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Atari Mega Archive 1
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Atari Mega Archive - Volume 1.iso
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mjovesrc.zoo
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paragrap.c
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C/C++ Source or Header
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1992-04-04
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14KB
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547 lines
/***************************************************************************
* This program is Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988 by Jonathan Payne. JOVE *
* is provided to you without charge, and with no warranty. You may give *
* away copies of JOVE, including sources, provided that this notice is *
* included in all the files. *
***************************************************************************/
#include "jove.h"
#include "disp.h"
private int get_indent proto((Line *));
/* Thanks to Brian Harvey for this paragraph boundery finding algorithm.
It's really quite hairy figuring it out. This deals with paragraphs that
are seperated by blank lines, lines beginning with a Period (assumed to
be an nroff command), lines beginning with BackSlash (assumed to be Tex
commands). Also handles paragraphs that are separated by lines of
different indent; and it deals with outdented paragraphs, too. It's
really quite nice. Here's Brian's algorithm.
Definitions:
THIS means the line containing the cursor.
PREV means the line above THIS.
NEXT means the line below THIS.
BLANK means empty, empty except for spaces and tabs, starts with a period
or a backslash, or nonexistent (because the edge of the buffer is
reached). ((BH 12/24/85 A line starting with backslash is blank only if
the following line also starts with backslash. This is so that \noindent
is part of a paragraph, but long strings of TeX commands don't get
rearranged. It still isn't perfect but it's better.))
BSBLANK means BLANK or starts with a backslash. (BH 12/24/85)
HEAD means the first (nonblank) line of the paragraph containing THIS.
BODY means all other (nonblank) lines of the paragraph.
TAIL means the last (nb) line of the paragraph. (TAIL is part of BODY.)
HEAD INDENT means the indentation of HEAD. M-J should preserve this.
BODY INDENT means the indentation of BODY. Ditto.
Subprocedures:
TAILRULE(BODYLINE)
If BODYLINE is BLANK, the paragraph has only one line, and there is no
BODY and therefore no TAIL. Return. Otherwise, starting from BODYLINE,
move down until you find a line that either is BSBLANK or has a different
indentation from BODYLINE. The line above that different line is TAIL.
Return.
Rules:
1. If THIS is BLANK, which command are you doing? If M-J or M-[, then go
up to the first non-BLANK line and start over. (If there is no non-BLANK
line before THIS, ring the bell.) If M-], then the first non-BLANK line
below THIS is HEAD, and the second consecutive non-BSBLANK line (if any) is
the beginning of BODY. (If there is no non-BLANK line after THIS, ring
the bell.) Do TAILRULE(beginning-of-BODY). Go to rule A.
2. If PREV is BLANK or THIS is BSBLANK, then THIS is HEAD, and NEXT (if
not BSBLANK) is in BODY. Do TAILRULE(NEXT). Go to rule A.
3. If NEXT is BSBLANK, then THIS is TAIL, therefore part of BODY. Go to
rule 5 to find HEAD.
4. If either NEXT or PREV has the same indentation as THIS, then THIS is
part of BODY. Do TAILRULE(THIS). Go to rule 5 to find HEAD. Otherwise,
go to rule 6.
5. Go up until you find a line that is either BSBLANK or has a different
indentation from THIS. If that line is BLANK, the line below it is HEAD;
If that line is non-BLANK, then call that new line THIS for what follows.
If THIS is BSBLANK (that is, THIS starts with backslash), THIS is HEAD;
otherwise, if (the new) PREV has the same indent as THIS, then (the new)
NEXT is HEAD; if PREV has a different indent from THIS, then THIS is
HEAD. Go to rule A.
6. If you got here, then both NEXT and PREV are nonblank and are
differently indented from THIS. This is a tricky case and there is no
guarantee that you're going to win. The most straightforward thing to do
is assume that we are not using hanging indentation. In that case:
whichever of PREV and THIS is indented further is HEAD. Do
TAILRULE(HEAD+1). Go to rule A.
6+. A more complicated variant would be this: if THIS is indented further
than PREV, we are using regular indentation and rule 6 applies. If PREV
is indented further than THIS, look at both NEXT and the line after NEXT.
