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-rw-r--r--ChangeLog4
-rw-r--r--Doc/Zsh/contrib.yo11
-rw-r--r--Functions/Zle/replace-string38
-rw-r--r--Functions/Zle/replace-string-again45
4 files changed, 63 insertions, 35 deletions
diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog
index af717e8ee..498f1f34b 100644
--- a/ChangeLog
+++ b/ChangeLog
@@ -1,5 +1,9 @@
 2006-10-10  Peter Stephenson  <pws@csr.com>
 
+	* 22854: Doc/Zsh/contrib.yo, Functions/Zle/replace-string,
+	Functions/Zle/replace-string-again: separate out back end
+	as separate widget to repeat replacement.
+
 	* 22853: Src/utils.c: unquoted ^ at end of bindkey string
 	treated literally.
 
diff --git a/Doc/Zsh/contrib.yo b/Doc/Zsh/contrib.yo
index 32fb283dc..bb03fa68a 100644
--- a/Doc/Zsh/contrib.yo
+++ b/Doc/Zsh/contrib.yo
@@ -1055,8 +1055,10 @@ not used.  Hence it is still possible to call tt(executed-named-cmd) and
 similar functions while reading a value.
 )
 tindex(replace-string)
+tindex(replace-string-again)
 tindex(replace-pattern)
-item(tt(replace-string), tt(replace-pattern))(
+xitem(tt(replace-string), tt(replace-pattern))
+item(tt(replace-string-again), tt(replace-pattern-again))(
 The function tt(replace-string) implements two widgets.
 If defined under the same name as the function, it prompts for two
 strings; the first (source) string will be replaced by the second
@@ -1082,6 +1084,13 @@ tt(:zle:replace-string)) to tt(true).  In addition, a positive
 numeric argument forces the previous values to be offered, a negative or
 zero argument forces them not to be.
 
+The function tt(replace-string-again) can be used to repeat the
+previous replacement; no prompting is done.  As with tt(replace-string), if
+the name of the widget contains the word `tt(pattern)', pattern matching
+is performed, else a literal string replacement.  Note that the
+previous source and replacement text are the same whether pattern or string
+matching is used.
+
 For example, starting from the line:
 
 example(print This line contains fan and fond)
diff --git a/Functions/Zle/replace-string b/Functions/Zle/replace-string
index 577e9174d..31a7567db 100644
--- a/Functions/Zle/replace-string
+++ b/Functions/Zle/replace-string
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
 emulate -L zsh
 setopt extendedglob
 
-autoload read-from-minibuffer
+autoload -U read-from-minibuffer replace-string-again
 
 local p1="Replace: " p2="   with: "
-local REPLY MATCH MBEGIN MEND curwidget=$WIDGET previous
-local -a match mbegin mend
+# Saving curwidget is necessary to avoid the widget name being overwritten.
+local REPLY previous curwidget=$WIDGET
 
 if (( ${+NUMERIC} )); then
   (( $NUMERIC > 0 )) && previous=1
@@ -20,34 +20,4 @@ read-from-minibuffer "$p1$_replace_string_src$p2" \
   ${previous:+$_replace_string_rep} || return 1
 _replace_string_rep=$REPLY
 
-if [[ $curwidget = *pattern* ]]; then
-    local rep2
-    # The following horror is so that an & preceded by an even
-    # number of backslashes is active, without stripping backslashes,
-    # while preceded by an odd number of backslashes is inactive,
-    # with one backslash being stripped.  A similar logic applies
-    # to \digit.
-    local rep=$_replace_string_rep
-    while [[ $rep = (#b)([^\\]#)(\\\\)#(\\|)(\&|\\<->|\\\{<->\})(*) ]]; do
-	if [[ -n $match[3] ]]; then
-	    # Expression is quoted, strip quotes
-	    rep2="${match[1]}${match[2]}${match[4]}"
-	else
-	    rep2+="${match[1]}${match[2]}"
-	    if [[ $match[4] = \& ]]; then
-		rep2+='${MATCH}'
-	    elif [[ $match[4] = \\\{* ]]; then
-		rep2+='${match['${match[4][3,-2]}']}'
-	    else
-		rep2+='${match['${match[4][2,-1]}']}'
-	    fi
-	fi
-	rep=${match[5]}
-    done
-    rep2+=$rep
-    LBUFFER=${LBUFFER//(#bm)$~_replace_string_src/${(e)rep2}}
-    RBUFFER=${RBUFFER//(#bm)$~_replace_string_src/${(e)rep2}}
-else
-    LBUFFER=${LBUFFER//$_replace_string_src/$_replace_string_rep}
-    RBUFFER=${RBUFFER//$_replace_string_src/$_replace_string_rep}
-fi
+replace-string-again $curwidget
diff --git a/Functions/Zle/replace-string-again b/Functions/Zle/replace-string-again
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..122f0a8ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Functions/Zle/replace-string-again
@@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
+# Back end for replace-string; can be called as a widget to repeat
+# the previous replacement.  _replace_string_src and _replace_string_rep
+# are global.
+
+# When called from replace-string, we need to use the widget
+# name passed to decide whether to do pattern matching: the widget
+# may since have been overwritten.
+local MATCH MBEGIN MEND curwidget=${1:-$WIDGET}
+local -a match mbegin mend
+
+if [[ -z $_replace_string_src ]]; then
+  zle -M No string to replace.
+fi
+
+if [[ $curwidget = *pattern* ]]; then
+    local rep2
+    # The following horror is so that an & preceded by an even
+    # number of backslashes is active, without stripping backslashes,
+    # while preceded by an odd number of backslashes is inactive,
+    # with one backslash being stripped.  A similar logic applies
+    # to \digit.
+    local rep=$_replace_string_rep
+    while [[ $rep = (#b)([^\\]#)(\\\\)#(\\|)(\&|\\<->|\\\{<->\})(*) ]]; do
+	if [[ -n $match[3] ]]; then
+	    # Expression is quoted, strip quotes
+	    rep2="${match[1]}${match[2]}${match[4]}"
+	else
+	    rep2+="${match[1]}${match[2]}"
+	    if [[ $match[4] = \& ]]; then
+		rep2+='${MATCH}'
+	    elif [[ $match[4] = \\\{* ]]; then
+		rep2+='${match['${match[4][3,-2]}']}'
+	    else
+		rep2+='${match['${match[4][2,-1]}']}'
+	    fi
+	fi
+	rep=${match[5]}
+    done
+    rep2+=$rep
+    LBUFFER=${LBUFFER//(#bm)$~_replace_string_src/${(e)rep2}}
+    RBUFFER=${RBUFFER//(#bm)$~_replace_string_src/${(e)rep2}}
+else
+    LBUFFER=${LBUFFER//$_replace_string_src/$_replace_string_rep}
+    RBUFFER=${RBUFFER//$_replace_string_src/$_replace_string_rep}
+fi