Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
annotate src/event-stream.c @ 5925:08cfc8f77fb6 cygwin
make space for long ptr, and store as such, for frame in WINDOW data,
add a bit more debugging to debug-mswindow,
Vin Shelton patch to fix M-x shell
| author | Henry Thompson <ht@markup.co.uk> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 27 Feb 2015 17:41:20 +0000 |
| parents | b3824b7f5627 |
| children | 6ec4964c1687 |
| rev | line source |
|---|---|
| 428 | 1 /* The portable interface to event streams. |
| 2 Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
| 3 Copyright (C) 1995 Board of Trustees, University of Illinois. | |
| 4 Copyright (C) 1995 Sun Microsystems, Inc. | |
| 5125 | 5 Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2010 Ben Wing. |
| 428 | 6 |
| 7 This file is part of XEmacs. | |
| 8 | |
|
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9 XEmacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it |
| 428 | 10 under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the |
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11 Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your |
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12 option) any later version. |
| 428 | 13 |
| 14 XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT | |
| 15 ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or | |
| 16 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License | |
| 17 for more details. | |
| 18 | |
| 19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
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20 along with XEmacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| 428 | 21 |
| 22 /* Synched up with: Not in FSF. */ | |
| 23 | |
| 442 | 24 /* Authorship: |
| 25 | |
| 26 Created 1991 by Jamie Zawinski. | |
| 27 A great deal of work over the ages by Ben Wing (Mule-ization for 19.12, | |
| 28 device abstraction for 19.12/19.13, async timers for 19.14, | |
| 29 rewriting of focus code for 19.12, pre-idle hook for 19.12, | |
| 30 redoing of signal and quit handling for 19.9 and 19.12, | |
| 31 misc-user events to clean up menu/scrollbar handling for 19.11, | |
| 32 function-key-map/key-translation-map/keyboard-translate-table for | |
| 33 19.13/19.14, open-dribble-file for 19.13, much other cleanup). | |
| 34 focus-follows-mouse from Chuck Thompson, 1995. | |
| 35 XIM stuff by Martin Buchholz, c. 1996?. | |
| 36 */ | |
| 37 | |
| 428 | 38 /* This file has been Mule-ized. */ |
| 39 | |
| 40 /* | |
| 41 * DANGER!! | |
| 42 * | |
| 43 * If you ever change ANYTHING in this file, you MUST run the | |
| 44 * testcases at the end to make sure that you haven't changed | |
| 45 * the semantics of recent-keys, last-input-char, or keyboard | |
| 46 * macros. You'd be surprised how easy it is to break this. | |
| 47 * | |
| 48 */ | |
| 49 | |
| 50 /* TODO: | |
| 1204 | 51 [This stuff is way too hard to maintain - needs rework.] |
| 52 I don't think it's that bad in the main. I've done a fair amount of | |
| 53 cleanup work over the ages; the only stuff that's probably still somewhat | |
| 54 messy is the command-builder handling, which is that way because it's | |
| 55 trying to be "compatible" with pseudo-standards established by Emacs | |
| 56 v18. | |
| 428 | 57 |
| 58 The command builder should deal only with key and button events. | |
| 59 Other command events should be able to come in the MIDDLE of a key | |
| 60 sequence, without disturbing the key sequence composition, or the | |
| 61 command builder structure representing it. | |
| 62 | |
| 63 Someone should rethink universal-argument and figure out how an | |
| 64 arbitrary command can influence the next command (universal-argument | |
| 65 or universal-coding-system-argument) or the next key (hyperify). | |
| 66 | |
| 67 Both C-h and Help in the middle of a key sequence should trigger | |
| 68 prefix-help-command. help-char is stupid. Maybe we need | |
| 69 keymap-of-last-resort? | |
| 70 | |
| 71 After prefix-help is run, one should be able to CONTINUE TYPING, | |
| 72 instead of RETYPING, the key sequence. | |
| 73 */ | |
| 74 | |
| 75 #include <config.h> | |
| 76 #include "lisp.h" | |
| 77 | |
| 78 #include "blocktype.h" | |
| 79 #include "buffer.h" | |
| 80 #include "commands.h" | |
| 872 | 81 #include "device-impl.h" |
| 428 | 82 #include "elhash.h" |
| 83 #include "events.h" | |
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84 #include "extents.h" |
| 872 | 85 #include "frame-impl.h" |
| 428 | 86 #include "insdel.h" /* for buffer_reset_changes */ |
| 87 #include "keymap.h" | |
| 88 #include "lstream.h" | |
| 89 #include "macros.h" /* for defining_keyboard_macro */ | |
| 442 | 90 #include "menubar.h" /* #### for evil kludges. */ |
| 428 | 91 #include "process.h" |
| 1292 | 92 #include "profile.h" |
| 872 | 93 #include "window-impl.h" |
| 428 | 94 |
| 95 #include "sysdep.h" /* init_poll_for_quit() */ | |
| 96 #include "syssignal.h" /* SIGCHLD, etc. */ | |
| 97 #include "sysfile.h" | |
| 98 #include "systime.h" /* to set Vlast_input_time */ | |
| 99 | |
| 100 #include "file-coding.h" | |
| 101 | |
| 102 #include <errno.h> | |
| 103 | |
| 104 /* The number of keystrokes between auto-saves. */ | |
| 458 | 105 static Fixnum auto_save_interval; |
| 428 | 106 |
| 107 Lisp_Object Qundefined_keystroke_sequence; | |
| 563 | 108 Lisp_Object Qinvalid_key_binding; |
| 428 | 109 |
| 110 Lisp_Object Qcommand_event_p; | |
| 111 | |
| 112 /* Hooks to run before and after each command. */ | |
| 113 Lisp_Object Vpre_command_hook, Vpost_command_hook; | |
| 114 Lisp_Object Qpre_command_hook, Qpost_command_hook; | |
| 115 | |
| 442 | 116 /* See simple.el */ |
| 117 Lisp_Object Qhandle_pre_motion_command, Qhandle_post_motion_command; | |
| 118 | |
| 428 | 119 /* Hook run when XEmacs is about to be idle. */ |
| 120 Lisp_Object Qpre_idle_hook, Vpre_idle_hook; | |
| 121 | |
| 122 /* Control gratuitous keyboard focus throwing. */ | |
| 123 int focus_follows_mouse; | |
| 124 | |
| 444 | 125 /* When true, modifier keys are sticky. */ |
| 442 | 126 int modifier_keys_are_sticky; |
| 444 | 127 /* Modifier keys are sticky for this many milliseconds. */ |
| 128 Lisp_Object Vmodifier_keys_sticky_time; | |
| 129 | |
| 2828 | 130 /* If true, "Russian C-x processing" is enabled. */ |
| 131 int try_alternate_layouts_for_commands; | |
| 132 | |
| 444 | 133 /* Here FSF Emacs 20.7 defines Vpost_command_idle_hook, |
| 134 post_command_idle_delay, Vdeferred_action_list, and | |
| 135 Vdeferred_action_function, but we don't because that stuff is crap, | |
| 1315 | 136 and we're smarter than them, and their mommas are fat. */ |
| 444 | 137 |
| 138 /* FSF Emacs 20.7 also defines Vinput_method_function, | |
| 139 Qinput_method_exit_on_first_char and Qinput_method_use_echo_area. | |
| 1315 | 140 I don't know whether this should be imported or not. */ |
| 428 | 141 |
| 142 /* Non-nil disable property on a command means | |
| 143 do not execute it; call disabled-command-hook's value instead. */ | |
| 733 | 144 Lisp_Object Qdisabled; |
| 428 | 145 |
| 146 /* Last keyboard or mouse input event read as a command. */ | |
| 147 Lisp_Object Vlast_command_event; | |
| 148 | |
| 149 /* The nearest ASCII equivalent of the above. */ | |
| 150 Lisp_Object Vlast_command_char; | |
| 151 | |
| 152 /* Last keyboard or mouse event read for any purpose. */ | |
| 153 Lisp_Object Vlast_input_event; | |
| 154 | |
| 155 /* The nearest ASCII equivalent of the above. */ | |
| 156 Lisp_Object Vlast_input_char; | |
| 157 | |
| 158 Lisp_Object Vcurrent_mouse_event; | |
| 159 | |
| 160 /* This is fbound in cmdloop.el, see the commentary there */ | |
| 161 Lisp_Object Qcancel_mode_internal; | |
| 162 | |
| 163 /* If not Qnil, event objects to be read as the next command input */ | |
| 164 Lisp_Object Vunread_command_events; | |
| 165 Lisp_Object Vunread_command_event; /* obsoleteness support */ | |
| 166 | |
| 167 static Lisp_Object Qunread_command_events, Qunread_command_event; | |
| 168 | |
| 169 /* Previous command, represented by a Lisp object. | |
| 442 | 170 Does not include prefix commands and arg setting commands. */ |
| 428 | 171 Lisp_Object Vlast_command; |
| 172 | |
| 442 | 173 /* Contents of this-command-properties for the last command. */ |
| 174 Lisp_Object Vlast_command_properties; | |
| 175 | |
| 428 | 176 /* If a command sets this, the value goes into |
| 442 | 177 last-command for the next command. */ |
| 428 | 178 Lisp_Object Vthis_command; |
| 179 | |
| 442 | 180 /* If a command sets this, the value goes into |
| 181 last-command-properties for the next command. */ | |
| 182 Lisp_Object Vthis_command_properties; | |
| 183 | |
| 428 | 184 /* The value of point when the last command was executed. */ |
| 665 | 185 Charbpos last_point_position; |
| 428 | 186 |
| 187 /* The frame that was current when the last command was started. */ | |
| 188 Lisp_Object Vlast_selected_frame; | |
| 189 | |
| 190 /* The buffer that was current when the last command was started. */ | |
| 191 Lisp_Object last_point_position_buffer; | |
| 192 | |
| 193 /* A (16bit . 16bit) representation of the time of the last-command-event. */ | |
| 194 Lisp_Object Vlast_input_time; | |
| 195 | |
| 196 /* A (16bit 16bit usec) representation of the time | |
| 197 of the last-command-event. */ | |
| 198 Lisp_Object Vlast_command_event_time; | |
| 199 | |
| 200 /* Character to recognize as the help char. */ | |
| 201 Lisp_Object Vhelp_char; | |
| 202 | |
| 203 /* Form to execute when help char is typed. */ | |
| 204 Lisp_Object Vhelp_form; | |
| 205 | |
| 206 /* Command to run when the help character follows a prefix key. */ | |
| 207 Lisp_Object Vprefix_help_command; | |
| 208 | |
| 209 /* Flag to tell QUIT that some interesting occurrence (e.g. a keypress) | |
| 210 may have happened. */ | |
| 211 volatile int something_happened; | |
| 212 | |
| 213 /* Hash table to translate keysyms through */ | |
| 214 Lisp_Object Vkeyboard_translate_table; | |
| 215 | |
| 216 /* If control-meta-super-shift-X is undefined, try control-meta-super-x */ | |
| 217 Lisp_Object Vretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted; | |
| 218 Lisp_Object Qretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted; | |
| 219 | |
| 220 /* Console that corresponds to our controlling terminal */ | |
| 221 Lisp_Object Vcontrolling_terminal; | |
| 222 | |
| 223 /* An event (actually an event chain linked through event_next) or Qnil. | |
| 224 */ | |
| 225 Lisp_Object Vthis_command_keys; | |
| 226 Lisp_Object Vthis_command_keys_tail; | |
| 227 | |
| 228 /* #### kludge! */ | |
| 229 Lisp_Object Qauto_show_make_point_visible; | |
| 230 | |
| 231 /* File in which we write all commands we read; an lstream */ | |
| 232 static Lisp_Object Vdribble_file; | |
| 233 | |
| 234 /* Recent keys ring location; a vector of events or nil-s */ | |
| 235 Lisp_Object Vrecent_keys_ring; | |
| 236 int recent_keys_ring_size; | |
| 237 int recent_keys_ring_index; | |
| 238 | |
| 239 /* Boolean specifying whether keystrokes should be added to | |
| 240 recent-keys. */ | |
| 241 int inhibit_input_event_recording; | |
| 242 | |
| 430 | 243 Lisp_Object Qself_insert_defer_undo; |
| 244 | |
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245 Lisp_Object Qsans_modifiers; |
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246 |
| 1268 | 247 int in_modal_loop; |
| 248 | |
| 249 /* the number of keyboard characters read. callint.c wants this. */ | |
| 250 Charcount num_input_chars; | |
| 428 | 251 |
| 1292 | 252 static Lisp_Object Qnext_event, Qdispatch_event, QSnext_event_internal; |
| 253 static Lisp_Object QSexecute_internal_event; | |
| 254 | |
| 428 | 255 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS |
| 458 | 256 Fixnum debug_emacs_events; |
| 428 | 257 |
| 258 static void | |
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259 external_debugging_print_event (const Ascbyte *event_description, |
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260 Lisp_Object event) |
| 428 | 261 { |
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262 write_ascstring (Qexternal_debugging_output, "("); |
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263 write_ascstring (Qexternal_debugging_output, event_description); |
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264 write_ascstring (Qexternal_debugging_output, ") "); |
| 428 | 265 print_internal (event, Qexternal_debugging_output, 1); |
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266 write_ascstring (Qexternal_debugging_output, "\n"); |
| 428 | 267 } |
| 268 #define DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT(event_description, event) do { \ | |
| 269 if (debug_emacs_events) \ | |
| 270 external_debugging_print_event (event_description, event); \ | |
| 271 } while (0) | |
| 272 #else | |
| 273 #define DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT(string, event) | |
| 274 #endif | |
| 275 | |
| 276 | |
| 277 /* The callback routines for the window system or terminal driver */ | |
| 278 struct event_stream *event_stream; | |
| 279 | |
| 2367 | 280 |
| 281 /* | |
| 282 | |
| 283 See also | |
| 284 | |
| 285 (Info-goto-node "(internals)Event Stream Callback Routines") | |
| 286 */ | |
| 1204 | 287 |
| 428 | 288 static Lisp_Object command_event_queue; |
| 289 static Lisp_Object command_event_queue_tail; | |
| 290 | |
| 1204 | 291 Lisp_Object dispatch_event_queue; |
| 292 static Lisp_Object dispatch_event_queue_tail; | |
| 293 | |
| 428 | 294 /* Nonzero means echo unfinished commands after this many seconds of pause. */ |
| 295 static Lisp_Object Vecho_keystrokes; | |
| 296 | |
| 297 /* The number of keystrokes since the last auto-save. */ | |
| 298 static int keystrokes_since_auto_save; | |
| 299 | |
| 300 /* Used by the C-g signal handler so that it will never "hard quit" | |
| 301 when waiting for an event. Otherwise holding down C-g could | |
| 302 cause a suspension back to the shell, which is generally | |
| 303 undesirable. (#### This doesn't fully work.) */ | |
| 304 | |
| 305 int emacs_is_blocking; | |
| 306 | |
| 307 /* Handlers which run during sit-for, sleep-for and accept-process-output | |
| 308 are not allowed to recursively call these routines. We record here | |
| 309 if we are in that situation. */ | |
| 310 | |
| 1268 | 311 static int recursive_sit_for; |
| 312 | |
| 313 static void pre_command_hook (void); | |
| 314 static void post_command_hook (void); | |
| 315 static void maybe_kbd_translate (Lisp_Object event); | |
| 316 static void push_this_command_keys (Lisp_Object event); | |
| 317 static void push_recent_keys (Lisp_Object event); | |
| 318 static void dribble_out_event (Lisp_Object event); | |
| 319 static void execute_internal_event (Lisp_Object event); | |
| 320 static int is_scrollbar_event (Lisp_Object event); | |
| 428 | 321 |
| 322 | |
| 323 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 324 /* Command-builder object */ | |
| 325 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 326 | |
| 327 #define XCOMMAND_BUILDER(x) \ | |
