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1243 lines
54 KiB
EmacsLisp
1243 lines
54 KiB
EmacsLisp
;;; frameset.el --- save and restore frame and window setup -*- lexical-binding: t -*-
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;; Copyright (C) 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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;; Author: Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
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;; Keywords: convenience
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;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
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;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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;; (at your option) any later version.
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;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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;; GNU General Public License for more details.
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;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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;;; Commentary:
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;; This file provides a set of operations to save a frameset (the state
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;; of all or a subset of the existing frames and windows), both
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;; in-session and persistently, and restore it at some point in the
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;; future.
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;;
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;; It should be noted that restoring the frames' windows depends on
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;; the buffers they are displaying, but this package does not provide
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;; any way to save and restore sets of buffers (see desktop.el for
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;; that). So, it's up to the user of frameset.el to make sure that
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;; any relevant buffer is loaded before trying to restore a frameset.
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;; When a window is restored and a buffer is missing, the window will
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;; be deleted unless it is the last one in the frame, in which case
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;; some previous buffer will be shown instead.
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;;; Code:
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(require 'cl-lib)
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(cl-defstruct (frameset (:type vector) :named
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(:constructor frameset--make)
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;; Copier is defined below.
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(:copier nil))
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"A frameset encapsulates a serializable view of a set of frames and windows.
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It contains the following slots, which can be accessed with
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\(frameset-SLOT fs) and set with (setf (frameset-SLOT fs) VALUE):
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version A read-only version number, identifying the format
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of the frameset struct. Currently its value is 1.
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timestamp A read-only timestamp, the output of `current-time'.
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app A symbol, or a list whose first element is a symbol, which
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identifies the creator of the frameset and related info;
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for example, desktop.el sets this slot to a list
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`(desktop . ,desktop-file-version).
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name A string, the name of the frameset instance.
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description A string, a description for user consumption (to show in
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menus, messages, etc).
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properties A property list, to store both frameset-specific and
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user-defined serializable data.
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states A list of items (FRAME-PARAMETERS . WINDOW-STATE), in no
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particular order. Each item represents a frame to be
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restored. FRAME-PARAMETERS is a frame's parameter alist,
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extracted with (frame-parameters FRAME) and filtered
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through `frameset-filter-params'.
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WINDOW-STATE is the output of `window-state-get' applied
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to the root window of the frame.
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To avoid collisions, it is recommended that applications wanting to add
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private serializable data to `properties' either store all info under a
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single, distinctive name, or use property names with a well-chosen prefix.
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A frameset is intended to be used through the following simple API:
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- `frameset-save', the type's constructor, captures all or a subset of the
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live frames, and returns a serializable snapshot of them (a frameset).
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- `frameset-restore' takes a frameset, and restores the frames and windows
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it describes, as faithfully as possible.
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- `frameset-p' is the predicate for the frameset type.
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- `frameset-valid-p' checks a frameset's validity.
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- `frameset-copy' returns a deep copy of a frameset.
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- `frameset-prop' is a `setf'able accessor for the contents of the
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`properties' slot.
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- The `frameset-SLOT' accessors described above."
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(version 1 :read-only t)
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(timestamp (current-time) :read-only t)
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(app nil)
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(name nil)
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(description nil)
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(properties nil)
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(states nil))
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;; Add nicer docstrings for built-in predicate and accessors.
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(put 'frameset-p 'function-documentation
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"Return non-nil if OBJECT is a frameset, nil otherwise.\n\n(fn OBJECT)")
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(put 'frameset-version 'function-documentation
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"Return the version number of FRAMESET.\n
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It is an integer that identifies the format of the frameset struct.
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This slot cannot be modified.\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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(put 'frameset-timestamp 'function-documentation
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"Return the creation timestamp of FRAMESET.\n
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The value is in the format returned by `current-time'.
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This slot cannot be modified.\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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(put 'frameset-app 'function-documentation
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"Return the application identifier for FRAMESET.\n
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The value is either a symbol, like `my-app', or a list
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\(my-app ADDITIONAL-DATA...).\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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(put 'frameset-name 'function-documentation
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"Return the name of FRAMESET (a string).\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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(put 'frameset-description 'function-documentation
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"Return the description of FRAMESET (a string).\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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(put 'frameset-properties 'function-documentation
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"Return the property list of FRAMESET.\n
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This list is useful to store both frameset-specific and user-defined
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serializable data. The simplest way to access and modify it is
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through `frameset-prop' (which see).\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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(put 'frameset-states 'function-documentation
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"Return the list of frame states of FRAMESET.\n
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A frame state is a pair (FRAME-PARAMETERS . WINDOW-STATE), where
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FRAME-PARAMETERS is a frame's parameter alist, extracted with
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\(frame-parameters FRAME) and filtered through `frameset-filter-params',
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and WINDOW-STATE is the output of `window-state-get' applied to the
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root window of the frame.\n
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IMPORTANT: Modifying this slot may cause frameset functions to fail,
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unless the type constraints defined above are respected.\n\n(fn FRAMESET)")
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;; We autoloaded this for use in register.el, but now that we use registerv
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;; objects, this autoload is not useful any more.
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;; ;;;###autoload (autoload 'frameset-p "frameset"
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;; ;;;###autoload "Return non-nil if OBJECT is a frameset, nil otherwise." nil)
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(defun frameset-copy (frameset)
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"Return a deep copy of FRAMESET.
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FRAMESET is copied with `copy-tree'."
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(copy-tree frameset t))
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(defun frameset-valid-p (object)
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"Return non-nil if OBJECT is a valid frameset, nil otherwise."
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(and (frameset-p object)
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(integerp (frameset-version object))
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(consp (frameset-timestamp object))
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(let ((app (frameset-app object)))
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(or (null app) ; APP is nil
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(symbolp app) ; or a symbol
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(and (consp app) ; or a list
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(symbolp (car app))))) ; starting with a symbol
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(stringp (or (frameset-name object) ""))
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(stringp (or (frameset-description object) ""))
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(listp (frameset-properties object))
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(let ((states (frameset-states object)))
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(and (listp states)
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(cl-every #'consp (frameset-states object))))
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(frameset-version object))) ; And VERSION is non-nil.
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(defun frameset--prop-setter (frameset property value)
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"Setter function for `frameset-prop'. Internal use only."
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(setf (frameset-properties frameset)
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(plist-put (frameset-properties frameset) property value))
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value)
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;; A setf'able accessor to the frameset's properties
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(defun frameset-prop (frameset property)
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"Return the value for FRAMESET of PROPERTY.
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Properties can be set with
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(setf (frameset-prop FRAMESET PROPERTY) NEW-VALUE)"
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(declare (gv-setter frameset--prop-setter))
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(plist-get (frameset-properties frameset) property))
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;; Filtering
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;; What's the deal with these "filter alists"?
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;;
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;; Let's say that Emacs' frame parameters were never designed as a tool to
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;; precisely record (or restore) a frame's state. They grew organically,
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;; and their uses and behaviors reflect their history. In using them to
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;; implement framesets, the unwary implementer, or the prospective package
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;; writer willing to use framesets in their code, might fall victim of some
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;; unexpected... oddities.
