8

The only editor I've ever used that supports this (I'm sure lots do, however) is Sublime Text 2, but hopefully emacs has a trick up its sleeve too. Some classes I work on that have a fairly declarative syntax look cleaner if the source is kept columnized. The problem comes in when a new row increases the length of a column by a space or two... you then have to work through each row re-aligning it.

A screenshot probably clarifies what I'm getting at:

Columnized text out of alignment

Here I've added a row in which one if its columns extends further than the other columns, so I'd like to realign it all again. Ordinarily I'd just repeat-cycle my fingers around the arrows and the space bar until I've re-aligned everything row-by-row, but it'd be good if there was a way to just select a rectangular area and force text non-whitespace parts of that area to fall into alignment.

Is this possible?

1
  • 3
    Hah! ___ editor does x, can Emacs do x? Unless X is a horizontal scroll bar, then the answer is probably yes. ;)
    – event_jr
    Sep 21, 2011 at 5:23

3 Answers 3

22

Rather than using rectangles, you could use align-regexp. Select the area then do:

C-u M-x align-regexp RET ,\(\s-*\) RET 1 RET 1 RET y

If you do this a lot, make a function:

(defun my-align-after-commas (beg end)
  (interactive "r")
  (align-regexp beg end ",\\(\\s-*\\)" 1 1 t))

Then select the area and M-x my-align-after-commas

4
  • What's the - for in the regexp?
    – malana
    Sep 20, 2011 at 15:27
  • 1
    \s- means whitespace in Emacs regexp's (it's actually a syntax class, see the manual if you're really interested) Sep 20, 2011 at 16:32
  • 1
    @mmmasterluke \s- is emacs' metacharacter for whitespace, as opposed to just \s. Emacs' regexes are a bit funky.
    – jdd
    Sep 20, 2011 at 16:34
  • 1
    See M-: (info "(elisp) Syntax Class Table") RET, and also "(elisp) Regexp Backslash". Each class is matched in a regexp with \sCODE for a given syntax class CODE (with \SCODE matching anything but).
    – phils
    Sep 21, 2011 at 2:47
5

There's also the columnize library which can transform this:

(defvar enform-keywords-statements
  '( "AT END"  "AT  START" "CLOSE" "DECLARE" "DELINK" "DICTIONARY"     
     "EXIT" "FIND" "FOOTING" "LINK" "LIST" "OPEN" "PARAM" "SET"            
     "SUBFOOTING" "SUBTITLE" "TITLE" )
  "List of ENFORM statement keywords. Used to create the `font-lock-keywords' table.")

into this:

(defvar enform-keywords-statements
  '( "AT END"      "AT  START"   "CLOSE"       "DECLARE"     "DELINK"      
     "DICTIONARY"  "EXIT"        "FIND"        "FOOTING"     "LINK"        
     "LIST"        "OPEN"        "PARAM"       "SET"         "SUBFOOTING"  
     "SUBTITLE"    "TITLE"        )
  "List of ENFORM statement keywords. Used to create the `font-lock-keywords' table.")

You select the region you want to align and then M-x columnize-text.

EmacsWiki page on this and others:
http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/CategoryAlignment

4

Emacs does let you select rectangular areas, and it does let you edit whole columns. To delete a rectangular area, set the mark at one corner, point at the other, and then M-x kill-rectangle. You can add a rectangle of whitespace by marking it the same way, and then M-x open-rectangle.

This is just the way that I know how to do this; there are doubtless other, possibly better ways.

3
  • Thanks for the response. I want to shift the column (in this case) one space to the right, not delete it. When I set the mark (assuming you mean C-space) then move the point to the other corner, it seems to select entire lines between the mark and point?
    – d11wtq
    Sep 20, 2011 at 12:25
  • Sorry, missed your edit while I was typing, let's see what happens, thanks! :)
    – d11wtq
    Sep 20, 2011 at 12:26
  • Or with cua-selection-mode on: C-RET at top corner to begin rectangle editing, <down> to the bottom corner, SPC to insert a space at the start of every row, and C-RET again to disable the rectangle. For documentation, use M-x find-library RET cua-base RET and search for the comments on "CUA rectangle support".
    – phils
    Sep 21, 2011 at 10:44

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