| 328 XRECORD (x, command_builder, struct command_builder) | |
| 771 | 329 #define wrap_command_builder(p) wrap_record (p, command_builder) |
| 428 | 330 #define COMMAND_BUILDERP(x) RECORDP (x, command_builder) |
| 331 #define CHECK_COMMAND_BUILDER(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, command_builder) | |
| 771 | 332 #define CONCHECK_COMMAND_BUILDER(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, command_builder) |
| 333 | |
| 1204 | 334 static const struct memory_description command_builder_description [] = { |
| 934 | 335 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (struct command_builder, current_events) }, |
| 336 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (struct command_builder, most_current_event) }, | |
| 337 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (struct command_builder, last_non_munged_event) }, | |
| 338 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (struct command_builder, console) }, | |
| 1204 | 339 { XD_LISP_OBJECT_ARRAY, offsetof (struct command_builder, first_mungeable_event), 2 }, |
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340 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (struct command_builder, echo_buf) }, |
| 934 | 341 { XD_END } |
| 342 }; | |
| 343 | |
| 428 | 344 static Lisp_Object |
| 345 mark_command_builder (Lisp_Object obj) | |
| 346 { | |
| 347 struct command_builder *builder = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (obj); | |
| 348 mark_object (builder->current_events); | |
| 349 mark_object (builder->most_current_event); | |
| 350 mark_object (builder->last_non_munged_event); | |
| 1204 | 351 mark_object (builder->first_mungeable_event[0]); |
| 352 mark_object (builder->first_mungeable_event[1]); | |
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353 mark_object (builder->echo_buf); |
| 428 | 354 return builder->console; |
| 355 } | |
| 356 | |
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357 DEFINE_NODUMP_LISP_OBJECT ("command-builder", command_builder, |
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358 mark_command_builder, |
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359 internal_object_printer, 0, 0, 0, |
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360 command_builder_description, |
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361 struct command_builder); |
| 771 | 362 |
| 428 | 363 static void |
| 364 reset_command_builder_event_chain (struct command_builder *builder) | |
| 365 { | |
| 366 builder->current_events = Qnil; | |
| 367 builder->most_current_event = Qnil; | |
| 368 builder->last_non_munged_event = Qnil; | |
| 1204 | 369 builder->first_mungeable_event[0] = Qnil; |
| 370 builder->first_mungeable_event[1] = Qnil; | |
| 428 | 371 } |
| 372 | |
| 373 Lisp_Object | |
| 771 | 374 allocate_command_builder (Lisp_Object console, int with_echo_buf) |
| 428 | 375 { |
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376 Lisp_Object builder_obj = ALLOC_NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT (command_builder); |
| 771 | 377 struct command_builder *builder = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (builder_obj); |
| 428 | 378 |
| 379 builder->console = console; | |
| 380 reset_command_builder_event_chain (builder); | |
| 771 | 381 if (with_echo_buf) |
| 382 { | |
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383 builder->echo_buf = Fmake_string (make_fixnum (300 * MAX_ICHAR_LEN), |
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384 make_char (0)); |
| 771 | 385 } |
| 386 else | |
| 387 { | |
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388 builder->echo_buf = Qnil; |
| 771 | 389 } |
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390 builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer = builder->echo_buf_end = -1; |
| 428 | 391 builder->self_insert_countdown = 0; |
| 392 | |
| 393 return builder_obj; | |
| 394 } | |
| 395 | |
| 771 | 396 /* Copy or clone COLLAPSING (copy to NEW_BUILDINGS if non-zero, |
| 397 otherwise clone); but don't copy the echo-buf stuff. (The calling | |
| 398 routines don't need it and will reset it, and we would rather avoid | |
| 399 malloc.) */ | |
| 400 | |
| 401 static Lisp_Object | |
| 402 copy_command_builder (struct command_builder *collapsing, | |
| 403 struct command_builder *new_buildings) | |
| 404 { | |
| 405 if (!new_buildings) | |
| 406 new_buildings = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (allocate_command_builder (Qnil, 0)); | |
| 407 | |
| 3358 | 408 new_buildings->console = collapsing->console; |
| 409 | |
| 771 | 410 new_buildings->self_insert_countdown = collapsing->self_insert_countdown; |
| 411 | |
| 412 deallocate_event_chain (new_buildings->current_events); | |
| 413 new_buildings->current_events = | |
| 414 copy_event_chain (collapsing->current_events); | |
| 415 | |
| 416 new_buildings->most_current_event = | |
| 417 transfer_event_chain_pointer (collapsing->most_current_event, | |
| 418 collapsing->current_events, | |
| 419 new_buildings->current_events); | |
| 420 new_buildings->last_non_munged_event = | |
| 421 transfer_event_chain_pointer (collapsing->last_non_munged_event, | |
| 422 collapsing->current_events, | |
| 423 new_buildings->current_events); | |
| 1204 | 424 new_buildings->first_mungeable_event[0] = |
| 425 transfer_event_chain_pointer (collapsing->first_mungeable_event[0], | |
| 771 | 426 collapsing->current_events, |
| 427 new_buildings->current_events); | |
| 1204 | 428 new_buildings->first_mungeable_event[1] = |
| 429 transfer_event_chain_pointer (collapsing->first_mungeable_event[1], | |
| 771 | 430 collapsing->current_events, |
| 431 new_buildings->current_events); | |
| 432 | |
| 433 return wrap_command_builder (new_buildings); | |
| 434 } | |
| 435 | |
| 436 static void | |
| 428 | 437 command_builder_append_event (struct command_builder *builder, |
| 438 Lisp_Object event) | |
| 439 { | |
| 440 assert (EVENTP (event)); | |
| 441 | |
| 771 | 442 event = Fcopy_event (event, Qnil); |
| 428 | 443 if (EVENTP (builder->most_current_event)) |
| 444 XSET_EVENT_NEXT (builder->most_current_event, event); | |
| 445 else | |
| 446 builder->current_events = event; | |
| 447 | |
| 448 builder->most_current_event = event; | |
| 1204 | 449 if (NILP (builder->first_mungeable_event[0])) |
| 450 builder->first_mungeable_event[0] = event; | |
| 451 if (NILP (builder->first_mungeable_event[1])) | |
| 452 builder->first_mungeable_event[1] = event; | |
| 428 | 453 } |
| 454 | |
| 455 | |
| 456 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 457 /* Low-level interfaces onto event methods */ | |
| 458 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 459 | |
| 460 static void | |
| 1268 | 461 check_event_stream_ok (void) |
| 428 | 462 { |
| 463 if (!event_stream && noninteractive) | |
| 814 | 464 /* See comment in init_event_stream() */ |
| 465 init_event_stream (); | |
| 466 else assert (event_stream); | |
| 428 | 467 } |
| 468 | |
| 469 void | |
| 440 | 470 event_stream_handle_magic_event (Lisp_Event *event) |
| 428 | 471 { |
| 1268 | 472 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 428 | 473 event_stream->handle_magic_event_cb (event); |
| 474 } | |
| 475 | |
| 788 | 476 void |
| 477 event_stream_format_magic_event (Lisp_Event *event, Lisp_Object pstream) | |
| 478 { | |
| 1268 | 479 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 788 | 480 event_stream->format_magic_event_cb (event, pstream); |
| 481 } | |
| 482 | |
| 483 int | |
| 484 event_stream_compare_magic_event (Lisp_Event *e1, Lisp_Event *e2) | |
| 485 { | |
| 1268 | 486 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 788 | 487 return event_stream->compare_magic_event_cb (e1, e2); |
| 488 } | |
| 489 | |
| 490 Hashcode | |
| 491 event_stream_hash_magic_event (Lisp_Event *e) | |
| 492 { | |
| 1268 | 493 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 788 | 494 return event_stream->hash_magic_event_cb (e); |
| 495 } | |
| 496 | |
| 428 | 497 static int |
| 498 event_stream_add_timeout (EMACS_TIME timeout) | |
| 499 { | |
| 1268 | 500 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 428 | 501 return event_stream->add_timeout_cb (timeout); |
| 502 } | |
| 503 | |
| 504 static void | |
| 505 event_stream_remove_timeout (int id) | |
| 506 { | |
| 1268 | 507 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 428 | 508 event_stream->remove_timeout_cb (id); |
| 509 } | |
| 510 | |
| 511 void | |
| 512 event_stream_select_console (struct console *con) | |
| 513 { | |
| 1268 | 514 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 428 | 515 if (!con->input_enabled) |
| 516 { | |
| 517 event_stream->select_console_cb (con); | |
| 518 con->input_enabled = 1; | |
| 519 } | |
| 520 } | |
| 521 | |
| 522 void | |
| 523 event_stream_unselect_console (struct console *con) | |
| 524 { | |
| 1268 | 525 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 428 | 526 if (con->input_enabled) |
| 527 { | |
| 528 event_stream->unselect_console_cb (con); | |
| 529 con->input_enabled = 0; | |
| 530 } | |
| 531 } | |
| 532 | |
| 533 void | |
| 853 | 534 event_stream_select_process (Lisp_Process *proc, int doin, int doerr) |
| 428 | 535 { |
| 853 | 536 int cur_in, cur_err; |
| 537 | |
| 1268 | 538 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 853 | 539 |
| 540 cur_in = get_process_selected_p (proc, 0); | |
| 541 if (cur_in) | |
| 542 doin = 0; | |
| 543 | |
| 544 if (!process_has_separate_stderr (wrap_process (proc))) | |
| 428 | 545 { |
| 853 | 546 doerr = 0; |
| 547 cur_err = 0; | |
| 548 } | |
| 549 else | |
| 550 { | |
| 551 cur_err = get_process_selected_p (proc, 1); | |
| 552 if (cur_err) | |
| 553 doerr = 0; | |
| 554 } | |
| 555 | |
| 556 if (doin || doerr) | |
| 557 { | |
| 558 event_stream->select_process_cb (proc, doin, doerr); | |
| 559 set_process_selected_p (proc, cur_in || doin, cur_err || doerr); | |
| 428 | 560 } |
| 561 } | |
| 562 | |
| 563 void | |
| 853 | 564 event_stream_unselect_process (Lisp_Process *proc, int doin, int doerr) |
| 428 | 565 { |
| 853 | 566 int cur_in, cur_err; |
| 567 | |
| 1268 | 568 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 853 | 569 |
| 570 cur_in = get_process_selected_p (proc, 0); | |
| 571 if (!cur_in) | |
| 572 doin = 0; | |
| 573 | |
| 574 if (!process_has_separate_stderr (wrap_process (proc))) | |
| 428 | 575 { |
| 853 | 576 doerr = 0; |
| 577 cur_err = 0; | |
| 578 } | |
| 579 else | |
| 580 { | |
| 581 cur_err = get_process_selected_p (proc, 1); | |
| 582 if (!cur_err) | |
| 583 doerr = 0; | |
| 584 } | |
| 585 | |
| 586 if (doin || doerr) | |
| 587 { | |
| 588 event_stream->unselect_process_cb (proc, doin, doerr); | |
| 589 set_process_selected_p (proc, cur_in && !doin, cur_err && !doerr); | |
| 428 | 590 } |
| 591 } | |
| 592 | |
| 853 | 593 void |
| 594 event_stream_create_io_streams (void *inhandle, void *outhandle, | |
| 595 void *errhandle, Lisp_Object *instream, | |
| 596 Lisp_Object *outstream, | |
| 597 Lisp_Object *errstream, | |
| 598 USID *in_usid, | |
| 599 USID *err_usid, | |
| 600 int flags) | |
| 428 | 601 { |
| 1268 | 602 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 853 | 603 event_stream->create_io_streams_cb |
| 604 (inhandle, outhandle, errhandle, instream, outstream, errstream, | |
| 605 in_usid, err_usid, flags); | |
| 428 | 606 } |
| 607 | |
| 853 | 608 void |
| 609 event_stream_delete_io_streams (Lisp_Object instream, | |
| 610 Lisp_Object outstream, | |
| 611 Lisp_Object errstream, | |
| 612 USID *in_usid, | |
| 613 USID *err_usid) | |
| 428 | 614 { |
| 1268 | 615 check_event_stream_ok (); |
| 853 | 616 event_stream->delete_io_streams_cb (instream, outstream, errstream, |
| 617 in_usid, err_usid); | |
| 428 | 618 } |
| 619 | |
| 442 | 620 static int |
| 621 event_stream_current_event_timestamp (struct console *c) | |
| 622 { | |
| 623 if (event_stream && event_stream->current_event_timestamp_cb) | |
| 624 return event_stream->current_event_timestamp_cb (c); | |
| 625 else | |
| 626 return 0; | |
| 627 } | |
| 428 | 628 |
| 629 | |
| 630 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 631 /* Character prompting */ | |
| 632 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 633 | |
| 634 static void | |
| 635 echo_key_event (struct command_builder *command_builder, | |
| 636 Lisp_Object event) | |
| 637 { | |
| 638 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 793 | 639 DECLARE_EISTRING_MALLOC (buf); |
|
5803
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
640 Bytecount buf_fill_pointer = command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer; |
| 428 | 641 Bytecount len; |
| 642 | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
643 if (buf_fill_pointer < 0) |
| 428 | 644 { |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
645 buf_fill_pointer = 0; |
| 428 | 646 clear_echo_area (selected_frame (), Qnil, 0); |
| 647 } | |
| 648 | |
| 934 | 649 format_event_object (buf, event, 1); |
| 793 | 650 len = eilen (buf); |
| 428 | 651 |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
652 if (NILP (command_builder->echo_buf) || |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
653 (len + buf_fill_pointer + 4 > XSTRING_LENGTH (command_builder->echo_buf))) |
| 793 | 654 { |
| 655 eifree (buf); | |
| 656 return; | |
| 657 } | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
658 |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
659 eicat_ascii (buf, " - "); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
660 |
|
b79e1e02bf01
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
661 memcpy (XSTRING_DATA (command_builder->echo_buf) + buf_fill_pointer, |
|
b79e1e02bf01
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
662 eidata (buf), eilen (buf)); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
663 init_string_ascii_begin (command_builder->echo_buf); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
664 bump_string_modiff (command_builder->echo_buf); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
665 sledgehammer_check_ascii_begin (command_builder->echo_buf); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
666 |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
667 command_builder->echo_buf_end = buf_fill_pointer + eilen (buf); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
668 /* *Not* including the trailing " - ". */ |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
669 command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer = buf_fill_pointer + len + 1; |
| 793 | 670 eifree (buf); |
| 428 | 671 } |
| 672 | |
| 673 static void | |
| 674 regenerate_echo_keys_from_this_command_keys (struct command_builder * | |
| 675 builder) | |
| 676 { | |
| 677 Lisp_Object event; | |
| 678 | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
679 builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer = builder->echo_buf_end = 0; |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
680 if (STRINGP (builder->echo_buf)) |
|
b79e1e02bf01
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
