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bug#18923: Alternative scrolling model


From: E Sabof
Subject: bug#18923: Alternative scrolling model
Date: Sun, 02 Nov 2014 19:09:20 +0000

Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> writes:
> > Imagine there is a buffer with **AN IMAGE** which occupies 30% of the 
> > window (ex. a diagram in an org-mode buffer). It's positioned at 
> > (window-start). I (scroll-up 1). I'd end up scrolling a lot more than the 
> > usual (= (default-line-height) 20) pixels, which is what I mean by "jump".

> If the problem is only with scrolling by single lines (or small
> number of lines), then a very similar problem is already solved in
> line-move-partial.  Try C-n in the same situation, and see if that's
> what you want.  We could then use the same technique.

I'm not sure that we are talking about the same scenario. I didn't encounter 
any relevant behavior while using C-n/C-p, when a large image was displayed on 
the first line (with my default settings or Emacs -Q, both on the latest stable 
release).

> The problem that you faced, as I understand it, was to get the pixel
> size of a screen line even if it is only partially visible.  The RTOP
> and RBOT values returned by pos-visible-in-window-p give you
> information about how many pixels of the line are above the top and
> below the bottom of the window.  (For a very tall image or a low
> window, both RTOP and RBOT will be non-zero.)  Add those to the
> visible height of the line, and AFIU you get what you wanted.  Am I
> missing something?

Maybe not.

>> > IME, the most important use case is scrolling by "almost the full
>> > window", in which case it is better to start with window-body-height
>> > and subtract from it, instead of starting with zero and add to it.
>> > The most expensive part here is vertical-motion, so I think you want
>> > to call it as little as possible.
>>
>> window-body-height can be very wrong if a large image is displayed in the 
>> buffer.
>
> I meant call window-body-height with PIXELWISE non-nil.  Then the
> return value doesn't depend on what is displayed, it just gives you
> the height of the text area in pixels.  Subtracting from that the
> pixel coordinates of point returned by pos-visible-in-window-p or
> posn-at-point will give you how many pixels are there to the top and
> bottom of the window.  This should eliminate the need to count pixels
> by moving one screen line at a time via vertical-motion, which is less
> efficient, I think.

I'm not sure how knowing the distance of a point to the bottom of the window 
would benefit me, but indeed I could bulk-measure several lines in some cases.

Evgeni





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