Commit graph

174 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Bremner
817e53f4db emacs: factor out calculation of mm-inline-override-types
The intended use case of this new function is to make reply behaviour
track that of show with respect to attachments.

Also fix the glob (which worked by fluke) into the documented regexp.
2022-05-16 07:12:28 -03:00
David Bremner
19cf3910a5 emacs: redirect undo to notmuch-tag-undo
The double remap is a bit ugly, but it seems better than adding
another layer of keymaps for those modes where notmuch-tag-undo makes
sense.
2022-02-26 08:00:11 -04:00
David Bremner
e722b4f48c emacs: wrap call-process
Provide safe working directory
2021-09-11 11:11:29 -03:00
David Bremner
eb226437e1 emacs: wrap make-process
Provide a safe working directory.
2021-09-11 10:27:38 -03:00
David Bremner
5e5f2122f9 emacs: wrap call-process-region
As with notmuch--process-lines, initial purpose is to provide a safe
binding for default-directory. This is enough to make notmuch-hello
robust against non-existent or corrupt values default-directory, but
probably not other views.
2021-09-11 10:19:27 -03:00
David Bremner
a890241138 emacs: wrap process-lines
Initially just set the working directory, to avoid (the implicit)
call-process crashing when the default-directory points to a
non-existent location.

Use of a macro here is over-engineering for this change, but the same
change needs to be applied to several other process creation
primitives.
2021-09-11 10:16:47 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
1f14dbfbd7 emacs: avoid type errors due to nil as content-type
The output of "notmuch show --format=sexp --format-version=4"
may contain `:content-type' entries with `nil' as the value,
when it fails to detect the correct value.  Account for that
in a few places where we would otherwise risk a type error.

Note that `string=' does not choke on `nil' because it uses
the `symbol-name' when encountering a symbol.
2021-01-15 07:30:33 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
371f481d93 emacs: use string-empty-p 2021-01-15 06:47:28 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
f3d6fa2e40 emacs: make subr-x available in all libraries
Like `cl-lib' and `pcase', which are already available in all
libraries, `subr-x' also provided many useful functions that
we would like to use.

Making `subr-x' available in every library from the get-go means
that we can use the functions it defines without having to double
check every single time, whether the feature is already available
in the current library.
2021-01-15 06:47:10 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
9ca1f945d9 emacs: improve how cl-lib and pcase are required
We need to load `cl-lib' at run-time because we use more from it than
just macros.  Never-the-less many, but not all libraries required it
only at compile-time, which we got away with because at least some
libraries already required it at run-time as well.

We use `cl-lib' and (currently to a lesser extend) `pcase' throughout
the code-base, which means that we should require these features in
most libraries.

In the past we tried to only require these features in just the
libraries that actually need them, without fully succeeding.  We did
not succeed in doing so because that means we would have to check
every time that we use a function from these features whether they
are already being required in the current library.

An alternative would be to add the `require' forms at the top of every
library but that is a bit annoying too.

In order to make sure that these features are loaded when needed but
also to keep the noise down we only require them in "notmuch-lib.el",
which most other libraries require, and in most of the few libraries
that do not do so, namely "notmuch-draft.el", "notmuch-message.el" and
"notmuch-parser.el".  ("coolj.el", "make-deps.el", various generated
libraries, and "notmuch-compat.el" are left touched.)
2021-01-15 06:46:38 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
f47e3333b5 emacs: avoid unnecessary let-bindings
To some extend this is a personal preference, but the preference is
strongly dependent on whether one is used to a language that makes it
necessary to use variables like this.

This makes it perfectly clear that we are first getting and then using
a "foo":

  (use-foo (get-foo))

Sure this has to be read "inside out", but that's something one better
gets used to quickly when dealing with lisp.  I don't understand why
one would want to write this instead:

  (let ((the-foo (get-foo)))
    (use-foo the-foo))

Both `get-foo' and `use-foo' are named in a way that make it very
clear that we are dealing with a "foo".  Storing the value in an
additional variable `the-foo' does not make this any more clear.

On the contrary I makes the reader wonder why the author choose to
use a variable.  Is the value used more than once?  Is the value
being retrieved in one context and then used in another (e.g. when
the current buffer changes)?
2021-01-15 06:45:30 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
42d32713be emacs: define a few variables as automatically buffer-local
Define these variables as automatically buffer-local, meaning that
they always become buffer-local when set unless explicitly told
otherwise using `setq-default' or when using the Custom interface.

