]> code.delx.au - gnu-emacs/blob - lisp/progmodes/cc-align.el
CC Mode update (5.30.8).
[gnu-emacs] / lisp / progmodes / cc-align.el
1 ;;; cc-align.el --- custom indentation functions for CC Mode
2
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1985,1987,1992-2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 ;; Authors: 1998- Martin Stjernholm
6 ;; 1992-1999 Barry A. Warsaw
7 ;; 1987 Dave Detlefs and Stewart Clamen
8 ;; 1985 Richard M. Stallman
9 ;; Maintainer: bug-cc-mode@gnu.org
10 ;; Created: 22-Apr-1997 (split from cc-mode.el)
11 ;; Version: See cc-mode.el
12 ;; Keywords: c languages oop
13
14 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
15
16 ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
17 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
18 ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
19 ;; any later version.
20
21 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
22 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
23 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
24 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
25
26 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
27 ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
28 ;; the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
29 ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
30
31 ;;; Commentary:
32
33 ;;; Code:
34
35 (eval-when-compile
36 (let ((load-path
37 (if (and (boundp 'byte-compile-dest-file)
38 (stringp byte-compile-dest-file))
39 (cons (file-name-directory byte-compile-dest-file) load-path)
40 load-path)))
41 (load "cc-bytecomp" nil t)))
42
43 (cc-require 'cc-defs)
44 (cc-require 'cc-vars)
45 (cc-require 'cc-engine)
46
47 \f
48 ;; Standard indentation line-ups
49
50 ;; Calling convention:
51 ;;
52 ;; The single argument is a cons cell containing the syntactic symbol
53 ;; in the car, and the relpos (a.k.a. anchor position) in the cdr.
54 ;; The cdr may be nil for syntactic symbols which doesn't have an
55 ;; associated relpos.
56 ;;
57 ;; Some syntactic symbols provide more information, usually more
58 ;; interesting positions. The complete list for the syntactic element
59 ;; (beginning with the symbol itself) is available in
60 ;; `c-syntactic-element'.
61
62 (defun c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont (langelem)
63 "Line up declaration continuation lines zero or one indentation step.
64 For lines in the \"header\" of a definition, zero is used. For other
65 lines, `c-basic-offset' is added to the indentation. E.g:
66
67 int
68 neg (int i) <- c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont
69 {
70 return -i;
71 }
72
73 struct
74 larch <- c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont
75 {
76 double height;
77 }
78 the_larch, <- c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont
79 another_larch; <- c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont
80 <--> c-basic-offset
81
82 struct larch
83 the_larch, <- c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont
84 another_larch; <- c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont
85
86 \(This function is mainly provided to mimic the behavior of CC Mode
87 5.28 and earlier where this case wasn't handled consistently so that
88 these lines could be analyzed as either topmost-intro-cont or
89 statement-cont.)
90
91 Works with: topmost-intro-cont."
92 (save-excursion
93 (beginning-of-line)
94 (c-backward-syntactic-ws (cdr langelem))
95 (if (memq (char-before) '(?} ?,))
96 c-basic-offset)))
97
98 (defun c-lineup-arglist (langelem)
99 "Line up the current argument line under the first argument.
100
101 As a special case, if an argument on the same line as the open
102 parenthesis starts with a brace block opener, the indentation is
103 `c-basic-offset' only. This is intended as a \"DWIM\" measure in
104 cases like macros that contains statement blocks, e.g:
105
106 A_VERY_LONG_MACRO_NAME ({
107 some (code, with + long, lines * in[it]);
108 });
109 <--> c-basic-offset
110
111 This is motivated partly because it's more in line with how code
112 blocks are handled, and partly since it approximates the behavior of
113 earlier CC Mode versions, which due to inaccurate analysis tended to
114 indent such cases this way.
115
116 Works with: arglist-cont-nonempty, arglist-close."
117 (save-excursion
118 (goto-char (1+ (elt c-syntactic-element 2)))
119
120 ;; Don't stop in the middle of a special brace list opener
121 ;; like "({".
122 (when c-special-brace-lists
123 (let ((special-list (c-looking-at-special-brace-list)))
124 (when special-list
125 (goto-char (+ (car (car special-list)) 2)))))
126
127 (let ((savepos (point))
128 (eol (c-point 'eol)))
129
130 ;; Find out if an argument on the same line starts with an
131 ;; unclosed open brace paren. Note similar code in
132 ;; `c-lineup-close-paren' and
133 ;; `c-lineup-arglist-close-under-paren'.
134 (if (and (c-syntactic-re-search-forward "{" eol t t)
135 (looking-at c-syntactic-eol)
136 (progn (backward-char)
137 (not (c-looking-at-special-brace-list)))
138 (progn (c-backward-syntactic-ws)
139 (or (= (point) savepos)
140 (eq (char-before) ?,))))
141 c-basic-offset
142
143 ;; Normal case. Indent to the token after the arglist open paren.
144 (goto-char savepos)
145 (c-forward-syntactic-ws)
146 (when (< (point) eol)
147 (goto-char savepos)
148 (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
149 (vector (current-column))))))
150
151 ;; Contributed by Kevin Ryde <user42@zip.com.au>.
152 (defun c-lineup-argcont (elem)
153 "Line up a continued argument.
154
155 foo (xyz, aaa + bbb + ccc
156 + ddd + eee + fff); <- c-lineup-argcont
157
158 Only continuation lines like this are touched, nil is returned on lines
159 which are the start of an argument.
160
161 Within a gcc asm block, \":\" is recognised as an argument separator,
162 but of course only between operand specifications, not in the expressions
163 for the operands.
