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Copyright (C) 2022, 2023 Enrico Flor.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License.”
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Next: Available commands, Previous: LaTeX table wizard - Magic editing of LaTeX tables, Up: LaTeX table wizard - Magic editing of LaTeX tables [Contents]
One of org-mode’s magic features is its table editing capabilities. The goal of this package is to replicate that magic for LaTeX table(-like) environments.
The way this is done is through a series of interactive commands that
are exposed as transient suffixes through the transient interface
invoked by the command latex-table-wizard
. What this means is that
by calling latex-table-wizard
when point is in a table-like
environment, you will be presented with a choice of keys that are
bound to all the commands provided by this package.
All these commands can of course be called through
execute-extended-command
, and you can bind any key you want to them.
See Customize transient prefix for how to change the default bindings
offered by the transient prefix.
An important feature of LaTeX-table-wizard is that it tries to be smart: for instance, it should not be fooled if the current table-like environments contains embedded tables (that is, other tabular environments inside of its cells). The table is parsed so that these big cells are treated like any other cell.
For example, if you call latex-table-wizard
when point is outside of
the embedded tabular
environment, LaTeX-table-wizard will behave as if
it was in any other 3x3 table, and the embedded table will be treated
just as any other cell content.
\begin{tabular}{lll} \begin{tabular}{ll} a & b \\ c & d \end{tabular} & █B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 \makecell{longer & nested cell} & C0 \end{tabular}
Of course you can call latex-table-wizard
with point inside of the
embedded table, in which case any command you use will operate only on
the embedded table.
For most of this document we will assume the table-like environment has the standard LaTeX2e syntax, but you can define your own types of table-like environments (more on this below).
Next: Known issues, Previous: Introduction, Up: LaTeX table wizard - Magic editing of LaTeX tables [Contents]
For now, we will assume a standard LaTeX syntax for tabular
environments, where &
delimits columns and \\
rows (see below for
info as to how to specify additional environments).
Whenever we say “current” we mean “at point”.
Next: Relative motion commands, Up: Available commands [Contents]
Just call latex-table-wizard
when point is inside of table-like
environment.
This commands actually activates the non-global minor mode
latex-table-wizard-mode
. If you intend to use this package’s commands
without the transient interface brought up by latex-table-wizard
,
activate this minor mode to have the interactive functions loaded.
Next: Absolute motion commands, Previous: Start editing, Up: Available commands [Contents]
These commands move point N cells to the right, left, down, and up. N is passed as a prefix argument, and if it’s not passed, it defaults to 1.
Command | Default key |
---|---|
latex-table-wizard-right | f |
latex-table-wizard-left | b |
latex-table-wizard-down | n |
latex-table-wizard-up | p |
With just one of these you can get anywhere you want in the table:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A0 & B0 & C0 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A2 & B2 & C2 \end{tabular}
This is because these commands try to Do What You Mean if there is no suitable cell to move to:
C0
, latex-table-wizard-right
⇒ point on A1
A0
, latex-table-wizard-left
⇒ point on C2
C2
, latex-table-wizard-down
⇒ point on A0
B0
, latex-table-wizard-up
⇒ point on A2
and so on.
These four commands accept a positive integer passed as a prefix
argument that determines how many steps (i.e. how many cells) the
movement will consist of. By default, you can pass this argument
from the transient interface of latex-table-wizard
with the key u
(bound to universal-argument
).
These four commands also accept a second optional argument which, if
non-nil, prevents the Do What You Mean behavior. This is useful if
you want to use these functions to write your own functions to edit
tables. Given the table above, if point is on A2
, both of the
following expressions will return nil and won’t move point:
(latex-table-wizard-left 1 t) (latex-table-wizard-down 1 t)
Next: Mark, kill and insert commands, Previous: Relative motion commands, Up: Available commands [Contents]
Command | Default key | Move to… |
---|---|---|
latex-table-wizard-beginning-of-cell | a | end of current cell |
latex-table-wizard-end-of-cell | e | beginning of current cell |
latex-table-wizard-beginning-of-row | B | leftmost cell in current row |
latex-table-wizard-end-of-row | F | rightmost cell in current row |
latex-table-wizard-bottom | N | bottom cell in current column |
latex-table-wizard-top | P | top cell in current column |
Next: Swap adjacent fields, Previous: Absolute motion commands, Up: Available commands [Contents]
Command | Default key | |
---|---|---|
latex-table-wizard-edit-cell | . | edit current cell |
latex-table-wizard-mark-cell | m c | mark current cell |
latex-table-wizard-insert-column | i c | insert empty column to the right |
latex-table-wizard-insert-row | i r | insert row below |
latex-table-wizard-copy-cell-content | w | copy content of current cell |
latex-table-wizard-yank-cell-content | y | replace and yank into current cell |
latex-table-wizard-kill-cell-content | k k | kill content of current cell |
latex-table-wizard-kill-column-content | k c | kill content of current column |
latex-table-wizard-kill-row-content | k r | kill content of current row |
latex-table-wizard-delete-column | D c | delete current column |
latex-table-wizard-delete-row | D r | delete current row |
exchange-point-and-mark | x |
latex-table-wizard-kill-cell-content
and
latex-table-wizard-copy-cell-content
add the content of current cell
both to the kill ring (like the default kill and copy commands) and to
the value of a special variable: latex-table-wizard-yank-cell-content
will replace the content of the current cell with whatever that value
is.
