;; gsdoc.el ;; ;; GNU emacs (19.34) functions to help working with the HTML form of ;; Ghostscript documentation. ;; ;; Pete Kaiser 8 September 1998 V1.2 ;; 2 December 1999 V1.3 Correct improper "--" to "==" ;; in HTML marker comments ;;============================================================ ;; One global key setting, which runs the function to bind some keys ;; locally -- presumably in a buffer containing HTML code. Plus that ;; function itself. (global-set-key [?\C-\S-k] 'gskeys) (defun gskeys () "Set the keys in this buffer to use with Ghostscript HTML docs." (interactive) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-b] 'gs-bold) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-c] 'gs-code) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-e] 'gs-emphatic) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-g] 'gs-get-anchor) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-h] 'gs-href) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-i] 'gs-italic) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-m] 'gs-mailto) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-n] 'gs-name) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-p] 'gs-put-anchor) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-q] 'gs-quote) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-r] 'gs-row-of-table) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-s] 'gs-selfref) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-t] 'gs-table) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-u] 'gs-tag) (local-set-key [?\C-\S-x] 'gs-example) ) ;;============================================================ ;; Each of these next few functions just wraps a region in a ;; ..., or two nested tags. Where there are two, the first one ;; is inner. See the inner function ~gsregion. (defun gs-bold () "Make text strong (bold)." (interactive) (~gsregion "b")) (defun gs-code () "Make text strong code (bold TT)." (interactive) (~gsregion "tt") (~gsregion "b")) (defun gs-emphatic () "Make text emphatic (bold italic)." (interactive) (~gsregion "em") (~gsregion "b")) (defun gs-italic () "Make text italic." (interactive) (~gsregion "em")) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-quote () "Indent a region with BLOCKQUOTE and separate it with empty lines from surrounding text." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "\n\n") (push-mark (1+ (point-min)) t) (goto-char (point-max)) (~gsregion "blockquote") (insert "\n\n") ) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-example () "Make an indented literatim example BLOCKQUOTE PRE and separate it with empty lines from surrounding text." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "\n") (push-mark (point-min) t) (goto-char (point-max)) (~gsregion "pre") (~gsregion "blockquote") (insert "\n") ) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-get-anchor () "Beginning at the head of this line, pick up the next anchor name for later use along with its HTML file name. This is useful when picking up an anchor name from a file in one buffer and using it in another buffer containing a different file." (interactive) ;; From the beginning of this line find and pick up the next non-empty ;; anchor, which might, of course not be right here -- though that's how it ;; ought to be used, to pick up an anchor for immediate use. The regular ;; expression picks up only the name itself. (beginning-of-line) (re-search-forward "]+\\)\"?>" nil t) (setq gs-anchor (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))) ;; Get the name of this buffer, treating it as the filename. (setq gs-anchor-file (buffer-name)) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-href () "Wrap a region in an empty link and leave point in the middle of the emptiness to write the link. Maybe some day read the URL and put it there." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "") (setq HREF (- (point) 2)) (goto-char (point-max)) (insert "") (goto-char HREF) ) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-mailto () "Turn an address into a proper \"mailto:\" visually bracketed with <>." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (setq gs-address (buffer-substring (point-min) (point-max))) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "<" gs-address ">") ) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-tag (Tag) "Bracket a region with some arbitrary tag read from the minibuffer, leaving point right after the opening word of the opening tag, and the end of the region at the end of the closing tag. Leaving point there makes it possible, for instance, to enter additional matter in a tag. Get to the end of a region with ^x-^x." (interactive "*sTag: ") (~gsregion Tag) (exchange-point-and-mark) (forward-word 1) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-toc () "[Re]build the table of contents by picking up all the lines and converting them to properly indented . (goto-char (point-min)) (re-search-forward "^]*>" nil t) (setq First (string-to-number (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))) (setq Previous First) (replace-match "
  • " t t) ;; Got the first one, now handle the rest. (while (re-search-forward "^]*>" nil t) (setq This (string-to-number (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))) (setq Hold This) (replace-match "
  • " t t) (beginning-of-line) ;; No point being too fancy with conditionals: the "while" statements here ;; make at most one logically unnecessary test. (while (> This Previous) (insert "
      \n") (setq This (1- This))) (while (< This Previous) (insert "
    \n") (setq This (1+ This))) (setq Previous Hold) ) ;; Done with the loop. Clean up by inserting at the end any needed ;; to get back to the top level. (goto-char (point-max)) (while (> Previous First) (insert "\n") (setq Previous (1- Previous))) ;; Finally add the trailing whitespace and leading whitespace and header line. (insert "\n\n") (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "\n