164
165 Works with: arglist-cont, arglist-cont-nonempty."
166
167 (save-excursion
168 (beginning-of-line)
169
170 (when (eq (car elem) 'arglist-cont-nonempty)
171 ;; Our argument list might not be the innermost one. If it
172 ;; isn't, go back to the last position in it. We do this by
173 ;; stepping back over open parens until we get to the open paren
174 ;; of our argument list.
175 (let ((open-paren (elt c-syntactic-element 2))
176 (paren-state (c-parse-state)))
177 (while (not (eq (car paren-state) open-paren))
178 (goto-char (car paren-state))
179 (setq paren-state (cdr paren-state)))))
180
181 (let ((start (point)) c)
182
183 (when (bolp)
184 ;; Previous line ending in a comma means we're the start of an
185 ;; argument. This should quickly catch most cases not for us.
186 ;; This case is only applicable if we're the innermost arglist.
187 (c-backward-syntactic-ws)
188 (setq c (char-before)))
189
190 (unless (eq c ?,)
191 ;; In a gcc asm, ":" on the previous line means the start of an
192 ;; argument. And lines starting with ":" are not for us, don't
193 ;; want them to indent to the preceding operand.
194 (let ((gcc-asm (save-excursion
195 (goto-char start)
196 (c-in-gcc-asm-p))))
197 (unless (and gcc-asm
198 (or (eq c ?:)
199 (save-excursion
200 (goto-char start)
201 (looking-at "[ \t]*:"))))
202
203 (c-lineup-argcont-scan (if gcc-asm ?:))
204 (vector (current-column))))))))
205
206 (defun c-lineup-argcont-scan (&optional other-match)
207 ;; Find the start of an argument, for `c-lineup-argcont'.
208 (when (zerop (c-backward-token-2 1 t))
209 (let ((c (char-after)))
210 (if (or (eq c ?,) (eq c other-match))
211 (progn
212 (forward-char)
213 (c-forward-syntactic-ws))
214 (c-lineup-argcont-scan other-match)))))
215
216 (defun c-lineup-arglist-intro-after-paren (langelem)
217 "Line up a line to just after the open paren of the surrounding paren
218 or brace block.
219
220 Works with: defun-block-intro, brace-list-intro,
221 statement-block-intro, statement-case-intro, arglist-intro."
222 (save-excursion
223 (beginning-of-line)
224 (backward-up-list 1)
225 (skip-chars-forward " \t" (c-point 'eol))
226 (vector (1+ (current-column)))))
227
228 (defun c-lineup-arglist-close-under-paren (langelem)
229 "Line up a line under the enclosing open paren.
230 Normally used to line up a closing paren in the same column as its
231 corresponding open paren, but can also be used with arglist-cont and
232 arglist-cont-nonempty to line up all lines inside a parenthesis under
233 the open paren.
234
235 As a special case, if a brace block is opened at the same line as the
236 open parenthesis of the argument list, the indentation is
237 `c-basic-offset' only. See `c-lineup-arglist' for further discussion
238 of this \"DWIM\" measure.
239
240 Works with: Almost all symbols, but are typically most useful on
241 arglist-close, brace-list-close, arglist-cont and arglist-cont-nonempty."
242 (save-excursion
243 (let (special-list paren-start savepos)
244 (if (memq (car langelem) '(arglist-cont-nonempty arglist-close))
245 (goto-char (elt c-syntactic-element 2))
246 (beginning-of-line)
247 (c-go-up-list-backward))
248
249 (if (and c-special-brace-lists
250 (setq special-list (c-looking-at-special-brace-list)))
251 ;; Don't stop in the middle of a special brace list opener
252 ;; like "({".
253 (progn
254 (setq paren-start (car (car special-list)))
255 (goto-char (+ paren-start 2)))
256 (setq paren-start (point))
257 (forward-char 1))
258
259 (setq savepos (point))
260 ;; Find out if an argument on the same line starts with an
261 ;; unclosed open brace paren. Note similar code in
262 ;; `c-lineup-arglist' and `c-lineup-close-paren'.
263 (if (and (c-syntactic-re-search-forward "{" (c-point 'eol) t t)
264 (looking-at c-syntactic-eol)
265 (progn (backward-char)
266 (not (c-looking-at-special-brace-list)))
267 (progn (c-backward-syntactic-ws)
268 (or (= (point) savepos)
269 (eq (char-before) ?,))))
270 c-basic-offset
271
272 ;; Normal case. Indent to the arglist open paren.
273 (goto-char paren-start)
274 (vector (current-column))))))
275
276 (defun c-lineup-arglist-operators (langelem)
277 "Line up lines starting with an infix operator under the open paren.
278 Return nil on lines that don't start with an operator, to leave those
279 cases to other lineup functions. Example:
280
281 if ( x < 10
282 || at_limit (x, <- c-lineup-arglist-operators
283 list) <- c-lineup-arglist-operators returns nil
284 )
285
286 Since this function doesn't do anything for lines without an infix
287 operator you typically want to use it together with some other lineup
288 settings, e.g. as follows \(the arglist-close setting is just a
289 suggestion to get a consistent style):
290
291 \(c-set-offset 'arglist-cont '(c-lineup-arglist-operators 0))
292 \(c-set-offset 'arglist-cont-nonempty '(c-lineup-arglist-operators
293 c-lineup-arglist))
294 \(c-set-offset 'arglist-close '(c-lineup-arglist-close-under-paren))
295
296 Works with: arglist-cont, arglist-cont-nonempty."
297 (save-excursion
298 (back-to-indentation)
299 (when (looking-at "[-+|&*%<>=]\\|\\(/[^/*]\\)")
300 ;; '-' can be both an infix and a prefix operator, but I'm lazy now..
