Tony Zorman bdb13e2551 X.P.OrgMode: Add orgPromptRefile[To]
Add orgPromptRefile and orgPromptRefileTo in order to refile entries
after insertion.
2022-10-31 14:29:43 +01:00

644 lines
23 KiB
Haskell

{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-}
{-# LANGUAGE InstanceSigs #-}
{-# LANGUAGE LambdaCase #-}
{-# LANGUAGE NamedFieldPuns #-}
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# LANGUAGE RecordWildCards #-}
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables #-}
{-# LANGUAGE StrictData #-}
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-- |
-- Module : XMonad.Prompt.OrgMode
-- Description : A prompt for interacting with org-mode.
-- Copyright : (c) 2021 Tony Zorman
-- License : BSD3-style (see LICENSE)
--
-- Maintainer : Tony Zorman <soliditsallgood@mailbox.org>
-- Stability : experimental
-- Portability : unknown
--
-- A prompt for interacting with <https:\/\/orgmode.org\/ org-mode>.
-- This can be seen as an org-specific version of
-- "XMonad.Prompt.AppendFile", allowing for more interesting
-- interactions with that particular file type.
--
-- It can be used to quickly save TODOs, NOTEs, and the like with the
-- additional capability to schedule/deadline a task, add a priority,
-- refile to some existing heading, and use the system's clipboard
-- (really: the primary selection) as the contents of the note.
--
-- A blog post highlighting some features of this module can be found
-- <https://tony-zorman.com/posts/orgmode-prompt/2022-08-27-xmonad-and-org-mode.html here>.
--
--------------------------------------------------------------------
module XMonad.Prompt.OrgMode (
-- * Usage
-- $usage
-- * Prompts
orgPrompt, -- :: XPConfig -> String -> FilePath -> X ()
orgPromptRefile, -- :: XPConfig -> [String] -> String -> FilePath -> X ()
orgPromptRefileTo, -- :: XPConfig -> String -> String -> FilePath -> X ()
orgPromptPrimary, -- :: XPConfig -> String -> FilePath -> X ()
-- * Types
ClipboardSupport (..),
OrgMode, -- abstract
#ifdef TESTING
pInput,
Note (..),
Priority (..),
Date (..),
Time (..),
TimeOfDay (..),
DayOfWeek (..),
#endif
) where
import XMonad.Prelude
import XMonad (X, io, whenJust)
import XMonad.Prompt (XPConfig, XPrompt (showXPrompt), mkXPromptWithReturn, mkComplFunFromList, ComplFunction)
import XMonad.Util.Parser
import XMonad.Util.XSelection (getSelection)
import XMonad.Util.Run
import Control.DeepSeq (deepseq)
import Data.Time (Day (ModifiedJulianDay), NominalDiffTime, UTCTime (utctDay), addUTCTime, defaultTimeLocale, formatTime, fromGregorian, getCurrentTime, iso8601DateFormat, nominalDay, toGregorian)
import GHC.Natural (Natural)
import System.IO (IOMode (AppendMode, ReadMode), hClose, hGetContents, openFile, withFile)
{- $usage
You can use this module by importing it, along with "XMonad.Prompt", in
your @xmonad.hs@
> import XMonad.Prompt
> import XMonad.Prompt.OrgMode (orgPrompt)
and adding an appropriate keybinding. For example, using syntax from
"XMonad.Util.EZConfig":
> , ("M-C-o", orgPrompt def "TODO" "/home/me/org/todos.org")
This would create notes of the form @* TODO /my-message/@ in the
specified file.
You can also enter a relative path; in that case the file path will be
prepended with @$HOME@ or an equivalent directory. I.e. instead of the
above you can write
> , ("M-C-o", orgPrompt def "TODO" "org/todos.org")
> -- also possible: "~/org/todos.org"
There is also some scheduling and deadline functionality present. This
may be initiated by entering @+s@ or @+d@—separated by at least one
whitespace character on either side—into the prompt, respectively.
