;; -*- Mode: Emacs-Lisp -*- ;;; This is a sample .emacs file, customized by J. Mohr 2001 June 5 ;;; (My additions are at the end.) ;;; Upgraded for xemacs v. 21.1 (had to change tests for major-version = 20 ;;; to >= ) - JM 2001 Aug 26 ;;; ;;; The .emacs file, which should reside in your home directory, allows you to ;;; customize the behavior of Emacs. In general, changes to your .emacs file ;;; will not take effect until the next time you start up Emacs. You can load ;;; it explicitly with `M-x load-file RET ~/.emacs RET'. ;;; ;;; There is a great deal of documentation on customization in the Emacs ;;; manual. You can read this manual with the online Info browser: type ;;; `C-h i' or select "Emacs Info" from the "Help" menu. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;; Basic Customization ;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;; Enable the command `narrow-to-region' ("C-x n n"), a useful ;; command, but possibly confusing to a new user, so it's disabled by ;; default. (put 'narrow-to-region 'disabled nil) ;;; Define a variable to indicate whether we're running XEmacs/Lucid Emacs. ;;; (You do not have to defvar a global variable before using it -- ;;; you can just call `setq' directly like we do for `emacs-major-version' ;;; below. It's clearer this way, though.) (defvar running-xemacs (string-match "XEmacs\\|Lucid" emacs-version)) ;; Make the sequence "C-x w" execute the `what-line' command, ;; which prints the current line number in the echo area. (global-set-key "\C-xw" 'what-line) ;; set up the function keys to do common tasks to reduce Emacs pinky ;; and such. ;; Make F1 invoke help (global-set-key [f1] 'help-command) ;; Make F2 be `undo' (global-set-key [f2] 'undo) ;; Make F3 be `find-file' ;; Note: it does not currently work to say ;; (global-set-key 'f3 "\C-x\C-f") ;; The reason is that macros can't do interactive things properly. ;; This is an extremely longstanding bug in Emacs. Eventually, ;; it will be fixed. (Hopefully ..) (global-set-key [f3] 'find-file) ;; Make F4 be "mark", F5 be "copy", F6 be "paste" ;; Note that you can set a key sequence either to a command or to another ;; key sequence. (global-set-key [f4] 'set-mark-command) (global-set-key [f5] "\M-w") (global-set-key [f6] "\C-y") ;; Shift-F4 is "pop mark off of stack" (global-set-key [(shift f4)] (lambda () (interactive) (set-mark-command t))) ;; Make F7 be `save-buffer' (global-set-key [f7] 'save-buffer) ;; Make F8 be "start macro", F9 be "end macro", F10 be "execute macro" (global-set-key [f8] 'start-kbd-macro) (global-set-key [f9] 'end-kbd-macro) (global-set-key [f10] 'call-last-kbd-macro) ;; Here's an alternative binding if you don't use keyboard macros: ;; Make F8 be `save-buffer' followed by `delete-window'. ;;(global-set-key 'f8 "\C-x\C-s\C-x0") ;; If you prefer delete to actually delete forward then you want to ;; uncomment the next line (or use `Customize' to customize this). ;; (setq delete-key-deletes-forward t) (cond (running-xemacs ;; ;; Code for any version of XEmacs/Lucid Emacs goes here ;; ;; Change the values of some variables. ;; (t means true; nil means false.) ;; ;; Use the "Describe Variable..." option on the "Help" menu ;; to find out what these variables mean. (setq find-file-use-truenames nil find-file-compare-truenames t minibuffer-confirm-incomplete t complex-buffers-menu-p t next-line-add-newlines nil mail-yank-prefix "> " ;; I like leaving the newline. - JM ; kill-whole-line t ) ;; When running ispell, consider all 1-3 character words as correct. (setq ispell-extra-args '("-W" "3")) (cond ((or (not (fboundp 'device-type)) (equal (device-type) 'x)) ;; Code which applies only when running emacs under X goes here. ;; (We check whether the function `device-type' exists ;; before using it. In versions before 19.12, there ;; was no such function. If it doesn't exist, we ;; simply assume we're running under X -- versions before ;; 19.12 only supported X.) ;; Remove the binding of C-x C-c, which normally exits emacs. ;; It's easy to hit