latex-table-wizard-delete-column
and latex-table-wizard-delete-row
modify the structure of the table (they actually remove the
column/table, not just the content of the cells in them).
Next: Swap arbitrary fields, Previous: Mark, kill and insert commands, Up: Available commands [Contents]
Command | Default key | Swap current… |
---|---|---|
latex-table-wizard-swap-cell-right | C-f | cell with the one to the right |
latex-table-wizard-swap-cell-left | C-b | cell with the one to the left |
latex-table-wizard-swap-cell-down | C-n | cell with the one below |
latex-table-wizard-swap-cell-up | C-p | cell with the one above |
latex-table-wizard-swap-column-right | M-f | column with the one to the right |
latex-table-wizard-swap-column-left | M-b | column with the one to the left |
latex-table-wizard-swap-row-down | M-n | row with the one below |
latex-table-wizard-swap-row-up | M-p | row with the one above |
For these commands, think of the cells and columns as circular: if there is no item in the direction given, the target is the one on the opposite end of the current cell. So for example:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A0 & B0 & C0 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A2 & B2 & C2 \end{tabular}
This is because these commands try to Do What You Mean if there is no suitable cell to move to:
Point on C0
, latex-table-wizard-swap-cell-right
⇒
\begin{tabular}{lll} C0 & B0 & A0 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A2 & B2 & C2 \end{tabular}
Point on B0
, latex-table-wizard-swap-row-up
⇒
\begin{tabular}{lll} A2 & B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 & C0 \end{tabular}
Point on A1
, latex-table-wizard-swap-column-right
⇒
\begin{tabular}{lll} B0 & A0 & C0 \\\hline B1 & A1 & C1 \\ B2 & A2 & C2 \end{tabular}
Next: Comment out cells, Previous: Swap adjacent fields, Up: Available commands [Contents]
To swap arbitrary fields one must first select something and then move point somewhere else and perform the swap. Importantly, selecting does not mean marking: the mark is not even moved when selecting (however, by default the selected cell will receive the same kind of highlighting the loaded theme defines for the active region, but this is a purely graphical equivalence). “Selecting”, for the purposes of LaTeX-table-wizard only means storing a cell, a line or a row to be swapped with another.
The simplest case is one in which the current cell, column or row are selected:
Command | Default key | Select current… |
---|---|---|
latex-table-wizard-select-deselect-cell | SPC | select/deselect cell |
latex-table-wizard-select-column | c | select column |
latex-table-wizard-select-row | r | deselect row |
latex-table-wizard-deselect-all | d | deselect all |
The first command, latex-table-wizard-select-deselect-cell
toggles the
status of the current cell as being selected or not.
Once things are selected, you move point somewhere else in the table (with the above mentioned motion commands), and then:
latex-table-wizard-swap | s | swap selection and current thing |
What is swapped depends on what is selected: if the selection was only a cell, then that cell and the current one are swapped. If it was (a potentially discontinuous segment of) a column or a row, then that selection is swapped with the current column or row or the corresponding portion thereof. If you selected multiple cell that are not part of the same column or row, the swap won’t happen (LaTeX-table-wizard doesn’t know what you want it to do in that case).
Next: Format the table, Previous: Swap arbitrary fields, Up: Available commands [Contents]
These two commands act on all the selected cells, if any is; otherwise, on the current cell point is on.
Command | Default key | Select current… |
---|---|---|
latex-table-wizard-comment-out-content | ; c | comment out content |
latex-table-wizard-comment-out | ; ; | comment out |
The difference between the two is that one only comments out the content, preserving both delimiters around the cell; the other one actually modifies the structure of the table because for any cell that is commented out, one delimiter around it is commented out too.
Next: Extra commands in the transient prefix, Previous: Comment out cells, Up: Available commands [Contents]
The only command to format the table is latex-table-wizard-align
. The
behavior of this command is cyclic, in the sense that calling it
repeatedly causes the table to cycle through four types of formatting:
left aligned, centered, right aligned and compressed. The latter
state is actually not one of alignment (that is, the column separators
are not vertically aligned): it just means that all the extra space at
the beginning and end of each cell is collapsed into one.
