+(defun notmuch-database-path ()
+ "Return the database.path value from the notmuch configuration."
+ (notmuch-config-get "database.path"))
+
+(defun notmuch-user-name ()
+ "Return the user.name value from the notmuch configuration."
+ (notmuch-config-get "user.name"))
+
+(defun notmuch-user-primary-email ()
+ "Return the user.primary_email value from the notmuch configuration."
+ (notmuch-config-get "user.primary_email"))
+
+(defun notmuch-user-other-email ()
+ "Return the user.other_email value (as a list) from the notmuch configuration."
+ (split-string (notmuch-config-get "user.other_email") "\n"))
+
+(defun notmuch-kill-this-buffer ()
+ "Kill the current buffer."
+ (interactive)
+ (kill-buffer (current-buffer)))
+
+;;
+
+(defun notmuch-common-do-stash (text)
+ "Common function to stash text in kill ring, and display in minibuffer."
+ (kill-new text)
+ (message "Stashed: %s" text))
+
+;;
+
+(defun notmuch-remove-if-not (predicate list)
+ "Return a copy of LIST with all items not satisfying PREDICATE removed."
+ (let (out)
+ (while list
+ (when (funcall predicate (car list))
+ (push (car list) out))
+ (setq list (cdr list)))
+ (nreverse out)))
+
+; This lets us avoid compiling these replacement functions when emacs
+; is sufficiently new enough to supply them alone. We do the macro
+; treatment rather than just wrapping our defun calls in a when form
+; specifically so that the compiler never sees the code on new emacs,
+; (since the code is triggering warnings that we don't know how to get
+; rid of.
+;
+; A more clever macro here would accept a condition and a list of forms.
+(defmacro compile-on-emacs-prior-to-23 (form)
+ "Conditionally evaluate form only on emacs < emacs-23."
+ (list 'when (< emacs-major-version 23)
+ form))
+
+;; Compatibility functions for versions of emacs before emacs 23.
+;;
+;; Both functions here were copied from emacs 23 with the following copyright:
+;;
+;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,
+;; 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.