Previously they were declared, which keeps the byte-compiler quiet but
is not actually the same as being defined.  `notmuch-search-mode' then
made them buffer-local in the current buffer and then set the local
values.  This works but is not kosher.

The definitions of the three non-option variables have to be moved up
a bit to enable the change in the next commit, which see.
2021-01-15 06:44:01 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
65fc5ea758 emacs: various comment improvements 2021-01-15 06:38:43 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
16b2db0986 emacs: various cosmetic improvements 2021-01-15 06:38:00 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
0067a43ea2 emacs: deal with unused lexical arguments and variables
The previous commit switched to lexical-binding but without dealing
with the new warnings about unused lexical arguments and variables.

This commit deals with most of them, in most cases by either removing
leftover bindings that are actually unnecessary, or by marking certain
arguments as "known to be unused" by prefixing their names with "_".

In the case of the functions named `notmuch-show-insert-...' the
amount of silencing that is required is a bit extreme and we might
want to investigate if there is a better way.

In the case of `notmuch-mua-mail', ignoring CONTINUE means that we do
not fully follow the intended behavior described in `compose-mail's
doc-string.
2021-01-13 07:16:23 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
fc4cda07a9 emacs: use lexical-bindings in all libraries
Doing so causes many new compile warnings.  Some of these warnings
concern genuine changes in behavior that have to be addressed right
away.

Many other warnings are due to unused variables.  Nothing has changed
here, except that the byte-compiler can now detect these pre-existing
and harmless issues.  We delay addressing these issues so that we can
focus on the important ones here.

A third group of warnings concern arguments that are not actually used
inside the function but which cannot be removed because the functions
signature is dictated by some outside convention.  Silencing these
warning is also delayed until subsequent commits.
2021-01-13 07:16:04 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
2ca941163d emacs: make headings outline-minor-mode compatible
`outline-minor-mode' treats comments that begin with three or more
semicolons as headings.  That makes it very convenient to navigate
code and to show/hide parts of a file.

Elips libraries typically have four top-level sections, e.g.:

;;; notmuch.el --- run notmuch within emacs...
;;; Commentary:...
;;; Code:...
;;; notmuch.el ends here

In this package many libraries lack a "Commentary:" section, which is
not optimal but okay for most libraries, except major entry points.

Depending on how one chooses to look at it, the "... ends here" line
is not really a heading that begins a section, because it should never
have a "section" body (after all it marks eof).

If the file is rather short, then I left "Code:" as the only section
that contains code.  Otherwise I split the file into multiple sibling
sections.  The "Code:" section continues to contain `require' and
`declare-function' forms and other such "front matter".

If and only if I have split the code into multiple sections anyway,
then I also added an additional section named just "_" before the
`provide' form and shortly before the "...end here" line.  This
section could also be called "Back matter", but I feel it would be
distracting to be that explicit about it.  (The IMO unnecessary but
unfortunately still obligatory "... ends here" line is already
distracting enough as far as I am concerned.)

Before this commit some libraries already uses section headings, some
of them consistently.  When a library already had some headings, then
this commit often sticks to that style, even at the cost inconsistent
styling across all libraries.

A very limited number of variable and function definitions have to be
moved around because they would otherwise end up in sections they do
not belong into.

Sections, including but not limited to their heading, can and should
be further improved in the future.
2021-01-13 07:10:27 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
adc123e4fd emacs: avoid killing process buffer when process is still alive
In practice this probably does not make a difference or we would
have heard about it many times, but better be safe than sorry.

Process sentinels are called not only when the process has finished
but also on other state changes.
2021-01-13 07:08:13 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
904ffbc925 emacs: avoid passing around some redundant information
When running "notmuch" we use its full path but when displaying the
command to the user we show just its name for readability reasons.
Avoid passing around both representations because it is very easy
to get the name from the path.

Notmuch itself uses the involved functions just for "notmuch" but
there might be extensions that use them for other executable so we
forgo other potential simplifications.
2021-01-13 07:07:59 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
778950872d emacs: notmuch-start-notmuch: avoid storing process buffer twice
The buffer of the error process is accessible using `process-buffer'.
We still have to store the error-buffer in the non-error process
because for that process `process-buffer' obviously returns its own
buffer.
2021-01-13 07:07:47 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
db0fd8e782 emacs: notmuch-start-notmuch-sentinel: assert buffer is alive 2021-01-13 07:06:16 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
d57ce9ca71 emacs: notmuch-start-notmuch-error-sentinel: assert buffer is alive 2021-01-13 06:57:41 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
0afb3f8b21 emacs: notmuch-start-notmuch: remove backward compatibility code
We no longer support Emacs releases before version 25.1.