this by mistake, and that can be annoying. ;; Under X, you can always quit with the "Exit Emacs" option on ;; the File menu. ;; Personally, I like have C-x C-c available, since I can exit ;; a temporary invocation of Emacs/Xemacs without taking my ;; hands off the keyboard. (In one case, I was reconfiguring ;; by X server configuration, and I had no mouse operating. ;; I couldn't get out of Emacs to get back to my xterm.) - JM ;(global-set-key "\C-x\C-c" nil) ;; Uncomment this to enable "sticky modifier keys" in 19.13 ;; and up. With sticky modifier keys enabled, you can ;; press and release a modifier key before pressing the ;; key to be modified, like how the ESC key works always. ;; If you hold the modifier key down, however, you still ;; get the standard behavior. I personally think this ;; is the best thing since sliced bread (and a *major* ;; win when it comes to reducing Emacs pinky), but it's ;; disorienting at first so I'm not enabling it here by ;; default. ;;(setq modifier-keys-are-sticky t) ;; This changes the variable which controls the text that goes ;; in the top window title bar. (However, it is not changed ;; unless it currently has the default value, to avoid ;; interfering with a -wn command line argument I may have ;; started emacs with.) ; (if (equal frame-title-format "%S: %b") ; (setq frame-title-format ; (concat "%S: " invocation-directory invocation-name ; " [" emacs-version "]" ; (if nil ; (getenv "NCD") ; "" ; " %b")))) ;; If we're running on display 0, load some nifty sounds that ;; will replace the default beep. But if we're running on a ;; display other than 0, which probably means my NCD X terminal, ;; which can't play digitized sounds, do two things: reduce the ;; beep volume a bit, and change the pitch of the sound that is ;; made for "no completions." ;; ;; (Note that sampled sounds only work if XEmacs was compiled ;; with sound support, and we're running on the console of a ;; Sparc, HP, or SGI machine, or on a machine which has a ;; NetAudio server; otherwise, you just get the standard beep.) ;; ;; (Note further that changing the pitch and duration of the ;; standard beep only works with some X servers; many servers ;; completely ignore those parameters.) ;; ; (cond ((string-match ":0" (getenv "DISPLAY")) ; (load-default-sounds)) ; (t ; (setq bell-volume 40) ; (setq sound-alist ; (append sound-alist '((no-completion :pitch 500)))) ; )) ;; Make `C-x C-m' and `C-x RET' be different (since I tend ;; to type the latter by accident sometimes.) (define-key global-map [(control x) return] nil) ;; Change the pointer used when the mouse is over a modeline (set-glyph-image modeline-pointer-glyph "leftbutton") ;; Change the continuation glyph face so it stands out more (and (fboundp 'set-glyph-property) (boundp 'continuation-glyph) (set-glyph-property continuation-glyph 'face 'bold)) ;; Change the pointer used during garbage collection. ;; ;; Note that this pointer image is rather large as pointers go, ;; and so it won't work on some X servers (such as the MIT ;; R5 Sun server) because servers may have lamentably small ;; upper limits on pointer size. ;;(if (featurep 'xpm) ;; (set-glyph-image gc-pointer-glyph ;; (expand-file-name "trash.xpm" data-directory))) ;; Here's another way to do that: it first tries to load the ;; pointer once and traps the error, just to see if it's ;; possible to load that pointer on this system; if it is, ;; then it sets gc-pointer-glyph, because we know that ;; will work. Otherwise, it doesn't change that variable ;; because we know it will just cause some error messages. (if (featurep 'xpm) (let ((file (expand-file-name "recycle.xpm" data-directory))) (if (condition-case error ;; check to make sure we can use the pointer. (make-image-instance file nil '(pointer)) (error nil)) ; returns nil if an error occurred. (set-glyph-image gc-pointer-glyph file)))) (when (featurep 'menubar) ;; Add `dired' to the File menu (add-menu-button '("File") ["Edit Directory" dired t]) ;; Here's a way to add scrollbar-like