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;;
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;; You can find frame parameters that:
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;;
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;; - can be used to get and set some data from the frame's current state
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;; (`height', `width')
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;; - can be set at creation time, and setting them afterwards has no effect
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;; (`window-state', `minibuffer')
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;; - can be set at creation time, and setting them afterwards will fail with
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;; an error, *unless* you set it to the same value, a noop (`border-width')
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;; - act differently when passed at frame creation time, and when set
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;; afterwards (`height')
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;; - affect the value of other parameters (`name', `visibility')
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;; - can be ignored by window managers (most positional args, like `height',
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;; `width', `left' and `top', and others, like `auto-raise', `auto-lower')
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;; - can be set externally in X resources or Window registry (again, most
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;; positional parameters, and also `toolbar-lines', `menu-bar-lines' etc.)
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;, - can contain references to live objects (`buffer-list', `minibuffer') or
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;; code (`buffer-predicate')
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;; - are set automatically, and cannot be changed (`window-id', `parent-id'),
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;; but setting them produces no error
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;; - have a noticeable effect in some window managers, and are ignored in
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;; others (`menu-bar-lines')
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;; - can not be safely set in a tty session and then copied back to a GUI
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;; session (`font', `background-color', `foreground-color')
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;;
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;; etc etc.
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;;
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;; Which means that, in order to save a parameter alist to disk and read it
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;; back later to reconstruct a frame, some processing must be done. That's
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;; what `frameset-filter-params' and the `frameset-*-filter-alist' variables
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;; are for.
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;;
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;; First, a clarification. The word "filter" in these names refers to both
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;; common meanings of filter: to filter out (i.e., to remove), and to pass
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;; through a transformation function (think `filter-buffer-substring').
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;;
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;; `frameset-filter-params' takes a parameter alist PARAMETERS, a filtering
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;; alist FILTER-ALIST, and a flag SAVING to indicate whether we are filtering
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;; parameters with the intent of saving a frame or restoring it. It then
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;; accumulates an output alist, FILTERED, by checking each parameter in
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;; PARAMETERS against FILTER-ALIST and obeying any rule found there. The
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;; absence of a rule just means the parameter/value pair (called CURRENT in
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;; filtering functions) is copied to FILTERED as is. Keyword values :save,
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;; :restore and :never tell the function to copy CURRENT to FILTERED in the
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;; respective situations, that is, when saving, restoring, or never at all.
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;; Values :save and :restore are not used in this package, because usually if
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;; you don't want to save a parameter, you don't want to restore it either.
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;; But they can be useful, for example, if you already have a saved frameset
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;; created with some intent, and want to reuse it for a different objective
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;; where the expected parameter list has different requirements.
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;;
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;; Finally, the value can also be a filtering function, or a filtering
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;; function plus some arguments. The function is called for each matching
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;; parameter, and receives CURRENT (the parameter/value pair being processed),
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;; FILTERED (the output alist so far), PARAMETERS (the full parameter alist),
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;; SAVING (the save/restore flag), plus any additional ARGS set along the
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;; function in the `frameset-*-filter-alist' entry. The filtering function
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;; then has the possibility to pass along CURRENT, or reject it altogether,
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;; or pass back a (NEW-PARAM . NEW-VALUE) pair, which does not even need to
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;; refer to the same parameter (so you can filter `width' and return `height'
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;; and vice versa, if you're feeling silly and want to mess with the user's
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;; mind). As a help in deciding what to do, the filtering function has
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;; access to PARAMETERS, but must not change it in any way. It also has
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;; access to FILTERED, which can be modified at will. This allows two or
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;; more filters to coordinate themselves, because in general there's no way
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;; to predict the order in which they will be run.
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;;
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;; So, which parameters are filtered by default, and why? Let's see.
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;;
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;; - `buffer-list', `buried-buffer-list', `buffer-predicate': They contain
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;; references to live objects, or in the case of `buffer-predicate', it
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;; could also contain an fbound symbol (a predicate function) that could
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;; not be defined in a later session.
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;;
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;; - `window-id', `outer-window-id', `parent-id': They are assigned
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;; automatically and cannot be set, so keeping them is harmless, but they
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;; add clutter. `window-system' is similar: it's assigned at frame
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;; creation, and does not serve any useful purpose later.
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;;
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;; - `left', `top': Only problematic when saving an iconified frame, because
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;; when the frame is iconified they are set to (- 32000), which doesn't
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;; really help in restoring the frame. Better to remove them and let the
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;; window manager choose a default position for the frame.
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;;
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;; - `background-color', `foreground-color': In tty frames they can be set
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;; to "unspecified-bg" and "unspecified-fg", which aren't understood on
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;; GUI sessions. They have to be filtered out when switching from tty to
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;; a graphical display.
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;;
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;; - `tty', `tty-type': These are tty-specific. When switching to a GUI
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;; display they do no harm, but they clutter the parameter alist.
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;;
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;; - `minibuffer': It can contain a reference to a live window, which cannot
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;; be serialized. Because of Emacs' idiosyncratic treatment of this
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;; parameter, frames created with (minibuffer . t) have a parameter
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;; (minibuffer . #<window...>), while frames created with
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;; (minibuffer . #<window...>) have (minibuffer . nil), which is madness
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;; but helps to differentiate between minibufferless and "normal" frames.
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;; So, changing (minibuffer . #<window...>) to (minibuffer . t) allows
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;; Emacs to set up the new frame correctly. Nice, uh?
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;;
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;; - `name': If this parameter is directly set, `explicit-name' is
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;; automatically set to t, and then `name' no longer changes dynamically.
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;; So, in general, not saving `name' is the right thing to do, though
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;; surely there are applications that will want to override this filter.
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;;
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;; - `font', `fullscreen', `height' and `width': These parameters suffer
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;; from the fact that they are badly mangled when going through a
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;; tty session, though not all in the same way. When saving a GUI frame
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;; and restoring it in a tty, the height and width of the new frame are
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;; those of the tty screen (let's say 80x25, for example); going back
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;; to a GUI session means getting frames of the tty screen size (so all
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;; your frames are 80 cols x 25 rows). For `fullscreen' there's a
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;; similar problem, because a tty frame cannot really be fullscreen or
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;; maximized, so the state is lost. The problem with `font' is a bit
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;; different, because a valid GUI font spec in `font' turns into
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;; (font . "tty") in a tty frame, and when read back into a GUI session
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;; it fails because `font's value is no longer a valid font spec.
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;;
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;; In most cases, the filtering functions just do the obvious thing: remove
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;; CURRENT when it is meaningless to keep it, or pass a modified copy if
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;; that helps (as in the case of `minibuffer').
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;;
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;; The exception are the parameters in the last set, which should survive
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;; the roundtrip though tty-land. The answer is to add "stashing
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;; parameters", working in pairs, to shelve the GUI-specific contents and
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;; restore it once we're back in pixel country. That's what functions
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;; `frameset-filter-shelve-param' and `frameset-filter-unshelve-param' do.
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;;
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;; Basically, if you set `frameset-filter-shelve-param' as the filter for
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;; a parameter P, it will detect when it is restoring a GUI frame into a
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;; tty session, and save P's value in the custom parameter X:P, but only
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;; if X:P does not exist already (so it is not overwritten if you enter
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;; the tty session more than once). If you're not switching to a tty
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;; frame, the filter just passes CURRENT along.
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;;
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;; The parameter X:P, on the other hand, must have been setup to be
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;; filtered by `frameset-filter-unshelve-param', which unshelves the
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;; value: if we're entering a GUI session, returns P instead of CURRENT,
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;; while in other cases it just passes it along.