Then, one may enter a date and (optionally) a time of day. Any of the
following are valid dates, where brackets indicate optionality:
- tod[ay]
- tom[orrow]
- /any weekday/
- /any date of the form DD [MM] [YYYY]/
In the last case, the missing month and year will be filled out with the
current month and year.
For weekdays, we also disambiguate as early as possible; a simple @w@
will suffice to mean Wednesday, but @s@ will not be enough to say
Sunday. You can, however, also write the full word without any
troubles. Weekdays always schedule into the future; e.g., if today is
Monday and you schedule something for Monday, you will actually schedule
it for the /next/ Monday (the one in seven days).
The time is specified in the @HH:MM@ format. The minutes may be
omitted, in which case we assume a full hour is specified.
A few examples are probably in order. Suppose we have bound the key
above, pressed it, and are now confronted with a prompt:
- @hello +s today@ would create a TODO note with the header @hello@
and would schedule that for today's date.
- @hello +s today 12@ schedules the note for today at 12:00.
- @hello +s today 12:30@ schedules it for today at 12:30.
- @hello +d today 12:30@ works just like above, but creates a
deadline.
- @hello +s thu@ would schedule the note for next thursday.
- @hello +s 11@ would schedule it for the 11th of this month and this
year.
- @hello +s 11 jan 2013@ would schedule the note for the 11th of
January 2013.
Note that, due to ambiguity concerns, years below @25@ result in
undefined parsing behaviour. Otherwise, what should @message +s 11 jan
13@ resolve to—the 11th of january at 13:00 or the 11th of january in
the year 13?
There is basic support for alphabetic org-mode
<https:\/\/orgmode.org\/manual\/Priorities.html priorities>.
Simply append either @#A@, @#B@, or @#C@ (capitalisation is optional) to
the end of the note. For example, one could write @"hello +s 11 jan
2013 #A"@ or @"hello #C"@. Note that there has to be at least one
whitespace character between the end of the note and the chosen
priority.
There's also the possibility to take what's currently in the primary
selection and paste that as the content of the created note. This is
especially useful when you want to quickly save a URL for later and
return to whatever you were doing before. See the 'orgPromptPrimary'
prompt for that.
Finally, 'orgPromptRefile' and 'orgPromptRefileTo' provide support to
automatically
<https://orgmode.org/manual/Refile-and-Copy.html refile>
the generated item under a heading of choice. For example, binding
> orgPromptRefile def ["TODO", "DONE", "SOMEDAY"] "TODO" "todos.org"
to a key will first pop up an ordinary prompt that works exactly like
'orgPrompt', and then query the user for an already existing heading
(with completions) as provided by the @~/todos.org@ file. If that
prompt is cancelled, the heading will appear in the org file as normal
(i.e., at the end of the file); otherwise, it gets refiled under the
selected heading.
The second argument to 'orgPromptRefile'—in this case, @["TODO", "DONE",
"SOMEDAY"]@—says which keywords you want to have recognised as todo
keywords. This means that they won't be shown in the prompt when
selecting headings. This should probably be at least close to the value
of @org-todo-keywords@.
-}
{- TODO
- XMonad.Util.XSelection.getSelection is really, really horrible. The
plan would be to rewrite this in a way so it uses xmonad's
connection to the X server.
- Add option to explicitly use the system clipboard instead of the
primary selection.
-}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Prompt
data OrgMode = OrgMode
{ clpSupport :: ClipboardSupport
, todoHeader :: String -- ^ Will display like @* todoHeader @
, orgFile :: FilePath
}
mkOrgCfg :: ClipboardSupport -> String -> FilePath -> X OrgMode
mkOrgCfg clp header fp = OrgMode clp header <$> mkAbsolutePath fp
-- | Whether we should use a clipboard and which one to use.
data ClipboardSupport
= PrimarySelection
| NoClpSupport
-- | How one should display the clipboard string.
data Clp
= Header String -- ^ In the header as a link: @* [[clp][message]]@
| Body String -- ^ In the body as additional text: @* message \n clp@
instance XPrompt OrgMode where
showXPrompt :: OrgMode -> String
showXPrompt OrgMode{ todoHeader, orgFile, clpSupport } =
mconcat ["Add ", todoHeader, clp, " to ", orgFile, ": "]
where
clp :: String = case clpSupport of
NoClpSupport -> ""
PrimarySelection -> " + PS"
-- | Prompt for interacting with @org-mode@.
