improve SCI_LINEDELETE shortcut
-
This is probably not a bad idea, but Notepad++ doesn’t control this functionality; Scintilla does. As Scintilla is a separate project, you’d have to make a feature request to that project for a change. You can do that HERE.
-
@alan-kilborn ok thanks
-
Here’s a PythonScript called
LineDelete.py
that implements the functionality:# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- class LD(object): def __init__(self): if editor.getSelections() > 1 and not editor.selectionIsRectangle(): return # unsupported for now editor.beginUndoAction() if editor.getCurrentPos() != editor.getAnchor(): (line_start, line_end) = editor.getUserLineSelection() if line_start != line_end: start_pos = editor.positionFromLine(line_start) end_pos = editor.getLineEndPosition(line_end) editor.deleteRange(start_pos, end_pos - start_pos) editor.lineDelete() editor.endUndoAction() #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- if __name__ == '__main__': LD()
-
@earth-invader said in improve SCI_LINEDELETE shortcut:
It only deletes the 1st line of the selection in the current version.
Actually, it deletes the line of the caret, which isn’t always the 1st line.
If you start making your selection from the top of your window and then lengthen it towards the bottom, when you stop your caret position will be on the bottom-most line, so that one will be the one deleted with SCI_LINEDELETE.
If you do it the other way, from lower on the window toward the upper part of the window, then yes, you are correct, the 1st line of the selection will be the one deleted with SCI_LINEDELETE.
-
How do I use your script? I installed PythonScript plugin and placed the script in the script folder but after restart, it still only delete one line.
-
@earth-invader said in improve SCI_LINEDELETE shortcut:
How do I use your script? I installed PythonScript plugin and placed the script in the script folder but after restart, it still only delete one line.
See HERE.
-
@alan-kilborn
Thanks. it works. -
@Alan-Kilborn
At your script, is it necessary to wrap the core of it inside a class?
And generally, for any pythonscripts?
Because I try just this and seems to work:if editor.getSelections() == 1 or editor.selectionIsRectangle(): # else, unsupported for now editor.beginUndoAction() if editor.getCurrentPos() != editor.getAnchor(): (line_start, line_end) = editor.getUserLineSelection() if line_start != line_end: start_pos = editor.positionFromLine(line_start) end_pos = editor.getLineEndPosition(line_end) editor.deleteRange(start_pos, end_pos - start_pos) editor.lineDelete() editor.endUndoAction()
I’ve read PythonScript 2.0.0.0 documentation , nothing on that.
-
@Victorel-Petrovich said in improve SCI_LINEDELETE shortcut:
@Alan-Kilborn
At your script, is it necessary to wrap the core of it inside a class?
And generally, for any pythonscripts?It’s not necessary. But if you’ve got a lot of scripts, there are potentials for namespace collisions (“is the
line_start
variable inscript1.py
going to mess up a variable of the same name inscript2.py
?”). Alan, and other of us regulars, have lots of scripts that we use on a regular basis, and namespace collisions can create nasty bugs. By wrapping in a class with a name unique to the script, there is virtually no danger of a namespace collision (unless you don’t pick a unique class name).So those of us who write and/or use lots of scripts tend to wrap them in some way: either in a class, or at least wrapping them in functions and giving the functions long, annoying-to-type names… I used to use a suffix of which Community “topic” number it was (as seen in the URL for each topic) when I would write a function in response to a post here, because that’s a safe way to guarantee that neither I nor the recipient has a function with that exact name already loaded in their PythonScript environment.
-
@PeterJones
Oh, so it’s standard python scoping rules at work.
Makes sense. Those classes probably look spooky for beginners :)I’ll stick to functions, at least for now: I can name them same as filename of the script (which needs to be unique anyway).
Thank you for the good reply.
EDIT:
def main(): ... main()
should also be enough, provided I do so in EVERY script (as explained by Alan here ) -
2 other versions:
def main(): if editor.getSelections() > 1 and not editor.selectionIsRectangle(): return # unsupported for now editor.beginUndoAction() p1=editor.getSelectionStart() p2=editor.getSelectionEnd() editor.deleteRange(p1,p2-p1) editor.lineDelete() editor.endUndoAction() main()
and:
def main(): if editor.getSelections() > 1: return # unsupported editor.beginUndoAction() editor.deleteBackNotLine() editor.lineDelete() editor.endUndoAction() main()
The 2nd one doesn’t work for rectangle selections (column mode), but this is consistent with cutting lines in selection using SCI_LINECUT.
-
This post is deleted! -
This one, almost works even for multiple selections (multiple carets).
The only problem is that in such case, the last commandeditor.clear()
refuses to delete the EOL-s, thus it leaves multiple carets in place:def main(): editor.beginUndoAction() editor.deleteBackNotLine() editor.delLineLeft() editor.delLineRight() editor.clear() editor.endUndoAction() main()
I should look in how to focus on one selection at a time, in a loop.
-
I hope that those who think I’m spamming here, have unsubscribed from the topic :) .