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;;
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;; The only additional trick is that `frameset-filter-shelve-param' does
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;; not set P if switching back to GUI and P already has a value, because
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;; it assumes that `frameset-filter-unshelve-param' did set it up. And
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;; `frameset-filter-unshelve-param', when unshelving P, must look into
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;; FILTERED to determine if P has already been set and if so, modify it;
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;; else just returns P.
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;;
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;; Currently, the value of X in X:P is `GUI', but you can use any prefix,
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;; by passing its symbol as argument in the filter:
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;;
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;; (my-parameter frameset-filter-shelve-param MYPREFIX)
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;;
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;; instead of
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;;
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;; (my-parameter . frameset-filter-shelve-param)
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;;
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;; Note that `frameset-filter-unshelve-param' does not need MYPREFIX
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;; because it is available from the parameter name in CURRENT. Also note
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;; that the colon between the prefix and the parameter name is hardcoded.
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;; The reason is that X:P is quite readable, and that the colon is a
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;; very unusual character in symbol names, other than in initial position
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;; in keywords (emacs -Q has only two such symbols, and one of them is a
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;; URL). So the probability of a collision with existing or future
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;; symbols is quite insignificant.
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;;
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;; Now, what about the filter alist variables? There are three of them,
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;; though only two sets of parameters:
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;;
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;; - `frameset-session-filter-alist' contains these filters that allow to
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;; save and restore framesets in-session, without the need to serialize
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;; the frameset or save it to disk (for example, to save a frameset in a
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;; register and restore it later). Filters in this list do not remove
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;; live objects, except in `minibuffer', which is dealt especially by
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;; `frameset-save' / `frameset-restore'.
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;;
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;; - `frameset-persistent-filter-alist' is the whole deal. It does all
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;; the filtering described above, and the result is ready to be saved on
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;; disk without loss of information. That's the format used by the
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;; desktop.el package, for example.
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;;
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;; IMPORTANT: These variables share structure and should NEVER be modified.
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;;
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;; - `frameset-filter-alist': The value of this variable is the default
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;; value for the FILTERS arguments of `frameset-save' and
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;; `frameset-restore'. It is set to `frameset-persistent-filter-alist',
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;; though it can be changed by specific applications.
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;;
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;; How to use them?
|
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;;
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;; The simplest way is just do nothing. The default should work
|
||
;; reasonably and sensibly enough. But, what if you really need a
|
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;; customized filter alist? Then you can create your own variable
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;;
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;; (defvar my-filter-alist
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;; '((my-param1 . :never)
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;; (my-param2 . :save)
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;; (my-param3 . :restore)
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;; (my-param4 . my-filtering-function-without-args)
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;; (my-param5 my-filtering-function-with arg1 arg2)
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;; ;;; many other parameters
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;; )
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;; "My customized parameter filter alist.")
|
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;;
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||
;; or, if you're only changing a few items,
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;;
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;; (defvar my-filter-alist
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;; (nconc '((my-param1 . :never)
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;; (my-param2 . my-filtering-function))
|
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;; frameset-filter-alist)
|
||
;; "My brief customized parameter filter alist.")
|
||
;;
|
||
;; and pass it to the FILTER arg of the save/restore functions,
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||
;; ALWAYS taking care of not modifying the original lists; if you're
|
||
;; going to do any modifying of my-filter-alist, please use
|
||
;;
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||
;; (nconc '((my-param1 . :never) ...)
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;; (copy-sequence frameset-filter-alist))
|
||
;;
|
||
;; One thing you shouldn't forget is that they are alists, so searching
|
||
;; in them is sequential. If you just want to change the default of
|
||
;; `name' to allow it to be saved, you can set (name . nil) in your
|
||
;; customized filter alist; it will take precedence over the latter
|
||
;; setting. In case you decide that you *always* want to save `name',
|
||
;; you can add it to `frameset-filter-alist':
|
||
;;
|
||
;; (push '(name . nil) frameset-filter-alist)
|
||
;;
|
||
;; In certain applications, having a parameter filtering function like
|
||
;; `frameset-filter-params' can be useful, even if you're not using
|
||
;; framesets. The interface of `frameset-filter-params' is generic
|
||
;; and does not depend of global state, with one exception: it uses
|
||
;; the internal variable `frameset--target-display' to decide if, and
|
||
;; how, to modify the `display' parameter of FILTERED. But that
|
||
;; should not represent any problem, because it's only meaningful
|
||
;; when restoring, and customized uses of `frameset-filter-params'
|
||
;; are likely to use their own filter alist and just call
|
||
;;
|
||
;; (setq my-filtered (frameset-filter-params my-params my-filters t))
|
||
;;
|
||
;; In case you want to use it with the standard filters, you can
|
||
;; wrap the call to `frameset-filter-params' in a let form to bind
|
||
;; `frameset--target-display' to nil or the desired value.
|
||
;;
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defvar frameset-session-filter-alist
|
||
'((name . :never)
|
||
(left . frameset-filter-iconified)
|
||
(minibuffer . frameset-filter-minibuffer)
|
||
(top . frameset-filter-iconified))
|
||
"Minimum set of parameters to filter for live (on-session) framesets.
|
||
DO NOT MODIFY. See `frameset-filter-alist' for a full description.")
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defvar frameset-persistent-filter-alist
|
||
(nconc
|
||
'((background-color . frameset-filter-sanitize-color)
|
||
(buffer-list . :never)
|
||
(buffer-predicate . :never)
|
||
(buried-buffer-list . :never)
|
||
(font . frameset-filter-shelve-param)
|
||
(foreground-color . frameset-filter-sanitize-color)
|
||
(fullscreen . frameset-filter-shelve-param)
|
||
(GUI:font . frameset-filter-unshelve-param)
|
||
(GUI:fullscreen . frameset-filter-unshelve-param)
|
||
(GUI:height . frameset-filter-unshelve-param)
|
||
(GUI:width . frameset-filter-unshelve-param)
|
||
(height . frameset-filter-shelve-param)
|
||
(outer-window-id . :never)
|
||
(parent-id . :never)
|
||
(tty . frameset-filter-tty-to-GUI)
|
||
(tty-type . frameset-filter-tty-to-GUI)
|
||
(width . frameset-filter-shelve-param)
|
||
(window-id . :never)
|
||
(window-system . :never))
|
||
frameset-session-filter-alist)
|
||
"Parameters to filter for persistent framesets.
|
||
DO NOT MODIFY. See `frameset-filter-alist' for a full description.")