orgPrompt
:: XPConfig -- ^ Prompt configuration
-> String -- ^ What kind of note to create; will be displayed after
-- a single @*@
-> FilePath -- ^ Path to @.org@ file, e.g. @home\/me\/todos.org@
-> X ()
orgPrompt xpc = (void . mkOrgPrompt xpc =<<) .: mkOrgCfg NoClpSupport
-- | Like 'orgPrompt', but additionally make use of the primary
-- selection. If it is a URL, then use an org-style link
-- @[[primary-selection][entered message]]@ as the heading. Otherwise,
-- use the primary selection as the content of the note.
--
-- The prompt will display a little @+ PS@ in the window
-- after the type of note.
orgPromptPrimary :: XPConfig -> String -> FilePath -> X ()
orgPromptPrimary xpc = (void . mkOrgPrompt xpc =<<) .: mkOrgCfg PrimarySelection
-- | Internal type in order to generate a nice prompt in
-- 'orgPromptRefile' and 'orgPromptRefileTo'.
data RefilePrompt = Refile
instance XPrompt RefilePrompt where
showXPrompt :: RefilePrompt -> String
showXPrompt Refile = "Refile note to: "
-- | Like 'orgPrompt' (which see for the other arguments), but offer to
-- refile the entered note afterwards.
--
-- Note that refiling is done by shelling out to Emacs, hence an @emacs@
-- binary must be in @$PATH@. One may customise this by following the
-- instructions in "XMonad.Util.Run#g:EDSL"; more specifically, by
-- changing the 'XMonad.Util.Run.emacs' field of
-- 'XMonad.Util.Run.ProcessConfig'.
orgPromptRefile
:: XPConfig
-> [String] -- ^ List of strings to be treated as todo keywords.
-- Should reflect the value of @org-todo-keywords@.
-> String
-> FilePath
-> X ()
orgPromptRefile xpc todoPrefixes str fp = do
orgCfg <- mkOrgCfg NoClpSupport str fp
-- NOTE: Ideally we would just use System.IO.readFile' here
-- (especially because it also reads everything strictly), but this is
-- only available starting in base 4.15.x.
fileContents <- io $ do
handle <- openFile (orgFile orgCfg) ReadMode
contents <- hGetContents handle
contents <$ (contents `deepseq` hClose handle)
-- Save the entry as soon as possible.
notCancelled <- mkOrgPrompt xpc orgCfg
when notCancelled $
-- If the user didn't cancel, try to parse the org file and offer to
-- refile the entry if possible.
whenJust (runParser (pOrgFile todoPrefixes) fileContents) $ \headings ->
mkXPromptWithReturn Refile xpc (completeHeadings headings) pure >>= \case
Nothing -> pure ()
Just parent -> refile parent (orgFile orgCfg)
where
completeHeadings :: [Heading] -> ComplFunction
completeHeadings = mkComplFunFromList xpc . map headingText
-- | Like 'orgPromptRefile', but with a fixed heading for refiling; no
-- prompt will appear to query for a target.
--
-- Heading names may omit tags, but generally need to be prefixed by the
-- correct todo keywords; e.g.,
--
-- > orgPromptRefileTo def "PROJECT Work" "TODO" "~/todos.org"
--
-- Will refile the created note @"TODO <text>"@ to the @"PROJECT Work"@
-- heading, even with the actual name is @"PROJECT Work
-- :work:other_tags:"@. Just entering @"Work"@ will not work, as Emacs
-- doesn't recognise @"PROJECT"@ as an Org keyword by default (i.e. when
-- started in batch-mode).
orgPromptRefileTo
:: XPConfig
-> String -- ^ Heading to refile the entry under.