301 (c-lineup-arglist-close-under-paren langelem))))
302
303 (defun c-lineup-close-paren (langelem)
304 "Line up the closing paren under its corresponding open paren if the
305 open paren is followed by code. If the open paren ends its line, no
306 indentation is added. E.g:
307
308 main (int, main (
309 char ** int, char **
310 ) <-> ) <- c-lineup-close-paren
311
312 As a special case, if a brace block is opened at the same line as the
313 open parenthesis of the argument list, the indentation is
314 `c-basic-offset' instead of the open paren column. See
315 `c-lineup-arglist' for further discussion of this \"DWIM\" measure.
316
317 Works with: All *-close symbols."
318 (save-excursion
319 (beginning-of-line)
320 (c-go-up-list-backward)
321
322 (let ((spec (c-looking-at-special-brace-list)) savepos argstart)
323 (if spec (goto-char (car (car spec))))
324 (setq savepos (point))
325 (forward-char 1)
326 (when spec
327 (c-forward-syntactic-ws)
328 (forward-char 1))
329
330 (if (looking-at c-syntactic-eol)
331 ;; The arglist is "empty".
332 0
333
334 ;; Find out if an argument on the same line starts with an
335 ;; unclosed open brace paren. Note similar code in
336 ;; `c-lineup-arglist' and
337 ;; `c-lineup-arglist-close-under-paren'.
338 (setq argstart (point))
339 (if (and (c-syntactic-re-search-forward "{" (c-point 'eol) t t)
340 (looking-at c-syntactic-eol)
341 (progn (backward-char)
342 (not (c-looking-at-special-brace-list)))
343 (progn (c-backward-syntactic-ws)
344 (or (= (point) argstart)
345 (eq (char-before) ?,))))
346 c-basic-offset
347
348 ;; Normal case. Indent to the arglist open paren.
349 (goto-char savepos)
350 (vector (current-column)))))))
351
352 (defun c-lineup-streamop (langelem)
353 "Line up C++ stream operators under each other.
354
355 Works with: stream-op."
356 (save-excursion
357 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
358 (re-search-forward "<<\\|>>" (c-point 'eol) 'move)
359 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
360 (vector (current-column))))
361
362 (defun c-lineup-multi-inher (langelem)
363 "Line up the classes in C++ multiple inheritance clauses and member
364 initializers under each other. E.g:
365
366 class Foo: Foo::Foo (int a, int b):
367 public Cyphr, Cyphr (a),
368 public Bar <-> Bar (b) <- c-lineup-multi-inher
369
370 class Foo Foo::Foo (int a, int b)
371 : public Cyphr, : Cyphr (a),
372 public Bar <-> Bar (b) <- c-lineup-multi-inher
373
374 class Foo Foo::Foo (int a, int b)
375 : public Cyphr : Cyphr (a)
376 , public Bar <-> , Bar (b) <- c-lineup-multi-inher
377
378 Works with: inher-cont, member-init-cont."
379 (save-excursion
380 (back-to-indentation)
381 (let* ((eol (c-point 'eol))
382 (here (point))
383 (char-after-ip (progn
384 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
385 (char-after))))
386 (if (cdr langelem) (goto-char (cdr langelem)))
387
388 ;; This kludge is necessary to support both inher-cont and
389 ;; member-init-cont, since they have different anchor positions.
390 (c-backward-syntactic-ws)
391 (when (eq (char-before) ?:)
392 (backward-char)
393 (c-backward-syntactic-ws))
394
395 (skip-chars-forward "^:" eol)
396 (if (eq char-after-ip ?,)
397 (skip-chars-forward " \t" eol)
398 (skip-chars-forward " \t:" eol))
399 (if (or (eolp)
400 (looking-at c-comment-start-regexp))
401 (c-forward-syntactic-ws here))
402 (if (< (point) here)
403 (vector (current-column)))
404 )))
405
406 (defun c-lineup-java-inher (langelem)
407 "Line up Java implements and extends declarations.
408 If class names follow on the same line as the implements/extends
409 keyword, they are lined up under each other. Otherwise, they are
410 indented by adding `c-basic-offset' to the column of the keyword.
411 E.g:
412
413 class Foo class Foo
414 extends extends Cyphr,
415 Bar <-> Bar <- c-lineup-java-inher
416 <--> c-basic-offset
417
418 Works with: inher-cont."
419 (save-excursion
420 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
421 (forward-word 1)
422 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*$")
423 c-basic-offset
424 (c-forward-syntactic-ws)
425 (vector (current-column)))))
426
427 (defun c-lineup-java-throws (langelem)
428 "Line up Java throws declarations.
429 If exception names follow on the same line as the throws keyword,
430 they are lined up under each other. Otherwise, they are indented by
431 adding `c-basic-offset' to the column of the throws keyword. The
432 throws keyword itself is also indented by `c-basic-offset' from the
433 function declaration start if it doesn't hang. E.g:
434
435 int foo() int foo() throws Cyphr,
436 throws <-> Bar, <- c-lineup-java-throws
437 Bar <-> Vlod <- c-lineup-java-throws
438 <--><--> c-basic-offset
439
440 Works with: func-decl-cont."
441 (save-excursion
442 (let* ((lim (1- (c-point 'bol)))
443 (throws (catch 'done
444 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
445 (while (zerop (c-forward-token-2 1 t lim))
446 (if (looking-at "throws\\>[^_]")
447 (throw 'done t))))))
448 (if throws
449 (if (zerop (c-forward-token-2 1 nil (c-point 'eol)))
450 (vector (current-column))
451 (back-to-indentation)
452 (vector (+ (current-column) c-basic-offset)))
453 c-basic-offset))))
454
455 (defun c-indent-one-line-block (langelem)
456 "Indent a one line block `c-basic-offset' extra.
