Escaping and Formatting Newlines
Using the “Send Selection to Command” feature of Geany and a simple Python script, you can re-format escaped newlines in your code so that the trailing back-slash always is aligned.
To demonstrate, here is a before and after the operation:
/* Some un-aligned, misplaced and missing escaped newlines */ #define FOO_BAR(a, b) do { if (a < b) \ call_c(b, a); else \ call_c(a, b); } while (0)\ /* After selecting the whole chunk of code and sending it through the Python script */ #define FOO_BAR(a, b) \ do \ { \ if (a < b) \ call_c(b, a); \ else \ call_c(a, b); \ } \ while (0)
This is a simple Python script to do this:
#!/usr/bin/env python from sys import stdin, stdout # computes the width of a line, taking tabs into account def line_width(line, tab_width=8): length = 0 for c in line: if c == '\t': length += tab_width - (length % tab_width) else: length += 1 return length # pads @string with @char to become @width wide # at least one @char will be added def ljust(string, width, char=' ', tab_width=8): while True: string += char if line_width(string, tab_width) > width: break return string # read all lines from stdin, stripping trailing slashes and whitespace lines = [l.rstrip(' \t\r\n\v\\') for l in stdin] # determine the maximum line length line_max = max([line_width(l) for l in lines]) # write out the formatted lines to stdout num_lines = len(lines) for i, line in enumerate(lines): if i != num_lines - 1: stdout.write('%s\\\n' % ljust(line, line_max)) else: stdout.write('%s\n' % line)
Save it to a file, make it executable and then use Edit→Format→Send Selection to→Set Custom Commands to add it to the commands. See the user manual for more information about sending text through custom commands.