-> String
-> FilePath
-> X ()
orgPromptRefileTo xpc refileHeading str fp = do
orgCfg <- mkOrgCfg NoClpSupport str fp
notCancelled <- mkOrgPrompt xpc orgCfg
when notCancelled $ refile refileHeading (orgFile orgCfg)
-- | Create the actual prompt. Returns 'False' when the input was
-- cancelled by the user (by, for example, pressing @Esc@ or @C-g@) and
-- 'True' otherwise.
mkOrgPrompt :: XPConfig -> OrgMode -> X Bool
mkOrgPrompt xpc oc@OrgMode{ todoHeader, orgFile, clpSupport } =
isJust <$> mkXPromptWithReturn oc xpc (const (pure [])) appendNote
where
-- | Parse the user input, create an @org-mode@ note out of that and
-- try to append it to the given file.
appendNote :: String -> X ()
appendNote input = io $ do
clpStr <- case clpSupport of
NoClpSupport -> pure $ Body ""
PrimarySelection -> do
sel <- getSelection
pure $ if any (`isPrefixOf` sel) ["http://", "https://"]
then Header sel
else Body $ "\n " <> sel
withFile orgFile AppendMode . flip hPutStrLn
<=< maybe (pure "") (ppNote clpStr todoHeader) . pInput
$ input
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Refiling
-- | Let Emacs do the refiling, as this seems—and I know how this
-- sounds—more robust than trying to do it ad-hoc in this module.
refile :: String -> FilePath -> X ()
refile parent fp =
proc $ inEmacs
>-> asBatch
>-> eval (progn [ findFile fp
, "end-of-buffer"
, "org-refile nil nil"
<> list [ asString parent
, asString fp
, "nil"
, saveExcursion ["org-find-exact-headline-in-buffer"
<> asString parent]
]
, "save-buffer"
])
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Time
-- | A 'Time' is a 'Date' with the possibility of having a specified
-- @HH:MM@ time.
data Time = Time
{ date :: Date
, tod :: Maybe TimeOfDay
}
deriving (Eq, Show)
-- | The time in HH:MM.
data TimeOfDay = TimeOfDay Int Int
deriving (Eq)
instance Show TimeOfDay where
show :: TimeOfDay -> String
show (TimeOfDay h m) = pad h <> ":" <> pad m
where
pad :: Int -> String
pad n = (if n <= 9 then "0" else "") <> show n
-- | Type for specifying exactly which day one wants.
data Date
= Today
| Tomorrow
| Next DayOfWeek
-- ^ This will __always__ show the next 'DayOfWeek' (e.g. calling
-- 'Next Monday' on a Monday will result in getting the menu for the
-- following Monday)
| Date (Int, Maybe Int, Maybe Integer)
-- ^ Manual date entry in the format DD [MM] [YYYY]
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
toOrgFmt :: Maybe TimeOfDay -> Day -> String
toOrgFmt tod day =
mconcat ["<", isoDay, " ", take 3 $ show (dayOfWeek day), time, ">"]
where
time :: String = maybe "" ((' ' :) . show) tod
isoDay :: String = formatTime defaultTimeLocale (iso8601DateFormat Nothing) day
-- | Pretty print a 'Date' and an optional time to reflect the actual
-- date.
ppDate :: Time -> IO String
ppDate Time{ date, tod } = do
curTime <- getCurrentTime
let curDay = utctDay curTime
(y, m, _) = toGregorian curDay
diffToDay d = diffBetween d (dayOfWeek curDay)
pure . toOrgFmt tod $ case date of
Today -> curDay
Tomorrow -> utctDay $ addDays 1 curTime
Next wday -> utctDay $ addDays (diffToDay wday) curTime
Date (d, mbM, mbY) -> fromGregorian (fromMaybe y mbY) (fromMaybe m mbM) d
where
-- | Add a specified number of days to a 'UTCTime'.
addDays :: NominalDiffTime -> UTCTime -> UTCTime
= addUTCTime . (* nominalDay)
-- | Evil enum hackery.
diffBetween :: DayOfWeek -> DayOfWeek -> NominalDiffTime
diffBetween d cur -- we want to jump to @d@
| d == cur = 7
| otherwise = fromIntegral . abs $ (fromEnum d - fromEnum cur) `mod` 7
-- Old GHC versions don't have a @time@ library new enough to have
-- this, so replicate it here for the moment.
