Difference between revisions of "Emacs"
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Some useful functions in dix-mode: |
Some useful functions in dix-mode: |
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* <code>C-c C</code> just creates a copy of the current <e> element, putting it below the current one |
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* Movement and editing: |
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* <code>C-c L</code> and <code>C-c R</code> also make a copy of the current <e> element, but with an LR or RL restriction |
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* <code>C-TAB</code> cycles between the restriction possibilities LR, RL or none for the current <e> element |
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* <code> |
** <code>M-n</code> and <code>M-p</code> move to the next and previous "important bits" of <e>-elements (just try it!). |
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⚫ | |||
* Copying elements and adding restrictions: |
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⚫ | |||
* <code>C-c |
** <code>C-c C</code> just creates a copy of the current <e> element, putting it below the current one |
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* <code> |
** <code>C-c L</code> and <code>C-c R</code> also make a copy of the current <e> element, but with an LR or RL restriction |
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* |
** <code>C-TAB</code> cycles between the restriction possibilities LR, RL or none for the current <e> element |
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* <code>C- |
** <code>C-S-TAB</code>, used with elements that have the slr/srl attribute, will swap the sense translation of this <e> with the <e> above |
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⚫ | |||
* Pardef viewing and manipulation: |
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** <code>C-c G</code> will go to the pardef of the nearest <par> |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
** <code>C-c S</code> will sort a pardef by its right-hand-side, <r>. |
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*** You can also do <code>M-x dix-sort-e-by-l</code> to sort the selected <e;> elements by the contents of their <l> element |
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** <code>C-c D</code> (in a pardef or an <e>) will print a list of all pardefs which have the same suffixes as this one (where a 'suffix' is the contents of an <l>-element), useful for finding duplicates. Note: it ignores the tags |
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** Inside a pardef, <code>C-c A</code> shows all usages of that pardef within the dictionaries represented by the variable `dix-dixfiles' |
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''Note: capital letters means you have to press shift.'' If you fancy other keyboard shortcuts, copy the relevant <code>define-key</code> entries from the bottom of <code>dix.el</code>, put them in your ~/.emacs, e.g. to add <code>F12</code> as an alternative to <code>C-c V</code>: |
''Note: capital letters means you have to press shift.'' If you fancy other keyboard shortcuts, copy the relevant <code>define-key</code> entries from the bottom of <code>dix.el</code>, put them in your ~/.emacs, e.g. to add <code>F12</code> as an alternative to <code>C-c V</code>: |
Revision as of 17:20, 27 February 2011
Emacs stuff:
Contents
Quickstart for non-emacs users
If you just want to get emacs set up for dix editing with the minimum of hassle, here is a howto. This assumes you have emacs version 23 or higher installed (but see discussion page if you're stuck with an old version). First execute (paste) the following commands in your terminal:
mkdir ~/.elisp cd ~/.elisp wget http://apertium.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/apertium/trunk/apertium-tools/dix.el cd .. touch ~/.emacs
Then open the file ~/.emacs in an editor (like vi) and enter the following:
; Start of dix-mode setup (add-to-list 'load-path "~/.elisp") ; path to the folder where you have dix.el (autoload 'dix-mode "dix" "dix-mode is a minor mode for editing Apertium XML dictionary files." t) (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.dix\\'" . nxml-mode)) ; turn on nxml-mode for dix-files (add-hook 'nxml-mode-hook ; turn on dix-mode for dix-files after nxml-mode (lambda () (and buffer-file-name (string-match "\\.dix$" buffer-file-name) (dix-mode 1)))) (add-to-list 'nxml-completion-hook 'rng-complete) ; turn on schema-based completion with C-RET ; Start of CUA mode setup - to make Emacs behave like other editors - see http://www.emacswiki.org/CuaMode (cua-mode t) (setq cua-auto-tabify-rectangles nil) ; Don't tabify after rectangle commands (setq cua-keep-region-after-copy t) ; Standard Windows behaviour
See also the Validation quickstart for auto-validation and schema-based completion.
nxml-mode
Emacs has a nice xml editing mode called nXML, with syntax highlighting, movement commands to navigate through the XML (out of, into, across elements, etc.). It also has validation, and can auto-complete using the XML schema if a schema file is available.
