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Re: defining my own newline function
From: |
Ryan Krauss |
Subject: |
Re: defining my own newline function |
Date: |
Tue, 6 Nov 2007 07:56:15 -0600 |
Sorry, I meant to cc the list as well.
I can't make 'M-: (current-local-mode)' do anything. I assume you
want me to press Alt-Shift-: (the shift is needed to make a colon
rather than a semi-colon?). When I do that, I prompted with
Eval:
so, I typed
(current-local-mode)
there and I get
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function current-local-mode)
(current-local-mode)
eval((current-local-mode))
eval-expression((current-local-mode) nil)
call-interactively(eval-expression)
But the info line lists my major mode as the one being run. The
syntax highlighting is what I have defined, and my indent function is
being used. My local key map is also available, with an outdent
function bound to backtab. These keys don't work if I create a .txt
file where my mode isn't running. So, I think my mode is running and
my local key map is happening with other keys.
Ryan
On 11/5/07, Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> wrote:
> > (define-key pypoutline-mode-map "\C-j" 'pypoutline-newline-and-indent)
> > (define-key pypoutline-mode-map [<return>] 'pypoutline-newline-and-indent)
> > (define-key py-mode-map "\C-m" 'pypoutline-newline-and-indent)
>
> > but none of them seem to be working. If I type C-h k and
> > then hit return (in a buffer running my mode), I get:
>
> > RET (translated from <return>) runs the command newline
>
> > What am I doing wrong? Is there something I need to add
> > to the syntax table of my mode or somewhere else?
>
> Are you sure that you are in your mode and that your mode has your mode map
> as its local map? What does `M-: (current-local-mode)' tell you?
>
> [BTW, it's generally better to use plain text, not HTML, for email to a
> mailing list.]
>
>