buttons to the menubar (add-menu-button nil ["Top" beginning-of-buffer t]) (add-menu-button nil ["<<<" scroll-down t]) (add-menu-button nil [" . " recenter t]) (add-menu-button nil [">>>" scroll-up t]) (add-menu-button nil ["Bot" end-of-buffer t])) ;; Change the behavior of mouse button 2 (which is normally ;; bound to `mouse-yank'), so that it inserts the selected text ;; at point (where the text cursor is), instead of at the ;; position clicked. ;; ;; Note that you can find out what a particular key sequence or ;; mouse button does by using the "Describe Key..." option on ;; the Help menu. (setq mouse-yank-at-point t) ;; When editing C code (and Lisp code and the like), I often ;; like to insert tabs into comments and such. It gets to be ;; a pain to always have to use `C-q TAB', so I set up a more ;; convenient binding. Note that this does not work in ;; TTY frames, where tab and shift-tab are indistinguishable. (define-key global-map '(shift tab) 'self-insert-command) ;; LISPM bindings of Control-Shift-C and Control-Shift-E. ;; Note that "\C-C" means Control-C, not Control-Shift-C. ;; To specify shifted control characters, you must use the ;; more verbose syntax used here. (define-key emacs-lisp-mode-map '(control C) 'compile-defun) (define-key emacs-lisp-mode-map '(control E) 'eval-defun) ;; If you like the FSF Emacs binding of button3 (single-click ;; extends the selection, double-click kills the selection), ;; uncomment the following: ;; Under 19.13, the following is enough: (define-key global-map 'button3 'mouse-track-adjust) ;; But under 19.12, you need this: ;(define-key global-map 'button3 ; (lambda (event) ; (interactive "e") ; (let ((default-mouse-track-adjust t)) ; (mouse-track event)))) ;; Under both 19.12 and 19.13, you also need this: (add-hook 'mouse-track-click-hook (lambda (event count) (if (or (/= (event-button event) 3) (/= count 2)) nil ;; do the normal operation (kill-region (point) (mark)) t ;; don't do the normal operations. ))) )) )) ;;; Older versions of emacs did not have these variables ;;; (emacs-major-version and emacs-minor-version.) ;;; Let's define them if they're not around, since they make ;;; it much easier to conditionalize on the emacs version. (if (and (not (boundp 'emacs-major-version)) (string-match "^[0-9]+" emacs-version)) (setq emacs-major-version (string-to-int (substring emacs-version (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0))))) (if (and (not (boundp 'emacs-minor-version)) (string-match "^[0-9]+\\.\\([0-9]+\\)" emacs-version)) (setq emacs-minor-version (string-to-int (substring emacs-version (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))))) ;;; Define a function to make it easier to check which version we're ;;; running. (defun running-emacs-version-or-newer (major minor) (or (> emacs-major-version major) (and (= emacs-major-version major) (>= emacs-minor-version minor)))) (cond ((and running-xemacs (running-emacs-version-or-newer 19 12)) ;; ;; Code requiring XEmacs/Lucid Emacs version 19.12 or newer goes here ;; ;; Here's a cute hack you might want to put in the sample .emacs ;; file: it changes the color of the window if it's not on the local ;; machine, or if it's running as root: ;; local emacs background: whitesmoke ;; remote emacs background: palegreen1 ;; root emacs background: paleturquoise (cond ((eq window-system 'x) (let* ((root-p (eq 0 (user-uid))) (dpy (or (getenv "DISPLAY") "")) (remote-p (not (or (string-match "^\\(\\|unix\\|localhost\\):" dpy) (let ((s (system-name))) (if (string-match "\\.