Note: since the dix-files can often get rather huge, syntax highlighting can make nXML a bit slow (at least if you're eg. planning on running a keyboard macro 10000 times). To speed it up, just temporarily turn off syntax highlighting with by typing M-x set-variable RET nxml-syntax-highlight-flag RET nil RET
. Alternatively, use the dix.el keyboard shortcut C-c H
(dix-toggle-syntax-highlighting
).
If your emacs doesn't turn on nxml-mode automatically when you open an xml-file, you can add the following line to your ~/.emacs
file:
(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.dix\\'" . nxml-mode))
Emacs 23 or newer includes nxml-mode, but if your version of emacs doesn't: download nxml-mode-20041004.tar.gz (or whatever the newest version is) from http://www.thaiopensource.com/download/, extract somewhere, and add the following to your .emacs
file:
(load "/path/to/nxml-mode-20041004/rng-auto.el") ; full path to the _file_ rng-auto.el which you just extracted
dix-mode
In svn there is a minor mode for editing .dix files, dix.el (or use svn co https://apertium.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/apertium/trunk/apertium-tools
). It needs nxml-mode (see above, installed by default in emacs version 23 or above).
Put the following in your ~/.emacs
file to use it:
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/dix.el-folder") ; ie. path to the _folder_ containing dix.el (autoload 'dix-mode "dix" "dix-mode is a minor mode for editing Apertium XML dictionary files." t) (add-hook 'nxml-mode-hook (lambda () (and buffer-file-name (string-match "\\.dix$" buffer-file-name) (dix-mode 1))))
I use Apertium-dixtools-formatted dix, not all functions have been tested in the regular format, but I've tried to make the functions use XML-movements so mostly they should work no matter how you format your files.
When you open emacs (after adding the above lines to ~/.emacs) and load a .dix-file, you should see a menu named dix. Most of the functions added by dix-mode are shown in this menu (which also shows their keyboard shortcuts). Hovering over a menu-item might give a little popup-help. The Help for dix-mode entry will show all the user functions defined by dix-mode. The keyboard shortcuts are in general a lot more useful than the menu bar, which is mostly there in case you forget which buttons to press... Remember: C is Control, S is Shift, M is alt (well, M stands for Meta, but that's typically alt).
Some useful functions in dix-mode:
- Movement and editing:
- The space bar inserts a <b/> in <r>, <l> or <i> elements; a
_
in par/pardef names; otherwise a plain space. M-n
andM-p
move to the next and previous "important bits" of <e>-elements (just try it!).
- The space bar inserts a <b/> in <r>, <l> or <i> elements; a
- Copying elements and adding restrictions:
C-c C
just creates a copy of the current <e> element, putting it below the current oneC-c L
andC-c R
also make a copy of the current <e> element, but with an LR or RL restrictionC-TAB
cycles between the restriction possibilities LR, RL or none for the current <e> elementC-S-TAB
, used with elements that have the slr/srl attribute, will swap the sense translation of this <e> with the <e> above
- Pardef viewing and manipulation:
C-c G
will go to the pardef of the nearest <par>- the place you left is saved in the standard emacs fashion, so you can go back by pressing
C-u C-SPACE
- the place you left is saved in the standard emacs fashion, so you can go back by pressing
C-c V
will show the pardef of the nearest <par> in another windowC-c S
will sort a pardef by its right-hand-side, <r>.- You can also do
M-x dix-sort-e-by-l
to sort the selected <e;> elements by the contents of their <l> element
- You can also do
C-c D
(in a pardef or an <e>) will print a list of all pardefs which have the same suffixes as this one (where a 'suffix' is the contents of an <l>-element), useful for finding duplicates. Note: it ignores the tags- Inside a pardef,
C-c A
shows all usages of that pardef within the dictionaries represented by the variable `dix-dixfiles'
Note: capital letters means you have to press shift. If you fancy other keyboard shortcuts, copy the relevant define-key
entries from the bottom of dix.el
, put them in your ~/.emacs, e.g. to add F12
as an alternative to C-c V
:
(add-hook 'dix-mode-hook (lambda nil (define-key dix-mode-map (kbd "<f12>") 'dix-view-pardef)))
(the whole add-hook thing is needed since dix-mode is not loaded until the first .dix-file is loaded)
Also, if you like having all <i> elements aligned at eg. column 25, select a region and do M-x align
to achieve that (this also aligns <p> to 10 and <r> to 44, for bidix). These numbers are customizable with M-x customize-group RET dix
. (Ie. there's no extra indentation function, but then, nxml already has that.)