    Table of contents

    \n\n
      \n") ;; The TOC is now entirely built in the work buffer. Move it to where it's ;; supposed to be in the original buffer. (append-to-buffer g~html-buffer (point-min) (point-max)) ) )) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-name () "Insert a name anchor at point and leave point ready to enter the anchor's name. Anchors are always empty (that is, )." (interactive) (insert "") (backward-char 6) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-put-anchor () "Insert around the current region the last anchor picked up with gs-get-anchor. This includes the HTML file name if the href is put in a file other than the anchor." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert (concat "")) (goto-char (point-max)) (insert "")) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-row-of-table () "Set up a row of a table from the line containing point. Insert the right things at beginning and end, and in between convert tab and \"|\" into column breaks with a nonbreaking space in between -- which means that no entry can contain a tab or \"|\". Format the HTML nicely for readability. Between each two substantive columns this function puts a column containing a single nonbreaking space to provide a visual break. Generally in the first row of a table those columns should be given enough NBSPs to make the table look right on screen and when converted to text, but this has to be done by hand." (interactive) (save-restriction (end-of-line) (setq EOL (point)) (beginning-of-line) (narrow-to-region (point) EOL) (insert "\t") (while (re-search-forward "[|\t]" nil t) (replace-match "\n\t \n\t" t t)) (goto-char (point-max)) ) (next-line 1) (beginning-of-line) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-selfref () "Wrap an URL to make it its own link. This is useful for links that should be visible when converted to text." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (goto-char (point-min)) (if (not (looking-at "http:\\|ftp:")) (insert "http://")) (setq g~url (buffer-substring (point-min) (point-max))) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "" g~url "") ) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-table () "Set up an indented table around this region, leaving plenty of white space around the table within the HTML. The number of columns in the table is hardcoded here as 3, so that number must be changed by hand if the table has more than 3 columns. See gs-row-of-table for how rows are built: a table with N visible columns generally has 2N-1 HTML columns, including the columns that provide vertical white space." (interactive) (save-restriction (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (indent-rigidly (region-beginning) (region-end) -80) (goto-char (point-min)) (insert (concat "\n\n
      \n" "\n" "\t\t

      XXXXXXXXXX
      \n" "
      \n" "\t  \n" "\t\n" "

      \n" )) (goto-char (point-max)) (insert "
      \n") ) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-text-chars () "Prepare text for inclusion in HTML by converting \"&\", \"<\", and \">\" into their HTML special forms. The function acts from point to end-of-region or end-of-buffer, whichever comes first. This function is NOT idempotent -- running it twice on the same text will certainly do the wrong thing, unless at first the text contained none of those characters." (interactive) (setq BEGIN (point)) ;; Replace significant characters: "&", "<", and ">". (while (search-forward "&" nil t) (replace-match "&" t t)) (goto-char BEGIN) (while (search-forward "<" nil t) (replace-match "<" t t)) (goto-char BEGIN) (while (search-forward ">" nil t) (replace-match ">" t t)) (goto-char BEGIN) ) ;;============================================================ (defun gs-wrap-textfile () "Prepare a text file for inclusion between
       and 
      , then put a header and footer around it. One would generally run this function on a buffer containing only an original text file; it is how the original history and news files were first prepared. At this point it's likely to be most useful in preparing new sections for the news document." (interactive) (widen) ;; First prepare the entire text by replacing special characters. (goto-char (point-min)) (gs-text-chars) ;; At the end of the file, end as-is text and add the standard footer. (goto-char (point-max)) (backward-word 1) (next-line 1) (beginning-of-line) (delete-region (point) (point-max)) (insert "\n\n") (insert-file "Footer.htm") ;; At the beginning of the file, begin as-is text and delete everything ;; up to the identity string (if any), saving the identity string. (goto-char (point-min)) (insert "
      \n") (setq g~pre-point (point))
      (setq g~ID " [No pre-existing ID] ")
      (if (re-search-forward "^\\$Id:\\( [^ ]+ \\)\\$" nil t) (progn
          (setq g~ID (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))
          (next-line 1) (beginning-of-line) (delete-region g~pre-point (point))
          ))
      
      ;; Insert the standard header and fill in the identity string.
      