681 { |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
682 detach_all_extents (builder->echo_buf); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
683 } |
| 428 | 684 |
| 685 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, Vthis_command_keys) | |
| 686 echo_key_event (builder, event); | |
| 687 } | |
| 688 | |
| 689 static void | |
| 690 maybe_echo_keys (struct command_builder *command_builder, int no_snooze) | |
| 691 { | |
| 692 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 693 double echo_keystrokes; | |
| 694 struct frame *f = selected_frame (); | |
| 853 | 695 int depth = begin_dont_check_for_quit (); |
| 696 | |
| 428 | 697 /* Message turns off echoing unless more keystrokes turn it on again. */ |
| 698 if (echo_area_active (f) && !EQ (Qcommand, echo_area_status (f))) | |
| 853 | 699 goto done; |
| 428 | 700 |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
701 if (FIXNUMP (Vecho_keystrokes) || FLOATP (Vecho_keystrokes)) |
| 428 | 702 echo_keystrokes = extract_float (Vecho_keystrokes); |
| 703 else | |
| 704 echo_keystrokes = 0; | |
| 705 | |
| 706 if (minibuf_level == 0 | |
| 707 && echo_keystrokes > 0.0 | |
| 442 | 708 #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) && defined (LWLIB_MENUBARS_LUCID) |
| 709 && !x_kludge_lw_menu_active () | |
| 710 #endif | |
| 711 ) | |
| 428 | 712 { |
| 713 if (!no_snooze) | |
| 714 { | |
| 715 if (NILP (Fsit_for (Vecho_keystrokes, Qnil))) | |
| 716 /* input came in, so don't echo. */ | |
| 853 | 717 goto done; |
| 428 | 718 } |
| 719 | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
720 echo_area_message (f, NULL, command_builder->echo_buf, 0, |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
721 command_builder->echo_buf_end, Qcommand); |
| 428 | 722 } |
| 853 | 723 |
| 724 done: | |
| 725 Vquit_flag = Qnil; /* see begin_dont_check_for_quit() */ | |
| 726 unbind_to (depth); | |
| 428 | 727 } |
| 728 | |
| 729 static void | |
| 730 reset_key_echo (struct command_builder *command_builder, | |
| 731 int remove_echo_area_echo) | |
| 732 { | |
| 733 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 734 struct frame *f = selected_frame (); | |
| 735 | |
| 757 | 736 if (command_builder) |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
737 { |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
738 command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer = |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
739 command_builder->echo_buf_end = -1; |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
740 } |
| 428 | 741 |
| 742 if (remove_echo_area_echo) | |
| 743 clear_echo_area (f, Qcommand, 0); | |
| 744 } | |
| 745 | |
| 746 | |
| 747 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 748 /* random junk */ | |
| 749 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 750 | |
| 751 /* NB: The following auto-save stuff is in keyboard.c in FSFmacs, and | |
| 752 keystrokes_since_auto_save is equivalent to the difference between | |
| 753 num_nonmacro_input_chars and last_auto_save. */ | |
| 754 | |
| 444 | 755 /* When an auto-save happens, record the number of keystrokes, and |
| 756 don't do again soon. */ | |
| 428 | 757 |
| 758 void | |
| 759 record_auto_save (void) | |
| 760 { | |
| 761 keystrokes_since_auto_save = 0; | |
| 762 } | |
| 763 | |
| 764 /* Make an auto save happen as soon as possible at command level. */ | |
| 765 | |
| 766 void | |
| 767 force_auto_save_soon (void) | |
| 768 { | |
| 769 keystrokes_since_auto_save = 1 + max (auto_save_interval, 20); | |
| 770 } | |
| 771 | |
| 772 static void | |
| 773 maybe_do_auto_save (void) | |
| 774 { | |
| 775 /* This function can call lisp */ | |
| 776 keystrokes_since_auto_save++; | |
| 777 if (auto_save_interval > 0 && | |
| 778 keystrokes_since_auto_save > max (auto_save_interval, 20) && | |
| 1268 | 779 !detect_input_pending (1)) |
| 428 | 780 { |
| 781 Fdo_auto_save (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 782 record_auto_save (); | |
| 783 } | |
| 784 } | |
| 785 | |
| 786 static Lisp_Object | |
| 787 print_help (Lisp_Object object) | |
| 788 { | |
| 789 Fprinc (object, Qnil); | |
| 790 return Qnil; | |
| 791 } | |
| 792 | |
| 793 static void | |
| 794 execute_help_form (struct command_builder *command_builder, | |
| 795 Lisp_Object event) | |
| 796 { | |
| 797 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 798 Lisp_Object help = Qnil; | |
| 799 int speccount = specpdl_depth (); | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
800 Bytecount buf_fill_pointer = command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer; |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
801 Bytecount buf_end = command_builder->echo_buf_end; |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
802 Lisp_Object echo = ((buf_fill_pointer <= 0) ? Qnil |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
803 : Fcopy_sequence (command_builder->echo_buf)); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
804 |
| 428 | 805 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; |
| 806 GCPRO2 (echo, help); | |
| 807 | |
|
4775
1d61580e0cf7
Remove Fsave_window_excursion from window.c, it's overridden by Lisp.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4718
diff
changeset
|
808 record_unwind_protect (Feval, |
|
1d61580e0cf7
Remove Fsave_window_excursion from window.c, it's overridden by Lisp.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4718
diff
changeset
|
809 list2 (Qset_window_configuration, |
|
1d61580e0cf7
Remove Fsave_window_excursion from window.c, it's overridden by Lisp.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4718
diff
changeset
|
810 call0 (Qcurrent_window_configuration))); |
| 428 | 811 reset_key_echo (command_builder, 1); |
| 812 | |
|
4677
8f1ee2d15784
Support full Common Lisp multiple values in C.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4528
diff
changeset
|
813 help = IGNORE_MULTIPLE_VALUES (Feval (Vhelp_form)); |
| 428 | 814 if (STRINGP (help)) |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
815 internal_with_output_to_temp_buffer (build_ascstring ("*Help*"), |
| 428 | 816 print_help, help, Qnil); |
| 817 Fnext_command_event (event, Qnil); | |
| 818 /* Remove the help from the frame */ | |
| 771 | 819 unbind_to (speccount); |
| 428 | 820 /* Hmmmm. Tricky. The unbind restores an old window configuration, |
| 821 apparently bypassing any setting of windows_structure_changed. | |
| 822 So we need to set it so that things get redrawn properly. */ | |
| 823 /* #### This is massive overkill. Look at doing it better once the | |
| 824 new redisplay is fully in place. */ | |
| 825 { | |
| 826 Lisp_Object frmcons, devcons, concons; | |
| 827 FRAME_LOOP_NO_BREAK (frmcons, devcons, concons) | |
| 828 { | |
| 829 struct frame *f = XFRAME (XCAR (frmcons)); | |
| 830 MARK_FRAME_WINDOWS_STRUCTURE_CHANGED (f); | |
| 831 } | |
| 832 } | |
| 833 | |
| 834 redisplay (); | |
| 1204 | 835 if (event_matches_key_specifier_p (event, make_char (' '))) |
| 428 | 836 { |
| 837 /* Discard next key if it is a space */ | |
| 838 reset_key_echo (command_builder, 1); | |
| 839 Fnext_command_event (event, Qnil); | |
| 840 } | |
| 841 | |
|
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842 command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer = buf_fill_pointer; |
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843 command_builder->echo_buf_end = buf_end; |
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844 |
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845 if (buf_fill_pointer > 0) |
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846 { |
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847 command_builder->echo_buf = echo; |
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848 } |
| 428 | 849 UNGCPRO; |
| 850 } | |
| 851 | |
| 852 | |
| 853 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 854 /* timeouts */ | |
| 855 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 856 | |
| 593 | 857 /* NOTE: "Low-level" or "interval" timeouts are one-shot timeouts that |
| 858 measure single intervals. "High-level timeouts" or "wakeups" are | |
| 859 the objects generated by `add-timeout' or `add-async-timout' -- | |
| 860 they can fire repeatedly (and in fact can have a different initial | |
| 861 time and resignal time). Given the nature of both setitimer() and | |
| 862 select() -- i.e. all we get is a single one-shot timer -- we have | |
| 863 to decompose all high-level timeouts into a series of intervals or | |
| 864 low-level timeouts. | |
| 865 | |
| 866 Low-level timeouts are of two varieties: synchronous and asynchronous. | |
| 867 The former are handled at the window-system level, the latter in | |
| 868 signal.c. | |
| 869 */ | |
| 870 | |
| 871 /**** Low-level timeout helper functions. **** | |
| 428 | 872 |
| 873 These functions maintain a sorted list of one-shot timeouts (where | |
| 593 | 874 the timeouts are in absolute time so we never lose any time as a |
| 875 result of the delay between noting an interval and firing the next | |
| 876 one). They are intended for use by functions that need to convert | |
| 877 a list of absolute timeouts into a series of intervals to wait | |
| 878 for. */ | |
| 428 | 879 |
| 880 /* We ensure that 0 is never a valid ID, so that a value of 0 can be | |
| 881 used to indicate an absence of a timer. */ | |
| 882 static int low_level_timeout_id_tick; | |
| 883 | |
| 884 static struct low_level_timeout_blocktype | |
| 885 { | |
| 886 Blocktype_declare (struct low_level_timeout); | |
| 887 } *the_low_level_timeout_blocktype; | |
| 888 | |
| 889 /* Add a one-shot timeout at time TIME to TIMEOUT_LIST. Return | |
| 890 a unique ID identifying the timeout. */ | |
| 891 | |
| 892 int | |
| 893 add_low_level_timeout (struct low_level_timeout **timeout_list, | |
| 894 EMACS_TIME thyme) | |
| 895 { | |
| 896 struct low_level_timeout *tm; | |
| 897 struct low_level_timeout *t, **tt; | |
| 898 | |
| 899 /* Allocate a new time struct. */ | |
| 900 | |
| 901 tm = Blocktype_alloc (the_low_level_timeout_blocktype); | |
| 902 tm->next = NULL; | |
| 593 | 903 /* Don't just use ++low_level_timeout_id_tick, for the (admittedly |
| 904 rare) case in which numbers wrap around. */ | |
| 428 | 905 if (low_level_timeout_id_tick == 0) |
| 906 low_level_timeout_id_tick++; | |
| 907 tm->id = low_level_timeout_id_tick++; | |
| 908 tm->time = thyme; | |
| 909 | |
| 910 /* Add it to the queue. */ | |
| 911 | |
| 912 tt = timeout_list; | |
| 913 t = *tt; | |
| 914 while (t && EMACS_TIME_EQUAL_OR_GREATER (tm->time, t->time)) | |
| 915 { | |
| 916 tt = &t->next; | |
| 917 t = *tt; | |
| 918 } | |
| 919 tm->next = t; | |
| 920 *tt = tm; | |
| 921 | |
| 922 return tm->id; | |
| 923 } | |
| 924 | |
| 925 /* Remove the low-level timeout identified by ID from TIMEOUT_LIST. | |
| 926 If the timeout is not there, do nothing. */ | |
| 927 | |
| 928 void | |
| 929 remove_low_level_timeout (struct low_level_timeout **timeout_list, int id) | |
| 930 { | |
| 931 struct low_level_timeout *t, *prev; | |
| 932 | |
| 933 /* find it */ | |
| 934 | |
| 935 for (t = *timeout_list, prev = NULL; t && t->id != id; t = t->next) | |
| 936 prev = t; | |
| 937 | |
| 938 if (!t) | |
| 939 return; /* couldn't find it */ | |
| 940 | |
| 941 if (!prev) | |
| 942 *timeout_list = t->next; | |
| 943 else prev->next = t->next; | |
| 944 | |
| 945 Blocktype_free (the_low_level_timeout_blocktype, t); | |
| 946 } | |
| 947 | |
| 948 /* If there are timeouts on TIMEOUT_LIST, store the relative time | |
| 949 interval to the first timeout on the list into INTERVAL and | |
| 950 return 1. Otherwise, return 0. */ | |
| 951 | |
| 952 int | |
| 953 get_low_level_timeout_interval (struct low_level_timeout *timeout_list, | |
| 954 EMACS_TIME *interval) | |
| 955 { | |
| 956 if (!timeout_list) /* no timer events; block indefinitely */ | |
| 957 return 0; | |
| 958 else | |
| 959 { | |
| 960 EMACS_TIME current_time; | |
| 961 | |
| 962 /* The time to block is the difference between the first | |
| 963 (earliest) timer on the queue and the current time. | |
| 964 If that is negative, then the timer will fire immediately | |
| 965 but we still have to call select(), with a zero-valued | |
| 966 timeout: user events must have precedence over timer events. */ | |
| 967 EMACS_GET_TIME (current_time); | |
| 968 if (EMACS_TIME_GREATER (timeout_list->time, current_time)) | |
| 969 EMACS_SUB_TIME (*interval, timeout_list->time, | |
| 970 current_time); | |
| 971 else | |
| 972 EMACS_SET_SECS_USECS (*interval, 0, 0); | |
| 973 return 1; | |
| 974 } | |
| 975 } | |
| 976 | |
| 977 /* Pop the first (i.e. soonest) timeout off of TIMEOUT_LIST and return | |
| 978 its ID. Also, if TIME_OUT is not 0, store the absolute time of the | |
| 979 timeout into TIME_OUT. */ | |
| 980 | |
| 981 int | |
| 982 pop_low_level_timeout (struct low_level_timeout **timeout_list, | |
| 983 EMACS_TIME *time_out) | |
| 984 { | |
| 985 struct low_level_timeout *tm = *timeout_list; | |
| 986 int id; | |
| 987 | |
| 988 assert (tm); | |
| 989 id = tm->id; | |
| 990 if (time_out) | |
| 991 *time_out = tm->time; | |
| 992 *timeout_list = tm->next; | |
| 993 Blocktype_free (the_low_level_timeout_blocktype, tm); | |
| 994 return id; | |
| 995 } | |
| 996 | |
| 997 | |
| 593 | 998 /**** High-level timeout functions. **** */ |
| 999 | |
| 1000 /* We ensure that 0 is never a valid ID, so that a value of 0 can be | |
| 1001 used to indicate an absence of a timer. */ | |
| 428 | 1002 static int timeout_id_tick; |
| 1003 | |
| 1004 static Lisp_Object pending_timeout_list, pending_async_timeout_list; | |
| 1005 | |
| 1006 static Lisp_Object | |
| 1007 mark_timeout (Lisp_Object obj) | |
| 1008 { | |
| 440 | 1009 Lisp_Timeout *tm = XTIMEOUT (obj); |
| 428 | 1010 mark_object (tm->function); |
| 1011 return tm->object; | |
| 1012 } | |
| 1013 | |
| 1204 | 1014 static const struct memory_description timeout_description[] = { |
| 440 | 1015 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (Lisp_Timeout, function) }, |
| 1016 { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (Lisp_Timeout, object) }, | |
| 428 | 1017 { XD_END } |
| 1018 }; | |
| 1019 | |
|
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1020 DEFINE_DUMPABLE_INTERNAL_LISP_OBJECT ("timeout", timeout, |
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1021 mark_timeout, timeout_description, |
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1022 Lisp_Timeout); |
| 428 | 1023 |
| 1024 /* Generate a timeout and return its ID. */ | |
| 1025 | |
| 1026 int | |
| 1027 event_stream_generate_wakeup (unsigned int milliseconds, | |
| 1028 unsigned int vanilliseconds, | |
| 1029 Lisp_Object function, Lisp_Object object, | |
| 1030 int async_p) | |
| 1031 { | |
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1032 Lisp_Object op = ALLOC_NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT (timeout); |
| 440 | 1033 Lisp_Timeout *timeout = XTIMEOUT (op); |
| 428 | 1034 EMACS_TIME current_time; |
| 1035 EMACS_TIME interval; | |