\\(netscape\\|mcom\\)\\.com" s) (setq s (substring s 0 (match-beginning 0)))) (string-match (concat "^" (regexp-quote s)) dpy))))) (bg (cond (root-p "paleturquoise") (remote-p "palegreen1") (t nil)))) (cond (bg (let ((def (color-name (face-background 'default))) (faces (face-list))) (while faces (let ((obg (face-background (car faces)))) (if (and obg (equal def (color-name obg))) (set-face-background (car faces) bg))) (setq faces (cdr faces))))))))) ;; End of window color-changing code. )) (cond ((and running-xemacs (running-emacs-version-or-newer 19 6)) ;; ;; Code requiring XEmacs/Lucid Emacs version 19.6 or newer goes here ;; )) (cond ((>= emacs-major-version 19) ;; ;; Code for any vintage-19 emacs goes here ;; )) (cond ((and (not running-xemacs) (>= emacs-major-version 19)) ;; ;; Code specific to FSF Emacs 19 (not XEmacs/Lucid Emacs) goes here ;; )) (cond ((< emacs-major-version 19) ;; ;; Code specific to emacs 18 goes here ;; )) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;; Customization of Specific Packages ;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;;; Load gnuserv, which will allow you to connect to XEmacs sessions ;;; using `gnuclient'. ;; If you never run more than one XEmacs at a time, you might want to ;; always start gnuserv. Otherwise it is preferable to specify ;; `-f gnuserv-start' on the command line to one of the XEmacsen. ; (gnuserv-start) ;;; ******************** ;;; Load efs, which uses the FTP protocol as a pseudo-filesystem. ;;; When this is loaded, the pathname syntax /user@host:/remote/path ;;; refers to files accessible through ftp. ;;; (require 'dired) ;; compatible ange-ftp/efs initialization derived from code ;; from John Turner ;; As of 19.15, efs is bundled instead of ange-ftp. ;; NB: doesn't handle 20.0 properly, efs didn't appear until 20.1. ;; ;; The environment variable EMAIL_ADDRESS is used as the password ;; for access to anonymous ftp sites, if it is set. If not, one is ;; constructed using the environment variables USER and DOMAINNAME ;; (e.g. turner@lanl.gov), if set. (if (and running-xemacs (or (> emacs-major-version 20 ) (and (= emacs-major-version 20) (>= emacs-minor-version 1)) (and (= emacs-major-version 19) (>= emacs-minor-version 15)))) (progn (message "Loading and configuring bundled packages... efs") (require 'efs-auto) (if (getenv "USER") (setq efs-default-user (getenv "USER"))) (if (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS") (setq efs-generate-anonymous-password (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS")) (if (and (getenv "USER") (getenv "DOMAINNAME")) (setq efs-generate-anonymous-password (concat (getenv "USER")"@"(getenv "DOMAINNAME"))))) (setq efs-auto-save 1)) (progn (message "Loading and configuring bundled packages... ange-ftp") (require 'ange-ftp) (if (getenv "USER") (setq ange-ftp-default-user (getenv "USER"))) (if (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS") (setq ange-ftp-generate-anonymous-password (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS")) (if (and (getenv "USER") (getenv "DOMAINNAME")) (setq ange-ftp-generate-anonymous-password (concat (getenv "USER")"@"(getenv "DOMAINNAME"))))) (setq ange-ftp-auto-save 1) ) ) ;;; ******************** ;;; Load the default-dir.el package which installs fancy handling ;;; of the initial contents in the minibuffer when reading ;;; file names. (if (and running-xemacs (or (> emacs-major-version 20 ) (and (= emacs-major-version 20) (>= emacs-minor-version 1)) (and (= emacs-major-version 19) (>= emacs-minor-version 15)))) (require 'default-dir)) ;;; ******************** ;;; Load the auto-save.el package, which lets you put all of your autosave ;;; files in one place, instead of scattering them around the file system. ;;; (setq auto-save-directory (expand-file-name "~/autosave/") auto-save-directory-fallback auto-save-directory auto-save-hash-p nil efs-auto-save t efs-auto-save-remotely nil ;; now that we have auto-save-timeout, let's crank this up ;; for better interactive response. ;auto-save-interval 2000 auto-save-interval 200 ) ;; We load this afterwards because it checks to make sure the ;; auto-save-directory exists (creating it if not) when it's loaded. (require 'auto-save) ;;; ******************** ;;; cc-mode (the mode you're in when editing C, C++, and Objective C files) ;; Tell cc-mode not to check for old-style (K&R) function declarations. ;; This speeds up indenting a lot. (setq c-recognize-knr-p nil) ;; Change the indentation amount to 4 spaces