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defvar frameset-filter-alist frameset-persistent-filter-alist
|
||
"Alist of frame parameters and filtering functions.
|
||
|
||
This alist is the default value of the FILTERS argument of
|
||
`frameset-save' and `frameset-restore' (which see).
|
||
|
||
Initially, `frameset-filter-alist' is set to, and shares the value of,
|
||
`frameset-persistent-filter-alist'. You can override any item in
|
||
this alist by `push'ing a new item onto it. If, for some reason, you
|
||
intend to modify existing values, do
|
||
|
||
(setq frameset-filter-alist (copy-tree frameset-filter-alist))
|
||
|
||
before changing anything.
|
||
|
||
On saving, PARAMETERS is the parameter alist of each frame processed,
|
||
and FILTERED is the parameter alist that gets saved to the frameset.
|
||
|
||
On restoring, PARAMETERS is the parameter alist extracted from the
|
||
frameset, and FILTERED is the resulting frame parameter alist used
|
||
to restore the frame.
|
||
|
||
Elements of `frameset-filter-alist' are conses (PARAM . ACTION),
|
||
where PARAM is a parameter name (a symbol identifying a frame
|
||
parameter), and ACTION can be:
|
||
|
||
nil The parameter is copied to FILTERED.
|
||
:never The parameter is never copied to FILTERED.
|
||
:save The parameter is copied only when saving the frame.
|
||
:restore The parameter is copied only when restoring the frame.
|
||
FILTER A filter function.
|
||
|
||
FILTER can be a symbol FILTER-FUN, or a list (FILTER-FUN ARGS...).
|
||
FILTER-FUN is invoked with
|
||
|
||
(apply FILTER-FUN CURRENT FILTERED PARAMETERS SAVING ARGS)
|
||
|
||
where
|
||
|
||
CURRENT A cons (PARAM . VALUE), where PARAM is the one being
|
||
filtered and VALUE is its current value.
|
||
FILTERED The resulting alist (so far).
|
||
PARAMETERS The complete alist of parameters being filtered,
|
||
SAVING Non-nil if filtering before saving state, nil if filtering
|
||
before restoring it.
|
||
ARGS Any additional arguments specified in the ACTION.
|
||
|
||
FILTER-FUN is allowed to modify items in FILTERED, but no other arguments.
|
||
It must return:
|
||
nil Skip CURRENT (do not add it to FILTERED).
|
||
t Add CURRENT to FILTERED as is.
|
||
(NEW-PARAM . NEW-VALUE) Add this to FILTERED instead of CURRENT.
|
||
|
||
Frame parameters not on this alist are passed intact, as if they were
|
||
defined with ACTION = nil.")
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defvar frameset--target-display nil
|
||
;; Either (minibuffer . VALUE) or nil.
|
||
;; This refers to the current frame config being processed inside
|
||
;; `frameset-restore' and its auxiliary functions (like filtering).
|
||
;; If nil, there is no need to change the display.
|
||
;; If non-nil, display parameter to use when creating the frame.
|
||
"Internal use only.")
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-switch-to-gui-p (parameters)
|
||
"True when switching to a graphic display.
|
||
Return non-nil if the parameter alist PARAMETERS describes a frame on a
|
||
text-only terminal, and the frame is being restored on a graphic display;
|
||
otherwise return nil. Only meaningful when called from a filtering
|
||
function in `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(and frameset--target-display ; we're switching
|
||
(null (cdr (assq 'display parameters))) ; from a tty
|
||
(cdr frameset--target-display))) ; to a GUI display
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-switch-to-tty-p (parameters)
|
||
"True when switching to a text-only terminal.
|
||
Return non-nil if the parameter alist PARAMETERS describes a frame on a
|
||
graphic display, and the frame is being restored on a text-only terminal;
|
||
otherwise return nil. Only meaningful when called from a filtering
|
||
function in `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(and frameset--target-display ; we're switching
|
||
(cdr (assq 'display parameters)) ; from a GUI display
|
||
(null (cdr frameset--target-display)))) ; to a tty
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-tty-to-GUI (_current _filtered parameters saving)
|
||
"Remove CURRENT when switching from tty to a graphic display.
|
||
|
||
For the meaning of CURRENT, FILTERED, PARAMETERS and SAVING,
|
||
see `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(or saving
|
||
(not (frameset-switch-to-gui-p parameters))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-sanitize-color (current _filtered parameters saving)
|
||
"When switching to a GUI frame, remove \"unspecified\" colors.
|
||
Useful as a filter function for tty-specific parameters.
|
||
|
||
For the meaning of CURRENT, FILTERED, PARAMETERS and SAVING,
|
||
see `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(or saving
|
||
(not (frameset-switch-to-gui-p parameters))
|
||
(not (stringp (cdr current)))
|
||
(not (string-match-p "^unspecified-[fb]g$" (cdr current)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-minibuffer (current filtered _parameters saving)
|
||
"Force the minibuffer parameter to have a sensible value.
|
||
|
||
When saving, convert (minibuffer . #<window>) to (minibuffer . t).
|
||
When restoring, if there are two copies, keep the one pointing to
|
||
a live window.
|
||
|
||
For the meaning of CURRENT, FILTERED, PARAMETERS and SAVING,
|
||
see `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(let ((value (cdr current)) mini)
|
||
(cond (saving
|
||
(if (windowp value) '(minibuffer . t) t))
|
||
((setq mini (assq 'minibuffer filtered))
|
||
(when (windowp value) (setcdr mini value))
|
||
nil)
|
||
(t t))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-shelve-param (current _filtered parameters saving
|
||
&optional prefix)
|
||
"When switching to a tty frame, save parameter P as PREFIX:P.
|
||
The parameter can be later restored with `frameset-filter-unshelve-param'.
|
||
PREFIX defaults to `GUI'.
|
||
|
||
For the meaning of CURRENT, FILTERED, PARAMETERS and SAVING,
|
||
see `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(unless prefix (setq prefix 'GUI))
|
||
(cond (saving t)
|
||
((frameset-switch-to-tty-p parameters)
|
||
(let ((prefix:p (intern (format "%s:%s" prefix (car current)))))
|
||
(if (assq prefix:p parameters)
|
||
nil
|
||
(cons prefix:p (cdr current)))))
|
||
((frameset-switch-to-gui-p parameters)
|
||
(not (assq (intern (format "%s:%s" prefix (car current))) parameters)))
|
||
(t t)))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-unshelve-param (current filtered parameters saving)
|
||
"When switching to a GUI frame, restore PREFIX:P parameter as P.
|
||
CURRENT must be of the form (PREFIX:P . value).
|
||
|
||
For the meaning of CURRENT, FILTERED, PARAMETERS and SAVING,
|
||
see `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(or saving
|
||
(not (frameset-switch-to-gui-p parameters))
|
||
(let* ((prefix:p (symbol-name (car current)))
|
||
(p (intern (substring prefix:p
|
||
(1+ (string-match-p ":" prefix:p)))))
|
||
(val (cdr current))
|
||
(found (assq p filtered)))
|
||
(if (not found)
|
||
(cons p val)
|
||
(setcdr found val)
|
||
nil))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-iconified (_current _filtered parameters saving)
|
||
"Remove CURRENT when saving an iconified frame.
|
||
This is used for positional parameters `left' and `top', which are
|
||
meaningless in an iconified frame, so the frame is restored in a
|
||
default position.
|
||
|
||
For the meaning of CURRENT, FILTERED, PARAMETERS and SAVING,
|
||
see `frameset-filter-alist'."
|
||
(not (and saving (eq (cdr (assq 'visibility parameters)) 'icon))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-filter-params (parameters filter-alist saving)
|
||
"Filter parameter alist PARAMETERS and return a filtered alist.
|
||
FILTER-ALIST is an alist of parameter filters, in the format of
|
||
`frameset-filter-alist' (which see).
|
||
SAVING is non-nil while filtering parameters to save a frameset,
|
||
nil while the filtering is done to restore it."