| 1036 | |
| 593 | 1037 /* Don't just use ++timeout_id_tick, for the (admittedly rare) case |
| 1038 in which numbers wrap around. */ | |
| 1039 if (timeout_id_tick == 0) | |
| 1040 timeout_id_tick++; | |
| 428 | 1041 timeout->id = timeout_id_tick++; |
| 1042 timeout->resignal_msecs = vanilliseconds; | |
| 1043 timeout->function = function; | |
| 1044 timeout->object = object; | |
| 1045 | |
| 1046 EMACS_GET_TIME (current_time); | |
| 1047 EMACS_SET_SECS_USECS (interval, milliseconds / 1000, | |
| 1048 1000 * (milliseconds % 1000)); | |
| 1049 EMACS_ADD_TIME (timeout->next_signal_time, current_time, interval); | |
| 1050 | |
| 1051 if (async_p) | |
| 1052 { | |
| 1053 timeout->interval_id = | |
| 593 | 1054 signal_add_async_interval_timeout (timeout->next_signal_time); |
| 1055 pending_async_timeout_list = | |
| 1056 noseeum_cons (op, pending_async_timeout_list); | |
| 428 | 1057 } |
| 1058 else | |
| 1059 { | |
| 1060 timeout->interval_id = | |
| 1061 event_stream_add_timeout (timeout->next_signal_time); | |
| 1062 pending_timeout_list = noseeum_cons (op, pending_timeout_list); | |
| 1063 } | |
| 1064 return timeout->id; | |
| 1065 } | |
| 1066 | |
| 1067 /* Given the INTERVAL-ID of a timeout just signalled, resignal the timeout | |
| 1068 as necessary and return the timeout's ID and function and object slots. | |
| 1069 | |
| 1070 This should be called as a result of receiving notice that a timeout | |
| 1071 has fired. INTERVAL-ID is *not* the timeout's ID, but is the ID that | |
| 1072 identifies this particular firing of the timeout. INTERVAL-ID's and | |
| 1073 timeout ID's are in separate number spaces and bear no relation to | |
| 1074 each other. The INTERVAL-ID is all that the event callback routines | |
| 1075 work with: they work only with one-shot intervals, not with timeouts | |
| 1076 that may fire repeatedly. | |
| 1077 | |
| 1078 NOTE: The returned FUNCTION and OBJECT are *not* GC-protected at all. | |
| 1079 */ | |
| 1080 | |
| 593 | 1081 int |
| 428 | 1082 event_stream_resignal_wakeup (int interval_id, int async_p, |
| 1083 Lisp_Object *function, Lisp_Object *object) | |
| 1084 { | |
| 1085 Lisp_Object op = Qnil, rest; | |
| 440 | 1086 Lisp_Timeout *timeout; |
| 428 | 1087 Lisp_Object *timeout_list; |
| 1088 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 1089 int id; | |
| 1090 | |
| 1091 GCPRO1 (op); /* just in case ... because it's removed from the list | |
| 1092 for awhile. */ | |
| 1093 | |
| 1094 timeout_list = async_p ? &pending_async_timeout_list : &pending_timeout_list; | |
| 1095 | |
| 1096 /* Find the timeout on the list of pending ones. */ | |
| 1097 LIST_LOOP (rest, *timeout_list) | |
| 1098 { | |
| 1099 timeout = XTIMEOUT (XCAR (rest)); | |
| 1100 if (timeout->interval_id == interval_id) | |
| 1101 break; | |
| 1102 } | |
| 1103 | |
| 1104 assert (!NILP (rest)); | |
| 1105 op = XCAR (rest); | |
| 1106 timeout = XTIMEOUT (op); | |
| 1107 /* We make sure to snarf the data out of the timeout object before | |
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1108 we free it with free_normal_lisp_object(). */ |
| 428 | 1109 id = timeout->id; |
| 1110 *function = timeout->function; | |
| 1111 *object = timeout->object; | |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 /* Remove this one from the list of pending timeouts */ | |
| 1114 *timeout_list = delq_no_quit_and_free_cons (op, *timeout_list); | |
| 1115 | |
| 1116 /* If this timeout wants to be resignalled, do it now. */ | |
| 1117 if (timeout->resignal_msecs) | |
| 1118 { | |
| 1119 EMACS_TIME current_time; | |
| 1120 EMACS_TIME interval; | |
| 1121 | |
| 1122 /* Determine the time that the next resignalling should occur. | |
| 1123 We do that by adding the interval time to the last signalled | |
| 1124 time until we get a time that's current. | |
| 1125 | |
| 1126 (This way, it doesn't matter if the timeout was signalled | |
| 1127 exactly when we asked for it, or at some time later.) | |
| 1128 */ | |
| 1129 EMACS_GET_TIME (current_time); | |
| 1130 EMACS_SET_SECS_USECS (interval, timeout->resignal_msecs / 1000, | |
| 1131 1000 * (timeout->resignal_msecs % 1000)); | |
| 1132 do | |
| 1133 { | |
| 1134 EMACS_ADD_TIME (timeout->next_signal_time, timeout->next_signal_time, | |
| 1135 interval); | |
| 1136 } while (EMACS_TIME_GREATER (current_time, timeout->next_signal_time)); | |
| 1137 | |
| 1138 if (async_p) | |
| 1139 timeout->interval_id = | |
| 593 | 1140 signal_add_async_interval_timeout (timeout->next_signal_time); |
| 428 | 1141 else |
| 1142 timeout->interval_id = | |
| 1143 event_stream_add_timeout (timeout->next_signal_time); | |
| 1144 /* Add back onto the list. Note that the effect of this | |
| 1145 is to move frequently-hit timeouts to the front of the | |
| 1146 list, which is a good thing. */ | |
| 1147 *timeout_list = noseeum_cons (op, *timeout_list); | |
| 1148 } | |
| 1149 else | |
|
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1150 free_normal_lisp_object (op); |
| 428 | 1151 |
| 1152 UNGCPRO; | |
| 1153 return id; | |
| 1154 } | |
| 1155 | |
| 1156 void | |
| 1157 event_stream_disable_wakeup (int id, int async_p) | |
| 1158 { | |
| 440 | 1159 Lisp_Timeout *timeout = 0; |
| 428 | 1160 Lisp_Object rest; |
| 1161 Lisp_Object *timeout_list; | |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 if (async_p) | |
| 1164 timeout_list = &pending_async_timeout_list; | |
| 1165 else | |
| 1166 timeout_list = &pending_timeout_list; | |
| 1167 | |
| 1168 /* Find the timeout on the list of pending ones, if it's still there. */ | |
| 1169 LIST_LOOP (rest, *timeout_list) | |
| 1170 { | |
| 1171 timeout = XTIMEOUT (XCAR (rest)); | |
| 1172 if (timeout->id == id) | |
| 1173 break; | |
| 1174 } | |
| 1175 | |
| 1176 /* If we found it, remove it from the list and disable the pending | |
| 1177 one-shot. */ | |
| 1178 if (!NILP (rest)) | |
| 1179 { | |
| 1180 Lisp_Object op = XCAR (rest); | |
| 1181 *timeout_list = | |
| 1182 delq_no_quit_and_free_cons (op, *timeout_list); | |
| 1183 if (async_p) | |
| 593 | 1184 signal_remove_async_interval_timeout (timeout->interval_id); |
| 428 | 1185 else |
| 1186 event_stream_remove_timeout (timeout->interval_id); | |
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1187 free_normal_lisp_object (op); |
| 428 | 1188 } |
| 1189 } | |
| 1190 | |
| 1191 static int | |
| 1192 event_stream_wakeup_pending_p (int id, int async_p) | |
| 1193 { | |
| 440 | 1194 Lisp_Timeout *timeout; |
| 428 | 1195 Lisp_Object rest; |
| 1196 Lisp_Object timeout_list; | |
| 1197 int found = 0; | |
| 1198 | |
| 1199 | |
| 1200 if (async_p) | |
| 1201 timeout_list = pending_async_timeout_list; | |
| 1202 else | |
| 1203 timeout_list = pending_timeout_list; | |
| 1204 | |
| 1205 /* Find the element on the list of pending ones, if it's still there. */ | |
| 1206 LIST_LOOP (rest, timeout_list) | |
| 1207 { | |
| 1208 timeout = XTIMEOUT (XCAR (rest)); | |
| 1209 if (timeout->id == id) | |
| 1210 { | |
| 1211 found = 1; | |
| 1212 break; | |
| 1213 } | |
| 1214 } | |
| 1215 | |
| 1216 return found; | |
| 1217 } | |
| 1218 | |
| 1219 | |
| 1220 /**** Lisp-level timeout functions. ****/ | |
| 1221 | |
| 1222 static unsigned long | |
| 1223 lisp_number_to_milliseconds (Lisp_Object secs, int allow_0) | |
| 1224 { | |
|
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1225 Lisp_Object args[] = { allow_0 ? Qzero : make_fixnum (1), |
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1226 secs, |
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1227 /* (((unsigned int) 0xFFFFFFFF) / 1000) - 1 */ |
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1228 make_fixnum (4294967 - 1) }; |
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1229 |
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1230 if (!allow_0 && FLOATP (secs) && XFLOAT_DATA (secs) > 0) |
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1231 { |
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1232 args[0] = secs; |
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1233 } |
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1234 |
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1235 if (NILP (Fleq (countof (args), args))) |
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1236 { |
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1237 args_out_of_range_3 (secs, args[0], args[2]); |
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1238 } |
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1239 |
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1240 args[0] = make_fixnum (1000); |
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1241 args[0] = Ftimes (2, args); |
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1242 |
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1243 if (FIXNUMP (args[0])) |
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1244 { |
|
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1245 return XFIXNUM (args[0]); |
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1246 } |
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1247 |
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1248 return (unsigned long) extract_float (args[0]); |
| 428 | 1249 } |
| 1250 | |
| 1251 DEFUN ("add-timeout", Fadd_timeout, 3, 4, 0, /* | |
| 1252 Add a timeout, to be signaled after the timeout period has elapsed. | |
| 1253 SECS is a number of seconds, expressed as an integer or a float. | |
| 1254 FUNCTION will be called after that many seconds have elapsed, with one | |
| 1255 argument, the given OBJECT. If the optional RESIGNAL argument is provided, | |
| 1256 then after this timeout expires, `add-timeout' will automatically be called | |
| 1257 again with RESIGNAL as the first argument. | |
| 1258 | |
| 1259 This function returns an object which is the id number of this particular | |
| 1260 timeout. You can pass that object to `disable-timeout' to turn off the | |
| 1261 timeout before it has been signalled. | |
| 1262 | |
| 1263 NOTE: Id numbers as returned by this function are in a distinct namespace | |
| 1264 from those returned by `add-async-timeout'. This means that the same id | |
| 1265 number could refer to a pending synchronous timeout and a different pending | |
| 1266 asynchronous timeout, and that you cannot pass an id from `add-timeout' | |
| 1267 to `disable-async-timeout', or vice-versa. | |
| 1268 | |
| 1269 The number of seconds may be expressed as a floating-point number, in which | |
| 1270 case some fractional part of a second will be used. Caveat: the usable | |
| 1271 timeout granularity will vary from system to system. | |
| 1272 | |
| 1273 Adding a timeout causes a timeout event to be returned by `next-event', and | |
| 1274 the function will be invoked by `dispatch-event,' so if emacs is in a tight | |
| 1275 loop, the function will not be invoked until the next call to sit-for or | |
| 1276 until the return to top-level (the same is true of process filters). | |
| 1277 | |
| 1278 If you need to have a timeout executed even when XEmacs is in the midst of | |
| 1279 running Lisp code, use `add-async-timeout'. | |
| 1280 | |
| 1281 WARNING: if you are thinking of calling add-timeout from inside of a | |
| 1282 callback function as a way of resignalling a timeout, think again. There | |
| 1283 is a race condition. That's why the RESIGNAL argument exists. | |
| 1284 */ | |
| 1285 (secs, function, object, resignal)) | |
| 1286 { | |
| 1287 unsigned long msecs = lisp_number_to_milliseconds (secs, 0); | |
| 1288 unsigned long msecs2 = (NILP (resignal) ? 0 : | |
| 1289 lisp_number_to_milliseconds (resignal, 0)); | |
| 1290 int id; | |
| 1291 Lisp_Object lid; | |
| 1292 id = event_stream_generate_wakeup (msecs, msecs2, function, object, 0); | |
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1293 lid = make_fixnum (id); |
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1294 assert (id == XFIXNUM (lid)); |
| 428 | 1295 return lid; |
| 1296 } | |
| 1297 | |
| 1298 DEFUN ("disable-timeout", Fdisable_timeout, 1, 1, 0, /* | |
| 1299 Disable a timeout from signalling any more. | |
| 1300 ID should be a timeout id number as returned by `add-timeout'. If ID | |
| 1301 corresponds to a one-shot timeout that has already signalled, nothing | |
| 1302 will happen. | |
| 1303 | |
| 1304 It will not work to call this function on an id number returned by | |
| 1305 `add-async-timeout'. Use `disable-async-timeout' for that. | |
| 1306 */ | |
| 1307 (id)) | |
| 1308 { | |
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1309 CHECK_FIXNUM (id); |
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1310 event_stream_disable_wakeup (XFIXNUM (id), 0); |
| 428 | 1311 return Qnil; |
| 1312 } | |
| 1313 | |
| 1314 DEFUN ("add-async-timeout", Fadd_async_timeout, 3, 4, 0, /* | |
| 1315 Add an asynchronous timeout, to be signaled after an interval has elapsed. | |
| 1316 SECS is a number of seconds, expressed as an integer or a float. | |
| 1317 FUNCTION will be called after that many seconds have elapsed, with one | |
| 1318 argument, the given OBJECT. If the optional RESIGNAL argument is provided, | |
| 1319 then after this timeout expires, `add-async-timeout' will automatically be | |
| 1320 called again with RESIGNAL as the first argument. | |
| 1321 | |
| 1322 This function returns an object which is the id number of this particular | |
| 1323 timeout. You can pass that object to `disable-async-timeout' to turn off | |
| 1324 the timeout before it has been signalled. | |
| 1325 | |
| 1326 NOTE: Id numbers as returned by this function are in a distinct namespace | |
| 1327 from those returned by `add-timeout'. This means that the same id number | |
| 1328 could refer to a pending synchronous timeout and a different pending | |
| 1329 asynchronous timeout, and that you cannot pass an id from | |
| 1330 `add-async-timeout' to `disable-timeout', or vice-versa. | |
| 1331 | |
| 1332 The number of seconds may be expressed as a floating-point number, in which | |
| 1333 case some fractional part of a second will be used. Caveat: the usable | |
| 1334 timeout granularity will vary from system to system. | |
| 1335 | |
| 1336 Adding an asynchronous timeout causes the function to be invoked as soon | |
| 1337 as the timeout occurs, even if XEmacs is in the midst of executing some | |
| 1338 other code. (This is unlike the synchronous timeouts added with | |
| 1339 `add-timeout', where the timeout will only be signalled when XEmacs is | |
| 1340 waiting for events, i.e. the next return to top-level or invocation of | |
| 1341 `sit-for' or related functions.) This means that the function that is | |
| 1342 called *must* not signal an error or change any global state (e.g. switch | |
| 1343 buffers or windows) except when locking code is in place to make sure | |
| 1344 that race conditions don't occur in the interaction between the | |
| 1345 asynchronous timeout function and other code. | |
| 1346 | |
| 1347 Under most circumstances, you should use `add-timeout' instead, as it is | |
