> > (put 'if 'common-lisp-indent-function > > '(nil nil &body)))) > This breaks the standard indentation of IF in lisp-mode buffers. By standard, I mean the accepted way of indenting IF in common lisp.
Do we care about breaking the common-lisp standard for indentation of Emacs Lisp? I don't care if we break it. (But see below - I see now that you are not talking about Emacs-Lisp code.) it will affect indentation of IF in all modes that use common-lisp-indent-function to indent. in common lisp: (if test then else) OK, I understand. The `put' affects also the common-lisp standard indentation for `if', and that indentation is not appropriate for Common-Lisp `if'. My suggestion was not to simply add the above code, but to integrate its behavior. You're right that it would be preferable to integrate it only for the proper modes - so that it doesn't affect editing of common-lisp code, for instance. Currently, it looks as if common-lisp-mode is an alias for lisp-mode. Because there are syntax differences between Emacs Lisp and Common Lisp, perhaps it would be better not to have this simple alias, and to allow for behavioral differences (e.g. indentation). Lisp-interaction-mode and emacs-lisp-mode are built on lisp-mode, and they both should, I think, have the indentation support appropriate to emacs-lisp. (Not sure about the status of lisp-interaction-mode - in *scratch*, at least, it is best to have Emacs-Lisp indentation support.) IOW, the idea is to have this indentation for Emacs Lisp, including in *scratch* (which is in lisp-interaction-mode). Yes, it would be wrong to impose this on Common-Lisp (or other Lisp) code also. _______________________________________________ Emacs-devel mailing list Emacs-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-devel