|
||
(let ((filtered nil))
|
||
(dolist (current parameters)
|
||
;; When saving, the parameter alist is temporary, so modifying it
|
||
;; is not a problem. When restoring, the parameter alist is part
|
||
;; of a frameset, so we must copy parameters to avoid inadvertent
|
||
;; modifications.
|
||
(pcase (cdr (assq (car current) filter-alist))
|
||
(`nil
|
||
(push (if saving current (copy-tree current)) filtered))
|
||
(:never
|
||
nil)
|
||
(:restore
|
||
(unless saving (push (copy-tree current) filtered)))
|
||
(:save
|
||
(when saving (push current filtered)))
|
||
((or `(,fun . ,args) (and fun (pred fboundp)))
|
||
(let* ((this (apply fun current filtered parameters saving args))
|
||
(val (if (eq this t) current this)))
|
||
(when val
|
||
(push (if saving val (copy-tree val)) filtered))))
|
||
(other
|
||
(delay-warning 'frameset (format "Unknown filter %S" other) :error))))
|
||
;; Set the display parameter after filtering, so that filter functions
|
||
;; have access to its original value.
|
||
(when frameset--target-display
|
||
(let ((display (assq 'display filtered)))
|
||
(if display
|
||
(setcdr display (cdr frameset--target-display))
|
||
(push frameset--target-display filtered))))
|
||
filtered))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; Frame ids
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--set-id (frame)
|
||
"Set FRAME's id if not yet set.
|
||
Internal use only."
|
||
(unless (frame-parameter frame 'frameset--id)
|
||
(set-frame-parameter frame
|
||
'frameset--id
|
||
(mapconcat (lambda (n) (format "%04X" n))
|
||
(cl-loop repeat 4 collect (random 65536))
|
||
"-"))))
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defun frameset-frame-id (frame)
|
||
"Return the frame id of FRAME, if it has one; else, return nil.
|
||
A frame id is a string that uniquely identifies a frame.
|
||
It is persistent across `frameset-save' / `frameset-restore'
|
||
invocations, and once assigned is never changed unless the same
|
||
frame is duplicated (via `frameset-restore'), in which case the
|
||
newest frame keeps the id and the old frame's is set to nil."
|
||
(frame-parameter frame 'frameset--id))
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defun frameset-frame-id-equal-p (frame id)
|
||
"Return non-nil if FRAME's id matches ID."
|
||
(string= (frameset-frame-id frame) id))
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defun frameset-frame-with-id (id &optional frame-list)
|
||
"Return the live frame with id ID, if exists; else nil.
|
||
If FRAME-LIST is a list of frames, check these frames only.
|
||
If nil, check all live frames."
|
||
(cl-find-if (lambda (f)
|
||
(and (frame-live-p f)
|
||
(frameset-frame-id-equal-p f id)))
|
||
(or frame-list (frame-list))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; Saving framesets
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--record-minibuffer-relationships (frame-list)
|
||
"Process FRAME-LIST and record minibuffer relationships.
|
||
FRAME-LIST is a list of frames. Internal use only."
|
||
;; Record frames with their own minibuffer
|
||
(dolist (frame (minibuffer-frame-list))
|
||
(when (memq frame frame-list)
|
||
(frameset--set-id frame)
|
||
;; For minibuffer-owning frames, frameset--mini is a cons
|
||
;; (t . DEFAULT?), where DEFAULT? is a boolean indicating whether
|
||
;; the frame is the one pointed out by `default-minibuffer-frame'.
|
||
(set-frame-parameter frame
|
||
'frameset--mini
|
||
(cons t (eq frame default-minibuffer-frame)))))
|
||
;; Now link minibufferless frames with their minibuffer frames
|
||
(dolist (frame frame-list)
|
||
(unless (frame-parameter frame 'frameset--mini)
|
||
(frameset--set-id frame)
|
||
(let ((mb-frame (window-frame (minibuffer-window frame))))
|
||
;; For minibufferless frames, frameset--mini is a cons
|
||
;; (nil . FRAME-ID), where FRAME-ID is the frameset--id of
|
||
;; the frame containing its minibuffer window.
|
||
;; FRAME-ID can be set to nil, if FRAME-LIST doesn't contain
|
||
;; the minibuffer frame of a minibufferless frame; we allow
|
||
;; it without trying to second-guess the user.
|
||
(set-frame-parameter frame
|
||
'frameset--mini
|
||
(cons nil
|
||
(and mb-frame
|
||
(frameset-frame-id mb-frame))))))))
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(cl-defun frameset-save (frame-list
|
||
&key app name description
|
||
filters predicate properties)
|
||
"Return a frameset for FRAME-LIST, a list of frames.
|
||
Dead frames and non-frame objects are silently removed from the list.
|
||
If nil, FRAME-LIST defaults to the output of `frame-list' (all live frames).
|
||
APP, NAME and DESCRIPTION are optional data; see the docstring of the
|
||
`frameset' defstruct for details.
|
||
FILTERS is an alist of parameter filters; if nil, the value of the variable
|
||
`frameset-filter-alist' is used instead.
|
||
PREDICATE is a predicate function, which must return non-nil for frames that
|
||
should be saved; if PREDICATE is nil, all frames from FRAME-LIST are saved.
|
||
PROPERTIES is a user-defined property list to add to the frameset."
|
||
(let* ((list (or (copy-sequence frame-list) (frame-list)))
|
||
(frames (cl-delete-if-not #'frame-live-p
|
||
(if predicate
|
||
(cl-delete-if-not predicate list)
|
||
list)))
|
||
fs)
|
||
(frameset--record-minibuffer-relationships frames)
|
||
(setq fs (frameset--make
|
||
:app app
|
||
:name name
|
||
:description description
|
||
:properties properties
|
||
:states (mapcar
|
||
(lambda (frame)
|
||
(cons
|
||
(frameset-filter-params (frame-parameters frame)
|
||
(or filters
|
||
frameset-filter-alist)
|
||
t)
|
||
(window-state-get (frame-root-window frame) t)))
|
||
frames)))
|
||
(cl-assert (frameset-valid-p fs))
|
||
fs))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; Restoring framesets
|
||
|
||
(defvar frameset--reuse-list nil
|
||
"The list of frames potentially reusable.
|
||
Its value is only meaningful during execution of `frameset-restore'.
|
||
Internal use only.")
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-compute-pos (value left/top right/bottom)
|
||
"Return an absolute positioning value for a frame.
|
||
VALUE is the value of a positional frame parameter (`left' or `top').
|
||
If VALUE is relative to the screen edges (like (+ -35) or (-200), it is
|
||
converted to absolute by adding it to the corresponding edge; if it is
|
||
an absolute position, it is returned unmodified.
|
||
LEFT/TOP and RIGHT/BOTTOM indicate the dimensions of the screen in
|
||
pixels along the relevant direction: either the position of the left
|
||
and right edges for a `left' positional parameter, or the position of
|
||
the top and bottom edges for a `top' parameter."
|
||
(pcase value
|
||
(`(+ ,val) (+ left/top val))
|
||
(`(- ,val) (+ right/bottom val))
|
||
(val val)))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-move-onscreen (frame force-onscreen)
|
||
"If FRAME is offscreen, move it back onscreen and, if necessary, resize it.
|
||
For the description of FORCE-ONSCREEN, see `frameset-restore'.
|
||
When forced onscreen, frames wider than the monitor's workarea are converted
|
||
to fullwidth, and frames taller than the workarea are converted to fullheight.