instead of 2. ;; You have to do it in this complicated way because of the ;; strange way the cc-mode initializes the value of `c-basic-offset'. ;; ;; See my own customizations below. - JM ;(add-hook 'c-mode-hook (lambda () (setq c-basic-offset 4))) ;;; ******************** ;;; Load a partial-completion mechanism, which makes minibuffer completion ;;; search multiple words instead of just prefixes; for example, the command ;;; `M-x byte-compile-and-load-file RET' can be abbreviated as `M-x b-c-a RET' ;;; because there are no other commands whose first three words begin with ;;; the letters `b', `c', and `a' respectively. ;;; (load-library "completer") ;;; ******************** ;;; Load crypt, which is a package for automatically decoding and reencoding ;;; files by various methods - for example, you can visit a .Z or .gz file, ;;; edit it, and have it automatically re-compressed when you save it again. ;;; (setq crypt-encryption-type 'pgp ; default encryption mechanism crypt-confirm-password t ; make sure new passwords are correct ;crypt-never-ever-decrypt t ; if you don't encrypt anything, set this to ; tell it not to assume that "binary" files ; are encrypted and require a password. ) (require 'crypt) ;;; ******************** ;;; Edebug is a source-level debugger for emacs-lisp programs. ;;; (define-key emacs-lisp-mode-map "\C-xx" 'edebug-defun) ;;; ******************** ;;; Font-Lock is a syntax-highlighting package. When it is enabled and you ;;; are editing a program, different parts of your program will appear in ;;; different fonts or colors. For example, with the code below, comments ;;; appear in red italics, function names in function definitions appear in ;;; blue bold, etc. The code below will cause font-lock to automatically be ;;; enabled when you edit C, C++, Emacs-Lisp, and many other kinds of ;;; programs. ;;; ;;; The "Options" menu has some commands for controlling this as well. ;;; (cond (running-xemacs ;; If you want the default colors, you could do this: ;; (setq font-lock-use-default-fonts nil) ;; (setq font-lock-use-default-colors t) ;; but I want to specify my own colors, so I turn off all ;; default values. (setq font-lock-use-default-fonts nil) (setq font-lock-use-default-colors nil) (require 'font-lock) ;; Mess around with the faces a bit. Note that you have ;; to change the font-lock-use-default-* variables *before* ;; loading font-lock, and wait till *after* loading font-lock ;; to customize the faces. ;; string face is green (set-face-foreground 'font-lock-string-face "forest green") ;; comments are italic and red; doc strings are italic ;; ;; (I use copy-face instead of make-face-italic/make-face-bold ;; because the startup code does intelligent things to the ;; 'italic and 'bold faces to ensure that they are different ;; from the default face. For example, if the default face ;; is bold, then the 'bold face will be unbold.) ; I commented this out, because italics look ; terrible at the moment -- some font problem. ; -- JM 2001-8-27 ;(copy-face 'italic 'font-lock-comment-face) ;; Underlining comments looks terrible on tty's (set-face-underline-p 'font-lock-comment-face nil 'global 'tty) (set-face-highlight-p 'font-lock-comment-face t 'global 'tty) (copy-face 'font-lock-comment-face 'font-lock-doc-string-face) (set-face-foreground 'font-lock-comment-face "red") ;; function names are bold and blue (copy-face 'bold 'font-lock-function-name-face) (set-face-foreground 'font-lock-function-name-face "blue") ;; misc. faces (and (find-face 'font-lock-preprocessor-face) ; 19.13 and above (copy-face 'bold 'font-lock-preprocessor-face)) (copy-face 'italic 'font-lock-type-face) (copy-face 'bold 'font-lock-keyword-face) )) ;;; ******************** ;;; fast-lock is a package which speeds up the highlighting of files ;;; by saving information about a font-locked buffer to a file and ;;; loading that information when the file is loaded again. This ;;; requires a little extra disk space be used. ;;; ;;; Normally fast-lock puts the cache file (the