[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Custom query-replace.
From: |
R. Clayton |
Subject: |
Custom query-replace. |
Date: |
Sun, 12 Jul 2015 16:47:56 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.5 (gnu/linux) |
I'm trying to write a query-replace command to deal with hyphens in text. For
each match, I want to perform one of three changes:
delete hyphen; go from "for- got" to "forgot"
unspace hyphen; go from "red- headed" to "red-headed"
space hyphen; go from "stop- it" to "stop - it"
as well as the usual query-replace options (quit, skip, and so on). For
example, typing 'D' at the query-replace prompt would delete the hyphen.
I had a hazy idea I could do this by flogging some keymap. However, once I got
this far
(defun rehyphenate ()
(interactive)
(let (f r)
(fset 'r (lambda (data count)
(concat (match-string 1) "-" (match-string 2))))
(fset 'f (lambda ()
(perform-replace
"\\([a-z]\\)- +\\([a-z]\\)" ; from-string
(cons 'r "") ; replacements
t ; query-flag
t ; regexp-flag
nil ; delimited-flag
nil ; repeat-count
nil ; keymap
(point-min) ; start
(point-max) ; end
)))
(while (f)
)))
I realized my hazy idea was hazier than I though. It seems to me I have two
paths I can follow:
Continue to flog the keymap by including commands in the keymap that in turn
flog the replacement text, or otherwise communicate the change choice to the
replacement function.
Move the query from the match to the replacement function, which would forego
standard query-replace behavior, such as quitting and skipping, which is an
ok trade-off.
Both of these paths seem unattractive to me. What alternatives are there
available for me to do what I want? Is there some similarly-behaving code
around I can steal from?
- Custom query-replace.,
R. Clayton <=