| 1348 much safer. Asynchronous timeouts should only be used when such behavior | |
| 1349 is really necessary. | |
| 1350 | |
| 1351 Asynchronous timeouts are blocked and will not occur when `inhibit-quit' | |
| 1352 is non-nil. As soon as `inhibit-quit' becomes nil again, any pending | |
| 1353 asynchronous timeouts will get called immediately. (Multiple occurrences | |
| 1354 of the same asynchronous timeout are not queued, however.) While the | |
| 1355 callback function of an asynchronous timeout is invoked, `inhibit-quit' | |
| 1356 is automatically bound to non-nil, and thus other asynchronous timeouts | |
| 1357 will be blocked unless the callback function explicitly sets `inhibit-quit' | |
| 1358 to nil. | |
| 1359 | |
| 1360 WARNING: if you are thinking of calling `add-async-timeout' from inside of a | |
| 1361 callback function as a way of resignalling a timeout, think again. There | |
| 1362 is a race condition. That's why the RESIGNAL argument exists. | |
| 1363 */ | |
| 1364 (secs, function, object, resignal)) | |
| 1365 { | |
| 1366 unsigned long msecs = lisp_number_to_milliseconds (secs, 0); | |
| 1367 unsigned long msecs2 = (NILP (resignal) ? 0 : | |
| 1368 lisp_number_to_milliseconds (resignal, 0)); | |
| 1369 int id; | |
| 1370 Lisp_Object lid; | |
| 1371 id = event_stream_generate_wakeup (msecs, msecs2, function, object, 1); | |
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1372 lid = make_fixnum (id); |
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1373 assert (id == XFIXNUM (lid)); |
| 428 | 1374 return lid; |
| 1375 } | |
| 1376 | |
| 1377 DEFUN ("disable-async-timeout", Fdisable_async_timeout, 1, 1, 0, /* | |
| 1378 Disable an asynchronous timeout from signalling any more. | |
| 1379 ID should be a timeout id number as returned by `add-async-timeout'. If ID | |
| 1380 corresponds to a one-shot timeout that has already signalled, nothing | |
| 1381 will happen. | |
| 1382 | |
| 1383 It will not work to call this function on an id number returned by | |
| 1384 `add-timeout'. Use `disable-timeout' for that. | |
| 1385 */ | |
| 1386 (id)) | |
| 1387 { | |
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1388 CHECK_FIXNUM (id); |
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1389 event_stream_disable_wakeup (XFIXNUM (id), 1); |
| 428 | 1390 return Qnil; |
| 1391 } | |
| 1392 | |
| 1393 | |
| 1394 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1395 /* enqueuing and dequeuing events */ | |
| 1396 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1397 | |
| 1398 /* Add an event to the back of the command-event queue: it will be the next | |
| 1399 event read after all pending events. This only works on keyboard, | |
| 1400 mouse-click, misc-user, and eval events. | |
| 1401 */ | |
| 1402 static void | |
| 1403 enqueue_command_event (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 1404 { | |
| 1405 enqueue_event (event, &command_event_queue, &command_event_queue_tail); | |
| 1406 } | |
| 1407 | |
| 1408 static Lisp_Object | |
| 1409 dequeue_command_event (void) | |
| 1410 { | |
| 1411 return dequeue_event (&command_event_queue, &command_event_queue_tail); | |
| 1412 } | |
| 1413 | |
| 1204 | 1414 void |
| 1415 enqueue_dispatch_event (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 1416 { | |
| 1417 enqueue_event (event, &dispatch_event_queue, &dispatch_event_queue_tail); | |
| 1418 } | |
| 1419 | |
| 1420 Lisp_Object | |
| 1421 dequeue_dispatch_event (void) | |
| 1422 { | |
| 1423 return dequeue_event (&dispatch_event_queue, &dispatch_event_queue_tail); | |
| 1424 } | |
| 1425 | |
| 428 | 1426 static void |
| 1427 enqueue_command_event_1 (Lisp_Object event_to_copy) | |
| 1428 { | |
| 853 | 1429 enqueue_command_event (Fcopy_event (event_to_copy, Qnil)); |
| 428 | 1430 } |
| 1431 | |
| 1432 void | |
| 1433 enqueue_magic_eval_event (void (*fun) (Lisp_Object), Lisp_Object object) | |
| 1434 { | |
| 1435 Lisp_Object event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 934 | 1436 XSET_EVENT_TYPE (event, magic_eval_event); |
| 1437 /* channel for magic_eval events is nil */ | |
| 1204 | 1438 XSET_EVENT_MAGIC_EVAL_INTERNAL_FUNCTION (event, fun); |
| 1439 XSET_EVENT_MAGIC_EVAL_OBJECT (event, object); | |
| 428 | 1440 enqueue_command_event (event); |
| 1441 } | |
| 1442 | |
| 1443 DEFUN ("enqueue-eval-event", Fenqueue_eval_event, 2, 2, 0, /* | |
| 1444 Add an eval event to the back of the eval event queue. | |
| 1445 When this event is dispatched, FUNCTION (which should be a function | |
| 1446 of one argument) will be called with OBJECT as its argument. | |
| 1447 See `next-event' for a description of event types and how events | |
| 1448 are received. | |
| 1449 */ | |
| 1450 (function, object)) | |
| 1451 { | |
| 1452 Lisp_Object event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 1453 | |
| 934 | 1454 XSET_EVENT_TYPE (event, eval_event); |
| 1455 /* channel for eval events is nil */ | |
| 1204 | 1456 XSET_EVENT_EVAL_FUNCTION (event, function); |
| 1457 XSET_EVENT_EVAL_OBJECT (event, object); | |
| 428 | 1458 enqueue_command_event (event); |
| 1459 | |
| 1460 return event; | |
| 1461 } | |
| 1462 | |
| 1463 Lisp_Object | |
| 1464 enqueue_misc_user_event (Lisp_Object channel, Lisp_Object function, | |
| 1465 Lisp_Object object) | |
| 1466 { | |
| 1467 Lisp_Object event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 934 | 1468 XSET_EVENT_TYPE (event, misc_user_event); |
| 1469 XSET_EVENT_CHANNEL (event, channel); | |
| 1204 | 1470 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event, function); |
| 1471 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_OBJECT (event, object); | |
| 1472 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_BUTTON (event, 0); | |
| 1473 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_MODIFIERS (event, 0); | |
| 1474 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_X (event, -1); | |
| 1475 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_Y (event, -1); | |
| 428 | 1476 enqueue_command_event (event); |
| 1477 | |
| 1478 return event; | |
| 1479 } | |
| 1480 | |
| 1481 Lisp_Object | |
| 1482 enqueue_misc_user_event_pos (Lisp_Object channel, Lisp_Object function, | |
| 1483 Lisp_Object object, | |
| 1484 int button, int modifiers, int x, int y) | |
| 1485 { | |
| 1486 Lisp_Object event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 1487 | |
| 934 | 1488 XSET_EVENT_TYPE (event, misc_user_event); |
| 1489 XSET_EVENT_CHANNEL (event, channel); | |
| 1204 | 1490 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event, function); |
| 1491 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_OBJECT (event, object); | |
| 1492 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_BUTTON (event, button); | |
| 1493 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_MODIFIERS (event, modifiers); | |
| 1494 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_X (event, x); | |
| 1495 XSET_EVENT_MISC_USER_Y (event, y); | |
| 428 | 1496 enqueue_command_event (event); |
| 1497 | |
| 1498 return event; | |
| 1499 } | |
| 1500 | |
| 1501 | |
| 1502 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1503 /* focus-event handling */ | |
| 1504 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1505 | |
| 1506 /* | |
| 1507 | |
| 2367 | 1508 See also |
| 1509 | |
| 1510 (Info-goto-node "(internals)Focus Handling") | |
| 428 | 1511 */ |
| 1512 | |
| 2367 | 1513 |
| 428 | 1514 static void |
| 1515 run_select_frame_hook (void) | |
| 1516 { | |
| 1517 run_hook (Qselect_frame_hook); | |
| 1518 } | |
| 1519 | |
| 1520 static void | |
| 1521 run_deselect_frame_hook (void) | |
| 1522 { | |
| 1523 run_hook (Qdeselect_frame_hook); | |
| 1524 } | |
| 1525 | |
| 1526 /* When select-frame is called and focus_follows_mouse is false, we want | |
| 1527 to tell the window system that the focus should be changed to point to | |
| 1528 the new frame. However, | |
| 1529 sometimes Lisp functions will temporarily change the selected frame | |
| 1530 (e.g. to call a function that operates on the selected frame), | |
| 1531 and it's annoying if this focus-change happens exactly when | |
| 1532 select-frame is called, because then you get some flickering of the | |
| 1533 window-manager border and perhaps other undesirable results. We | |
| 1534 really only want to change the focus when we're about to retrieve | |
| 1535 an event from the user. To do this, we keep track of the frame | |
| 1536 where the window-manager focus lies on, and just before waiting | |
| 1537 for user events, check the currently selected frame and change | |
| 1538 the focus as necessary. | |
| 1539 | |
| 1540 On the other hand, if focus_follows_mouse is true, we need to switch the | |
| 1541 selected frame back to the frame with window manager focus just before we | |
| 1542 execute the next command in Fcommand_loop_1, just as the selected buffer is | |
| 1543 reverted after a set-buffer. | |
| 1544 | |
| 1545 Both cases are handled by this function. It must be called as appropriate | |
| 1546 from these two places, depending on the value of focus_follows_mouse. */ | |
| 1547 | |
| 1548 void | |
| 1549 investigate_frame_change (void) | |
| 1550 { | |
| 1551 Lisp_Object devcons, concons; | |
| 1552 | |
| 1553 /* if the selected frame was changed, change the window-system | |
| 1554 focus to the new frame. We don't do it when select-frame was | |
| 1555 called, to avoid flickering and other unwanted side effects when | |
| 1556 the frame is just changed temporarily. */ | |
| 1557 DEVICE_LOOP_NO_BREAK (devcons, concons) | |
| 1558 { | |
| 1559 struct device *d = XDEVICE (XCAR (devcons)); | |
| 1560 Lisp_Object sel_frame = DEVICE_SELECTED_FRAME (d); | |
| 1561 | |
| 1562 /* You'd think that maybe we should use FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_REAL, | |
| 1563 but that can cause us to end up in an infinite loop focusing | |
| 1564 between two frames. It seems that since the call to `select-frame' | |
| 1565 in emacs_handle_focus_change_final() is based on the _FOR_HOOKS | |
| 1566 value, we need to do so too. */ | |
| 1567 if (!NILP (sel_frame) && | |
| 1568 !EQ (DEVICE_FRAME_THAT_OUGHT_TO_HAVE_FOCUS (d), sel_frame) && | |
| 1569 !NILP (DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d)) && | |
| 1570 !EQ (DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d), sel_frame)) | |
| 1571 { | |
| 1572 /* At this point, we know that the frame has been changed. Now, if | |
| 1573 * focus_follows_mouse is not set, we finish off the frame change, | |
| 1574 * so that user events will now come from the new frame. Otherwise, | |
| 1575 * if focus_follows_mouse is set, no gratuitous frame changing | |
| 1576 * should take place. Set the focus back to the frame which was | |
| 1577 * originally selected for user input. | |
| 1578 */ | |
| 1579 if (!focus_follows_mouse) | |
| 1580 { | |
| 1581 /* prevent us from issuing the same request more than once */ | |
| 1582 DEVICE_FRAME_THAT_OUGHT_TO_HAVE_FOCUS (d) = sel_frame; | |
| 1583 MAYBE_DEVMETH (d, focus_on_frame, (XFRAME (sel_frame))); | |
| 1584 } | |
| 1585 else | |
| 1586 { | |
| 1587 Lisp_Object old_frame = Qnil; | |
| 1588 | |
| 1589 /* #### Do we really want to check OUGHT ?? | |
| 1590 * It seems to make sense, though I have never seen us | |
| 1591 * get here and have it be non-nil. | |
| 1592 */ | |
| 1593 if (FRAMEP (DEVICE_FRAME_THAT_OUGHT_TO_HAVE_FOCUS (d))) | |
| 1594 old_frame = DEVICE_FRAME_THAT_OUGHT_TO_HAVE_FOCUS (d); | |
| 1595 else if (FRAMEP (DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d))) | |
| 1596 old_frame = DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d); | |
| 1597 | |
| 1598 /* #### Can old_frame ever be NIL? play it safe.. */ | |
| 1599 if (!NILP (old_frame)) | |
| 1600 { | |
| 1601 /* Fselect_frame is not really the right thing: it frobs the | |
| 1602 * buffer stack. But there's no easy way to do the right | |
| 1603 * thing, and this code already had this problem anyway. | |
| 1604 */ | |
| 1605 Fselect_frame (old_frame); | |
| 1606 } | |
| 1607 } | |
| 1608 } | |
| 1609 } | |
| 1610 } | |
| 1611 | |
| 1612 static Lisp_Object | |
| 1613 cleanup_after_missed_defocusing (Lisp_Object frame) | |
| 1614 { | |
| 1615 if (FRAMEP (frame) && FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (frame))) | |
| 1616 Fselect_frame (frame); | |
| 1617 return Qnil; | |
| 1618 } | |
| 1619 | |
| 1620 void | |
| 1621 emacs_handle_focus_change_preliminary (Lisp_Object frame_inp_and_dev) | |
| 1622 { | |
| 1623 Lisp_Object frame = Fcar (frame_inp_and_dev); | |
| 1624 Lisp_Object device = Fcar (Fcdr (frame_inp_and_dev)); | |
| 1625 int in_p = !NILP (Fcdr (Fcdr (frame_inp_and_dev))); | |
| 1626 struct device *d; | |
| 1627 | |
| 1628 if (!DEVICE_LIVE_P (XDEVICE (device))) | |
| 1629 return; | |
| 1630 else | |
| 1631 d = XDEVICE (device); | |
| 1632 | |
| 1633 /* Any received focus-change notifications render invalid any | |
| 1634 pending focus-change requests. */ | |
| 1635 DEVICE_FRAME_THAT_OUGHT_TO_HAVE_FOCUS (d) = Qnil; | |
| 1636 if (in_p) | |
| 1637 { | |
| 1638 Lisp_Object focus_frame; | |
| 1639 | |
| 1640 if (!FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (frame))) | |
| 1641 return; | |
| 1642 else | |
| 1643 focus_frame = DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_REAL (d); | |
| 1644 | |
| 1645 /* Mark the minibuffer as changed to make sure it gets updated | |
| 1646 properly if the echo area is active. */ | |
| 1647 { | |
| 1648 struct window *w = XWINDOW (FRAME_MINIBUF_WINDOW (XFRAME (frame))); | |
| 1649 MARK_WINDOWS_CHANGED (w); | |
| 1650 } | |
| 1651 | |
| 452 | 1652 if (FRAMEP (focus_frame) && FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (focus_frame)) |
| 1653 && !EQ (frame, focus_frame)) | |
| 428 | 1654 { |
| 1655 /* Oops, we missed a focus-out event. */ | |
| 1656 DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_REAL (d) = Qnil; | |
| 1657 redisplay_redraw_cursor (XFRAME (focus_frame), 1); | |
| 1658 } | |
| 1659 DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_REAL (d) = frame; | |
| 1660 if (!EQ (frame, focus_frame)) | |
| 1661 { | |
| 1662 redisplay_redraw_cursor (XFRAME (frame), 1); | |
| 1663 } | |
| 1664 } | |
| 1665 else | |
| 1666 { | |
| 1667 /* We ignore the frame reported in the event. If it's different | |
| 1668 from where we think the focus was, oh well -- we messed up. | |
| 1669 Nonetheless, we pretend we were right, for sensible behavior. */ | |
| 1670 frame = DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_REAL (d); | |
| 1671 if (!NILP (frame)) | |
| 1672 { | |
| 1673 DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_REAL (d) = Qnil; | |
| 1674 | |
| 1675 if (FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (frame))) | |
| 1676 redisplay_redraw_cursor (XFRAME (frame), 1); | |
| 1677 } | |
| 1678 } | |
| 1679 } | |
| 1680 | |
| 1681 /* Called from the window-system-specific code when we receive a | |
| 1682 notification that the focus lies on a particular frame. | |
| 1683 Argument is a cons: (frame . (device . in-p)) where in-p is non-nil | |