filename appended with ;;; .flc) in the same directory as the file it caches. You can ;;; specify an alternate directory to use by setting the variable ;;; fast-lock-cache-directories. ;; Let's use lazy-lock instead. ;;(add-hook 'font-lock-mode-hook 'turn-on-fast-lock) ;;(setq fast-lock-cache-directories '("/foo/bar/baz")) ;;; ******************** ;;; lazy-lock is a package which speeds up the highlighting of files ;;; by doing it "on-the-fly" -- only the visible portion of the ;;; buffer is fontified. The results may not always be quite as ;;; accurate as using full font-lock or fast-lock, but it's *much* ;;; faster. No more annoying pauses when you load files. (add-hook 'font-lock-mode-hook 'turn-on-lazy-lock) ;; I personally don't like "stealth mode" (where lazy-lock starts ;; fontifying in the background if you're idle for 30 seconds) ;; because it takes too long to wake up again on my piddly Sparc 1+. (setq lazy-lock-stealth-time nil) ;;; ******************** ;;; func-menu is a package that scans your source file for function ;;; definitions and makes a menubar entry that lets you jump to any ;;; particular function definition by selecting it from the menu. The ;;; following code turns this on for all of the recognized languages. ;;; Scanning the buffer takes some time, but not much. ;;; ;;; Send bug reports, enhancements etc to: ;;; David Hughes ;;; (cond (running-xemacs (require 'func-menu) (define-key global-map 'f8 'function-menu) (add-hook 'find-file-hooks 'fume-add-menubar-entry) (define-key global-map "\C-cl" 'fume-list-functions) (define-key global-map "\C-cg" 'fume-prompt-function-goto) ;; The Hyperbole information manager package uses (shift button2) and ;; (shift button3) to provide context-sensitive mouse keys. If you ;; use this next binding, it will conflict with Hyperbole's setup. ;; Choose another mouse key if you use Hyperbole. (define-key global-map '(shift button3) 'mouse-function-menu) ;; For descriptions of the following user-customizable variables, ;; type C-h v (setq fume-max-items 25 fume-fn-window-position 3 fume-auto-position-popup t ;fume-display-in-modeline-p t fume-menubar-menu-location "File" fume-buffer-name "*Function List*" fume-no-prompt-on-valid-default nil) )) ;;; ******************** ;;; MH is a mail-reading system from the Rand Corporation that relies on a ;;; number of external filter programs (which do not come with emacs.) ;;; Emacs provides a nice front-end onto MH, called "mh-e". ;;; ;; Bindings that let you send or read mail using MH ;(global-set-key "\C-xm" 'mh-smail) ;(global-set-key "\C-x4m" 'mh-smail-other-window) ;(global-set-key "\C-cr" 'mh-rmail) ;; Customization of MH behavior. (setq mh-delete-yanked-msg-window t) (setq mh-yank-from-start-of-msg 'body) (setq mh-summary-height 11) ;; Use lines like the following if your version of MH ;; is in a special place. ;(setq mh-progs "/usr/dist/pkgs/mh/bin.svr4/") ;(setq mh-lib "/usr/dist/pkgs/mh/lib.svr4/") ;;; ******************** ;;; resize-minibuffer-mode makes the minibuffer automatically ;;; resize as necessary when it's too big to hold its contents. (autoload 'resize-minibuffer-mode "rsz-minibuf" nil t) (resize-minibuffer-mode) (setq resize-minibuffer-window-exactly nil) ;;; ******************** ;;; W3 is a browser for the World Wide Web, and takes advantage of the very ;;; latest redisplay features in XEmacs. You can access it simply by typing ;;; 'M-x w3'; however, if you're unlucky enough to be on a machine that is ;;; behind a firewall, you will have to do something like this first: ;(setq w3-use-telnet t ; ;; ; ;; If the Telnet program you use to access the outside world is ; ;; not called "telnet", specify its name like this. ; w3-telnet-prog "itelnet" ; ;; ; ;; If your Telnet program adds lines of junk at the beginning ; ;; of the session, specify the number of lines here. ; w3-telnet-header-length 4 ; ) ;;; J. Mohr's customizations (some from the former Slackware /etc/skel/.emacs) ;; Default value of 'auto-mode-alist' in Xemacs (type 'C-h v auto-mode-alist') ;;( ;; ("\\.ad[abs]\\'" . ada-mode) ;; ("\\.