457 E.g:
458
459 if (n > 0) if (n > 0)
460 {m+=n; n=0;} <-> { <- c-indent-one-line-block
461 <--> c-basic-offset m+=n; n=0;
462 }
463
464 The block may use any kind of parenthesis character. nil is returned
465 if the line doesn't start with a one line block, which makes the
466 function usable in list expressions.
467
468 Work with: Almost all syntactic symbols, but most useful on *-open."
469 (save-excursion
470 (let ((eol (c-point 'eol)))
471 (back-to-indentation)
472 (if (and (eq (char-syntax (char-after)) ?\()
473 (c-safe (progn (c-forward-sexp) t))
474 (<= (point) eol))
475 c-basic-offset
476 nil))))
477
478 (defun c-indent-multi-line-block (langelem)
479 "Indent a multi line block `c-basic-offset' extra.
480 E.g:
481
482 int *foo[] = { int *foo[] = {
483 NULL, NULL,
484 {17}, <-> { <- c-indent-multi-line-block
485 17
486 }
487 <--> c-basic-offset
488
489 The block may use any kind of parenthesis character. nil is returned
490 if the line doesn't start with a multi line block, which makes the
491 function usable in list expressions.
492
493 Work with: Almost all syntactic symbols, but most useful on *-open."
494 (save-excursion
495 (let ((eol (c-point 'eol)))
496 (back-to-indentation)
497 (if (and (eq (char-syntax (char-after)) ?\()
498 (or (not (c-safe (progn (c-forward-sexp) t)))
499 (> (point) eol)))
500 c-basic-offset
501 nil))))
502
503 (defun c-lineup-C-comments (langelem)
504 "Line up C block comment continuation lines.
505 Various heuristics are used to handle many of the common comment
506 styles. Some examples:
507
508 /* /** /* /* text /* /**
509 * text * text text text ** text ** text
510 */ */ */ */ */ */
511
512 /*********************************************************************
513 * text
514 ********************************************************************/
515
516 /*********************************************************************
517 Free form text comments:
518 In comments with a long delimiter line at the start, the indentation
519 is kept unchanged for lines that start with an empty comment line
520 prefix. The delimiter line is whatever matches the
521 `comment-start-skip' regexp.
522 *********************************************************************/
523
524 The variable `c-comment-prefix-regexp' is used to recognize the
525 comment line prefix, e.g. the `*' that usually starts every line
526 inside a comment.
527
528 Works with: The `c' syntactic symbol."
529 (save-excursion
530 (let* ((here (point))
531 (prefixlen (progn (back-to-indentation)
532 (if (looking-at c-current-comment-prefix)
533 (- (match-end 0) (point))
534 0)))
535 (starterlen
536 ;; Get the length of the comment starter, not including
537 ;; the first '/'. We check if the comment prefix matched
538 ;; on the current line matches the starter or if it
539 ;; matches comment-start-skip, and choose whichever is
540 ;; longest.
541 (max (save-excursion
542 (goto-char (1+ (cdr langelem)))
543 (if (and (match-string 0)
544 (looking-at (regexp-quote (match-string 0))))
545 (- (match-end 0) (match-beginning 0))
546 0))
547 (save-excursion
548 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
549 (looking-at comment-start-skip)
550 (- (or (match-end 1)
551 (save-excursion
552 (goto-char (match-end 0))
553 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
554 (point)))
555 (point)
556 1)))))
557 (if (and (> starterlen 10) (zerop prefixlen))
558 ;; The comment has a long starter and the line doesn't have
559 ;; a nonempty comment prefix. Treat it as free form text
560 ;; and don't change the indentation.
561 (vector (current-column))
562 (forward-line -1)
563 (back-to-indentation)
564 (if (>= (cdr langelem) (point))
565 ;; On the second line in the comment.
566 (if (zerop prefixlen)
567 ;; No nonempty comment prefix. Align after comment
568 ;; starter.
569 (progn
570 (goto-char (match-end 0))
571 ;; The following should not be necessary, since
572 ;; comment-start-skip should match everything (i.e.
573 ;; typically whitespace) that leads up to the text.
574 ;;(if (looking-at "\\([ \t]+\\).+$")
575 ;; ;; Align with the text that hangs after the
576 ;; ;; comment starter.
577 ;; (goto-char (match-end 1)))
578 (vector (current-column)))
579 ;; How long is the comment starter? if greater than the
580 ;; length of the comment prefix, align left. if less
581 ;; than or equal, align right. this should also pick up
582 ;; Javadoc style comments.
583 (if (> starterlen prefixlen)
584 (progn
585 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
586 (vector (1+ (current-column))))
587 (goto-char (+ (cdr langelem) starterlen 1))
588 (vector (- (current-column) prefixlen))))
589 ;; Not on the second line in the comment. If the previous
590 ;; line has a nonempty comment prefix, align with it.
591 ;; Otherwise, align with the previous nonempty line, but
592 ;; align the comment ender with the starter.
593 (when (or (not (looking-at c-current-comment-prefix))
594 (eq (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)))
595 (goto-char here)
596 (back-to-indentation)
597 (if (looking-at (concat "\\(" c-current-comment-prefix "\\)\\*/"))
598 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
599 (while (and (zerop (forward-line -1))
600 (looking-at "^[ \t]*$")))
601 (back-to-indentation)
602 (if (< (point) (cdr langelem))
603 ;; Align with the comment starter rather than
604 ;; with the code before it.
605 (goto-char (cdr langelem)))))
606 (vector (current-column)))))))
607
608 (defun c-lineup-comment (langelem)
609 "Line up a comment start according to `c-comment-only-line-offset'.