Validation (Relax NG-schemas)
Validation quickstart
Download and extract trang by executing (pasting) this into your terminal:
cd wget http://jing-trang.googlecode.com/files/trang-20091111.zip unzip trang-20091111.zip
The copy this script to a file like "makeschema.sh", making sure to set APERTIUMSRC to the folder containing the apertium source, and TRANGJAR to the path to the trang jar-file you just extracted:
#!/bin/bash ## Set these to the correct paths: APERTIUMSRC="~/apertium-svn/trunk/apertium" TRANGJAR="~/trang-20091111/trang.jar" SCHEMAFILE=~/.elisp/schemas.xml # Change SCHEMAFILE if you want to put your schema locating file somewhere else. # Note: this path can't have quotes around it for some reason ## No changes needed below echo "Creating ${SCHEMAFILE}" cat > ${SCHEMAFILE} <<EOF <?xml version="1.0"?> <locatingRules xmlns="http://thaiopensource.com/ns/locating-rules/1.0"> <typeId id="dix" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/dix.rnc"/> <typeId id="transfer" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/transfer.rnc"/> <typeId id="interchunk" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/interchunk.rnc"/> <typeId id="postchunk" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/postchunk.rnc"/> <typeId id="format" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/format.rnc"/> <typeId id="tagger" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/tagger.rnc"/> <typeId id="modes" uri="${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium/modes.rnc"/> <documentElement localName="dictionary" typeId="dix"/> <documentElement localName="transfer" typeId="transfer"/> <documentElement localName="interchunk" typeId="interchunk"/> <documentElement localName="postchunk" typeId="postchunk"/> <documentElement localName="format" typeId="format"/> <documentElement localName="tagger" typeId="tagger"/> <documentElement localName="modes" typeId="modes"/> <uri pattern="*.dix" typeId="dix"/> <uri pattern="*.t1x" typeId="transfer"/> <uri pattern="*.t2x" typeId="interchunk"/> <uri pattern="*.t3x" typeId="interchunk"/> <!-- Some pairs have t3x as postchunk, others t4x or even t5x... but if one of the documentElement rules match, these rules are ignored since they're below them. --> </locatingRules> EOF echo "Creating rnc files in ${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium" cd ${APERTIUMSRC}/apertium for DTD in `ls *.dtd`; do OUT=`echo $DTD | sed 's/dtd$/rnc/'`; CMD="java -jar ${TRANGJAR} $DTD $OUT" echo $CMD eval $CMD done echo "Now inform nxml-mode about ${SCHEMAFILE} by appending this to ~/.emacs:" cat <<EOF (add-hook 'nxml-mode-hook (lambda () (add-to-list 'rng-schema-locating-files "${SCHEMAFILE}"))) EOF
Run it like
sh makeschema.sh
and add the hook to your ~/.emacs as instructed by the script.
More about nxml validation
nxml-mode uses compact Relax NG schemas (.rnc
files) for validation (without these, XML is only checked for well-formedness by nxml-mode).
You can make compact Relax NG schemas using trang, see the above script.
Note: if you want to auto-complete using the schema (keyboard shortcut: C-RET), you should have (add-to-list 'nxml-completion-hook 'rng-complete)
somewhere in your ~/.emacs
.
You can toggle validation using the XML menu at the top of the screen, or the keyboard shortcut C-c C-v
.
See http://www.dpawson.co.uk/relaxng/nxml/schemaloc.html#d574e168 for how to write a schema.xml file to automatically find the right schema, or just use the quickstart script above.
See also
- Emacs C style for Apertium hacking
- SFST/HFST mode for emacs (see SFST and HFST)
- CG-mode for emacs (see Constraint Grammar)
- ZenCoding lets you type
section#main>e*2
and it turns it into the full, etc.
- YASnippet is a template system (automatically expand abbreviations)