\\(arc\\|zip\\|lzh\\|zoo\\)\\'" . archive-mode) ;; ("\\.[sS]\\'" . asm-mode) ;; ("\\.m4\\'" . autoconf-mode) ;; ("configure\\.in\\'" . autoconf-mode) ;; ("\\.awk\\'" . awk-mode) ;; ("\\.bib\\'" . bibtex-mode) ;; ("\\.[ch]\\'" . c-mode) ;; ("\\.y\\'" . c-mode) ;; ("\\.lex\\'" . c-mode) ;; ("\\.\\([CH]\\|cc\\|hh\\)\\'" . c++-mode) ;; ("\\.[ch]\\(pp\\|xx\\|\\+\\+\\)\\'" . c++-mode) ;; ("[Cc]hange.?[Ll]og?\\(.[0-9]+\\)?\\'" . change-log-mode) ;; ("\\$CHANGE_LOG\\$\\.TXT" . change-log-mode) ;; ("\\.e\\'" . eiffel-mode) ;; ("\\.el\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode) ;; ("[]>:/]\\..*emacs\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode) ;; ("[:/]_emacs\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode) ;; ("\\.f\\(or\\)?\\'" . fortran-mode) ;; ("\\.F\\(OR\\)?\\'" . fortran-mode) ;; ("\\.[fF]90\\'" . f90-mode) ;; ("\\.s?html?\\'" . html-mode) ;; ("\\.htm?l?3\\'" . html3-mode) ;; ("\\.icn\\'" . icon-mode) ;; ("\\.[Jj][Pp][Ee]?[Gg]\\'" . image-mode) ;; ("\\.[Pp][Nn][Gg]\\'" . image-mode) ;; ("\\.[Gg][Ii][Ff]\\'" . image-mode) ;; ("\\.java\\'" . java-mode) ;; ("\\.ltx\\'" . latex-mode) ;; ("\\.\\(sty\\|cls\\|bbl\\)\\'" . latex-mode) ;; ("\\.c?l\\(i?sp\\)?\\'" . lisp-mode) ;; ("\\.ml\\'" . lisp-mode) ;; ("\\.ma?k\\'" . makefile-mode) ;; ("[Mm]akefile\\(\\.\\|\\'\\)" . makefile-mode) ;; ("/drafts/[0-9]+\\'" . mh-letter-mode) ;; ("\\.m\\([mes]\\|an\\)\\'" . nroff-mode) ;; ("\\.[12345678]\\'" . nroff-mode) ;; ("\\.m\\'" . objc-mode) ;; ("\\.p\\(as\\)?\\'" . pascal-mode) ;; ("\\.p[lm]\\'" . perl-mode) ;; ("\\.c?ps\\'" . postscript-mode) ;; ("\\.prolog\\'" . prolog-mode) ;; ("\\.py\\'" . python-mode) ;; ("\\.scm\\(\\.[0-9]*\\)?\\'" . scheme-mode) ;; ("\\.oak\\'" . scheme-mode) ;; ("\\.mss\\'" . scribe-mode) ;; ("\\.\\(sgml?\\|dtd\\)\\'" . sgml-mode) ;; ("\\.\\([ckz]?sh\\|shar\\)\\'" . sh-mode) ;; ("/\\.\\(bash_\\|z\\)?\\(profile\\|login||logout\\)\\'" . sh-mode) ;; ("/\\.\\([ckz]sh\\|bash\\|tcsh\\|es\\)rc\\'" . sh-mode) ;; ("/\\.\\([kz]shenv\\|xsession\\)\\'" . sh-mode) ;; ("/\\.\\([xinit\\|startx\\)rc\\'" . sh-mode) ;; ("\\.tar\\'" . tar-mode) ;; ("\\.\\(tcl\\|exp\\)\\'" . tcl-mode) ;; ("\\.[tT]e[xX]\\'" . tex-mode) ;; ("\\.texi\\(nfo\\)?\\'" . texinfo-mode) ;; ("\\.te?xt\\'" . text-mode) ;; ("\\.article\\'" . text-mode) ;; ("\\.letter\\'" . text-mode) ;; ("^/tmp/Re" . text-mode) ;; ("^/tmp/fol/" . text-mode) ;; ("/Message[0-9]*\\'" . text-mode) ;; ("\\.wrl\\'" . vrml-mode) ;; ("\\.[^/]*wm\\'" . winmgr-mode) ;; ("\\.[^/]*wm2?rc" . winmgr-mode) ;; ("\\.X\\(defaults\\|environment\\|resources\\|modmap\\)\\'" . xrdb-mode) ;; ("/app-defaults/" . xrdb-mode) ;;) ;; This adds additional extensions which indicate files which I would like ;; to be handled in certain modes. (setq auto-mode-alist (append '( ("\\.a$" . c-mode) ("\\.icc$" . c++-mode) ("\\.thh$" . c++-mode) ("\\.tcc$" . c++-mode) ("\\.pro$" . prolog-mode) ("\\.st$" . smalltalk-mode) ) auto-mode-alist)) ;; Customize the C indentation scheme. ;; Enable both auto-newline and hungry-delete modes in all CC-mode buffers. ;; See info CC Mode - Minor modes. ;; These can be done individually, as follows, but I included them in ;; a new general function to be invoked via the hook, below. - JM ;(add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook ; '(lambda () (c-toggle-auto-hungry-state 1))) ;(add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook (lambda () (setq c-basic-offset 3))) ;; See info CC Mode - Customizing Indentation - Styles - Built-in Styles (defun my-c-mode-common-hook () ;; First set the 'c-default-style' (which is "gnu" by default.) ;; If a different default style is set here (e.g., "bsd", "stroustrup", ;; "k+r", "ellemtel", or "java"), then all style variables default to ;; the values of the "user" style, and only the variables specified ;; in the named default style are changed as specified. ;; (Note that the "gnu" style also overrides the "user" defaults.) ;; ;; Use Ellemtel style for all C-like