|
||
NOTE: This only works for non-iconified frames."
|
||
(pcase-let* ((`(,left ,top ,width ,height) (cl-cdadr (frame-monitor-attributes frame)))
|
||
(right (+ left width -1))
|
||
(bottom (+ top height -1))
|
||
(fr-left (frameset-compute-pos (frame-parameter frame 'left) left right))
|
||
(fr-top (frameset-compute-pos (frame-parameter frame 'top) top bottom))
|
||
(ch-width (frame-char-width frame))
|
||
(ch-height (frame-char-height frame))
|
||
(fr-width (max (frame-pixel-width frame) (* ch-width (frame-width frame))))
|
||
(fr-height (max (frame-pixel-height frame) (* ch-height (frame-height frame))))
|
||
(fr-right (+ fr-left fr-width -1))
|
||
(fr-bottom (+ fr-top fr-height -1)))
|
||
(when (pcase force-onscreen
|
||
;; A predicate.
|
||
((pred functionp)
|
||
(funcall force-onscreen
|
||
frame
|
||
(list fr-left fr-top fr-width fr-height)
|
||
(list left top width height)))
|
||
;; Any corner is outside the screen.
|
||
(:all (or (< fr-bottom top) (> fr-bottom bottom)
|
||
(< fr-left left) (> fr-left right)
|
||
(< fr-right left) (> fr-right right)
|
||
(< fr-top top) (> fr-top bottom)))
|
||
;; Displaced to the left, right, above or below the screen.
|
||
(`t (or (> fr-left right)
|
||
(< fr-right left)
|
||
(> fr-top bottom)
|
||
(< fr-bottom top)))
|
||
;; Fully inside, no need to do anything.
|
||
(_ nil))
|
||
(let ((fullwidth (> fr-width width))
|
||
(fullheight (> fr-height height))
|
||
(params nil))
|
||
;; Position frame horizontally.
|
||
(cond (fullwidth
|
||
(push `(left . ,left) params))
|
||
((> fr-right right)
|
||
(push `(left . ,(+ left (- width fr-width))) params))
|
||
((< fr-left left)
|
||
(push `(left . ,left) params)))
|
||
;; Position frame vertically.
|
||
(cond (fullheight
|
||
(push `(top . ,top) params))
|
||
((> fr-bottom bottom)
|
||
(push `(top . ,(+ top (- height fr-height))) params))
|
||
((< fr-top top)
|
||
(push `(top . ,top) params)))
|
||
;; Compute fullscreen state, if required.
|
||
(when (or fullwidth fullheight)
|
||
(push (cons 'fullscreen
|
||
(cond ((not fullwidth) 'fullheight)
|
||
((not fullheight) 'fullwidth)
|
||
(t 'maximized)))
|
||
params))
|
||
;; Finally, move the frame back onscreen.
|
||
(when params
|
||
(modify-frame-parameters frame params))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--find-frame-if (predicate display &rest args)
|
||
"Find a frame in `frameset--reuse-list' satisfying PREDICATE.
|
||
Look through available frames whose display property matches DISPLAY
|
||
and return the first one for which (PREDICATE frame ARGS) returns t.
|
||
If PREDICATE is nil, it is always satisfied. Internal use only."
|
||
(cl-find-if (lambda (frame)
|
||
(and (equal (frame-parameter frame 'display) display)
|
||
(or (null predicate)
|
||
(apply predicate frame args))))
|
||
frameset--reuse-list))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--reuse-frame (display parameters)
|
||
"Return an existing frame to reuse, or nil if none found.
|
||
DISPLAY is the display where the frame will be shown, and PARAMETERS
|
||
is the parameter alist of the frame being restored. Internal use only."
|
||
(let ((frame nil)
|
||
mini)
|
||
;; There are no fancy heuristics there. We could implement some
|
||
;; based on frame size and/or position, etc., but it is not clear
|
||
;; that any "gain" (in the sense of reduced flickering, etc.) is
|
||
;; worth the added complexity. In fact, the code below mainly
|
||
;; tries to work nicely when M-x desktop-read is used after a
|
||
;; desktop session has already been loaded. The other main use
|
||
;; case, which is the initial desktop-read upon starting Emacs,
|
||
;; will usually have only one frame, and should already work.
|
||
(cond ((null display)
|
||
;; When the target is tty, every existing frame is reusable.
|
||
(setq frame (frameset--find-frame-if nil display)))
|
||
((car (setq mini (cdr (assq 'frameset--mini parameters))))
|
||
;; If the frame has its own minibuffer, let's see whether
|
||
;; that frame has already been loaded (which can happen after
|
||
;; M-x desktop-read).
|
||
(setq frame (frameset--find-frame-if
|
||
(lambda (f id)
|
||
(frameset-frame-id-equal-p f id))
|
||
display (cdr (assq 'frameset--id parameters))))
|
||
;; If it has not been loaded, and it is not a minibuffer-only frame,
|
||
;; let's look for an existing non-minibuffer-only frame to reuse.
|
||
(unless (or frame (eq (cdr (assq 'minibuffer parameters)) 'only))
|
||
(setq frame (frameset--find-frame-if
|
||
(lambda (f)
|
||
(let ((w (frame-parameter f 'minibuffer)))
|
||
(and (window-live-p w)
|
||
(window-minibuffer-p w)
|
||
(eq (window-frame w) f))))
|
||
display))))
|
||
(mini
|
||
;; For minibufferless frames, check whether they already exist,
|
||
;; and that they are linked to the right minibuffer frame.
|
||
(setq frame (frameset--find-frame-if
|
||
(lambda (f id mini-id)
|
||
(and (frameset-frame-id-equal-p f id)
|
||
(or (null mini-id) ; minibuffer frame not saved
|
||
(frameset-frame-id-equal-p
|
||
(window-frame (minibuffer-window f))
|
||
mini-id))))
|
||
display
|
||
(cdr (assq 'frameset--id parameters)) (cdr mini))))
|
||
(t
|
||
;; Default to just finding a frame in the same display.
|
||
(setq frame (frameset--find-frame-if nil display))))
|
||
;; If found, remove from the list.
|
||
(when frame
|
||
(setq frameset--reuse-list (delq frame frameset--reuse-list)))
|
||
frame))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--initial-params (parameters)
|
||
"Return a list of PARAMETERS that must be set when creating the frame.
|
||
Setting position and size parameters as soon as possible helps reducing
|
||
flickering; other parameters, like `minibuffer' and `border-width', can
|
||
not be changed once the frame has been created. Internal use only."
|
||
(cl-loop for param in '(left top with height border-width minibuffer)
|
||
collect (assq param parameters)))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--restore-frame (parameters window-state filters force-onscreen)
|
||
"Set up and return a frame according to its saved state.
|
||
That means either reusing an existing frame or creating one anew.
|
||
PARAMETERS is the frame's parameter alist; WINDOW-STATE is its window state.
|
||
For the meaning of FILTERS and FORCE-ONSCREEN, see `frameset-restore'.
|
||
Internal use only."
