[ESS] XEmacs, UNIX, ESS

Tim Hesterberg timhesterberg at gmail.com
Fri Nov 21 06:38:57 CET 2008


Sorry, just my ADD (Attachment Deficit Disorder) acting up.  Here's the
attachment.
Tim


On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 9:36 PM, Tim Hesterberg <timhesterberg at gmail.com>wrote:

> I'll claim authorship of push-line-other-window.  I'm glad to hear
> you find it useful.
>
> Here are
> * a couple of refinements
> * how I created this in the first place - you may find this useful for
>   other applications
> * another useful macro
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> Refinements
>
> Instead of C-x p, I now have it bound to M-o and C-t,
> either of which is easier to type repeatedly.
>
> (define-key esc-map "o" 'push-line-other-window)
> (global-set-key "\C-t" 'push-line-other-window)
>
> I now have a slightly more efficient version of the fset command in my
> .emacs.  I can't send that in an email message, because it includes
> some control characters, but I'll attach a small zip file that
> contains the definition.
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> Origination
>
> I created a macro that did what I want, then saved the macro into .emacs.
> Steps are:
> C-x ( start-kbd-macro
> give the sequences of commands that does what you want
> C-x ) end-kbd-macro
> M-x name-last-kbd-macro  (give a name)
> ; In your .emacs:
> M-x insert-kbd-macro
> ; Optionally, in your .emacs, bind it to a key sequence.
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> I've created a bunch of such macros, though you don't want most of them :-)
> Here's one that's generally useful:
>
> (fset 'double-line
>    [escape ?k ?\C-e ?  ?z ?z ?z ?  ?\C-y ?\C-n ?\C-a])
> ; insert zzz between copies, can replace that with something needed, or
> delete
>
> With C-u, you can use that to do the same thing for many lines.
> E.g. do
>   C-u 3 M-x double-line
> to convert:
>
> foo
> bar
> zed
>
> to:
>
> foo zzz foo
> bar zzz bar
> zed zzz zed
>
> which you can then use other editing commands to convert to:
>
> mv foo.txt foo.dat
> mv bar.txt bar.dat
> mv zed.txt zed.dat
>
> Naturally, you will want to use push-line-other-window to send
> those commands to a shell window :-)
>
> Tim Hesterberg
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 8:58 AM, Charles C. Berry <cberry at tajo.ucsd.edu>wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 19 Nov 2008, Luis F wrote:
>>
>>  Dear Douglas, Richard, Mailing List:
>>>
>>> Thanks for such a quick reply. Douglas is absolutely right. I was
>>> precisely trying to write an email clarifying my unprecise mail. Sorry
>>> about that.
>>>
>>> Douglas Bates wrote:
>>>
>>>>  On Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 8:12 AM, Richard M. Heiberger <rmh at temple.edu>
>>>>  wrote:
>>>>
>>>> >  Use ESS.  The behavior is identical on Windows and Unix.
>>>> >
>>>>  I believe Luis is asking a different question, Richard.  He wants to
>>>>  have separate shell and shell-script windows in which he can send
>>>>  lines from the shell script window to be executed in the shell window.
>>>>  That is, he wants to emulate some of the features provided by ESS for
>>>>  R, S-PLUS (which apparently now has become S+) and SAS source files in
>>>>  shell scripts.
>>>>
>>>
>>
>> You can use shell-script-mode to edit the script and add his macro:
>>
>>        (fset 'push-line-other-window
>>        "\C-@\C-e\M-w\C-n\C-a\C-xo\M->\C-y\C-m\C-xo")
>>        (global-set-key "\C-xp" 'push-line-other-window )
>>
>> to your .emacs (or wherever).
>>
>> With the shell-script-mode window open and the shell-mode window open, you
>> can use C-X p to send a line from the former to the latter.
>>
>> My thanks to the orignator of this macro and apologies for forgetting
>> his/her name. I think it was posted on S-news. I've used it for years when I
>> want to move a line from one buffer to another.
>>
>>
>> HTH,
>>
>> Chuck
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>>>
>>>> >  -----Original Message-----
>>>> >  From: ess-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch
>>>> >  [mailto:ess-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch] On Behalf Of Luis F
>>>> >  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 09:02
>>>> >  To: ess-help at stat.math.ethz.ch
>>>> >  Subject: [ESS] XEmacs, UNIX, ESS
>>>> > >  Dear Mailing List,
>>>> > >  I am a biologist, very used to program in R using XEmacs and ESS. I
>>>> have
>>>> >  to do some little things in UNIX now. I would love to have something
>>>> >  similar to what I'm used to with ESS.
>>>> > >  Mainly:
>>>> >  1) a shell script on my top window
>>>> >  2) a shell on my bottom window
>>>> >  3) send commands from the script (one line at the time, similar to
>>>> C-c
>>>> >  C-n; a region - C-C C-r; the whole file C-c C-l)
>>>> > >  I could already do 1) and 2) (alt-x shell) (major achievements!)
>>>> and I
>>>> >  can copy-paste, go from one window do the next (C-x o) and that is
>>>> >  already a great improvment.
>>>> > >  But I can't do 3). Any suggestions?
>>>> > >  I realize this might be a question outside of the strict scope of
>>>> this
>>>> >  list (and I appologize if anyone feels this is spam); I decided to
>>>> post
>>>> >  it here, because after searching for a while in the web, i felt this
>>>> >  specific request would be more understood by people in here.
>>>> > >  Thank you all for your work,
>>>> >  Tiago
>>>>
>>>


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