languages. ;; This sets the basic offset to 3, aligns opening braces with ;; the line above (i.e., 'substatement-open' is set to 0), and ;; indents case labels. (c-set-style "ellemtel") ;; other customizations can go here ;; Enable both auto-newline and hungry-delete modes in all CC-mode buffers. ; Hungry-delete mode is a nuisance if I just typed one too many spaces. -JM ;(c-toggle-auto-hungry-state 1) ;(setq c-basic-offset 3) ; default in Ellemtel style ;; The formatting "clean-ups" of the 'c-cleanup-list' only ;; occur while typing when 'auto-newline' is enabled. ;; By default, the list consists only of 'scope-operator'. ;; See info CC Mode - Minor Modes- Auto-newline insertion - Clean-ups. (setq c-cleanup-list '( empty-defun-braces defun-close-semi list-close-comma scope-operator )) ;; To modify the 'c-offsets-alist' (which controls indentation), ;; call 'c-set-offset' to set a particular syntactic symbol. ;; (To see which syntactic symbol needs to be set to change the ;; indentation of a particular line, put the cursor on the line ;; and press C-c C-s. The relevant syntactic symbol will be shown, ;; along with the current column to which it is indented.) ;; ;; Align opening brace with preceding line. ;(c-set-offset 'substatement-open 0) ; default in Ellemtel style ;(c-set-offset 'case-label '+) ; default in Ellemtel style ;(c-set-offset 'inclass '+ ) ) (add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook 'my-c-mode-common-hook) ; This was suggested in the Emacs documentation (info or faq) (setq special-display-buffer-names '("*compilation*" "*grep*" "*TeX Shell*")) (line-number-mode t) ; show the line number in the status bar (column-number-mode t) ; show the column number in the status bar (setq make-backup-files nil) ; don't make backup files ; ; Special modes ; ; This will define the M-x gnu-c-mode command. ; Put the string "-*- gnu-c -*-" somewhere on the first two lines ; to automatically invoke this mode. (defun gnu-c-mode () "C mode with GNU formatting defaults." (interactive) (c-mode) (c-set-style "gnu")) ; From "Linux kernel coding style" by Linus Torvalds: ; This will define the M-x linux-c-mode command. When hacking on a ; module, if you put the string -*- linux-c -*- somewhere on the first ; two lines, this mode will be automatically invoked. (defun linux-c-mode () "C mode with adjusted defaults for use with the Linux kernel." (interactive) (c-mode) (setq c-indent-level 8) (setq c-brace-imaginary-offset 0) (setq c-brace-offset -8) (setq c-argdecl-indent 8) (setq c-label-offset -8) (setq c-continued-statement-offset 8) (setq indent-tabs-mode nil) (setq tab-width 8)) ; More from Linus Torvalds for Linux kernel hacking: ; Uncomment the following if you want to have linux-c-mode switched on ; automagically when you edit source files under /usr/src/linux. (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("/usr/src/linux.*/.*\\.[ch]$" . linux-c-mode) auto-mode-alist)) ; Functions and key bindings for getting Emacs to interact with GCL. ; Thomas R. Ioerger, Dept of Computer Science, Texas A&M University ; see http://www.cs.tamu.edu/faculty/ioerger/emacs-gcl.html for more details (global-set-key "\C-t" (make-keymap)) (defun run-gcl () (interactive) (split-window) (other-window 1) (inferior-lisp "gcl") ) (defun gcl-debug-quit () (interactive) (comint-send-string "*inferior-lisp*" ":q\C-M")) (defun gcl-quit () (interactive) (comint-send-string "*inferior-lisp*" "(bye)\C-M")) (defun gcl-eval-buffer () (interactive) (set-mark 0) (end-of-buffer) (lisp-eval-region 1 (point)) (exchange-point-and-mark) ) (global-set-key "\C-tl" 'run-gcl) (global-set-key "\C-te" 'lisp-eval-defun) (global-set-key "\C-tw" 'switch-to-lisp) ; split screen! (global-set-key "\C-tq" 'gcl-debug-quit) (global-set-key "\C-tb" 'gcl-eval-buffer) (global-set-key "\C-tx" 'gcl-quit) ; commands (after prefix of control-t) ; l = start lisp ; e = eval current expression ; w = switch to lisp buffer ; q = quit from debugger back to top-level ; b = eval buffer ; x = kill lisp process