Emacs C style for Apertium hacking
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Apertium's coding style does not match any of the Emacs built-in C styles. You can place the following code in your Emacs customisation file (normally found under ~/.emacs
in Unix systems).
(defconst apertium-c-style '((c-basic-offset . 2) (c-comment-only-line-offset . 0) (c-hanging-braces-alist (substatement-open before after)) (c-offsets-alist (topmost-intro . 0) (substatement . +) (substatement-open . 0) (case-label . +) (access-label . -) (inclass . ++) (inline-open . 0))) "Apertium C++ Programming Style") ;; Customisations for all modes in CC Mode. (defun my-c-mode-common-hook () ;; add apertium to the list of C/C++ styles: (c-add-style "apertium" apertium-c-style t) ;; use the apertium style if the path of the opened file contains the substring "/apertium/": (if (and (buffer-file-name) (string-match "/matxin/\\|/apertium/\\|/lttoolbox/" (buffer-file-name))) (c-set-style "apertium")) ;; Some function names are camelCase, so make keys like M-f and M-b treat "camelCase" as two words: (subword-mode)) (add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook 'my-c-mode-common-hook)
The above should enable the Apertium style to the correct C++ files. If it's not enabled automatically, just execute
M-x c-set-style
(or use the default keyboard shortcut C-c .
) and simply type
apertium
at the prompt.