|
||
(let* ((fullscreen (cdr (assq 'fullscreen parameters)))
|
||
(lines (assq 'tool-bar-lines parameters))
|
||
(filtered-cfg (frameset-filter-params parameters filters nil))
|
||
(display (cdr (assq 'display filtered-cfg))) ;; post-filtering
|
||
alt-cfg frame)
|
||
|
||
;; This works around bug#14795 (or feature#14795, if not a bug :-)
|
||
(setq filtered-cfg (assq-delete-all 'tool-bar-lines filtered-cfg))
|
||
(push '(tool-bar-lines . 0) filtered-cfg)
|
||
|
||
(when fullscreen
|
||
;; Currently Emacs has the limitation that it does not record the size
|
||
;; and position of a frame before maximizing it, so we cannot save &
|
||
;; restore that info. Instead, when restoring, we resort to creating
|
||
;; invisible "fullscreen" frames of default size and then maximizing them
|
||
;; (and making them visible) which at least is somewhat user-friendly
|
||
;; when these frames are later de-maximized.
|
||
(let ((width (and (eq fullscreen 'fullheight) (cdr (assq 'width filtered-cfg))))
|
||
(height (and (eq fullscreen 'fullwidth) (cdr (assq 'height filtered-cfg))))
|
||
(visible (assq 'visibility filtered-cfg)))
|
||
(setq filtered-cfg (cl-delete-if (lambda (p)
|
||
(memq p '(visibility fullscreen width height)))
|
||
filtered-cfg :key #'car))
|
||
(when width
|
||
(setq filtered-cfg (append `((user-size . t) (width . ,width))
|
||
filtered-cfg)))
|
||
(when height
|
||
(setq filtered-cfg (append `((user-size . t) (height . ,height))
|
||
filtered-cfg)))
|
||
;; These are parameters to apply after creating/setting the frame.
|
||
(push visible alt-cfg)
|
||
(push (cons 'fullscreen fullscreen) alt-cfg)))
|
||
|
||
;; Time to find or create a frame an apply the big bunch of parameters.
|
||
;; If a frame needs to be created and it falls partially or fully offscreen,
|
||
;; sometimes it gets "pushed back" onscreen; however, moving it afterwards is
|
||
;; allowed. So we create the frame as invisible and then reapply the full
|
||
;; parameter alist (including position and size parameters).
|
||
(setq frame (or (and frameset--reuse-list
|
||
(frameset--reuse-frame display filtered-cfg))
|
||
(make-frame-on-display display
|
||
(cons '(visibility)
|
||
(frameset--initial-params filtered-cfg)))))
|
||
(modify-frame-parameters frame
|
||
(if (eq (frame-parameter frame 'fullscreen) fullscreen)
|
||
;; Workaround for bug#14949
|
||
(assq-delete-all 'fullscreen filtered-cfg)
|
||
filtered-cfg))
|
||
|
||
;; If requested, force frames to be onscreen.
|
||
(when (and force-onscreen
|
||
;; FIXME: iconified frames should be checked too,
|
||
;; but it is impossible without deiconifying them.
|
||
(not (eq (frame-parameter frame 'visibility) 'icon)))
|
||
(frameset-move-onscreen frame force-onscreen))
|
||
|
||
;; Let's give the finishing touches (visibility, tool-bar, maximization).
|
||
(when lines (push lines alt-cfg))
|
||
(when alt-cfg (modify-frame-parameters frame alt-cfg))
|
||
;; Now restore window state.
|
||
(window-state-put window-state (frame-root-window frame) 'safe)
|
||
frame))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--minibufferless-last-p (state1 state2)
|
||
"Predicate to sort frame states in an order suitable for creating frames.
|
||
It sorts minibuffer-owning frames before minibufferless ones.
|
||
Internal use only."
|
||
(pcase-let ((`(,hasmini1 ,id-def1) (assq 'frameset--mini (car state1)))
|
||
(`(,hasmini2 ,id-def2) (assq 'frameset--mini (car state2))))
|
||
(cond ((eq id-def1 t) t)
|
||
((eq id-def2 t) nil)
|
||
((not (eq hasmini1 hasmini2)) (eq hasmini1 t))
|
||
((eq hasmini1 nil) (or id-def1 id-def2))
|
||
(t t))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-keep-original-display-p (force-display)
|
||
"True if saved frames' displays should be honored.
|
||
For the meaning of FORCE-DISPLAY, see `frameset-restore'."
|
||
(cond ((daemonp) t)
|
||
((eq system-type 'windows-nt) nil) ;; Does ns support more than one display?
|
||
(t (not force-display))))
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset-minibufferless-first-p (frame1 _frame2)
|
||
"Predicate to sort minibufferless frames before other frames."
|
||
(not (frame-parameter frame1 'minibuffer)))
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(cl-defun frameset-restore (frameset
|
||
&key predicate filters reuse-frames
|
||
force-display force-onscreen)
|
||
"Restore a FRAMESET into the current display(s).
|
||
|
||
PREDICATE is a function called with two arguments, the parameter alist
|
||
and the window-state of the frame being restored, in that order (see
|
||
the docstring of the `frameset' defstruct for additional details).
|
||
If PREDICATE returns nil, the frame described by that parameter alist
|
||
and window-state is not restored.
|
||
|
||
FILTERS is an alist of parameter filters; if nil, the value of
|
||
`frameset-filter-alist' is used instead.
|
||
|
||
REUSE-FRAMES selects the policy to use to reuse frames when restoring:
|
||
t Reuse existing frames if possible, and delete those not reused.
|
||
nil Restore frameset in new frames and delete existing frames.
|
||
:keep Restore frameset in new frames and keep the existing ones.
|
||
LIST A list of frames to reuse; only these are reused (if possible).
|
||
Remaining frames in this list are deleted; other frames not
|
||
included on the list are left untouched.
|
||
|
||
FORCE-DISPLAY can be:
|
||
t Frames are restored in the current display.
|
||
nil Frames are restored, if possible, in their original displays.
|
||
:delete Frames in other displays are deleted instead of restored.
|
||
PRED A function called with two arguments, the parameter alist and
|
||
the window state (in that order). It must return t, nil or
|
||
`:delete', as above but affecting only the frame that will
|
||
be created from that parameter alist.
|
||
|
||
FORCE-ONSCREEN can be:
|
||
t Force onscreen only those frames that are fully offscreen.
|
||
nil Do not force any frame back onscreen.
|
||
:all Force onscreen any frame fully or partially offscreen.
|
||
PRED A function called with three arguments,
|
||
- the live frame just restored,
|
||
- a list (LEFT TOP WIDTH HEIGHT), describing the frame,
|
||
- a list (LEFT TOP WIDTH HEIGHT), describing the workarea.
|
||
It must return non-nil to force the frame onscreen, nil otherwise.
|
||
|
||
Note the timing and scope of the operations described above: REUSE-FRAMES
|
||
affects existing frames; PREDICATE, FILTERS and FORCE-DISPLAY affect the frame
|
||
being restored before that happens; and FORCE-ONSCREEN affects the frame once
|
||
it has been restored.
|
||
|
||
All keyword parameters default to nil."
|
||
|
||
(cl-assert (frameset-valid-p frameset))
|
||
|
||
(let (other-frames)
|
||
|
||
;; frameset--reuse-list is a list of frames potentially reusable. Later we
|
||
;; will decide which ones can be reused, and how to deal with any leftover.
