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e493eba46d
Also, moved the "Markup strings" section to faces.asciidoc, since it wasn't anything to do with expansions, and updated various hyperlinks to point at the new location.
140 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
140 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
Interfacing Kakoune with external programs
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==========================================
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In order to interact with the external world, Kakoune uses the shell, mainly
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through the +%sh{ ... }+ string type, and its control socket.
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Basic interaction
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-----------------
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For synchronous operations, +%sh{ ... }+ blocks are easy to use, they behave
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similarly to +$( ... )+ shell construct.
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For example, one can echo the current time in Kakoune's status line using:
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[source,bash]
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----
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:echo %sh{ date }
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----
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For asynchronous operations, the Kakoune Unix stream socket can be used. This
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is the same socket that Kakoune clients connect to. It is available through the
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+kak_session+ environment variable: the socket is
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+/tmp/kakoune/${username}/${kak_session}+
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For example, we can echo a message in Kakoune in 10 seconds with:
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[source,bash]
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----
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:nop %sh{ {
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sleep 10
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echo "eval -client '$kak_client' 'echo sleep ended'" |
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kak -p ${kak_session}
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} > /dev/null 2>&1 < /dev/null & }
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----
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* The +nop+ command is used so that any eventual output from the
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+%sh{ ... }+ is not interpreted by Kakoune
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* When writing to the socket, Kakoune has no way to guess in which
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client's context the command should be evaluated. A temporary
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context is used, which does not have any user interface, so if we want
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to interact with the user, we need to use the +eval+ command, with
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its +-client+ option to send commands to a specific client.
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* For the command to run asynchronously, we wrap it in a sub shell
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with braces, redirect its +std{in,err,out}+ to +/dev/null+, and
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run it in background with +&+. Using this pattern, the shell does
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not wait for this sub shell to finish before quitting.
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Interactive output
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------------------
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It is a frequent interaction mode to run a program and display its output
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in a Kakoune buffer.
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The common pattern to do that is to use a fifo buffer:
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[source,bash]
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-----
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evaluate-commands %sh{
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# Create a temporary fifo for communication
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output=$(mktemp -d -t kak-temp-XXXXXXXX)/fifo
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mkfifo ${output}
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# run command detached from the shell
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{ run command here > ${output} } > /dev/null 2>&1 < /dev/null &
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# Open the file in Kakoune and add a hook to remove the fifo
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echo "edit! -fifo ${output} *buffer-name*
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hook buffer BufClose .* %{ nop %sh{ rm -r $(dirname ${output})} }"
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}
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-----
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This is a very simple example, most of the time, the echo command will as
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well contain
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-----
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set buffer filetype <...>
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-----
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and some hooks for this filetype will have been written
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Completion candidates
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---------------------
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Filetype specific completion should be provided by external programs.
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External completions are provided using an option to store completion, which
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have the following format.
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----
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line.column[+len]@timestamp candidate1|desc1|menu1 candidate2|desc2|menu2 ...
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----
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the first element of this string list specify where and when this completion
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applies, the others are a triplet `<completion text>|<docstring>|<menu text>`
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The menu text is a markup string (see <<faces#markup-strings,`:doc faces
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markup-strings`>>), so it can contain `{face}` directives.
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To effectively use that completion option, it should get added to the completers
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option.
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---
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set -add buffer completers option=my_option_name
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---
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As a completion program may take some time to compute the candidates, it should
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run asynchronously. In order to do that, the following pattern may be used:
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[source,bash]
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-----
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# Declare the option which will store the temporary filename
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decl str plugin_filename
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# Declare the completion option
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decl completions plugin_completions
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# Add plugin_completions to completers for files of good filetype
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hook global BufSetOption filetype=my_filetype %{
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set -add buffer completers option=plugin_completions
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}
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evaluate-commands %sh{
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# ask Kakoune to write current buffer to temporary file
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filename=$(mktemp -t kak-temp.XXXXXXXX)
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echo "set buffer plugin_filename '$filename'
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write '$filename'"
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}
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# End the %sh{} so that its output gets executed by Kakoune.
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# Use a nop so that any eventual output of this %sh does not get interpreted.
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nop %sh{ { # launch a detached shell
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buffer="${kak_opt_plugin_filename}"
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line="${kak_cursor_line}"
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column="${kak_cursor_column}"
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# run completer program and format the output in a list of completions
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candidates=$(completer $buffer $line $column | completer_filter)
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# remove temporary file
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rm $buffer
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# generate completion option value
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completions="$line.$column@$kak_timestamp $candidates"
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# write to Kakoune socket for the buffer that triggered the completion
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echo "set buffer=${kak_bufname} plugin_completions $completions" |
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kak -p ${kak_session}
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} > /dev/null 2>&1 < /dev/null & }
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-----
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