| 1684 for focus-in. | |
| 1685 */ | |
| 1686 void | |
| 1687 emacs_handle_focus_change_final (Lisp_Object frame_inp_and_dev) | |
| 1688 { | |
| 1689 Lisp_Object frame = Fcar (frame_inp_and_dev); | |
| 1690 Lisp_Object device = Fcar (Fcdr (frame_inp_and_dev)); | |
| 1691 int in_p = !NILP (Fcdr (Fcdr (frame_inp_and_dev))); | |
| 1692 struct device *d; | |
| 1693 int count; | |
| 1694 | |
| 1695 if (!DEVICE_LIVE_P (XDEVICE (device))) | |
| 1696 return; | |
| 1697 else | |
| 1698 d = XDEVICE (device); | |
| 1699 | |
| 1700 if (in_p) | |
| 1701 { | |
| 1702 Lisp_Object focus_frame; | |
| 1703 | |
| 1704 if (!FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (frame))) | |
| 1705 return; | |
| 1706 else | |
| 1707 focus_frame = DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d); | |
| 1708 | |
| 1709 DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d) = frame; | |
| 1710 if (FRAMEP (focus_frame) && !EQ (frame, focus_frame)) | |
| 1711 { | |
| 1712 /* Oops, we missed a focus-out event. */ | |
| 1713 Fselect_frame (focus_frame); | |
| 1714 /* Do an unwind-protect in case an error occurs in | |
| 1715 the deselect-frame-hook */ | |
| 1716 count = specpdl_depth (); | |
| 1717 record_unwind_protect (cleanup_after_missed_defocusing, frame); | |
| 1718 run_deselect_frame_hook (); | |
| 771 | 1719 unbind_to (count); |
| 428 | 1720 /* the cleanup method changed the focus frame to nil, so |
| 1721 we need to reflect this */ | |
| 1722 focus_frame = Qnil; | |
| 1723 } | |
| 1724 else | |
| 1725 Fselect_frame (frame); | |
| 1726 if (!EQ (frame, focus_frame)) | |
| 1727 run_select_frame_hook (); | |
| 1728 } | |
| 1729 else | |
| 1730 { | |
| 1731 /* We ignore the frame reported in the event. If it's different | |
| 1732 from where we think the focus was, oh well -- we messed up. | |
| 1733 Nonetheless, we pretend we were right, for sensible behavior. */ | |
| 1734 frame = DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d); | |
| 1735 if (!NILP (frame)) | |
| 1736 { | |
| 1737 DEVICE_FRAME_WITH_FOCUS_FOR_HOOKS (d) = Qnil; | |
| 1738 run_deselect_frame_hook (); | |
| 1739 } | |
| 1740 } | |
| 1741 } | |
| 1742 | |
| 1743 | |
| 1744 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1268 | 1745 /* input pending/quit checking */ |
| 1746 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1747 | |
| 1748 /* If HOW_MANY is 0, return true if there are any user or non-user events | |
| 1749 pending. If HOW_MANY is > 0, return true if there are that many *user* | |
| 1750 events pending, irrespective of non-user events. */ | |
| 1751 | |
| 1752 static int | |
| 1753 event_stream_event_pending_p (int how_many) | |
| 1754 { | |
| 1755 /* #### Hmmm ... There may be some duplication in "drain queue" and | |
| 1756 "event pending". Couldn't we just drain the queue and see what's in | |
| 1757 it, and not maybe need a separate event method for this? Would this | |
| 1758 work when HOW_MANY is 0? Maybe this would be slow? */ | |
| 1759 return event_stream && event_stream->event_pending_p (how_many); | |
| 1760 } | |
| 1761 | |
| 1762 static void | |
| 1763 event_stream_force_event_pending (struct frame *f) | |
| 1764 { | |
| 1765 if (event_stream->force_event_pending_cb) | |
| 1766 event_stream->force_event_pending_cb (f); | |
| 1767 } | |
| 1768 | |
| 1769 void | |
| 1770 event_stream_drain_queue (void) | |
| 1771 { | |
| 1318 | 1772 /* This can call Lisp */ |
| 1268 | 1773 if (event_stream && event_stream->drain_queue_cb) |
| 1774 event_stream->drain_queue_cb (); | |
| 1775 } | |
| 1776 | |
| 1777 /* Return non-zero if at least HOW_MANY user events are pending. */ | |
| 1778 int | |
| 1779 detect_input_pending (int how_many) | |
| 1780 { | |
| 1318 | 1781 /* This can call Lisp */ |
| 1268 | 1782 Lisp_Object event; |
| 1783 | |
| 1784 if (!NILP (Vunread_command_event)) | |
| 1785 how_many--; | |
| 1786 | |
|
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1787 how_many -= XFIXNUM (Fsafe_length (Vunread_command_events)); |
| 1268 | 1788 |
| 1789 if (how_many <= 0) | |
| 1790 return 1; | |
| 1791 | |
| 1792 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, command_event_queue) | |
| 1793 { | |
| 1794 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) != eval_event | |
| 1795 && XEVENT_TYPE (event) != magic_eval_event) | |
| 1796 { | |
| 1797 how_many--; | |
| 1798 if (how_many <= 0) | |
| 1799 return 1; | |
| 1800 } | |
| 1801 } | |
| 1802 | |
| 1803 return event_stream_event_pending_p (how_many); | |
| 1804 } | |
| 1805 | |
| 1806 DEFUN ("input-pending-p", Finput_pending_p, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 1807 Return t if command input is currently available with no waiting. | |
| 1808 Actually, the value is nil only if we can be sure that no input is available. | |
| 1809 */ | |
| 1810 ()) | |
| 1811 { | |
| 1318 | 1812 /* This can call Lisp */ |
| 1268 | 1813 return detect_input_pending (1) ? Qt : Qnil; |
| 1814 } | |
| 1815 | |
| 1816 static int | |
| 1817 maybe_read_quit_event (Lisp_Event *event) | |
| 1818 { | |
| 1819 /* A C-g that came from `sigint_happened' will always come from the | |
| 1820 controlling terminal. If that doesn't exist, however, then the | |
| 1821 user manually sent us a SIGINT, and we pretend the C-g came from | |
| 1822 the selected console. */ | |
| 1823 struct console *con; | |
| 1824 | |
| 1825 if (CONSOLEP (Vcontrolling_terminal) && | |
| 1826 CONSOLE_LIVE_P (XCONSOLE (Vcontrolling_terminal))) | |
| 1827 con = XCONSOLE (Vcontrolling_terminal); | |
| 1828 else | |
| 1829 con = XCONSOLE (Fselected_console ()); | |
| 1830 | |
| 1831 if (sigint_happened) | |
| 1832 { | |
| 1833 sigint_happened = 0; | |
| 1834 Vquit_flag = Qnil; | |
| 1835 Fcopy_event (CONSOLE_QUIT_EVENT (con), wrap_event (event)); | |
| 1836 return 1; | |
| 1837 } | |
| 1838 return 0; | |
| 1839 } | |
| 1840 | |
| 1841 struct remove_quit_p_data | |
| 1842 { | |
| 1843 int critical; | |
| 1844 }; | |
| 1845 | |
| 1846 static int | |
| 1847 remove_quit_p_event (Lisp_Object ev, void *the_data) | |
| 1848 { | |
| 1849 struct remove_quit_p_data *data = (struct remove_quit_p_data *) the_data; | |
| 1850 struct console *con = event_console_or_selected (ev); | |
| 1851 | |
| 1852 if (XEVENT_TYPE (ev) == key_press_event) | |
| 1853 { | |
| 1854 if (event_matches_key_specifier_p (ev, CONSOLE_QUIT_EVENT (con))) | |
| 1855 return 1; | |
| 1856 if (event_matches_key_specifier_p (ev, | |
| 1857 CONSOLE_CRITICAL_QUIT_EVENT (con))) | |
| 1858 { | |
| 1859 data->critical = 1; | |
| 1860 return 1; | |
| 1861 } | |
| 1862 } | |
| 1863 | |
| 1864 return 0; | |
| 1865 } | |
| 1866 | |
| 1867 void | |
| 1868 event_stream_quit_p (void) | |
| 1869 { | |
| 1318 | 1870 /* This can call Lisp */ |
| 1268 | 1871 struct remove_quit_p_data data; |
| 1872 | |
| 1873 /* Quit checking cannot happen in modal loop. Because it attempts to | |
| 1874 retrieve and dispatch events, it will cause lots of problems if we try | |
| 1875 to do this when already in the process of doing this -- deadlocking | |
| 1876 under Windows, crashes in lwlib etc. under X due to non-reentrant | |
| 1877 code. This is automatically caught, however, in | |
| 1878 event_stream_drain_queue() (checks for in_modal_loop in the | |
| 1879 event-specific code). */ | |
| 1880 | |
| 1881 /* Drain queue so we can check for pending C-g events. */ | |
| 1882 event_stream_drain_queue (); | |
| 1883 data.critical = 0; | |
| 1884 | |
| 1885 if (map_event_chain_remove (remove_quit_p_event, | |
| 1886 &dispatch_event_queue, | |
| 1887 &dispatch_event_queue_tail, | |
| 1888 &data, MECR_DEALLOCATE_EVENT)) | |
| 1889 Vquit_flag = data.critical ? Qcritical : Qt; | |
| 1890 } | |
| 1891 | |
| 1892 Lisp_Object | |
| 1893 event_stream_protect_modal_loop (const char *error_string, | |
| 1894 Lisp_Object (*bfun) (void *barg), | |
| 1895 void *barg, int flags) | |
| 1896 { | |
| 1897 Lisp_Object tmp; | |
| 1898 | |
| 1899 ++in_modal_loop; | |
| 1900 tmp = call_trapping_problems (Qevent, error_string, flags, 0, bfun, barg); | |
| 1901 --in_modal_loop; | |
| 1902 | |
| 1903 return tmp; | |
| 1904 } | |
| 1905 | |
| 1906 | |
| 1907 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 428 | 1908 /* retrieving the next event */ |
| 1909 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 1910 | |
| 1911 static int in_single_console; | |
| 1912 | |
| 1913 /* #### These functions don't currently do anything. */ | |
| 1914 void | |
| 1915 single_console_state (void) | |
| 1916 { | |
| 1917 in_single_console = 1; | |
| 1918 } | |
| 1919 | |
| 1920 void | |
| 1921 any_console_state (void) | |
| 1922 { | |
| 1923 in_single_console = 0; | |
| 1924 } | |
| 1925 | |
| 1926 int | |
| 1927 in_single_console_state (void) | |
| 1928 { | |
| 1929 return in_single_console; | |
| 1930 } | |
| 1931 | |
| 1268 | 1932 static void |
| 1933 event_stream_next_event (Lisp_Event *event) | |
| 1934 { | |
| 1935 Lisp_Object event_obj; | |
| 1936 | |
| 1937 check_event_stream_ok (); | |
| 1938 | |
| 1939 event_obj = wrap_event (event); | |
| 1940 zero_event (event); | |
| 1941 /* SIGINT occurs when C-g was pressed on a TTY. (SIGINT might have | |
| 1942 been sent manually by the user, but we don't care; we treat it | |
| 1943 the same.) | |
| 1944 | |
| 1945 The SIGINT signal handler sets Vquit_flag as well as sigint_happened | |
| 1946 and write a byte on our "fake pipe", which unblocks us when we are | |
| 1947 waiting for an event. */ | |
| 1948 | |
| 1949 /* If SIGINT was received after we disabled quit checking (because | |
| 1950 we want to read C-g's as characters), but before we got a chance | |
| 1951 to start reading, notice it now and treat it as a character to be | |
| 1952 read. If above callers wanted this to be QUIT, they can | |
| 1953 determine this by comparing the event against quit-char. */ | |
| 1954 | |
| 1955 if (maybe_read_quit_event (event)) | |
| 1956 { | |
| 1957 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("SIGINT", event_obj); | |
| 1958 return; | |
| 1959 } | |
| 1960 | |
| 1961 /* If a longjmp() happens in the callback, we're screwed. | |
| 1962 Let's hope it doesn't. I think the code here is fairly | |
| 1963 clean and doesn't do this. */ | |
| 1964 emacs_is_blocking = 1; | |
| 1965 event_stream->next_event_cb (event); | |
| 1966 emacs_is_blocking = 0; | |
| 1967 | |
| 1968 /* Now check to see if C-g was pressed while we were blocking. | |
| 1969 We treat it as an event, just like above. */ | |
| 1970 if (maybe_read_quit_event (event)) | |
| 1971 { | |
| 1972 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("SIGINT", event_obj); | |
| 1973 return; | |
| 1974 } | |
| 1975 | |
| 1976 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 1977 /* timeout events have more info set later, so | |
| 1978 print the event out in next_event_internal(). */ | |
| 1979 if (event->event_type != timeout_event) | |
| 1980 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("real", event_obj); | |
| 1981 #endif | |
| 1982 maybe_kbd_translate (event_obj); | |
| 1983 } | |
| 428 | 1984 |
| 853 | 1985 /* Read an event from the window system (or tty). If ALLOW_QUEUED is |
| 1986 non-zero, read from the command-event queue first. | |
| 1987 | |
| 1988 If C-g was pressed, this function will attempt to QUIT. If you want | |
| 1989 to read C-g as an event, wrap this function with a call to | |
| 1990 begin_dont_check_for_quit(), and set Vquit_flag to Qnil just before | |
| 1991 you unbind. In this case, TARGET_EVENT will contain a C-g. | |
| 1992 | |
| 1993 Note that even if you are interested in C-g doing QUIT, a caller of you | |
| 1994 might not be. | |
| 1995 */ | |
| 1996 | |
| 428 | 1997 static void |
| 1998 next_event_internal (Lisp_Object target_event, int allow_queued) | |
| 1999 { | |
| 2000 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 1292 | 2001 PROFILE_DECLARE (); |
| 2002 | |
| 853 | 2003 QUIT; |
| 428 | 2004 |
| 1292 | 2005 PROFILE_RECORD_ENTERING_SECTION (QSnext_event_internal); |
| 2006 | |
| 428 | 2007 assert (NILP (XEVENT_NEXT (target_event))); |
| 2008 | |
| 2009 GCPRO1 (target_event); | |
| 2010 | |
| 2011 /* When focus_follows_mouse is nil, if a frame change took place, we need | |
| 2012 * to actually switch window manager focus to the selected window now. | |
| 2013 */ | |
| 2014 if (!focus_follows_mouse) | |
| 2015 investigate_frame_change (); | |
| 2016 | |
| 2017 if (allow_queued && !NILP (command_event_queue)) | |
| 2018 { | |
| 2019 Lisp_Object event = dequeue_command_event (); | |
| 2020 Fcopy_event (event, target_event); | |
| 2021 Fdeallocate_event (event); | |
| 2022 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("command event queue", target_event); | |
| 2023 } | |
| 2024 else | |
| 2025 { | |
| 440 | 2026 Lisp_Event *e = XEVENT (target_event); |
| 428 | 2027 |
| 2028 /* The command_event_queue was empty. Wait for an event. */ | |
| 2029 event_stream_next_event (e); | |
| 2030 /* If this was a timeout, then we need to extract some data | |
| 2031 out of the returned closure and might need to resignal | |
| 2032 it. */ | |
| 934 | 2033 if (EVENT_TYPE (e) == timeout_event) |
| 428 | 2034 { |
| 2035 Lisp_Object tristan, isolde; | |
| 2036 | |
| 1204 | 2037 SET_EVENT_TIMEOUT_ID_NUMBER (e, |
| 2038 event_stream_resignal_wakeup (EVENT_TIMEOUT_INTERVAL_ID (e), 0, &tristan, &isolde)); | |
| 2039 | |
| 2040 SET_EVENT_TIMEOUT_FUNCTION (e, tristan); | |
| 2041 SET_EVENT_TIMEOUT_OBJECT (e, isolde); | |
| 934 | 2042 /* next_event_internal() doesn't print out timeout events |
| 2043 because of the extra info we just set. */ | |
| 428 | 2044 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("real, timeout", target_event); |
| 2045 } | |
| 2046 | |
| 853 | 2047 /* If we read a ^G, then set quit-flag and try to QUIT. |
| 2048 This may be blocked (see above). | |
| 428 | 2049 */ |
| 934 | 2050 if (EVENT_TYPE (e) == key_press_event && |
| 428 | 2051 event_matches_key_specifier_p |
| 1204 | 2052 (target_event, CONSOLE_QUIT_EVENT (XCONSOLE (EVENT_CHANNEL (e))))) |
| 428 | 2053 { |
| 2054 Vquit_flag = Qt; | |
| 853 | 2055 QUIT; |
| 428 | 2056 } |
| 2057 } | |
| 2058 | |
| 2059 UNGCPRO; | |
| 1292 | 2060 |
| 2061 PROFILE_RECORD_EXITING_SECTION (QSnext_event_internal); | |
| 428 | 2062 } |
| 2063 | |
| 853 | 2064 void |
| 428 | 2065 run_pre_idle_hook (void) |
| 2066 { | |
| 1318 | 2067 /* This can call Lisp */ |
| 428 | 2068 if (!NILP (Vpre_idle_hook) |
| 1268 | 2069 && !detect_input_pending (1)) |
| 853 | 2070 safe_run_hook_trapping_problems |
| 1333 | 2071 (Qredisplay, Qpre_idle_hook, |
| 1268 | 2072 /* Quit is inhibited as a result of being within next-event so |
| 2073 we need to fix that. */ | |
| 2074 INHIBIT_EXISTING_PERMANENT_DISPLAY_OBJECT_DELETION | UNINHIBIT_QUIT); | |
| 428 | 2075 } |
| 2076 | |
| 2077 DEFUN ("next-event", Fnext_event, 0, 2, 0, /* | |
| 2078 Return the next available event. | |
| 2079 Pass this object to `dispatch-event' to handle it. | |
| 2080 In most cases, you will want to use `next-command-event', which returns | |
| 2081 the next available "user" event (i.e. keypress, button-press, | |