610 If the comment is lined up with a comment starter on the previous
611 line, that alignment is preserved.
612
613 Works with: comment-intro."
614 (save-excursion
615 (back-to-indentation)
616 (let ((col (current-column)))
617 (cond
618 ;; CASE 1: preserve aligned comments
619 ((save-excursion
620 (and (c-backward-single-comment)
621 (= col (current-column))))
622 (vector col)) ; Return an absolute column.
623 ;; indent as specified by c-comment-only-line-offset
624 ((not (bolp))
625 (or (car-safe c-comment-only-line-offset)
626 c-comment-only-line-offset))
627 (t
628 (or (cdr-safe c-comment-only-line-offset)
629 (car-safe c-comment-only-line-offset)
630 -1000)) ;jam it against the left side
631 ))))
632
633 (defun c-lineup-knr-region-comment (langelem)
634 "Line up a comment in the \"K&R region\" with the declaration.
635 That is the region between the function or class header and the
636 beginning of the block. E.g:
637
638 int main()
639 /* This is the main function. */ <- c-lineup-knr-region-comment
640 {
641 return 0;
642 }
643
644 Return nil if called in any other situation, to be useful in list
645 expressions.
646
647 Works with: comment-intro."
648 (when (or (assq 'topmost-intro-cont c-syntactic-context)
649 (assq 'func-decl-cont c-syntactic-context)
650 (assq 'knr-argdecl-intro c-syntactic-context)
651 (assq 'lambda-intro-cont c-syntactic-context))
652 (save-excursion
653 (beginning-of-line)
654 (c-beginning-of-statement-1)
655 (vector (current-column)))))
656
657 (defun c-lineup-runin-statements (langelem)
658 "Line up statements when the first statement is on the same line as
659 the block opening brace. E.g:
660
661 int main()
662 { puts (\"Hello world!\");
663 return 0; <- c-lineup-runin-statements
664 }
665
666 If there is no statement after the opening brace to align with, nil is
667 returned. This makes the function usable in list expressions.
668
669 Works with: The `statement' syntactic symbol."
670 (if (eq (char-after (cdr langelem)) ?{)
671 (save-excursion
672 (if (cdr langelem) (goto-char (cdr langelem)))
673 (forward-char 1)
674 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
675 (unless (eolp)
676 (vector (current-column))))))
677
678 (defun c-lineup-math (langelem)
679 "Line up the current line after the equal sign on the first line in
680 the statement. If there isn't any, indent with `c-basic-offset'. If
681 the current line contains an equal sign too, try to align it with the
682 first one.
683
684 Works with: topmost-intro-cont, statement-cont, arglist-cont,
685 arglist-cont-nonempty."
686 (let (startpos endpos equalp)
687
688 (if (eq (car langelem) 'arglist-cont-nonempty)
689 ;; If it's an arglist-cont-nonempty then we're only interested
690 ;; in equal signs outside it. We don't search for a "=" on
691 ;; the current line since that'd have a different nesting
692 ;; compared to the one we should align with.
693 (save-excursion
694 (save-restriction
695 (setq endpos (nth 2 c-syntactic-element))
696 (narrow-to-region (cdr langelem) endpos)
697 (if (setq startpos (c-up-list-backward endpos))
698 (setq startpos (1+ startpos))
699 (setq startpos (cdr langelem)))))
700
701 (setq startpos (cdr langelem)
702 endpos (point))
703
704 ;; Find a syntactically relevant and unnested "=" token on the
705 ;; current line. equalp is in that case set to the number of
706 ;; columns to left shift the current line to align it with the
707 ;; goal column.
708 (save-excursion
709 (beginning-of-line)
710 (when (c-syntactic-re-search-forward
711 c-assignment-op-regexp
712 (c-point 'eol) t t t)
713 (setq equalp (- (or (match-beginning 1)
714 (match-end 0))
715 (c-point 'boi))))))
716
717 (save-excursion
718 (goto-char startpos)
719 (if (or (if (c-syntactic-re-search-forward
720 c-assignment-op-regexp
721 (min endpos (c-point 'eol)) t t t)
722 (progn
723 (goto-char (or (match-beginning 1)
724 (match-end 0)))
725 nil)
726 t)
727 (save-excursion
728 (c-forward-syntactic-ws (c-point 'eol))
729 (eolp)))
730 ;; There's no equal sign on the line, or there is one but
731 ;; nothing follows it.
732 c-basic-offset
733
734 ;; calculate indentation column after equals and ws, unless
735 ;; our line contains an equals sign
736 (if (not equalp)
737 (progn
738 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
739 (setq equalp 0)))
740
741 (vector (- (current-column) equalp)))
742 )))
743
744 (defun c-lineup-cascaded-calls (langelem)
745 "Line up \"cascaded calls\" under each other.
746 If the line begins with \"->\" or \".\" and the preceding line ends
747 with one or more function calls preceded by the same token, then the
748 arrow is lined up with the first of those tokens. E.g:
749
750 result = proc->add(17)->add(18)
751 ->add(19) + <- c-lineup-cascaded-calls
752 offset; <- c-lineup-cascaded-calls (inactive)
753
754 In any other situation nil is returned to allow use in list
755 expressions.
756
757 Works with: topmost-intro-cont, statement-cont, arglist-cont,
758 arglist-cont-nonempty."
759
760 (if (and (eq (car langelem) 'arglist-cont-nonempty)
761 (not (eq (nth 2 c-syntactic-element)
762 (c-most-enclosing-brace (c-parse-state)))))
763 ;; The innermost open paren is not our one, so don't do
764 ;; anything. This can occur for arglist-cont-nonempty with
765 ;; nested arglist starts on the same line.