dayOfWeek :: Day -> DayOfWeek
dayOfWeek (ModifiedJulianDay d) = toEnum $ fromInteger $ d + 3
data DayOfWeek
= Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
-- | \"Circular\", so for example @[Tuesday ..]@ gives an endless
-- sequence. Also: 'fromEnum' gives [1 .. 7] for [Monday .. Sunday],
-- and 'toEnum' performs mod 7 to give a cycle of days.
instance Enum DayOfWeek where
toEnum :: Int -> DayOfWeek
toEnum i = case mod i 7 of
0 -> Sunday
1 -> Monday
2 -> Tuesday
3 -> Wednesday
4 -> Thursday
5 -> Friday
_ -> Saturday
fromEnum :: DayOfWeek -> Int
fromEnum = \case
Monday -> 1
Tuesday -> 2
Wednesday -> 3
Thursday -> 4
Friday -> 5
Saturday -> 6
Sunday -> 7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Note
-- | An @org-mode@ style note.
data Note
= Scheduled String Time Priority
| Deadline String Time Priority
| NormalMsg String Priority
deriving (Eq, Show)
-- | An @org-mode@ style priority symbol[1]; e.g., something like
-- @[#A]@. Note that this uses the standard org conventions: supported
-- priorities are @A@, @B@, and @C@, with @A@ being the highest.
-- Numerical priorities are not supported.
--
-- [1]: https://orgmode.org/manual/Priorities.html
data Priority = A | B | C | NoPriority
deriving (Eq, Show)
-- | Pretty print a given 'Note'.
ppNote :: Clp -> String -> Note -> IO String
ppNote clp todo = \case
Scheduled str time prio -> mkLine str "SCHEDULED: " (Just time) prio
Deadline str time prio -> mkLine str "DEADLINE: " (Just time) prio
NormalMsg str prio -> mkLine str "" Nothing prio
where
mkLine :: String -> String -> Maybe Time -> Priority -> IO String
mkLine str sched time prio = do
t <- case time of
Nothing -> pure ""
Just ti -> (("\n " <> sched) <>) <$> ppDate ti
pure $ "* " <> todo <> priority <> case clp of
Body c -> mconcat [str, t, c]
Header c -> mconcat ["[[", c, "][", str,"]]", t]
where
priority = case prio of
NoPriority -> " "
otherPrio -> " [#" <> show otherPrio <> "] "
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Note parsing
-- | Parse the given string into a 'Note'.
pInput :: String -> Maybe Note
pInput inp = (`runParser` inp) . choice $
[ Scheduled <$> getLast "+s" <*> (Time <$> pDate <*> pTimeOfDay) <*> pPriority
, Deadline <$> getLast "+d" <*> (Time <$> pDate <*> pTimeOfDay) <*> pPriority
, do s <- munch1 (pure True)
let (s', p) = splitAt (length s - 3) s
pure $ case tryPrio p of
Just prio -> NormalMsg (dropStripEnd 0 s') prio
Nothing -> NormalMsg s NoPriority
]
where
tryPrio :: String -> Maybe Priority
tryPrio [' ', '#', x]
| x `elem` ("Aa" :: String) = Just A
| x `elem` ("Bb" :: String) = Just B
| x `elem` ("Cc" :: String) = Just C
tryPrio _ = Nothing
-- Trim whitespace at the end of a string after dropping some number
-- of characters from it.
dropStripEnd :: Int -> String -> String
dropStripEnd n = reverse . dropWhile (== ' ') . drop n . reverse
getLast :: String -> Parser String
getLast ptn = dropStripEnd (length ptn) -- drop only the last pattern before stripping
. concat
<$> endBy1 (go "") (pure ptn)
where
go :: String -> Parser String
go consumed = do
str <- munch (/= head ptn)
word <- munch1 (/= ' ')
bool go pure (word == ptn) $ consumed <> str <> word
-- | Parse a 'Priority'.