| 2082 button-release, or menu selection) instead of this function. | |
| 2083 | |
| 2084 If EVENT is non-nil, it should be an event object and will be filled in | |
| 2085 and returned; otherwise a new event object will be created and returned. | |
| 2086 If PROMPT is non-nil, it should be a string and will be displayed in the | |
| 2087 echo area while this function is waiting for an event. | |
| 2088 | |
| 2089 The next available event will be | |
| 2090 | |
| 2091 -- any events in `unread-command-events' or `unread-command-event'; else | |
| 2092 -- the next event in the currently executing keyboard macro, if any; else | |
| 442 | 2093 -- an event queued by `enqueue-eval-event', if any, or any similar event |
| 2094 queued internally, such as a misc-user event. (For example, when an item | |
| 2095 is selected from a menu or from a `question'-type dialog box, the item's | |
| 2096 callback is not immediately executed, but instead a misc-user event | |
| 2097 is generated and placed onto this queue; when it is dispatched, the | |
| 2098 callback is executed.) Else | |
| 428 | 2099 -- the next available event from the window system or terminal driver. |
| 2100 | |
| 2101 In the last case, this function will block until an event is available. | |
| 2102 | |
| 2103 The returned event will be one of the following types: | |
| 2104 | |
| 2105 -- a key-press event. | |
| 2106 -- a button-press or button-release event. | |
| 2107 -- a misc-user-event, meaning the user selected an item on a menu or used | |
| 2108 the scrollbar. | |
| 2109 -- a process event, meaning that output from a subprocess is available. | |
| 2110 -- a timeout event, meaning that a timeout has elapsed. | |
| 2111 -- an eval event, which simply causes a function to be executed when the | |
| 2112 event is dispatched. Eval events are generated by `enqueue-eval-event' | |
| 2113 or by certain other conditions happening. | |
| 2114 -- a magic event, indicating that some window-system-specific event | |
| 2115 happened (such as a focus-change notification) that must be handled | |
| 2116 synchronously with other events. `dispatch-event' knows what to do with | |
| 2117 these events. | |
| 2118 */ | |
| 2119 (event, prompt)) | |
| 2120 { | |
| 2121 /* This function can call lisp */ | |
| 2122 /* #### We start out using the selected console before an event | |
| 2123 is received, for echoing the partially completed command. | |
| 2124 This is most definitely wrong -- there needs to be a separate | |
| 2125 echo area for each console! */ | |
| 2126 struct console *con = XCONSOLE (Vselected_console); | |
| 2127 struct command_builder *command_builder = | |
| 2128 XCOMMAND_BUILDER (con->command_builder); | |
| 2129 int store_this_key = 0; | |
| 2130 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 853 | 2131 int depth; |
| 1292 | 2132 PROFILE_DECLARE (); |
| 428 | 2133 |
| 2134 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 853 | 2135 |
| 1268 | 2136 /* This is not strictly necessary. Trying to retrieve an event inside of |
| 2137 a modal loop can cause major problems (see event_stream_quit_p()), but | |
| 2138 the event-specific code knows about this and will make sure we don't | |
| 2139 do anything dangerous. However, if we've gotten here, it's highly | |
| 2140 likely that some code is trying to fetch user events (e.g. in custom | |
| 2141 dialog-box code), and will almost certainly deadlock, so it's probably | |
| 2142 best to error out. #### This could cause problems because there are | |
| 2143 (potentially, at least) legitimate reasons for calling next-event | |
| 2144 inside of a modal loop, in particular if the code is trying to search | |
| 2145 for a timeout event, which will still get retrieved in such a case. | |
| 2146 However, the code to error in such a case has already been present for | |
| 2147 a long time without obvious problems so leaving it in isn't so | |
| 1279 | 2148 bad. |
| 2149 | |
| 2150 #### I used to conditionalize on in_modal_loop but that fails utterly | |
| 2151 because event-msw.c specifically calls Fnext_event() inside of a modal | |
| 2152 loop to clear the dispatch queue. --ben */ | |
| 1315 | 2153 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS |
| 1279 | 2154 if (in_menu_callback) |
| 2155 invalid_operation ("Attempt to call next-event inside menu callback", | |
| 1268 | 2156 Qunbound); |
| 1315 | 2157 #endif /* HAVE_MENUBARS */ |
| 1268 | 2158 |
| 1292 | 2159 PROFILE_RECORD_ENTERING_SECTION (Qnext_event); |
| 2160 | |
| 853 | 2161 depth = begin_dont_check_for_quit (); |
| 428 | 2162 |
| 2163 if (NILP (event)) | |
| 2164 event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2165 else | |
| 2166 CHECK_LIVE_EVENT (event); | |
| 2167 | |
| 2168 if (!NILP (prompt)) | |
| 2169 { | |
| 2170 Bytecount len; | |
|
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2171 Lisp_Object args[] = { Qnil, prompt }; |
| 428 | 2172 CHECK_STRING (prompt); |
| 2173 | |
| 2174 len = XSTRING_LENGTH (prompt); | |
|
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2175 |
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2176 detach_all_extents (command_builder->echo_buf); |
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2177 if (XSTRING_LENGTH (command_builder->echo_buf) < len) |
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2178 { |
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2179 command_builder->echo_buf |
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2180 = Fmake_string (make_fixnum (len + 300 * MAX_ICHAR_LEN), |
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2181 make_char (0)); |
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2182 } |
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2183 |
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2184 args[0] = command_builder->echo_buf; |
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2185 Freplace (countof (args), args); |
|
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|
2186 copy_string_extents (command_builder->echo_buf, prompt, 0, 0, |
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2187 XSTRING_LENGTH (prompt)); |
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|
2188 command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer |
|
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|
2189 = command_builder->echo_buf_end = len; |
|
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|
2190 |
|
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|
2191 echo_area_message (XFRAME (CONSOLE_SELECTED_FRAME (con)), NULL, |
|
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|
2192 command_builder->echo_buf, 0, |
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|
2193 command_builder->echo_buf_end, Qcommand); |
| 428 | 2194 } |
| 2195 | |
| 2196 start_over_and_avoid_hosage: | |
| 2197 | |
| 2198 /* If there is something in unread-command-events, simply return it. | |
| 2199 But do some error checking to make sure the user hasn't put something | |
| 2200 in the unread-command-events that they shouldn't have. | |
| 2201 This does not update this-command-keys and recent-keys. | |
| 2202 */ | |
| 2203 if (!NILP (Vunread_command_events)) | |
| 2204 { | |
| 2205 if (!CONSP (Vunread_command_events)) | |
| 2206 { | |
| 2207 Vunread_command_events = Qnil; | |
| 563 | 2208 signal_error_1 (Qwrong_type_argument, |
| 428 | 2209 list3 (Qconsp, Vunread_command_events, |
| 2210 Qunread_command_events)); | |
| 2211 } | |
| 2212 else | |
| 2213 { | |
| 2214 Lisp_Object e = XCAR (Vunread_command_events); | |
| 2215 Vunread_command_events = XCDR (Vunread_command_events); | |
| 2216 if (!EVENTP (e) || !command_event_p (e)) | |
| 563 | 2217 signal_error_1 (Qwrong_type_argument, |
| 428 | 2218 list3 (Qcommand_event_p, e, Qunread_command_events)); |
| 853 | 2219 redisplay_no_pre_idle_hook (); |
| 428 | 2220 if (!EQ (e, event)) |
| 2221 Fcopy_event (e, event); | |
| 2222 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("unread-command-events", event); | |
| 2223 } | |
| 2224 } | |
| 2225 | |
| 2226 /* Do similar for unread-command-event (obsoleteness support). */ | |
| 2227 else if (!NILP (Vunread_command_event)) | |
| 2228 { | |
| 2229 Lisp_Object e = Vunread_command_event; | |
| 2230 Vunread_command_event = Qnil; | |
| 2231 | |
| 2232 if (!EVENTP (e) || !command_event_p (e)) | |
| 2233 { | |
| 563 | 2234 signal_error_1 (Qwrong_type_argument, |
| 428 | 2235 list3 (Qeventp, e, Qunread_command_event)); |
| 2236 } | |
| 2237 if (!EQ (e, event)) | |
| 2238 Fcopy_event (e, event); | |
| 853 | 2239 redisplay_no_pre_idle_hook (); |
| 428 | 2240 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("unread-command-event", event); |
| 2241 } | |
| 2242 | |
| 2243 /* If we're executing a keyboard macro, take the next event from that, | |
| 2244 and update this-command-keys and recent-keys. | |
| 2245 Note that the unread-command-events take precedence over kbd macros. | |
| 2246 */ | |
| 2247 else | |
| 2248 { | |
| 2249 if (!NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) | |
| 2250 { | |
| 853 | 2251 redisplay_no_pre_idle_hook (); |
| 428 | 2252 pop_kbd_macro_event (event); /* This throws past us at |
| 2253 end-of-macro. */ | |
| 2254 store_this_key = 1; | |
| 2255 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("keyboard macro", event); | |
| 2256 } | |
| 2257 /* Otherwise, read a real event, possibly from the | |
| 2258 command_event_queue, and update this-command-keys and | |
| 2259 recent-keys. */ | |
| 2260 else | |
| 2261 { | |
| 2262 redisplay (); | |
| 2263 next_event_internal (event, 1); | |
| 2264 store_this_key = 1; | |
| 2265 } | |
| 2266 } | |
| 2267 | |
| 853 | 2268 /* temporarily reenable quit checking here, because arbitrary lisp |
| 2269 is executed */ | |
| 2270 Vquit_flag = Qnil; /* see begin_dont_check_for_quit() */ | |
| 2271 unbind_to (depth); | |
| 428 | 2272 status_notify (); /* Notice process change */ |
| 853 | 2273 depth = begin_dont_check_for_quit (); |
| 428 | 2274 |
| 2275 /* Since we can free the most stuff here | |
| 2276 * (since this is typically called from | |
| 2277 * the command-loop top-level). */ | |
| 851 | 2278 if (need_to_check_c_alloca) |
| 2279 xemacs_c_alloca (0); /* Cause a garbage collection now */ | |
| 428 | 2280 |
| 2281 if (object_dead_p (XEVENT (event)->channel)) | |
| 2282 /* event_console_or_selected may crash if the channel is dead. | |
| 2283 Best just to eat it and get the next event. */ | |
| 2284 goto start_over_and_avoid_hosage; | |
| 2285 | |
| 2286 /* OK, now we can stop the selected-console kludge and use the | |
| 2287 actual console from the event. */ | |
| 2288 con = event_console_or_selected (event); | |
| 2289 command_builder = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (con->command_builder); | |
| 2290 | |
| 2291 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 2292 { | |
| 2293 case button_release_event: | |
| 2294 case misc_user_event: | |
| 2295 /* don't echo menu accelerator keys */ | |
| 2296 reset_key_echo (command_builder, 1); | |
| 2297 goto EXECUTE_KEY; | |
| 2298 case button_press_event: /* key or mouse input can trigger prompting */ | |
| 2299 goto STORE_AND_EXECUTE_KEY; | |
| 2300 case key_press_event: /* any key input can trigger autosave */ | |
| 2301 break; | |
| 898 | 2302 default: |
| 2303 goto RETURN; | |
| 428 | 2304 } |
| 2305 | |
| 853 | 2306 /* temporarily reenable quit checking here, because we could get stuck */ |
| 2307 Vquit_flag = Qnil; /* see begin_dont_check_for_quit() */ | |
| 2308 unbind_to (depth); | |
| 428 | 2309 maybe_do_auto_save (); |
| 853 | 2310 depth = begin_dont_check_for_quit (); |
| 2311 | |
| 428 | 2312 num_input_chars++; |
| 2313 STORE_AND_EXECUTE_KEY: | |
| 2314 if (store_this_key) | |
| 2315 { | |
| 2316 echo_key_event (command_builder, event); | |
| 2317 } | |
| 2318 | |
| 2319 EXECUTE_KEY: | |
| 2320 /* Store the last-input-event. The semantics of this is that it is | |
| 2321 the thing most recently returned by next-command-event. It need | |
| 2322 not have come from the keyboard or a keyboard macro, it may have | |
| 2323 come from unread-command-events. It's always a command-event (a | |
| 2324 key, click, or menu selection), never a motion or process event. | |
| 2325 */ | |
| 2326 if (!EVENTP (Vlast_input_event)) | |
| 2327 Vlast_input_event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2328 if (XEVENT_TYPE (Vlast_input_event) == dead_event) | |
| 2329 { | |
| 2330 Vlast_input_event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 563 | 2331 invalid_state ("Someone deallocated last-input-event!", Qunbound); |
| 428 | 2332 } |
| 2333 if (! EQ (event, Vlast_input_event)) | |
| 2334 Fcopy_event (event, Vlast_input_event); | |
| 2335 | |
| 2336 /* last-input-char and last-input-time are derived from | |
| 2337 last-input-event. | |
| 2338 Note that last-input-char will never have its high-bit set, in an | |
| 2339 effort to sidestep the ambiguity between M-x and oslash. | |
| 2340 */ | |
| 2862 | 2341 Vlast_input_char = Fevent_to_character (Vlast_input_event, Qnil, Qnil, Qnil); |
| 428 | 2342 { |
| 2343 EMACS_TIME t; | |
| 2344 EMACS_GET_TIME (t); | |
| 2345 if (!CONSP (Vlast_input_time)) | |
| 2346 Vlast_input_time = Fcons (Qnil, Qnil); | |
|
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|
2347 XCAR (Vlast_input_time) = make_fixnum ((EMACS_SECS (t) >> 16) & 0xffff); |
|
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|
2348 XCDR (Vlast_input_time) = make_fixnum ((EMACS_SECS (t) >> 0) & 0xffff); |
| 428 | 2349 if (!CONSP (Vlast_command_event_time)) |
| 2350 Vlast_command_event_time = list3 (Qnil, Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2351 XCAR (Vlast_command_event_time) = | |
|
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|
2352 make_fixnum ((EMACS_SECS (t) >> 16) & 0xffff); |
| 428 | 2353 XCAR (XCDR (Vlast_command_event_time)) = |
|
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diff
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|
2354 make_fixnum ((EMACS_SECS (t) >> 0) & 0xffff); |
| 428 | 2355 XCAR (XCDR (XCDR (Vlast_command_event_time))) |
|
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|
2356 = make_fixnum (EMACS_USECS (t)); |
| 428 | 2357 } |
| 2358 /* If this key came from the keyboard or from a keyboard macro, then | |
| 2359 it goes into the recent-keys and this-command-keys vectors. | |
| 2360 If this key came from the keyboard, and we're defining a keyboard | |
| 2361 macro, then it goes into the macro. | |
| 2362 */ | |
| 2363 if (store_this_key) | |
| 2364 { | |
| 479 | 2365 if (!is_scrollbar_event (event)) /* #### not quite right, see |
| 2366 comment in execute_command_event */ | |
| 2367 push_this_command_keys (event); | |
| 428 | 2368 if (!inhibit_input_event_recording) |
| 2369 push_recent_keys (event); | |
| 2370 dribble_out_event (event); | |
| 2371 if (!NILP (con->defining_kbd_macro) && NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) | |
| 2372 { | |
| 2373 if (!EVENTP (command_builder->current_events)) | |