If those two lines are indented equally, and more than THIS, then we are
using hanging indent, THIS is HEAD, and NEXT is the first line of BODY.
Do TAILRULE(NEXT). Otherwise, rule 6 applies.
A. You now know where HEAD and TAIL are. The indentation of HEAD is HEAD
INDENT; the indentation of TAIL is BODY INDENT.
B. If you are trying to M-J, you are now ready to do it.
C. If you are trying to M-], leave point after the newline that ends
TAIL. In other words, leave the cursor at the beginning of the line
after TAIL. It is not possible for this to leave point where it started
unless it was already at the end of the buffer.
D. If you are trying to M-[, if the line before HEAD is not BLANK, then
leave point just before HEAD. That is, leave the cursor at the beginning
of HEAD. If the line before HEAD is BLANK, then leave the cursor at the
beginning of that line. If the cursor didn't move, go up to the first
earlier non-BLANK line and start over.
End of Algorithm. I implemented rule 6+ because it seemed nicer. */
int RMargin = 78,
LMargin = 0;
private Line *para_head,
*para_tail;
private int head_indent,
body_indent;
private bool use_lmargin;
/* some defines for paragraph boundery checking */
#define I_EMPTY (-1) /* line "looks" empty (spaces and tabs) */
#define I_PERIOD (-2) /* line begins with "." or "\" */
#define I_BUFEDGE (-3) /* line is nonexistent (edge of buffer) */
static bool bslash; /* Nonzero if get_indent finds line starting
with backslash */
private int
i_blank(lp)
Line *lp;
{
return get_indent(lp) < 0;
}
private bool
i_bsblank(lp)
Line *lp;
{
return i_blank(lp) || bslash;
}
private int
get_indent(lp)
register Line *lp;
{
Bufpos save;
register int indent;
bslash = NO;
if (lp == NULL)
return I_BUFEDGE;
DOTsave(&save);
SetLine(lp);
if (blnkp(linebuf))
indent = I_EMPTY;
else if (linebuf[0] == '.')
indent = I_PERIOD;
else if (linebuf[0] == '\\') {
/* BH 12/24/85. Backslash is BLANK only if next line
also starts with Backslash. */
bslash = YES;
SetLine(lp->l_next);
if (linebuf[0] == '\\')
indent = I_PERIOD;
else
indent = 0;
} else {
ToIndent();
indent = calc_pos(linebuf, curchar);
}
SetDot(&save);
return indent;
}
private Line *
tailrule(lp)
register Line *lp;
{
int i;
i = get_indent(lp);
if (i < 0)
return lp; /* one line paragraph */
do {
if ((get_indent(lp->l_next) != i) || bslash)
/* BH line with backslash is head of next para */
break;
} while ((lp = lp->l_next) != NULL);
if (lp == NULL)
complain((char *) NULL);
return lp;
}
/* Finds the beginning, end and indent of the current paragraph, and sets
the above global variables. HOW says how to behave when we're between
paragraphs. That is, it's either FORWARD or BACKWARD depending on which
way we're favoring. */
private void
find_para(how)
int how;
{
Line *this,
*prev,
*next,
*head = NULL,
*body = NULL,
*tail = NULL;
int this_indent;
Bufpos orig; /* remember where we were when we started */
DOTsave(&orig);
strt:
this = curline;
prev = curline->l_prev;
next = curline->l_next;
this_indent = get_indent(this);
if (i_blank(this)) { /* rule 1 */
if (how == BACKWARD) {
while (i_blank(curline))
if (firstp(curline))
complain((char *)NULL);
else
line_move(BACKWARD, 1, NO);
goto strt;
} else {
while (i_blank(curline))
if (lastp(curline))
complain((char *)NULL);
else
line_move(FORWARD, 1, NO);
head = curline;
next = curline->l_next;
body = !i_bsblank(next)? next : head;
}
} else if (i_bsblank(this) || i_blank(prev)) { /* rule 2 */
head = this;
if (!i_bsblank(next))
body = next;
} else if (i_bsblank(next)) { /* rule 3 */
tail = this;
body = this;
} else if ((get_indent(next) == this_indent) |