pPriority :: Parser Priority
pPriority = option NoPriority $
" " *> skipSpaces *> choice
[ "#" *> ("A" <|> "a") $> A
, "#" *> ("B" <|> "b") $> B
, "#" *> ("C" <|> "c") $> C
]
-- | Try to parse a 'Time'.
pTimeOfDay :: Parser (Maybe TimeOfDay)
pTimeOfDay = option Nothing $
skipSpaces *> choice
[ Just <$> (TimeOfDay <$> pHour <* string ":" <*> pMinute) -- HH:MM
, Just <$> (TimeOfDay <$> pHour <*> pure 0 ) -- HH
]
where
pMinute :: Parser Int = pNumBetween 1 60
pHour :: Parser Int = pNumBetween 1 24
-- | Parse a 'Date'.
pDate :: Parser Date
pDate = skipSpaces *> choice
[ pPrefix "tod" "ay" Today
, pPrefix "tom" "orrow" Tomorrow
, Next <$> pNext
, Date <$> pDate'
]
where
pNext :: Parser DayOfWeek = choice
[ pPrefix "m" "onday" Monday , pPrefix "tu" "esday" Tuesday
, pPrefix "w" "ednesday" Wednesday, pPrefix "th" "ursday" Thursday
, pPrefix "f" "riday" Friday , pPrefix "sa" "turday" Saturday
, pPrefix "su" "nday" Sunday
]
numWithoutColon :: Parser Int
numWithoutColon = do
str <- pNumBetween 1 12 -- month
c <- get
if c == ':'
then pfail
else pure str
pDate' :: Parser (Int, Maybe Int, Maybe Integer)
pDate' =
(,,) <$> pNumBetween 1 31 -- day
<*> optional (skipSpaces *> choice
[ pPrefix "ja" "nuary" 1 , pPrefix "f" "ebruary" 2
, pPrefix "mar" "ch" 3 , pPrefix "ap" "ril" 4
, pPrefix "may" "" 5 , pPrefix "jun" "e" 6
, pPrefix "jul" "y" 7 , pPrefix "au" "gust" 8
, pPrefix "s" "eptember" 9 , pPrefix "o" "ctober" 10
, pPrefix "n" "ovember" 11, pPrefix "d" "ecember" 12
, numWithoutColon
])
<*> optional (skipSpaces *> num >>= \i -> guard (i >= 25) $> i)
-- | Parse a prefix and drop a potential suffix up to the next (space
-- separated) word. If successful, return @ret@.
pPrefix :: Parser String -> String -> a -> Parser a
pPrefix start leftover ret = do
void start
l <- munch (/= ' ')
guard (l `isPrefixOf` leftover)
pure ret
-- | Parse a number between @lo@ (inclusive) and @hi@ (inclusive).
pNumBetween :: Int -> Int -> Parser Int
pNumBetween lo hi = do
n <- num
n <$ guard (n >= lo && n <= hi)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- File parsing
data Heading = Heading
{ level :: Natural
-- ^ Level of the Org heading; i.e., the number of leading stars.
, todoType :: String
-- ^ Type of the Org heading. This is some todo keyword used as a
-- prefix to mark the heading as such.
, headingText :: String
-- ^ The heading text without its level and prefix keyword.
}
-- | Naïvely parse an Org file. At this point, only the headings are
-- parsed into a non-nested list (ignoring parent-child relations); no
-- further analysis is done on the individual lines themselves.
pOrgFile :: [String] -> Parser [Heading]
pOrgFile = many . pHeading
pHeading :: [String] -> Parser Heading
pHeading todoPrefixes = skipSpaces *> do
level <- genericLength <$> munch1 (== '*') <* " "
todoType <- option "" $ do word <- munch1 (/= ' ') <* skipSpaces
guard (word `elem` todoPrefixes)
pure word
headingText <- pLine
void $ many (pLine >>= \line -> guard (isNotHeading line) $> line) -- skip body
pure Heading{..}
pLine :: Parser String
pLine = munch (/= '\n') <* "\n"
isNotHeading :: String -> Bool
isNotHeading str = case break (/= '*') str of
("", _) -> True
(_ , ' ' : _) -> False
_ -> True