766 nil
767
768 (save-excursion
769 (back-to-indentation)
770 (let ((operator (and (looking-at "->\\|\\.")
771 (regexp-quote (match-string 0))))
772 (stmt-start (cdr langelem)) col)
773
774 (when (and operator
775 (looking-at operator)
776 (zerop (c-backward-token-2 1 t stmt-start))
777 (eq (char-after) ?\()
778 (zerop (c-backward-token-2 2 t stmt-start))
779 (looking-at operator))
780 (setq col (current-column))
781
782 (while (and (zerop (c-backward-token-2 1 t stmt-start))
783 (eq (char-after) ?\()
784 (zerop (c-backward-token-2 2 t stmt-start))
785 (looking-at operator))
786 (setq col (current-column)))
787
788 (vector col))))))
789
790 (defun c-lineup-string-cont (langelem)
791 "Line up a continued string under the one it continues.
792 A continued string in this sense is where a string literal follows
793 directly after another one. E.g:
794
795 result = prefix + \"A message \"
796 \"string.\"; <- c-lineup-string-cont
797
798 Nil is returned in other situations, to allow stacking with other
799 lineup functions.
800
801 Works with: topmost-intro-cont, statement-cont, arglist-cont,
802 arglist-cont-nonempty."
803 (save-excursion
804 (back-to-indentation)
805 (and (looking-at "\\s\"")
806 (let ((quote (char-after)) pos)
807 (while (and (progn (c-backward-syntactic-ws)
808 (eq (char-before) quote))
809 (c-safe (c-backward-sexp) t)
810 (/= (setq pos (point)) (c-point 'boi))))
811 (when pos
812 (goto-char pos)
813 (vector (current-column)))))))
814
815 (defun c-lineup-template-args (langelem)
816 "Line up template argument lines under the first argument.
817 To allow this function to be used in a list expression, nil is
818 returned if there's no template argument on the first line.
819
820 Works with: template-args-cont."
821 (save-excursion
822 (c-with-syntax-table c++-template-syntax-table
823 (beginning-of-line)
824 (backward-up-list 1)
825 (if (and (eq (char-after) ?<)
826 (zerop (c-forward-token-2 1 nil (c-point 'eol))))
827 (vector (current-column))))))
828
829 (defun c-lineup-ObjC-method-call (langelem)
830 "Line up selector args as Emacs Lisp mode does with function args:
831 Go to the position right after the message receiver, and if you are at
832 the end of the line, indent the current line c-basic-offset columns
833 from the opening bracket; otherwise you are looking at the first
834 character of the first method call argument, so lineup the current
835 line with it.
836
837 Works with: objc-method-call-cont."
838 (save-excursion
839 (let* ((extra (save-excursion
840 (back-to-indentation)
841 (c-backward-syntactic-ws (cdr langelem))
842 (if (eq (char-before) ?:)
843 (- c-basic-offset)
844 0)))
845 (open-bracket-pos (cdr langelem))
846 (open-bracket-col (progn
847 (goto-char open-bracket-pos)
848 (current-column)))
849 (target-col (progn
850 (forward-char)
851 (c-forward-sexp)
852 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
853 (if (eolp)
854 (+ open-bracket-col c-basic-offset)
855 (current-column))))
856 )
857 (- target-col open-bracket-col extra))))
858
859 (defun c-lineup-ObjC-method-args (langelem)
860 "Line up the colons that separate args.
861 The colon on the current line is aligned with the one on the first
862 line.
863
864 Works with: objc-method-args-cont."
865 (save-excursion
866 (let* ((here (c-point 'boi))
867 (curcol (progn (goto-char here) (current-column)))
868 (eol (c-point 'eol))
869 (relpos (cdr langelem))
870 (first-col-column (progn
871 (goto-char relpos)
872 (skip-chars-forward "^:" eol)
873 (and (eq (char-after) ?:)
874 (current-column)))))
875 (if (not first-col-column)
876 c-basic-offset
877 (goto-char here)
878 (skip-chars-forward "^:" eol)
879 (if (eq (char-after) ?:)
880 (+ curcol (- first-col-column (current-column)))
881 c-basic-offset)))))
882
883 (defun c-lineup-ObjC-method-args-2 (langelem)
884 "Line up the colons that separate args.
885 The colon on the current line is aligned with the one on the previous
886 line.
887
888 Works with: objc-method-args-cont."
889 (save-excursion
890 (let* ((here (c-point 'boi))
891 (curcol (progn (goto-char here) (current-column)))
892 (eol (c-point 'eol))
893 (relpos (cdr langelem))
894 (prev-col-column (progn
895 (skip-chars-backward "^:" relpos)
896 (and (eq (char-before) ?:)
897 (- (current-column) 1)))))
898 (if (not prev-col-column)
899 c-basic-offset
900 (goto-char here)
901 (skip-chars-forward "^:" eol)
902 (if (eq (char-after) ?:)
903 (+ curcol (- prev-col-column (current-column)))
904 c-basic-offset)))))
905
906 (defun c-lineup-inexpr-block (langelem)
907 "Line up the block for constructs that use a block inside an expression,
908 e.g. anonymous classes in Java and lambda functions in Pike. The body
909 is aligned with the start of the header, e.g. with the \"new\" or
910 \"lambda\" keyword. Returns nil if the block isn't part of such a
911 construct.
