's macro a lot but it only works after you manually line-break each sentence. I'm a lazy guy so I want emacs to do it for me. This morning I finally sat down and looked into the problem. The solution I have now is to hack the built-in macro fill-region-as-paragraph.
After applying the following hack, a new option newline-after-sentence will be set to true. The standard M-q (fill-paragraph) will automatically fill and create line-breaks between sentences. Note that tests are only done with GNU Emacs 23.3.1 — use it at your own risk.
The full macro is long so I won't post it here. The idea is to add the following loops in fill-region-as-paragraph
...
;; Insert a line break after each sentence
(while (< (point) to)
(forward-sentence)
(if (< (point) to) (fill-newline)))
;; This is the actual filling loop.
(goto-char from)
(let (sentbeg sentend)
(while (< (point) to)
(setq sentbeg (point))
(end-of-line)
(setq sentend (point))
(fill-one-line sentbeg sentend justify) ;; original filling loop
(forward-line)))))
...
You can find the full macro in my git repository. Some details are also written in my blog. In case you don't want to read my poor English, you can simply use
$ curl http://fermi.mycloudnas.com/cgit.cgi/fill/plain/hack.el >> ~/.emacs
to append the hack to your ~/.emacs and give it a try. Comments and bug reports are all welcome.
An alternative approach would be to leave your .tex file as is, and use a tool like latexdiff
(described in this StackExchange post) instead of Unix diff. This produces a .tex file with Word-style track changes marks, and handles whitespace correctly so you don't have to worry about where your sentences end.
I wrote the following which loops over a region and inserts newlines. Instead of using forward-sentence which didn't work for me, I use re-search-forward "[.?!][]\"')}]*\\( \\)", which finds all sentences followed only by two spaces (the regexp is a modified sentence-end). The newline is made using newline-and-indent.
(defun fill-sentences-in-paragraph ()
"Put a newline at the end of each sentence in paragraph."
(interactive)
(save-excursion
(mark-paragraph)
(call-interactively 'fill-sentences-in-region)))
(defun fill-sentences-in-region (start end)
"Put a newline at the end of each sentence in region."
(interactive "*r")
(call-interactively 'unfill-region)
(save-excursion
(goto-char start)
(while (re-search-forward "[.?!][]\"')}]*\\( \\)" end t)
(newline-and-indent))))
To be able to fix improperly formatted text such as the example "chat chat chat...", fill-sentences-in-region first calls unfill-region which gets rid of sentence-breaking whitespace:
(defun unfill-region (beg end)
"Unfill the region, joining text paragraphs into a
single logical line. This is useful, e.g., for use
with 'visual-line-mode'."
(interactive "*r")
(let ((fill-column (point-max)))
(fill-region beg end)))
I use visual-line-mode and replace my default paragraph fill M-q to fill-sentences-in-paragraph with (global-set-key "\M-q" 'fill-sentences-in-paragraph).