      (goto-char (point-min)) (insert-file "Header.htm")
      (goto-char (point-min)) (search-forward "" nil t)
          (progn
            (setq Original (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))
            (replace-match g~thisfile t t nil 1)
            )
          (progn
            (search-forward "" nil t) (end-of-line)
            (insert (concat "\n"))
            (setq Original "(UNSET by gs-structure)")
            )
          )
      
      (end-of-line)
      (insert (concat "\n"))
      
      ;; Place the visible header marker immediately after .
      
      (re-search-forward "]*>" nil t)
          (end-of-line) (forward-char 1)
          (insert (concat g~header-begin "\n\n"))
      
      ;; Place the headline marker before the first  block.
      
      (search-forward ".  This isn't precise, and in fact
      ;; fails for several files, but once again only an approximation is needed
      ;; because it'll be edited by hand later.
      
      (search-forward "

      " nil t) (beginning-of-line) (insert (concat g~hint-begin "\n\n")) (search-forward "


      " nil t) (beginning-of-line) (insert (concat g~hint-end "\n\n")) ;; The visible header ends with (and includes) the first
      , and the ;; contents begin immediately thereafter. (search-forward "
      \n" nil t) (insert (concat "\n" g~header-end "\n\n")) (forward-word 1) (beginning-of-line) (insert (concat g~contents-begin "\n\n")) ;; The contents end before the final
      and the trailer begins ;; immediately thereafter. (goto-char (point-max)) (search-backward "
      " nil t) (backward-word 1) (end-of-line) (forward-char 1) (insert (concat "\n" g~contents-end "\n\n" g~trailer-begin "\n\n")) ;; The trailer ends with . (goto-char (point-max)) (search-backward "" nil t) (insert (concat "\n" g~trailer-end "\n\n")) ;; We may have introduced trailing whitespace and extra empty lines. ;; Remove them. (goto-char (point-min)) (while (re-search-forward "[ \t\240\r]+$" nil t) (replace-match "" t t)) (goto-char (point-min)) (while (re-search-forward "\n\n\n+" nil t) (replace-match "\n\n" t t)) ) ;;============================================================ ;; When this file is loaded into emacs, define the structure markers for GS ;; HTML files. These markers have two purposes: first, to make the HTML ;; more readable, and second, to enable these functions to locate sections ;; unambiguously (see gs-toc, the table of contents builder). Note that ;; the markers do not include LF. (defun g~marker (basic) "Build a complete Ghostscript HTML file marker from its text-only part. gs-toc relies entirely on this function, so if it's ever changed, gs-toc and existing markers would also have to be changed to keep pace. Intended only for initialization, not interactive use. All the existing files are now marked up, and since any future ones are (properly) likely to be created by plagiarism, it's difficult to imagine why anyone would want to change this unless they want to go to the trouble of coming up with a much more useful marking scheme." (interactive) (setq HEAD (concat "" (- (length HEAD) 80) )) ) ;;============================================================ ;; Initialization code that must run after functions are defined. ;; ;; Look in a Ghostscript HTML file to see how these markers are used, ;; generally ;; ;; begin visible header ;; begin headline ;; end headline ;; begin table of contents ;; end table of contents ;; begin hint ;; end hint ;; end visible header ;; begin contents ;; end contents ;; begin visible trailer ;; end visible trailer ;; ;; although the TOC is in slightly different positions in a few files. (defvar g~header-begin (g~marker "1.0 begin visible header") "Begin the HTML file's visible header material") (defvar g~header-end (g~marker "1.0 end visible header") "End the HTML file's visible header") (defvar g~headline-begin (g~marker "1.1 begin headline") "Begin the conspicuous headline") (defvar g~headline-end (g~marker "1.1 end headline") "End the conspicuous headline") (defvar g~toc-begin (g~marker "1.2 begin table of contents") "Begin the table of contents") (defvar g~toc-end (g~marker "1.2 end table of contents") "End the table of contents") (defvar g~hint-begin (g~marker "1.3 begin hint") "Begin the \"for other information\" section") (defvar g~hint-end (g~marker "1.3 end hint") "End the \"for other information\" section") (defvar g~contents-begin (g~marker "2.0 begin contents") "Begin the main contents") (defvar g~contents-end (g~marker "2.0 end contents") "End the main contents") (defvar g~trailer-begin (g~marker "3.0 begin visible trailer") "Begin the visible standard trailer material") (defvar g~trailer-end (g~marker "3.0 end visible trailer") "End the visible standard trailer material") ;;============================================================ ;; Some working variables (defvar gs-anchor "JUNK" "*Anchor name to insert") (defvar gs-anchor-file "JUNKFILE" "*Anchor filename to insert") (defvar gs-work-buffer "*GS work*" "*Ghostscript working buffer")