912
913 Works with: inlambda, inexpr-statement, inexpr-class."
914 (save-excursion
915 (back-to-indentation)
916 (let* ((paren-state (c-parse-state))
917 (containing-sexp (c-most-enclosing-brace paren-state))
918 (res (or (c-looking-at-inexpr-block
919 (c-safe-position containing-sexp paren-state)
920 containing-sexp)
921 (and containing-sexp
922 (progn (goto-char containing-sexp)
923 (eq (char-after) ?{))
924 (progn (setq containing-sexp
925 (c-most-enclosing-brace paren-state
926 (point)))
927 (c-looking-at-inexpr-block
928 (c-safe-position containing-sexp paren-state)
929 containing-sexp))))))
930 (when res
931 (goto-char (cdr res))
932 (- (current-column)
933 (progn
934 (back-to-indentation)
935 (current-column)))))))
936
937 (defun c-lineup-whitesmith-in-block (langelem)
938 "Line up lines inside a block in whitesmith style.
939 It's done in a way that works both when the opening brace hangs and
940 when it doesn't. E.g:
941
942 something
943 { something {
944 foo; <-> foo; <- c-lineup-whitesmith-in-block
945 } }
946 <--> c-basic-offset
947
948 In the first case the indentation is kept unchanged, in the
949 second `c-basic-offset' is added.
950
951 Works with: defun-close, defun-block-intro, block-close,
952 brace-list-close, brace-list-intro, statement-block-intro and all in*
953 symbols, e.g. inclass and inextern-lang."
954 (save-excursion
955 (goto-char (cdr langelem))
956 (back-to-indentation)
957 (if (eq (char-syntax (char-after)) ?\()
958 0
959 c-basic-offset)))
960
961 (defun c-lineup-cpp-define (langelem)
962 "Line up macro continuation lines according to the indentation of
963 the construct preceding the macro. E.g:
964
965 v beg of preceding constr v beg of preceding constr
966 int dribble() {
967 const char msg[] = if (!running)
968 \"Some text.\"; error(\"Not running!\");
969
970 #define X(A, B) \ #define X(A, B) \
971 do { \ <-> do { \ <- c-lineup-cpp-define
972 printf (A, B); \ printf (A, B); \
973 } while (0) } while (0)
974
975 If `c-syntactic-indentation-in-macros' is non-nil, the function
976 returns the relative indentation to the macro start line to allow
977 accumulation with other offsets. E.g. in the following cases,
978 cpp-define-intro is combined with the statement-block-intro that comes
979 from the \"do {\" that hangs on the \"#define\" line:
980
981 int dribble() {
982 const char msg[] = if (!running)
983 \"Some text.\"; error(\"Not running!\");
984
985 #define X(A, B) do { \ #define X(A, B) do { \
986 printf (A, B); \ <-> printf (A, B); \ <- c-lineup-cpp-define
987 this->refs++; \ this->refs++; \
988 } while (0) <-> } while (0) <- c-lineup-cpp-define
989
990 The relative indentation returned by `c-lineup-cpp-define' is zero and
991 two, respectively, in these two examples. They are then added to the
992 two column indentation that statement-block-intro gives in both cases
993 here.
994
995 If the relative indentation is zero, then nil is returned instead.
996 That is useful in a list expression to specify the default indentation
997 on the top level.
998
999 If `c-syntactic-indentation-in-macros' is nil then this function keeps
1000 the current indentation, except for empty lines \(ignoring the ending
1001 backslash) where it takes the indentation from the closest preceding
1002 nonempty line in the macro. If there's no such line in the macro then
1003 the indentation is taken from the construct preceding it, as described
1004 above.
1005
1006 Works with: cpp-define-intro."
1007 (let (offset)
1008 (if c-syntactic-indentation-in-macros
1009 ;; Go to the macro start and do a syntactic analysis of it.
1010 ;; Then remove the cpp-macro element it should contain and
1011 ;; calculate the indentation it then would get.
1012 (save-excursion
1013 (c-beginning-of-macro)
1014 (setq offset (- (c-get-syntactic-indentation
1015 (delete '(cpp-macro) (c-guess-basic-syntax)))
1016 (save-excursion
1017 (back-to-indentation)
1018 (current-column))))
1019 (if (zerop offset)
1020 nil
1021 offset))
1022 ;; Do not indent syntactically inside the macro.
1023 (save-excursion
1024 (let ((macro-start-line (save-excursion
1025 (goto-char (c-query-macro-start))
1026 (beginning-of-line)
1027 (point))))
1028 (beginning-of-line)
1029 ;; Check every line while inside the macro.
1030 (while (and (> (point) macro-start-line)
1031 (looking-at "[ \t]*\\\\?$")
1032 (= (forward-line -1) 0)))
1033 (if (<= (point) macro-start-line)
1034 ;; If we've stepped out of the macro we take the
1035 ;; syntactic offset.
1036 (setq offset (c-get-syntactic-indentation
1037 (delete '(cpp-macro) (c-guess-basic-syntax))))
1038 (setq offset (current-indentation)))
1039 (if (zerop offset)
1040 nil
1041 (vector offset)))))))
1042
1043 ;; Contributed by Kevin Ryde <user42@zip.com.au>.
1044 (defun c-lineup-gcc-asm-reg (elem)
1045 "Line up a gcc asm register under one on a previous line.
1046
1047 asm (\"foo %1, %0\\n\"
1048 \"bar %0, %1\"
1049 : \"=r\" (w),
1050 \"=r\" (x)
1051 : \"0\" (y),
1052 \"1\" (z));
1053
1054 The \"x\" line is aligned to the text after the \":\" on the \"w\" line, and
1055 similarly \"z\" under \"y\".
1056
1057 This is done only in an \"asm\" or \"__asm__\" block, and only to those
1058 lines mentioned. Anywhere else nil is returned. The usual arrangement is
1059 to have this routine as an extra feature at the start of arglist lineups, e.g.