|
||
(pcase reuse-frames
|
||
((or `nil `:keep)
|
||
(setq frameset--reuse-list nil
|
||
other-frames (frame-list)))
|
||
((pred consp)
|
||
(setq frameset--reuse-list (copy-sequence reuse-frames)
|
||
other-frames (cl-delete-if (lambda (frame)
|
||
(memq frame frameset--reuse-list))
|
||
(frame-list))))
|
||
(_
|
||
(setq frameset--reuse-list (frame-list)
|
||
other-frames nil)))
|
||
|
||
;; Sort saved states to guarantee that minibufferless frames will be created
|
||
;; after the frames that contain their minibuffer windows.
|
||
(dolist (state (sort (copy-sequence (frameset-states frameset))
|
||
#'frameset--minibufferless-last-p))
|
||
(pcase-let ((`(,frame-cfg . ,window-cfg) state))
|
||
(when (or (null predicate) (funcall predicate frame-cfg window-cfg))
|
||
(condition-case-unless-debug err
|
||
(let* ((d-mini (cdr (assq 'frameset--mini frame-cfg)))
|
||
(mb-id (cdr d-mini))
|
||
(default (and (car d-mini) mb-id))
|
||
(force-display (if (functionp force-display)
|
||
(funcall force-display frame-cfg window-cfg)
|
||
force-display))
|
||
frame to-tty)
|
||
;; Only set target if forcing displays and the target display is different.
|
||
(cond ((frameset-keep-original-display-p force-display)
|
||
(setq frameset--target-display nil))
|
||
((eq (frame-parameter nil 'display) (cdr (assq 'display frame-cfg)))
|
||
(setq frameset--target-display nil))
|
||
(t
|
||
(setq frameset--target-display (cons 'display
|
||
(frame-parameter nil 'display))
|
||
to-tty (null (cdr frameset--target-display)))))
|
||
;; Time to restore frames and set up their minibuffers as they were.
|
||
;; We only skip a frame (thus deleting it) if either:
|
||
;; - we're switching displays, and the user chose the option to delete, or
|
||
;; - we're switching to tty, and the frame to restore is minibuffer-only.
|
||
(unless (and frameset--target-display
|
||
(or (eq force-display :delete)
|
||
(and to-tty
|
||
(eq (cdr (assq 'minibuffer frame-cfg)) 'only))))
|
||
;; If keeping non-reusable frames, and the frameset--id of one of them
|
||
;; matches the id of a frame being restored (because, for example, the
|
||
;; frameset has already been read in the same session), remove the
|
||
;; frameset--id from the non-reusable frame, which is not useful anymore.
|
||
(when (and other-frames
|
||
(or (eq reuse-frames :keep) (consp reuse-frames)))
|
||
(let ((dup (frameset-frame-with-id (cdr (assq 'frameset--id frame-cfg))
|
||
other-frames)))
|
||
(when dup
|
||
(set-frame-parameter dup 'frameset--id nil))))
|
||
;; Restore minibuffers. Some of this stuff could be done in a filter
|
||
;; function, but it would be messy because restoring minibuffers affects
|
||
;; global state; it's best to do it here than add a bunch of global
|
||
;; variables to pass info back-and-forth to/from the filter function.
|
||
(cond
|
||
((null d-mini)) ;; No frameset--mini. Process as normal frame.
|
||
(to-tty) ;; Ignore minibuffer stuff and process as normal frame.
|
||
((car d-mini) ;; Frame has minibuffer (or it is minibuffer-only).
|
||
(when (eq (cdr (assq 'minibuffer frame-cfg)) 'only)
|
||
(setq frame-cfg (append '((tool-bar-lines . 0) (menu-bar-lines . 0))
|
||
frame-cfg))))
|
||
(t ;; Frame depends on other frame's minibuffer window.
|
||
(when mb-id
|
||
(let ((mb-frame (frameset-frame-with-id mb-id))
|
||
(mb-window nil))
|
||
(if (not mb-frame)
|
||
(delay-warning 'frameset
|
||
(format "Minibuffer frame %S not found" mb-id)
|
||
:warning)
|
||
(setq mb-window (minibuffer-window mb-frame))
|
||
(unless (and (window-live-p mb-window)
|
||
(window-minibuffer-p mb-window))
|
||
(delay-warning 'frameset
|
||
(format "Not a minibuffer window %s" mb-window)
|
||
:warning)
|
||
(setq mb-window nil)))
|
||
(when mb-window
|
||
(push (cons 'minibuffer mb-window) frame-cfg))))))
|
||
;; OK, we're ready at last to create (or reuse) a frame and
|
||
;; restore the window config.
|
||
(setq frame (frameset--restore-frame frame-cfg window-cfg
|
||
(or filters frameset-filter-alist)
|
||
force-onscreen))
|
||
;; Set default-minibuffer if required.
|
||
(when default (setq default-minibuffer-frame frame))))
|
||
(error
|
||
(delay-warning 'frameset (error-message-string err) :error))))))
|
||
|
||
;; In case we try to delete the initial frame, we want to make sure that
|
||
;; other frames are already visible (discussed in thread for bug#14841).
|
||
(sit-for 0 t)
|
||
|
||
;; Delete remaining frames, but do not fail if some resist being deleted.
|
||
(unless (eq reuse-frames :keep)
|
||
(dolist (frame (sort (nconc (if (listp reuse-frames) nil other-frames)
|
||
frameset--reuse-list)
|
||
;; Minibufferless frames must go first to avoid
|
||
;; errors when attempting to delete a frame whose
|
||
;; minibuffer window is used by another frame.
|
||
#'frameset-minibufferless-first-p))
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
(delete-frame frame)
|
||
(error
|
||
(delay-warning 'frameset (error-message-string err))))))
|
||
(setq frameset--reuse-list nil
|
||
frameset--target-display nil)
|
||
|
||
;; Make sure there's at least one visible frame.
|
||
(unless (or (daemonp) (visible-frame-list))
|
||
(make-frame-visible (car (frame-list))))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; Register support
|
||
|
||
(defun frameset--jump-to-register (data)
|
||
"Restore frameset from DATA stored in register.
|
||
Called from `jump-to-register'. Internal use only."
|
||
(let* ((delete (and current-prefix-arg t))
|
||
(iconify-list (if delete nil (frame-list))))
|
||
(frameset-restore (aref data 0)
|
||
:filters frameset-session-filter-alist
|
||
:reuse-frames (if delete t :keep))
|
||
(mapc #'iconify-frame iconify-list)
|
||
(let ((frame (frameset-frame-with-id (aref data 1))))
|
||
(when frame
|
||
(select-frame-set-input-focus frame)
|
||
(goto-char (aref data 2))))))
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defun frameset-to-register (register &optional _arg)
|
||
"Store the current frameset in register REGISTER.
|
||
Use \\[jump-to-register] to restore the frameset.
|
||
Argument is a character, naming the register."
|
||
(interactive "cFrameset to register: \nP")
|
||
(set-register register
|
||
(registerv-make
|
||
(vector (frameset-save nil
|
||
:app 'register
|
||
:filters frameset-session-filter-alist)
|
||
;; frameset-save does not include the value of point
|
||
;; in the current buffer, so record that separately.
|
||
(frameset-frame-id nil)
|
||
(point-marker))
|
||
:print-func (lambda (_data) (princ "a frameset."))
|
||
:jump-func #'frameset--jump-to-register)))
|
||
|
||
(provide 'frameset)
|
||
|
||
;;; frameset.el ends here
|