Package: emacs;
Reported by: "Drew Adams" <drew.adams <at> oracle.com>
Date: Mon, 24 May 2010 15:13:02 UTC
Severity: normal
Found in version 24.0.50
Done: Stefan Monnier <monnier <at> iro.umontreal.ca>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
Message #82 received at 6256 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
From: "Drew Adams" <drew.adams <at> oracle.com> To: "'Stefan Monnier'" <monnier <at> iro.umontreal.ca> Cc: 6256 <at> debbugs.gnu.org Subject: RE: bug#6256: 24.0.50; read-event in `repeat' command Date: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 13:55:35 -0700
> > That tells me that it exited during `read-key', not > > because the event/key tested did not match (`while' test = nil). > > That's one possibility, indeed, tho maybe the code never gets to > read-key at all. This is what I used: (unwind-protect (while (let ((evt (read-key))) (message "EVT: %S, R-R-CHAR: %S" evt repeat-repeat-char) (eq (or (car-safe evt) evt) (or (car-safe repeat-repeat-char) repeat-repeat-char))) (repeat repeat-arg)) (setq repeat-undo-count nil)) The only time that code is not entered is if `repeat-repeat-char' is nil (since the code is inside the (when repeat-repeat-char...)). And if that code is entered then the only time `message' is not invoked is if `read-key' barfs. > > Apparently `read-key' itself exits out to the `unwind-protect' > > protection code in this scenario. > > That's only if it signals an error, which you should then see > somewhere. I saw no error messages in *Messages*. Perhaps we can conclude that `repeat-repeat-char' was nil. Since I have `repeat-on-final-keystroke'=t (the default), that in turn means that `last-command-event' was nil. Does that help you see what went wrong? `last-command-event' takes us into C code (and perhaps into your code for `read-key'?). I can't help much with that. As I suggested, this might have to do with other things such as my using a standalone minibuffer. Dunno. > > In emacs -Q, however, with just the Bookmark+ files loaded, I do not > > see the problem. That is presumably what you are seeing. > > Indeed. So it does work for you in Emacs-23, tho only for the case of > "emacs -Q"? If so, you may want to try and do the binary-search dance > on your .emacs to see what's interfering. I really don't want to try that for this, if I can avoid it. > > Perhaps you can suggest something I can do to determine what is > > happening that causes it (presumably) to exit the `while' during the > > `read-key', jumping out to the `unwind-protect'. Is there > > some debug message I can put at the beginning of the the > > `unwind-protect' protection code to see what happened? Can I > > put some debug stuff into `read-key'? > > You can start by adding various `message' calls around the > while, inside the while, around the read-key call, etc... > Using edebug in this code is sadly problematic, so we're left with > print-debugging. > > > You still have not said anything about what's wrong with > > that solution. > > It does not work for me (i.e. for X11 mouse wheel events). Ah. I see. That's the first I heard of it. I was thinking that that code would work because it remains abstract (in principle). It just decomposes the event into its components and compares those. There is (in principle) nothing platform-specific about it. But I see from what you say below that the problem is that on X (and maybe on some other platforms?) wheel events cannot be treated abstractly without some massaging first. They have a different form depending on whether they are the first of a series. That form difference might be useful for X (?), and maybe it could sometimes be useful for Emacs (?), but it is just an obstacle in this context. In general (and in particular here) I don't think that Emacs has any need to distinguish the first wheel event in a given direction from subsequent ones in the same direction. IOW, the problem is not that X uses different event names from Windows for its wheel events. The problem (here) is that X uses different event names for the _same_ wheel action (rotation in a given direction). > You could also try > (while (let ((evt (read-event))) > (message "EVT: %S, R-R-CHAR: %S" evt repeat-repeat-char) > (and (equal (event-basic-type evt) > (event-basic-type repeat-repeat-char)) > (equal (event-modifiers evt) > (event-modifiers repeat-repeat-char)))) > (repeat repeat-arg)) > > > It's pretty simple. It also seems logical, and it says just what we > > want to be done: if the event's components are all the same as before > > then repeat. Dunno why you have a problem with this. What problems > > do you see with this approach? > > That on X11, the second event is *not* the same as the first because > mouse wheel send first a down and then an up event. I see. So it sounds like we need an abstraction to deal with that - I'd think that would be useful anyway. After all, there is no good reason to distinguish the first wheel rotation (in a given direction). At least there is no good reason to _always_ do that, even if someone might find a reason why that might be useful sometimes. The modifiers that I wanted to compare in the `while' test are only the `control', `meta', `shift', `double', etc. modifiers. In the case of a wheel event we could safely abstract from any `down' or `up' modifiers (here, at least), AFAIK - they don't mean anything here. What about defining a function that maps X wheel events to "Emacs" wheel events that strip the `down' and `up' modifiers? And then using that function here? But that means being able to recognize a wheel event as such - any wheel event. We don't want to strip `down' or `up' from any non-wheel mouse events. That recognition should be possible using the vars `mouse-wheel-(up|down)-event'. Can you use something like this to make the decomposing-read-event approach work for X? (defun wheel-event (event) "Return EVENT, with modifiers `down' and `up' removed if a wheel event." (if (memq (event-basic-type event) (list mouse-wheel-up-event mouse-wheel-down-event)) event (event-convert-list (delq 'down (delq 'up (event-modifiers event))))))
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