Command | Default key |
---|---|
latex-table-wizard-align | TAB |
The following five tables illustrate the effect of calling
latex-table-wizard-align
repeatedly.
This is the original cell:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A2 longer cell & B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 \makecell{longer & nested cell} & C0 \end{tabular}
left aligned:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A2 longer cell & B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 \makecell{longer & nested cell} & C0 \end{tabular}
centered:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A2 longer cell & B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 \makecell{longer & nested cell} & C0 \end{tabular}
right aligned:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A2 longer cell & B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 \makecell{longer & nested cell} & C0 \end{tabular}
compressed:
\begin{tabular}{lll} A2 longer cell & B2 & C2 \\\hline A1 & B1 & C1 \\ A0 & B0 \makecell{longer & nested cell} & C0 \end{tabular}
As you can see, latex-table-wizard-align
also forces every row of the
table to start on its own line.
As always, this alignment command tries to be smart and not be fooled by column or row delimiters embedded in a cell.
Beside latex-table-wizard-align
with its cycling behavior, four
commands are defined (but not exposed by the transient interface),
each of which just performs one of these transformations. These are:
latex-table-wizard-align-left
latex-table-wizard-align-right
latex-table-wizard-center
latex-table-wizard-compress
Previous: Format the table, Up: Available commands [Contents]
The transient interfaces invoked by latex-table-wizard
also exposes
some other commands that are not defined by this package but are
useful for its usage. These are:
Command | Default key |
---|---|
toggle-truncate-lines | t |
undo | / |
exchange-point-and-mark | x |
universal-argument | u |
transient-quit-one | RET |
Next: Customization, Previous: Available commands, Up: LaTeX table wizard - Magic editing of LaTeX tables [Contents]
Up: Known issues [Contents]
This package handles empty cells (that is, cells without any text in
them except perhaps comments) well. The only exception is in tables
with a single column. The problem is that a buffer substring like
\\ \\
is not parsed as a cell. This is normally not a problem, but if
the table has only one column then that substring could be meant to be
an empty or blank cell.
A way to avoid this problem may be defining a LaTeX macro that does nothing, and use it in the cell you intend to be empty so that the parser sees some text.
So instead of \\ \\
we will have \\ \blk{} \\
.
Next: Example setup without Transient interface (Emacs 28 and later), Previous: Known issues, Up: LaTeX table wizard - Magic editing of LaTeX tables [Contents]
To quickly access all customizations pertinent to LaTeX-table-wizard
through the Customize interface, call latex-table-wizard-customize
.
Next: Define rules for new environments, Up: Customization [Contents]
To change the default key bindings, you need to provide change the
value of the alist latex-table-wizard-transient-keys
. The easiest and
most convenient way to do it is through latex-table-wizard-customize
.
Each cons cell in this alist maps a command to a key description
string (the kind of strings that the macro kbd
takes as arguments).
For example, these three cons cells are members of the default value of
latex-table-wizard-transient-keys
:
(undo . "//") (latex-table-wizard-swap-cell-right . "C-f") (latex-table-wizard-insert-row . "i r")
Next: Customizing faces, Previous: Customize transient prefix, Up: Customization [Contents]
Remember the default values used for parsing table environments:
(defcustom latex-table-wizard-column-delimiters '("&") "List of strings that are column delimiters if unescaped." :type '(repeat string) :group 'latex-table-wizard) (defcustom latex-table-wizard-row-delimiters '("\\\\") "List of strings that are row delimiters if unescaped." :type '(repeat string) :group 'latex-table-wizard) (defcustom latex-table-wizard-hline-macros '("cline" "vline" "midrule" "hline" "toprule" "bottomrule") "Name of macros that draw horizontal lines. Each member of this list is a string that would be between the \"\\\" and the arguments." :type '(repeat string) :group 'latex-table-wizard)
LaTeX-table-wizard will always presume the table you want operate on
has a syntax specified like this. But suppose you use different
environments with non-standard syntax: suppose you define a
table-like environment of your choice, let’s call it mytable
, that
uses !ROW
and !COL
instead of &
and \\
as delimiters, and a macro
\horizontal
for horizontal lines. When you are in a mytable
environments, you want LaTeX-table-wizard to adapt to this new
syntax.