Also adjust the sentinels which only had to deal with
an error file when using an older Emacs release was used.
2021-01-13 06:57:31 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
9fadab4e63 emacs: use defvar-local
It is available since Emacs 24.3 and we require at least Emacs 25.
2020-12-06 16:22:18 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
dff7f06711 emacs: inline notmuch-split-content-type
This trivial helper function actually made things slightly
*less* readable by adding an unnecessary indirection.
2020-12-06 16:22:07 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
4f57e01843 emacs: inline notmuch-documentation-first-line
Inline a simplified version of `notmuch-documentation-first-line'
into its only caller.  The new code snippet differs from the
removed function in that it returns nil instead of the empty string
for symbols that have no function documentation.  That value is
ultimately used as an argument to `concat', which treats nil like
the empty string.  So we can do the logical thing without changing
the behavior.
2020-12-06 16:21:51 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
ac8a117a84 emacs: remove unnecessary notmuch-remove-if-not
We could just have switched to using `cl-remove-if-not' instead,
but the two uses of the *remove-if-not function are pretty strange
to begin with so we refactor to not use any such function at all.
2020-12-06 16:20:57 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
dfd99c7fba emacs: sanitize function that displays version
Previously it was defined in "notmuch-hello.el" and its name contained
"hello" solely because it replaced an anonymous function that was
mistakenly only bound in `notmuch-hello-mode-map'.  But it makes more
sense to bind it in all notmuch modes and even if we did not change
that aspect it still would make no sense to have "hello" in its name.
2020-12-06 16:18:34 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
ff80122972 emacs: more cleanup since dropping support for Emacs 24
Notmuch requires at least version 25 of Emacs now.

Adjust comments that previously referenced version 24 specifically,
even though they also apply to later releases. Remove documentation
and code that no longer applies.

- `mm-shr' no longer references `gnus-inhibit-images'.
2020-12-06 16:18:20 -04:00
Jonas Bernoulli
6336c26d23 emacs: Use new advice mechanism do advice mm-shr
Also because we now only support Emacs >= 25,
we can remove the check for Emacs >= 24.
2020-08-09 21:17:39 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
9946380e47 emacs: Use cl-incf where appropriate
It's shorter.  That's it pretty much.
2020-08-09 21:15:27 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
6c84dee531 Fix typos 2020-08-09 21:14:36 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
df3fab18fe emacs: Increase consistency of library headers 2020-08-09 21:14:36 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
73b8f0b8d7 emacs: Various cosmetic changes 2020-08-09 21:14:36 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
c2e9ec17fd emacs: Autoload notmuch-jump-search only once
This function is being autoloaded using an autoload cookie, so it
shouldn't additionally be autoloaded using an `autoload' form.

When building libraries we don't actually load the autoloads file and
dropping the `autoload' form results in an error, which reveals a so
far unspecified dependency: `notmuch-tree' needs `notmuch-jump'.

Before this commit compiling (or even just loading) `notmuch-tree'
resulted in `notmuch-jump' being loaded because the former requires
`notmuch-lib', which autoloaded `notmuch-jump-search'.

The bug was that this dependency was not explicitly specified, which
we fix by adding the respective `require' form.
2020-08-09 21:14:36 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
177cd31fbd emacs: notmuch-poll: Let the user know we are polling
It is done synchronously and it can take a while,
so we should let the user know what is going on.
2020-08-09 20:59:11 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
99b6e780c8 emacs: Use one or three lines for 'if' forms
Putting the COND and THEN parts on the same line but ELSE on a
separate line makes it harder to determine if there actually is
an ELSE part.
2020-08-09 20:53:30 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
e1a700067a emacs: Use 'when' instead of 'if' when there is no ELSE part 2020-08-09 20:52:34 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
dfb1b8eb89 emacs: Use 'and' instead of 'when' when the return value matters
Also do so for some 'if' forms that lack an ELSE part.
Even go as far as using 'and' and 'not' instead of 'unless'.
2020-08-09 20:51:16 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
18d289c863 emacs: Only set one variable per setq form
It's a bit weird to avoid having to write the "(setq ... )" more than
once, just because we can.  In a language that uses '=' for the same
purpose we also happily use that once per assignment.

