This data will be used to redisplay an image that is hidden by
deleting it from the buffer. We cannot easily delay until the image
is hidden, as we won't have the original data at that point.
Although this has more steps than the previous regular expression
search and replace, it should be more robust against changes in the
headerline format, such as the inclusion of duplicate numbers (which
broke the previous version).
This enables auto-completion of commands, something which plain
read-string does not do. It's otherwise a drop-in
replacement. According to `C-h f`, read-shell-command was introduced
in Emacs 23.1 or earlier.
Essentially we just need to arrange to pass the right --duplicate
argument to notmuch reply.
As a side-effect, correct the previously unused value of EXPECTED in
T453-emacs-reply.sh.
We want the reply used to match that shown e.g. in the emacs
interface. As a first step provide that functionality on the command
line.
Schema does not need updating as the duplicate key was already
present (with a constant value of 1).
This new command allows the user to interactively choose a different
duplicate (file) to display for a given message in
notmuch-show-mode. Since both tree and unthreaded view use
notmuch-show-mode, this provides the same facility there.
This parameter was originally introduced to hide large attachements
that happened to be text/plain. From a performance point of view,
there is no reason not to also hide large message bodies.
This leverages the machinery already there to insert buttons for
attachments.
A potential use-case is browsing the top layers of the tree to decide
which of the lower subtrees to read.
The only functionality actually used by notmuch is the base function
notmuch-query-get-threads; the other functions in this file have
nothing to do with that (single) use. Move that function into
notmuch-lib.el and rename to reflect use. Deprecate the other
functions in notmuch-query.el.
Having notmuch-show-next-thread return non-nil on success and nil on
failure makes it easier for users to interact with notmuch via elisp.
This commit changes notmuch-search-show-thread too since the return
value of notmuch-show-next-thread depends on notmuch-search-show-thread.
Amended by db: fix whitespace in T450-emacs-show
If a string value is assigned to notmuch-show-header-line, it's used
as a format string to be passed passed to format-spec with `%s`
substituted by the message's subject. If a function is given, it's
called with the subject as argument, and its return value used as
header line.
As before, t means displaying the subject and nil not using any header
line.
Signed-off-by: jao <jao@gnu.org>
Amended-by: db, docstring spelling fix
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.
New notmuch-show-header-line customizable boolean to allow inhibiting
a header line in notmuch-show-mode buffers (for instance, because one
prefers to just include Subject in notmuch-message-headers).
This avoids some ugly error messages and exceptions, and hopes that
some gnus method will display message/rfc822 parts that have only a
file, no :content part.
When mm-text-html-renderer is set to 'w3m, the variable playing the
role of a regular expression for blocked images is
w3m-ignored-image-url-regexp. We bind it when the renderer is not
'shr.
This dynamically bound variable can be set when the caller of
notmuch-show guarantees that exactly one message will match the
query. It avoids transporting and parsing the complete thread
structure.
Gmane web interface is long gone, remove it. Make MARC the new
default. Update LKML to Lore, where it already redirects anyway. Also
add Notmuch web archive.
- declare-function notmuch-unthreaded lacked file name
- declare-function notmuch-search had differently named last arg
- note: check-declare-directory did not complain about that
- declare-function notmuch-search-show-thread without nil
- some functions declared to be in different file than those
existed ("notmuch" -> "notmuch-lib")
- some related function/declare lines were (/are now) wider than
80-columns; added line breaks (and proper indentation) there
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.
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.)
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)?
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.
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.
`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.
The first sentence should fit on the first line. It is okay if
the first sentence/line does not contain all the information that
the rest of the doc-string covers.
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'.
This means that notmuch commands obey display-buffer-alist so the user
can customize how buffers show up.
It also permits the use of C-x 4 4, C-x 5 5 and C-x t t, available in
Emacs 28. For example, one can use C-x 4 4 M-x notmuch-jump-search RET
to open a saved search in another window rather than the current window.
Or in notmuch-search mode, C-x 5 5 RET to view the message at point in
a new frame.
notmuch-tree has custom buffer display logic, so bind
display-buffer-overriding-action to make pop-to-buffer-same-window
behave exactly as switch-to-buffer while that function is running.
Previously in message-show mode message's first header line (From
header) was always indented, even if user had turned thread
indentation off with "<" (notmuch-show-toggle-thread-indentation)
command.
This change modifies notmuch-show-insert-headerline function so that
it doesn't indent the first header line if notmuch-show-indent-content
variable is nil.
This change also modifies tests so that they expect this new output
format:
test/emacs-show.expected-output/notmuch-show-indent-thread-content-off
- The first sentence should fit on the first line in full. This is
even the case when that causes the line to get a bit long. If it
gets very long, then it should be made shorter.
- Even even the second sentence would fit on the first line, if it
just provides some details, then it shouldn't be done.
- Symbols are quoted like `so'.
- There is no clear rule on how to (not) quote non-atomic
s-expressions, but quoting like '(this) is definitely weird.
- It is a good idea to remember that \" becomes " and to take
that in mind when adjusting the automatic filling by hand.
- Use the imperative form.
- Arguments are written in all uppercase.