NAME
Emacs - Redefine Perl's system primitives to work inside of Emacs
SYNOPSIS
perlmacs -w -MEmacs -e main -- --display :0.0 file.txt
#! /usr/bin/perlmacs
use Emacs;
use Emacs::Lisp;
setq { $mail_self_blind = t; };
exit main ($0, "-q", @ARGV);
DESCRIPTION
This module replaces STDIN
, STDOUT
, STDERR
, %ENV
, %SIG
, exit
, and warn
(via $SIG{__WARN__}
) with versions that work safely within an Emacs session. In Perlmacs, it also defines a function named main, which launches an Emacs editing session from within a script.
STDIN
Reading a line from Perl's STDIN
filehandle causes a string to be read from the minibuffer with the prompt "Enter input: "
. To show a different prompt, use:
$string = &read_string ("Prompt: ");
STDOUT
Printing to Perl's STDOUT
filehandle inserts text into the current buffer as though typed, unless you have changed the Lisp variable standard-output
to do something different.
STDERR and `warn'
Perl's warn
operator and STDERR
filehandle are redirected to the minibuffer.
%ENV
Access to %ENV
is redirected to the Lisp variable process-environment
.
%SIG
Setting signal handlers is not currently permitted under Emacs.
exit
exit
calls kill-emacs
.
main (CMDLINE)
When you use Emacs
in a perlmacs script, a Perl sub named main
may be used to invoke the Emacs editor. This makes it possible to put customization code, which would normally appear as Lisp in ~/.emacs, into a Perl script.
NOTE: This function does not work under EPL. You have to have Perlmacs to use it. See "EPL AND PERLMACS" in Emacs::Lisp.
For example, this startup code
(setq
user-mail-address "gnaeus@perl.moc"
mail-self-blind t
mail-yank-prefix "> "
)
(put 'eval-expression 'disabled nil)
(global-font-lock-mode 1 t)
(set-face-background 'highlight "maroon")
(set-face-background 'region "Sienna")
could be placed in a file with the following contents:
#! /usr/local/bin/perlmacs
use Emacs;
use Emacs::Lisp;
setq {
$user_mail_address = 'gnaeus@perl.moc';
$mail_self_blind = t;
$mail_yank_prefix = '> ';
$eval_expression{\*disabled} = undef;
};
&global_font_lock_mode(1, t);
&set_face_background(\*highlight, "maroon");
&set_face_background(\*region, "Sienna");
exit main($0, "-q", @ARGV);
When you wanted to run Emacs, you would invoke this program.
The arguments to main
correspond to the argv
of the main
function in a C program. The first argument should be the program's invocation name, as in this example. -q inhibits running ~/.emacs (which is the point, after all).
BUGS
Problems with `main'.
main()
doesn't work under EPL. It may open an X display and not close it. Those are the most obvious of many problems withmain
.The thing is, Emacs was not written with the expectation of being embedded in another program, least of all a language interpreter such as Perl. Therefore, when Emacs is told to exit, it believes the process is really about to exit, and it neglects to tidy up after itself.
For best results, the value returned by
main
should be passed to Perl'sexit
soon, as in this code:exit (main($0, @args));
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1998-2001 by John Tobey, jtobey@john-edwin-tobey.org. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston,
MA 02111-1307 USA
SEE ALSO
perl, Emacs::Lisp, emacs.