Brett Stahlman wrote:
> >> On Tuesday, May 23, 2017 at 8:25:33 AM UTC-5, Brett Stahlman wrote:
> >> > On Tue, May 23, 2017 at 4:35 AM, Bram Moolenaar <Bram@moolenaar.net> wrote:
> >> > >
> >> > > Brett Stahlman wrote:
> >> > >
> >> %--snip--%
> >> > >
> >> > > The best solution is probably to also add the raw rhs, with the terminal
> >> > > codes replaced. This won't work when changing the terminal type, but
> >> > > that is very unlikely to happen.
> >> >
> >> > You mean adding a key such as "raw_rhs" to the dictionary returned by
> >> > maparg()? If so, then yes this would help, but there would still need to
> >> > be a way to determine lhs, which is currently even more ambiguous than
> >> > rhs. While it's true that I probably already have lhs if I'm calling
> >> > maparg(), I need a way to determine which lhs(s) is/are ambiguous with a
> >> > given lhs. Mapcheck() gives me only the rhs of the conflicting map. To
> >> > save and restore, I'd need to know the lhs in canonical form as well.
> >>
> >> Perhaps mapcheck() could take an optional arg requesting something more than a simple boolean return. When called with this extra arg, mapcheck() could return a conflicting/ambiguous lhs (or list thereof) in some canonical format (possibly determined by the value of the extra arg itself). As long as the format returned could be fed to maparg(), it would be possible to find conflicting mappings, remove them temporarily, and subsequently restore them...
> >
> > If you define a mapping you will want to know whether the mapping
> > already exists and needs to be restored. For that you can use maparg(),
> > no need to use mapcheck().
> >
> > Not sure why you would want to remove "conflicting" mappings. Perhaps
> > when you map the ; key, and the user has ;x mapped? Then you would need
> > a list. Adding a maplist() function would be better than adding
> > arguments to mapcheck().
>
> Yes. Very much like that. I'm implementing a sort of transient mode, in
> which I'll "shadow" existing maps with very short (generally single
> character) mappings, which are expected to be ambiguous/conflicting with
> existing maps, and even builtin operators. Of course, when I exit the
> transient mode, I'd need to restore the mappings that were shadowed.
>
> The global and builtin maps are not a problem, since the transient maps use
> <buffer> and <nowait>; however, without parsing the output of one of the :map
> functions, I have no way of knowing which buf-local mappings will be ambiguous
> with the transient maps I'm defining. And parsing the :map output is
> problematic for the reasons already mentioned: e.g., no way to tell the
> difference between function key <F8> and the corresponding 4 characters. I'd
> actually considered taking some sort of iterative approach: e.g., trying all
> possible permutations of lhs as input to maparg() and testing the results, in
> an attempt to deduce the canonical form, but this would be extremely messy,
> and I don't even know whether it would be deterministic... The maplist()
> function you mentioned, if it returned all ambiguous left hand sides in
> canonical form, or even a list of the corresponding maparg()-style
> dictionaries, would be perfect. Of course, there would also need to be a way
> to get the rhs's canonical form: e.g., the extra "raw_rhs" key in the maparg()
> or maplist() dictionary.
OK, so for this you would use maplist() to get the list of mappings to
disable, use maparg() to get the current mapping, clear the mapping, do
your stuff, then restore the cleared mappings. You then need to make
sure you restore the mappings exactly as they were, even when your
"stuff" fails miserably.
It's a lot easier if we would have a way to temporarily disable
mappings. It's mostly the same as above, but you won't need to use
maparg() to get the current mapping and the restore operation. Instead
you would disable instead of clear, and later re-enable instead of
restore. Still need to make sure the re-enbling does happen, no change
in that part.
Big advantage is that if we evern add functionality to mappings, it will
keep working, while your save/restore pair probably fails.
Ah, your later post goes in the same direction.
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/// Bram Moolenaar -- Bram@Moolenaar.net -- http://www.Moolenaar.net \\\
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Friday, May 26, 2017
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