Here's a little tutorial that lets you write emacs commands for processing the current text selection in emacs in your favorite lang.
Elisp Wrapper For Perl Scripts http://xahlee.org/emacs/elisp_perl_wrapper.html plain text version follows. ------------------------------------- Elisp Wrapper For Perl Scripts Xah Lee, 2008-10 This page shows a example of writing a emacs lisp function that process text on the current region, by calling a external perl script. So that you can use your existing knowledge in a scripting language for text processing as emacs commands. THE PROBLEM Elisp is great and powerful, but if you are new, it may take several months for you to actually become productive in using it for text processing. However, you are probably familiar with a existing language, such as Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby. It would be great if you can use your existing knowledge to write many text processing scripts, and make them available in emacs as commands, so that you can just select a section of text, press a key, then the selected text will be transformed according to one of your script. SOLUTION Basically, all your elisp function has to do is to grab the current region, then pass the text to a external program. The external program will take the input thru Stdin↗, then produce the processed result in Stdout. The elisp function will grab the text from the script's Stdout, then replace the current region by that text. Lucky for us, the elisp function shell-command-on-region already does this exactly. For your script, its should takes input from Stdin and oput to Stdout. For simplicity, let's assume your script is the unix program “wc”, which takes input from Stdin and output a text to Stdout. (the “wc” command counts the number of words, lines, chars in the text.) For example, try this: “cat ‹file name› | wc”. Here's the elisp wrapper: (defun my-process-region (startPos endPos) "Do some text processing on region. This command calls the external script “wc”." (interactive "r") (let (scriptName) (setq scriptName "/usr/bin/wc") ; full path to your script (shell-command-on-region startPos endPos scriptName nil t nil t) )) You can assign a keyboard shortcut to it: (global-set-key (kbd "<F6>") 'my-process-region) Put the above code in your “.emacs” then restart emacs. To use your function, first select a region of text, then press the F6 key. With the above, you can write many little text processing scripts in your favorite language, and have them all available in emacs as commands. For how to define keyboard shortcuts with other keys, see: How to Define Keyboard Shortcuts in Emacs. Xah ∑ http://xahlee.org/ ☄ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list