While there are no benefit to using just one 'setq' there are some
drawbacks.  It is not always clear on first what is a key and what a
value and as a result it is easy to make a mistake.  Also it becomes
harder to comment out just one assignment.
2020-08-09 20:50:50 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
2ee8e971c5 emacs: Closing parenthesis go on the same line 2020-08-09 20:50:36 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
caaa108760 emacs: Fix indentation 2020-08-09 20:48:09 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
6fb7d35069 emacs: Remove excess empty lines
Most people who write lots of lisp tend to only sparsely use empty
"separator" lines within forms.  In lisp they feel unnecessary and
since most files stick to this convention we get a bit confused
when there are extra empty lines.  It feels like the s-expressions
are falling into pieces.

All of this is especially true between a function's doc-string and
body because the doc-string is colored differently, which visually
already separates it quite sufficiently from the code that follows.
2020-08-09 20:47:52 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
a4617f29ce emacs: Shorten long lines 2020-08-09 19:48:36 -03:00
Tomi Ollila
ed40579ad3 emacs docstrings: consistent indentation, newlines, periods
Fixed emacs docstrings to be consistent. No functional change.

- removed some (accidental) indentation
- removed some trailing newlines
- added trailing periods where missing (some exclusions)
2020-06-06 07:55:58 -03:00
Jonas Bernoulli
11ac932a45 emacs: Use cl-lib' instead of deprecated cl'
Starting with Emacs 27 the old `cl' implementation is finally
considered obsolete.  Previously its use was strongly discouraged
at run-time but one was still allowed to use it at compile-time.

For the most part the transition is very simple and boils down to
adding the "cl-" prefix to some symbols.  A few replacements do not
follow that simple pattern; e.g. `first' is replaced with `car',
even though the alias `cl-first' exists, because the latter is not
idiomatic emacs-lisp.

In a few cases we start using `pcase-let' or `pcase-lambda' instead
of renaming e.g. `first' to `car'.  That way we can remind the reader
of the meaning of the various parts of the data that is being
deconstructed.

An obsolete `lexical-let' and a `lexical-let*' are replaced with their
regular variants `let' and `let*' even though we do not at the same
time enable `lexical-binding' for that file.  That is the right thing
to do because it does not actually make a difference in those cases
whether lexical bindings are used or not, and because this should be
enabled in a separate commit.

We need to explicitly depend on the `cl-lib' package because Emacs
24.1 and 24.2 lack that library.  When using these releases we end
up using the backport from GNU Elpa.

We need to explicitly require the `pcase' library because
`pcase-dolist' was not autoloaded until Emacs 25.1.
2020-04-27 07:36:10 -03:00
Keegan Carruthers-Smith
f28e0a9337 emacs: introduce notmuch-search-by-tag
This is like notmuch-search-filter-by-tag, but creates a new search
rather than filtering the current search. We add this to
notmuch-common-keymap since this can be used by many contexts. We bind
to the key "t", which is the same key used by
notmuch-search-filter-by-tag in notmuch-search-mode-map. This is done
intentionally since the keybinding for notmuch-search-mode-map can be
seen as a specialization of creating a new search.

This change was motivated for use in "notmuch-hello". It is a more
convenient way to search a tag than expanding the list of all tags. I
also noticed many saved searches people use are simply tags.
2020-04-14 12:29:31 -03:00
Mark Walters
63f4ba3057 Introduce unthreaded mode
This commit introduces a new 'unthreaded' search mode where each
matching message is shown on a separate line. It shares almost all of
its code with tree view. Subsequent commits will allow it to diverge
slightly in appearance.
2020-03-19 22:06:49 -03:00
Leo Vivier
46ab6013a2 emacs: make notmuch-search-interactive-region obsolete
`notmuch-search-interactive-region' was moved to notmuch-lib.el in
f3cba19f88 and renamed to
`notmuch-interactive-region' without making the old function
obsolete, thereby breaking user-commands which made use of it.

This commit marks the function as obsolete and makes it an alias for
the new function.
2019-05-23 14:05:05 -03:00
Pierre Neidhardt
f3cba19f88 emacs: Move notmuch-search-interactive-region to notmuch-lib as notmuch-interactive-region 2019-05-07 06:31:19 -03:00