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bug#59763: 29.0.60; Filling for c-ts-mode


From: Theodor Thornhill
Subject: bug#59763: 29.0.60; Filling for c-ts-mode
Date: Mon, 26 Dec 2022 23:03:36 +0100

Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com> writes:

> Theodor Thornhill <theo@thornhill.no> writes:
>
>> On 25 December 2022 02:30:35 CET, Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>Theodor Thornhill <theo@thornhill.no> writes:
>>>
>>>> On 24 December 2022 09:36:21 CET, Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>Theodor Thornhill <theo@thornhill.no> writes:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com> writes:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Dec 2, 2022, at 6:58 AM, Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> From: Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com>
>>>>>>>>> Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 21:33:06 -0800
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> IMO For c-ts-mode to be usable we need to have at least a basic 
>>>>>>>>> filling
>>>>>>>>> function. Below is the function I have in my init.el, could someone 
>>>>>>>>> have
>>>>>>>>> a look and see if it’s good? Alternatively we could copy out the 
>>>>>>>>> comment
>>>>>>>>> and fill it in a temp buffer with c-mode, but I didn’t have the time 
>>>>>>>>> to try
>>>>>>>>> it out and see how well it works.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Thanks.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> From quick testing, I see a problem:
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>  . Visit dispnew.c and go to the comment that starts on line 324.  
>>>>>>>> Delete
>>>>>>>>    the newline between the two lines of the comment, and invoke the
>>>>>>>>    function.  Observe how the first non-blank character of the 
>>>>>>>> comment's
>>>>>>>>    second line is aligned with the "/*" on the previous line, not with 
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>>    text after "/*" as I'd expect.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I see. I’ll need to look at how cc-mode fill comments.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Btw, this command should be bound to M-q in ts-c-mode.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Will do, once our fill function works well. BTW, Theo, if you have any
>>>>>>> idea, don’t hesitate to go ahead :-) No obligations, of course.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Yuan
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sure!  Added to my list :)  I had a function at some point that used
>>>>>> c-mode to do this. I'll see if I can polish it a little.
>>>>>
>>>>>I did some work in filling, it should work like cc-mode in like 90% of
>>>>>the cases now, yay!
>>>>>
>>>>>Yuan
>>>>
>>>> Nice! For all cc-ts-modes?
>>>
>>>I only added for c and c++, but support for other modes should be
>>>identical. And I think we should have something equivalent to cc-mode’s
>>>init which sets up things that are the same in all C-like languages,
>>>basically comments and filling.
>
> I added indent and filling for other C-like modes.
>
>>>But I wonder where should we put it, I guess it’s fine to leave it in
>>>c-ts-mode, since there really isn’t much code. Having other modes to
>>>require c-ts-mode shouldn’t be a big problem, I think?
>>>
>>>Yuan
>>
>> How about just having treesit-utils.el, or something like that? There
>> are probably many things in the future that will be common among
>> modes, yet won't really warrant inheritance. I think we have such an
>> example in js/typescript too, iirc.
>
> If it’s shared across all tree-sitter modes, it should be in treesit.el,
> of course. We are talking about things shared by tree-sitter C-like
> modes, so the scope is smaller.
>
> Since right now it’s only a handful functions, I made other modes
> require c-ts-mode.el. In the future if things accumulate, we can put
> things into a separate file (c-ts-mode-common.el or something).
>

Sure.  I just don't like it when these namespaces blend too much.  But
your call :-)

Theo





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