All you need to do add an appropriate cons cell to the
latex-table-wizard-new-environments-alist
association list, mapping
the name of the environment, as a string, to a property list
specifying the values. Here is this variable’s defcustom
expression:
(defcustom latex-table-wizard-new-environments-alist nil "Alist mapping environment names to property lists. The environment name is a string, for example \"foo\" for an environment like \\begin{foo} ... \\end{foo} The cdr of each mapping is a property list with three keys: :col :row :lines The values for :col and :row are two lists of strings. The value for :lines is a list of strings just like is the case for `latex-table-wizard-hline-macros', each of which is the name of a macro that inserts some horizontal line. For a macro \"\\foo{}\", use string \"foo\"." :type '(alist :key-type (string :tag "Name of the environment:") :value-type (plist :key-type symbol :options (:col :row :lines) :value-type (repeat string))) :group 'latex-table-wizard)
You can add the new syntax for the mytable
environment through the
Customize interface, which will present you with the correct values to
set, or you can just add a cons cell of your writing to the alist:
(add-to-list 'latex-table-wizard-new-environments-alist '("mytable" . (:col ("!COL") :row ("!ROW") :lines ("horizontal"))))
Each of the values in the plist is a list of strings: this way you can
define environments that can use more than one type of column
separator. Importantly, the strings in the :lines
list are names of
LaTeX macros, which means that they should not start with the
backslash and you should not add any argument to them. In the example
above a buffer substring like ‘\horizontal{1}’ will be interpreted as a
hline macro if in a mytable
environment.
Next: Detached arguments, Previous: Define rules for new environments, Up: Customization [Contents]
Calling latex-table-wizard
by default causes the portions of the
buffer before and after the table at point to be “grayed out”, so
that you can clearly focus on the table. If you don’t want this to
happen, set the value of the variable latex-table-wizard-no-focus
to
t
.
If instead you want effect to be different than the default (which is
applying a foreground of color gray40
), change the value of the face
latex-table-wizard-background
.
By default, when you move around the table and select objects from it
the relevant portions of the table are highlighted. If you don’t
want this to happen, set the value of the variable
latex-table-wizard-no-highlight
to t
.
If instead you want the highlighting to be done differently than the
default (which is applying a background of the same color as the
loaded theme defines for the active region), change the value of the
face latex-table-wizard-highlight
.
The easiest and most convenient way to set these variables,
especially the two faces, is through the Customize interface, which
you can access quickly by calling latex-table-wizard-customize
.
Previous: Customizing faces, Up: Customization [Contents]
Optional or obligatory arguments can be separated from the macro or
from each other in LaTeX. Suppose there is a macro \macro
that takes
one optional and one obligatory argument. Now, LaTeX can deal with
all of the following forms:
This fact matters for this package for several reasons but the most
important is that, in parsing the table, we need to know where the
table content starts. Suppose you defined a tabular like environment
myenv
whose \begin
macro accepts an optional argument. Is ‘[abc]’ below
the optional argument of the environment or content of the first cell?
By default, latex-table-wizard
will consider ‘[abc]’ part of the first
cell in the example above, because it does not recognize the
possibility for the arguments of LaTeX macros to be detached. If you
want to change this default, set the value of
latex-table-wizard-allow-detached-args
to t.
If latex-table-wizard-allow-detached-args
is set to t (that is, if
detached arguments are allowed), you should not have in your table
strings between braces or brackets after a macro without them be
separated by a blank line, unless these strings between braces or
brackets are in fact the arguments of the macro. This is not a
problem for LaTeX, because it knows what is a valid macro and what
isn’t, and how many arguments a macro accepts: latex-table-wizard
however does not know it and it could get confused while parsing, and
thus get the start of the first cell wrong.
Good practice is to never separate arguments from each other or from the LaTeX macro: if you respect this good practice, you will never need to be concerned with this customization.
If detached arguments are “disallowed” (that is,
latex-table-wizard-allow-detached-args
is nil as per default), you
have the option to be warned when latex-table-wizard
finds cases of
suspect detached arguments. The warning is just a message in the echo
area right after the table is parsed. If you want this, set the value
of latex-table-wizard-warn-about-detached-args
to t.
Previous: Customization, Up: LaTeX table wizard - Magic editing of LaTeX tables [Contents]
Since the interactive commands work independently from the
functionalities provided by transient.el, you can build your own
alternative interfaces easily if you prefer so. For example, the code
below uses repeat-mode
(built-in with Emacs 28 and later):
(require 'repeat) (define-prefix-command 'latex-table-wizard-map) (define-key global-map (kbd "C-c C-|") 'latex-table-wizard-map) (dolist (c latex-table-wizard-transient-keys) (define-key latex-table-wizard-map (kbd (cdr c)) (car c))) (dolist (cmd (mapcar #'car latex-table-wizard-transient-keys)) (put cmd 'repeat-map 'latex-table-wizard-map))