1060
1061 (c-lineup-gcc-asm-reg c-lineup-arglist)
1062
1063 Works with: arglist-cont, arglist-cont-nonempty."
1064
1065 (let ((orig-pos (point))
1066 alignto)
1067 (save-excursion
1068 (and
1069 c-opt-asm-stmt-key
1070
1071 ;; Don't do anything if the innermost open paren isn't our one.
1072 ;; This can occur for arglist-cont-nonempty with nested arglist
1073 ;; starts on the same line.
1074 (or (not (eq (car elem) 'arglist-cont-nonempty))
1075 (eq (elt c-syntactic-element 2)
1076 (c-most-enclosing-brace (c-parse-state))))
1077
1078 ;; Find the ":" to align to. Look for this first so as to quickly
1079 ;; eliminate pretty much all cases which are not for us.
1080 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*:[ \t]*\\(.\\)?" (cdr elem) t)
1081
1082 ;; Must have something after the ":".
1083 (setq alignto (match-beginning 1))
1084
1085 ;; Don't touch ":" lines themselves.
1086 (progn (goto-char orig-pos)
1087 (beginning-of-line)
1088 (not (looking-at "^[ \t]*:")))
1089
1090 ;; Only operate in an asm statement.
1091 (progn (goto-char orig-pos)
1092 (c-in-gcc-asm-p))
1093
1094 (vector (progn (goto-char alignto) (current-column)))))))
1095
1096 (defun c-lineup-dont-change (langelem)
1097 "Do not change the indentation of the current line.
1098
1099 Works with: Any syntactic symbol."
1100 (save-excursion
1101 (back-to-indentation)
1102 (vector (current-column))))
1103
1104 \f
1105 (defun c-snug-do-while (syntax pos)
1106 "Dynamically calculate brace hanginess for do-while statements.
1107 Using this function, `while' clauses that end a `do-while' block will
1108 remain on the same line as the brace that closes that block.
1109
1110 See `c-hanging-braces-alist' for how to utilize this function as an
1111 ACTION associated with `block-close' syntax."
1112 (save-excursion
1113 (let (langelem)
1114 (if (and (eq syntax 'block-close)
1115 (setq langelem (assq 'block-close c-syntactic-context))
1116 (progn (goto-char (elt langelem 1))
1117 (if (eq (char-after) ?{)
1118 (c-safe (c-forward-sexp -1)))
1119 (looking-at "\\<do\\>[^_]")))
1120 '(before)
1121 '(before after)))))
1122
1123 (defun c-gnu-impose-minimum ()
1124 "Imposes a minimum indentation for lines inside code blocks.
1125 The variable `c-label-minimum-indentation' specifies the minimum
1126 indentation amount."
1127
1128 (when (and (not
1129 ;; Don't adjust macro or comment-only lines.
1130 (or (assq 'cpp-macro c-syntactic-context)
1131 (assq 'comment-intro c-syntactic-context)))
1132 (c-intersect-lists c-inside-block-syms c-syntactic-context)
1133 (save-excursion
1134 (back-to-indentation)
1135 (< (current-column) c-label-minimum-indentation)))
1136 (c-shift-line-indentation (- c-label-minimum-indentation
1137 (current-indentation)))))
1138
1139 \f
1140 ;; Useful for c-hanging-semi&comma-criteria
1141
1142 (defun c-semi&comma-inside-parenlist ()
1143 "Controls newline insertion after semicolons in parenthesis lists.
1144 If a comma was inserted, no determination is made. If a semicolon was
1145 inserted inside a parenthesis list, no newline is added otherwise a
1146 newline is added. In either case, checking is stopped. This supports
1147 exactly the old newline insertion behavior."
1148 ;; newline only after semicolon, but only if that semicolon is not
1149 ;; inside a parenthesis list (e.g. a for loop statement)
1150 (if (not (eq last-command-char ?\;))
1151 nil ; continue checking
1152 (if (condition-case nil
1153 (save-excursion
1154 (up-list -1)
1155 (not (eq (char-after) ?\()))
1156 (error t))
1157 t
1158 'stop)))
1159
1160 ;; Suppresses newlines before non-blank lines
1161 (defun c-semi&comma-no-newlines-before-nonblanks ()
1162 "Controls newline insertion after semicolons.
1163 If a comma was inserted, no determination is made. If a semicolon was
1164 inserted, and the following line is not blank, no newline is inserted.
1165 Otherwise, no determination is made."
1166 (save-excursion
1167 (if (and (= last-command-char ?\;)
1168 ;;(/= (point-max)
1169 ;; (save-excursion (skip-syntax-forward " ") (point))
1170 (zerop (forward-line 1))
1171 (not (looking-at "^[ \t]*$")))
1172 'stop
1173 nil)))
1174
1175 ;; Suppresses new lines after semicolons in one-liners methods
1176 (defun c-semi&comma-no-newlines-for-oneline-inliners ()
1177 "Controls newline insertion after semicolons for some one-line methods.
1178 If a comma was inserted, no determination is made. Newlines are
1179 suppressed in one-liners, if the line is an in-class inline function.
1180 For other semicolon contexts, no determination is made."
1181 (let ((syntax (c-guess-basic-syntax))
1182 (bol (save-excursion
1183 (if (c-safe (up-list -1) t)
1184 (c-point 'bol)
1185 -1))))
1186 (if (and (eq last-command-char ?\;)
1187 (eq (car (car syntax)) 'inclass)
1188 (eq (car (car (cdr syntax))) 'topmost-intro)
1189 (= (c-point 'bol) bol))
1190 'stop
1191 nil)))
1192
1193 \f
1194 (cc-provide 'cc-align)
1195
1196 ;;; arch-tag: 4d71ed28-bf51-4509-a148-f39669669a2e
1197 ;;; cc-align.el ends here