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The line-up functions here calculate the indentation for braces, parentheses and statements within brace blocks.
Line up the closing paren under its corresponding open paren if the open paren is followed by code. If the open paren ends its line, no indentation is added. E.g.:
main (int, char ** ) <- c-lineup-close-paren
and
main ( int, char ** ) <- c-lineup-close-paren
As a special case, if a brace block is opened at the same line as the
open parenthesis of the argument list, the indentation is
c-basic-offset
instead of the open paren column. See
c-lineup-arglist
for further discussion of this “DWIM” measure.
Works with: All *-close
symbols.
Set your arglist-close
syntactic symbol to this line-up function
so that parentheses that close argument lists will line up under the
parenthesis that opened the argument list. It can also be used with
arglist-cont
and arglist-cont-nonempty
to line up all
lines inside a parenthesis under the open paren.
As a special case, if a brace block is opened at the same line as the
open parenthesis of the argument list, the indentation is
c-basic-offset
only. See c-lineup-arglist
for further
discussion of this “DWIM” measure.
Works with: Almost all symbols, but are typically most useful on
arglist-close
, brace-list-close
, arglist-cont
and
arglist-cont-nonempty
.
Indent a one line block c-basic-offset
extra. E.g.:
if (n > 0) {m+=n; n=0;} <- c-indent-one-line-block <--> c-basic-offset
and
if (n > 0) { <- c-indent-one-line-block m+=n; n=0; }
The block may be surrounded by any kind of parenthesis characters.
nil
is returned if the line doesn’t start with a one line block,
which makes the function usable in list expressions.
Works with: Almost all syntactic symbols, but most useful on the
-open
symbols.
Indent a multiline block c-basic-offset
extra. E.g.:
int *foo[] = { NULL, {17}, <- c-indent-multi-line-block
and
int *foo[] = { NULL, { <- c-indent-multi-line-block 17 }, <--> c-basic-offset
The block may be surrounded by any kind of parenthesis characters.
nil
is returned if the line doesn’t start with a multiline
block, which makes the function usable in list expressions.
Works with: Almost all syntactic symbols, but most useful on the
-open
symbols.
Line up statements for coding standards which place the first statement in a block on the same line as the block opening brace47. E.g.:
int main() { puts ("Hello!"); return 0; <- c-lineup-runin-statements }
If there is no statement after the opening brace to align with,
nil
is returned. This makes the function usable in list
expressions.
Works with: The statement
syntactic symbol.
This can be used with the in-expression block symbols to indent the
whole block to the column where the construct is started. E.g., for Java
anonymous classes, this lines up the class under the ‘new’ keyword,
and in Pike it lines up the lambda function body under the ‘lambda’
keyword. Returns nil
if the block isn’t part of such a
construct.
Works with: inlambda
, inexpr-statement
,
inexpr-class
.
Compensate for Whitesmith style indentation of blocks. Due to the way CC Mode calculates anchor positions for normal lines inside blocks, this function is necessary for those lines to get correct Whitesmith style indentation. Consider the following examples:
int foo() { a; x; <- c-lineup-after-whitesmith-blocks
int foo() { { a; } x; <- c-lineup-after-whitesmith-blocks
The fact that the line with x
is preceded by a Whitesmith style
indented block in the latter case and not the first should not affect
its indentation. But since CC Mode in cases like this uses the
indentation of the preceding statement as anchor position, the x
would in the second case be indented too much if the offset for
statement
was set simply to zero.
This lineup function corrects for this situation by detecting if the
anchor position is at an open paren character. In that case, it instead
indents relative to the surrounding block just like
c-lineup-whitesmith-in-block
.
Works with: brace-list-entry
, brace-entry-open
,
statement
, arglist-cont
.
Line up lines inside a block in Whitesmith style. It’s done in a way that works both when the opening brace hangs and when it doesn’t. E.g.:
something { foo; <- c-lineup-whitesmith-in-block }
and
something { foo; <- c-lineup-whitesmith-in-block } <--> c-basic-offset
In the first case the indentation is kept unchanged, in the second
c-basic-offset
is added.
Works with: defun-close
, defun-block-intro
,
inline-close
, block-close
, brace-list-close
,
brace-list-intro
, statement-block-intro
,
arglist-intro
, arglist-cont-nonempty
,
arglist-close
, and all in*
symbols, e.g., inclass
and inextern-lang
.
Run-in style doesn’t really work too well. You might need to write your own custom line-up functions to better support this style.
Next: List Line-Up Functions, Up: Line-Up Functions [Contents][Index]