Commit graph

14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
Mark Walters
98e9bda17f notmuch-hello/jump: allow saved searches to specify unthreaded mode
Saved searches in notmuch-hello and notmuch-jump can specify whether
to use search mode or tree mode. This adds an option for them to
specify unthreaded mode.
2020-03-19 22:08:07 -03:00
Mark Walters
fae577cc48 emacs: jump: make multilevel keys do multilevel jump
notmuch jump allows the user to specify a key sequence rather than
just a single key for its bindings. However, it doesn't show what has
already been typed so it can be difficult to see what has
happened. This makes each key press appear, and the jump menu reduce
to the possible follow up keys.

We also bind backspace (emacs symbol DEL) to go back up a level in the
subjumpmaps, and to exit from the top level.
2016-10-15 21:51:17 -03:00
Daniel Kahn Gillmor
6a833a6e83 Use https instead of http where possible
Many of the external links found in the notmuch source can be resolved
using https instead of http.  This changeset addresses as many as i
could find, without touching the e-mail corpus or expected outputs
found in tests.
2016-06-05 08:32:17 -03:00
Chunyang Xu
0cf457b73b emacs: Fix packaging
Refer to (info "(elisp) Library Headers") for package conventions.
2016-04-16 08:24:42 -03:00
Mark Walters
391d9f9420 emacs: allow saved searches to select tree-view
This patch allows the user to customize a saved search to choose tree
view rather than the default search view. It also updates notmuch-jump
so that it respects this choice.
2015-10-21 09:13:55 -03:00
David Edmondson
961937988e emacs: notmuch-jump.el should provide.
To ease loading, notmuch-jump.el should provide 'notmuch-jump.
2014-10-25 19:55:16 +02:00
Mark Walters
b2caa125ee emacs: jump: fix compile warning on emacs 23
notmuch-jump uses window-body-width which is not defined in emacs
23. To get around this it does

(unless (fboundp 'window-body-width)
  ;; Compatibility for Emacs pre-24
  (defalias 'window-body-width 'window-width))

This makes sure window-body-width is defined and all should be
well. But it seems that the byte compiler does not realise that this
guarantees that window-body-width will be defined and so, when
compiling with emacs 23, it gives an error

In end of data:
notmuch-jump.el:172:1:Warning: the function `window-body-width' is not known to be defined.

Domo and I came to following on irc: wrap the (unless (fboundp ...))
inside eval-and-compile which ensures that both the test and the
defalias (if needed) happen at both compile and load time.  This fixes
the warning.
2014-09-24 19:55:36 +02:00
Mark Walters
5c4f6ed99b emacs: jump: sort-order bugfix
default-value needs its argument to be quoted.

Slightly strangely default-value of 't or nil is 't or nil
respectively so the code

(default-value notmuch-search-oldest-first)

just gives the current value of notmuch-search-oldest-first rather
than intended default-value of this variable.

The symptom is that if you are in a search buffer and use notmuch jump
to run a saved search which does not have an explicitly set sort order
then the sort order of the saved-search is inherited from the current
search buffer rather than being the default search order.

Thanks to Jani for finding the bug.
2014-09-07 20:02:16 +02:00
Austin Clements
c1845bf0a4 emacs: Improved compatibility for window-body-width in Emacs < 24
Fix byte compiler warning "Warning: the function `window-body-width'
is not known to be defined." by moving our compatibility wrapper
before its use and simplify the definition to a defalias for the old
name of the function.
2014-08-16 17:44:47 -07:00
Austin Clements
3c1ad5bfa0 emacs: Introduce notmuch-jump: shortcut keys to saved searches
This introduces notmuch-jump, which is like a user-friendly,
user-configurable global prefix map for saved searches.  This provides
a non-modal and much faster way to access saved searches than
notmuch-hello.

A user configures shortcut keys in notmuch-saved-searches, which are
immediately accessible from anywhere in Notmuch under the "j" key (for
"jump").  When the user hits "j", the minibuffer immediately shows a
helpful table of bindings reminiscent of a completions buffer.

This code is a combination of work from myself (originally,
"notmuch-go"), David Edmondson, and modifications from Mark Walters.
2014-08-05 08:07:27 -03:00