Next “works” for all kinds of selections (column, not column, mixed…)… BUT … has a little glitch at Ist line in doc for the case of multiple non-column selections: won’t remove EOL for that particular case
def main(): editor.beginUndoAction() if editor.selectionIsRectangle(): p1=editor.getSelectionStart() p2=editor.getSelectionEnd() editor.deleteRange(p1,p2-p1) editor.lineDelete() else: editor.deleteBackNotLine() editor.delLineLeft() editor.delLineRight() if editor.getCurrentPos()!=0: editor.deleteBack() editor.charRight() else: editor.clear() # compromise: makes it work for single selection, at expense of multi-selections editor.endUndoAction() main()
Okay, probably can’t do better without looping over selections…
-
No one thinks you are spamming…
Are you just practicing your scripting skills in case Scintilla doesn’t address your concern about SCI_LINEDELETE?
Ref: https://sourceforge.net/p/scintilla/feature-requests/1489/
Ref: https://github.com/notepad-plus-plus/notepad-plus-plus/issues/13921 -
@Alan-Kilborn said in improve SCI_LINEDELETE shortcut:
No one thinks you are spamming…
Nice to know.
Are you just practicing your scripting skills in case Scintilla doesn’t address your concern about SCI_LINEDELETE?
That’s right; and who knows how many months till that change will be accepted?
Also, it’s a good general practice, and … a fun challenge :-).Hope will be instructive for others as well happening on this thread.
For example, the glitch in my last script:
at first seemed insurmountable, editor.clear() (which is just “delete” function) just doesn’t want to work with several carets
on EOL…
But this morning I thought: what would I do if on keyboard, my “delete” key didn’t work (say, temporarily) ?
Little easy puzzle … and the glitch is gone :) :def main(): editor.beginUndoAction() if editor.selectionIsRectangle(): p1=editor.getSelectionStart() p2=editor.getSelectionEnd() editor.deleteRange(p1,p2-p1) editor.lineDelete() else: editor.deleteBackNotLine() editor.delLineLeft() editor.delLineRight() editor.charRight() editor.deleteBack() editor.endUndoAction() main()
-
@Victorel-Petrovich said in improve SCI_LINEDELETE shortcut:
and who knows how many months till that change will be accepted?
I don’t see (at that Scintilla issue) that you submitted the patch? Hard to be accepted if nothing is submitted. :-)
-
If I were updating my original LineDelete.py script to handle all types of selections that could be active when the user invokes the script, maybe this is how I’d do it:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- from __future__ import print_function # references: # https://community.notepad-plus-plus.org/topic/23096/improve-sci_linedelete-shortcut from Npp import * #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- class LD(object): def __init__(self): line_range_tup_list = [] for sel_num in range(editor.getSelections()): sel_start_pos = editor.getSelectionNStart(sel_num) sel_end_pos = editor.getSelectionNEnd(sel_num) sel_line_start = editor.lineFromPosition(sel_start_pos) sel_line_end = editor.lineFromPosition(sel_end_pos) if sel_start_pos != sel_end_pos and sel_end_pos == editor.positionFromLine(sel_line_end): # adjust for case where there is some selected text and caret is on a line by itself, i.e., no actual selected text on line of caret: sel_line_end -= 1 line_range_tup_list.append( (sel_line_start, sel_line_end) ) editor.beginUndoAction() # delete lines from bottom of doc towards the top, to avoid having to constantly adjust for previously deleted lines: for __ in sorted(list(self.consolidate_tup_list(line_range_tup_list)), reverse=True): self.del_line_range(*__) editor.endUndoAction() # leave single caret: __ = editor.getCurrentPos() editor.setSel(__, __) editor.chooseCaretX() def del_line_range(self, start_line_to_del, end_line_to_del): #print('start_line_to_del:', start_line_to_del+1, 'end_line_to_del:', end_line_to_del+1) start_pos_to_del = editor.positionFromLine(start_line_to_del) end_pos_to_del = editor.positionFromLine(end_line_to_del) + editor.lineLength(end_line_to_del) #print('start_pos_to_del:', start_pos_to_del+1, 'end_pos_to_del:', end_pos_to_del+1) editor.deleteRange(start_pos_to_del, end_pos_to_del - start_pos_to_del) def consolidate_tup_list(self, tup_list): # inspired by https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5679638/merging-a-list-of-time-range-tuples-that-have-overlapping-time-ranges tup_list = sorted(tup_list) held_list = list(tup_list[0]) for (start, end) in tup_list[1:]: if held_list[1] <= start <= held_list[1] + 1: held_list[1] = end else: yield tuple(held_list) held_list[0] = start held_list[1] = end yield tuple(held_list) #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- if __name__ == '__main__': LD()
-
-
That’s advanced; I’ll look into it.
Meanwhile, I’ve also been working on a version with looping over selections.
""" This does not work correctly if some selections share one line (examples: 2 selections or just 2 carets on same line; a selection begins/ends on same line that another ends/begins); In such cases, the program will delete more lines than necessary. To solve this, I think would need more than one loop. """ def main(): editor.beginUndoAction() selN=editor.getSelections()-1 while selN>-1: p1=editor.getSelectionNStart(selN) p2=editor.getSelectionNEnd(selN) editor.deleteRange(p1,p2-p1) editor.lineDelete() editor.dropSelectionN(selN) selN-=1 editor.endUndoAction() main()
-