| 2374 finalize_kbd_macro_chars (con); | |
| 2375 store_kbd_macro_event (event); | |
| 2376 } | |
| 2377 } | |
| 853 | 2378 /* If this is the help char and there is a help form, then execute |
| 2379 the help form and swallow this character. Note that | |
| 2380 execute_help_form() calls Fnext_command_event(), which calls this | |
| 2381 function, as well as Fdispatch_event. */ | |
| 428 | 2382 if (!NILP (Vhelp_form) && |
| 1204 | 2383 event_matches_key_specifier_p (event, Vhelp_char)) |
| 853 | 2384 { |
| 2385 /* temporarily reenable quit checking here, because we could get stuck */ | |
| 2386 Vquit_flag = Qnil; /* see begin_dont_check_for_quit() */ | |
| 2387 unbind_to (depth); | |
| 2388 execute_help_form (command_builder, event); | |
| 2389 depth = begin_dont_check_for_quit (); | |
| 2390 } | |
| 428 | 2391 |
| 2392 RETURN: | |
| 853 | 2393 Vquit_flag = Qnil; /* see begin_dont_check_for_quit() */ |
| 2394 unbind_to (depth); | |
| 2395 | |
| 1292 | 2396 PROFILE_RECORD_EXITING_SECTION (Qnext_event); |
| 2397 | |
| 428 | 2398 UNGCPRO; |
| 853 | 2399 |
| 428 | 2400 return event; |
| 2401 } | |
| 2402 | |
| 2403 DEFUN ("next-command-event", Fnext_command_event, 0, 2, 0, /* | |
| 2404 Return the next available "user" event. | |
| 2405 Pass this object to `dispatch-event' to handle it. | |
| 2406 | |
| 2407 If EVENT is non-nil, it should be an event object and will be filled in | |
| 2408 and returned; otherwise a new event object will be created and returned. | |
| 2409 If PROMPT is non-nil, it should be a string and will be displayed in the | |
| 2410 echo area while this function is waiting for an event. | |
| 2411 | |
| 2412 The event returned will be a keyboard, mouse press, or mouse release event. | |
| 2413 If there are non-command events available (mouse motion, sub-process output, | |
| 2414 etc) then these will be executed (with `dispatch-event') and discarded. This | |
| 2415 function is provided as a convenience; it is roughly equivalent to the lisp code | |
| 2416 | |
| 2417 (while (progn | |
| 2418 (next-event event prompt) | |
| 2419 (not (or (key-press-event-p event) | |
| 2420 (button-press-event-p event) | |
| 2421 (button-release-event-p event) | |
| 2422 (misc-user-event-p event)))) | |
| 2423 (dispatch-event event)) | |
| 2424 | |
| 2425 but it also makes a provision for displaying keystrokes in the echo area. | |
| 2426 */ | |
| 2427 (event, prompt)) | |
| 2428 { | |
| 2429 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 2430 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 2431 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 934 | 2432 |
| 428 | 2433 maybe_echo_keys (XCOMMAND_BUILDER |
| 2434 (XCONSOLE (Vselected_console)-> | |
|
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|
2435 command_builder), |
|
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diff
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|
2436 /* Only snooze displaying keystrokes if we don't have a |
|
0e9f791cc655
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
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|
2437 prompt. (If we have a prompt, our callers want us to |
|
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|
2438 show it!) */ |
|
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|
2439 !NILP (prompt)); |
| 853 | 2440 |
| 428 | 2441 for (;;) |
| 2442 { | |
| 2443 event = Fnext_event (event, prompt); | |
| 2444 if (command_event_p (event)) | |
| 2445 break; | |
| 2446 else | |
| 2447 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2448 } | |
| 2449 UNGCPRO; | |
| 2450 return event; | |
| 2451 } | |
| 2452 | |
| 442 | 2453 DEFUN ("dispatch-non-command-events", Fdispatch_non_command_events, 0, 0, 0, /* |
| 2454 Dispatch any pending "magic" events. | |
| 2455 | |
| 2456 This function is useful for forcing the redisplay of native | |
| 2457 widgets. Normally these are redisplayed through a native window-system | |
| 2458 event encoded as magic event, rather than by the redisplay code. This | |
| 2459 function does not call redisplay or do any of the other things that | |
| 2460 `next-event' does. | |
| 2461 */ | |
| 2462 ()) | |
| 2463 { | |
| 2464 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 2465 Lisp_Object event = Qnil; | |
| 2466 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 2467 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 2468 event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2469 | |
| 2470 /* Make sure that there will be something in the native event queue | |
| 2471 so that externally managed things (e.g. widgets) get some CPU | |
| 2472 time. */ | |
| 2473 event_stream_force_event_pending (selected_frame ()); | |
| 2474 | |
| 2475 while (event_stream_event_pending_p (0)) | |
| 2476 { | |
| 2477 /* We're a generator of the command_event_queue, so we can't be a | |
| 2478 consumer as well. Also, we have no reason to consult the | |
| 2479 command_event_queue; there are only user and eval-events there, | |
| 2480 and we'd just have to put them back anyway. | |
| 2481 */ | |
| 2482 next_event_internal (event, 0); /* blocks */ | |
| 2483 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == magic_event || | |
| 2484 XEVENT_TYPE (event) == timeout_event || | |
| 2485 XEVENT_TYPE (event) == process_event || | |
| 2486 XEVENT_TYPE (event) == pointer_motion_event) | |
| 2487 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2488 else | |
| 2489 { | |
| 2490 enqueue_command_event_1 (event); | |
| 2491 break; | |
| 2492 } | |
| 2493 } | |
| 2494 | |
| 2495 Fdeallocate_event (event); | |
| 2496 UNGCPRO; | |
| 2497 return Qnil; | |
| 2498 } | |
| 2499 | |
| 428 | 2500 static void |
| 2501 reset_current_events (struct command_builder *command_builder) | |
| 2502 { | |
| 2503 Lisp_Object event = command_builder->current_events; | |
| 2504 reset_command_builder_event_chain (command_builder); | |
| 2505 if (EVENTP (event)) | |
| 2506 deallocate_event_chain (event); | |
| 2507 } | |
| 2508 | |
| 1268 | 2509 static int |
| 2286 | 2510 command_event_p_cb (Lisp_Object ev, void *UNUSED (the_data)) |
| 1268 | 2511 { |
| 2512 return command_event_p (ev); | |
| 2513 } | |
| 2514 | |
| 428 | 2515 DEFUN ("discard-input", Fdiscard_input, 0, 0, 0, /* |
| 2516 Discard any pending "user" events. | |
| 2517 Also cancel any kbd macro being defined. | |
| 2518 A user event is a key press, button press, button release, or | |
| 2519 "misc-user" event (menu selection or scrollbar action). | |
| 2520 */ | |
| 2521 ()) | |
| 2522 { | |
| 1318 | 2523 /* This can call Lisp */ |
| 1268 | 2524 Lisp_Object concons; |
| 2525 | |
| 2526 CONSOLE_LOOP (concons) | |
| 428 | 2527 { |
| 1268 | 2528 struct console *con = XCONSOLE (XCAR (concons)); |
| 2529 | |
| 2530 /* If a macro was being defined then we have to mark the modeline | |
| 2531 has changed to ensure that it gets updated correctly. */ | |
| 2532 if (!NILP (con->defining_kbd_macro)) | |
| 2533 MARK_MODELINE_CHANGED; | |
| 2534 con->defining_kbd_macro = Qnil; | |
| 2535 reset_current_events (XCOMMAND_BUILDER (con->command_builder)); | |
| 428 | 2536 } |
| 2537 | |
| 1268 | 2538 /* This function used to be a lot more complicated. Now, we just |
| 2539 drain the pending queue and discard all user events from the | |
| 2540 command and dispatch queues. */ | |
| 2541 event_stream_drain_queue (); | |
| 2542 | |
| 2543 map_event_chain_remove (command_event_p_cb, | |
| 2544 &dispatch_event_queue, &dispatch_event_queue_tail, | |
| 2545 0, MECR_DEALLOCATE_EVENT); | |
| 2546 map_event_chain_remove (command_event_p_cb, | |
| 2547 &command_event_queue, &command_event_queue_tail, | |
| 2548 0, MECR_DEALLOCATE_EVENT); | |
| 428 | 2549 |
| 2550 return Qnil; | |
| 2551 } | |
| 2552 | |
| 2553 | |
| 2554 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 2555 /* pausing until an action occurs */ | |
| 2556 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 2557 | |
| 2558 /* This is used in accept-process-output, sleep-for and sit-for. | |
| 2559 Before running any process_events in these routines, we set | |
| 1268 | 2560 recursive_sit_for to 1, and use this unwind protect to reset it to |
| 2561 Qnil upon exit. When recursive_sit_for is 1, calling sit-for will | |
| 428 | 2562 cause it to return immediately. |
| 2563 | |
| 2564 All of these routines install timeouts, so we clear the installed | |
| 2565 timeout as well. | |
| 2566 | |
| 2567 Note: It's very easy to break the desired behaviors of these | |
| 2568 3 routines. If you make any changes to anything in this area, run | |
| 2569 the regression tests at the bottom of the file. -- dmoore */ | |
| 2570 | |
| 2571 | |
| 2572 static Lisp_Object | |
| 2573 sit_for_unwind (Lisp_Object timeout_id) | |
| 2574 { | |
| 2575 if (!NILP(timeout_id)) | |
| 2576 Fdisable_timeout (timeout_id); | |
| 2577 | |
| 1268 | 2578 recursive_sit_for = 0; |
| 428 | 2579 return Qnil; |
| 2580 } | |
| 2581 | |
| 2582 /* #### Is (accept-process-output nil 3) supposed to be like (sleep-for 3)? | |
| 2583 */ | |
| 2584 | |
| 2585 DEFUN ("accept-process-output", Faccept_process_output, 0, 3, 0, /* | |
| 2586 Allow any pending output from subprocesses to be read by Emacs. | |
| 2587 It is read into the process' buffers or given to their filter functions. | |
| 2588 Non-nil arg PROCESS means do not return until some output has been received | |
| 2589 from PROCESS. Nil arg PROCESS means do not return until some output has | |
| 2590 been received from any process. | |
| 2591 If the second arg is non-nil, it is the maximum number of seconds to wait: | |
| 2592 this function will return after that much time even if no input has arrived | |
| 2593 from PROCESS. This argument may be a float, meaning wait some fractional | |
| 2594 part of a second. | |
| 2595 If the third arg is non-nil, it is a number of milliseconds that is added | |
| 2596 to the second arg. (This exists only for compatibility.) | |
| 2597 Return non-nil iff we received any output before the timeout expired. | |
| 2598 */ | |
| 2599 (process, timeout_secs, timeout_msecs)) | |
| 2600 { | |
| 2601 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 2602 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; | |
| 2603 Lisp_Object event = Qnil; | |
| 2604 Lisp_Object result = Qnil; | |
| 2605 int timeout_id = -1; | |
| 2606 int timeout_enabled = 0; | |
| 2607 int done = 0; | |
| 2608 struct buffer *old_buffer = current_buffer; | |
| 2609 int count; | |
| 2610 | |
| 2611 /* We preserve the current buffer but nothing else. If a focus | |
| 2612 change alters the selected window then the top level event loop | |
| 2613 will eventually alter current_buffer to match. In the mean time | |
| 2614 we don't want to mess up whatever called this function. */ | |
| 2615 | |
| 2616 if (!NILP (process)) | |
| 2617 CHECK_PROCESS (process); | |
| 2618 | |
| 2619 GCPRO2 (event, process); | |
| 2620 | |
| 2621 if (!NILP (timeout_secs) || !NILP (timeout_msecs)) | |
| 2622 { | |
| 2623 unsigned long msecs = 0; | |
| 2624 if (!NILP (timeout_secs)) | |
| 2625 msecs = lisp_number_to_milliseconds (timeout_secs, 1); | |
| 2626 if (!NILP (timeout_msecs)) | |
| 2627 { | |
|
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changeset
|
2628 check_integer_range (timeout_msecs, Qzero, |
|
5736
3192994c49ca
Convert C (un)signed long long values to bignums properly.
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
5722
diff
changeset
|
2629 make_fixnum (MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM)); |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2630 msecs += XFIXNUM (timeout_msecs); |
| 428 | 2631 } |
| 2632 if (msecs) | |
| 2633 { | |
| 2634 timeout_id = event_stream_generate_wakeup (msecs, 0, Qnil, Qnil, 0); | |
| 2635 timeout_enabled = 1; | |
| 2636 } | |
| 2637 } | |
| 2638 | |
| 2639 event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2640 | |
| 2641 count = specpdl_depth (); | |
| 2642 record_unwind_protect (sit_for_unwind, | |
|
5581
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Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2643 timeout_enabled ? make_fixnum (timeout_id) : Qnil); |
| 1268 | 2644 recursive_sit_for = 1; |
| 428 | 2645 |
| 2646 while (!done && | |
| 2647 ((NILP (process) && timeout_enabled) || | |
| 2648 (NILP (process) && event_stream_event_pending_p (0)) || | |
| 2649 (!NILP (process)))) | |
| 2650 /* Calling detect_input_pending() is the wrong thing here, because | |
| 2651 that considers the Vunread_command_events and command_event_queue. | |
| 2652 We don't need to look at the command_event_queue because we are | |
| 2653 only interested in process events, which don't go on that. In | |
| 2654 fact, we can't read from it anyway, because we put stuff on it. | |
| 2655 | |
| 2656 Note that event_stream->event_pending_p must be called in such | |
| 2657 a way that it says whether any events *of any kind* are ready, | |
| 2658 not just user events, or (accept-process-output nil) will fail | |
| 2659 to dispatch any process events that may be on the queue. It is | |
| 2660 not clear to me that this is important, because the top-level | |
| 2661 loop will process it, and I don't think that there is ever a | |
| 2662 time when one calls accept-process-output with a nil argument | |
| 2663 and really need the processes to be handled. */ | |
| 2664 { | |
| 2665 /* If our timeout has arrived, we move along. */ | |
| 2666 if (timeout_enabled && !event_stream_wakeup_pending_p (timeout_id, 0)) | |
| 2667 { | |
| 2668 timeout_enabled = 0; | |
| 2669 done = 1; /* We're done. */ | |
| 2670 continue; /* Don't call next_event_internal */ | |
| 2671 } | |
| 2672 | |
| 2673 next_event_internal (event, 0); | |
| 2674 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 2675 { | |
| 2676 case process_event: | |
| 2677 { | |
| 2678 if (NILP (process) || | |
| 1204 | 2679 EQ (XEVENT_PROCESS_PROCESS (event), process)) |
| 428 | 2680 { |
| 2681 done = 1; | |
| 2682 /* RMS's version always returns nil when proc is nil, | |
| 2683 and only returns t if input ever arrived on proc. */ | |
| 2684 result = Qt; | |
| 2685 } | |
| 2686 | |
| 2687 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2688 break; | |
| 2689 } | |
| 2690 case timeout_event: | |
| 2691 /* We execute the event even if it's ours, and notice that it's | |
| 2692 happened above. */ | |
| 2693 case pointer_motion_event: | |
| 2694 case magic_event: | |
| 2695 { | |
| 2696 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2697 break; | |
| 2698 } | |
| 2699 default: | |
| 2700 { | |
| 2701 enqueue_command_event_1 (event); | |
| 2702 break; | |
| 2703 } | |
| 2704 } | |
| 2705 } | |
| 2706 | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2707 unbind_to_1 (count, timeout_enabled ? make_fixnum (timeout_id) : Qnil); |
| 428 | 2708 |
| 2709 Fdeallocate_event (event); | |
| 853 | 2710 |
| 2711 status_notify (); | |
| 2712 | |
| 428 | 2713 UNGCPRO; |
| 2714 current_buffer = old_buffer; | |
| 2715 return result; | |
| 2716 } | |
| 2717 | |
| 2718 DEFUN ("sleep-for", Fsleep_for, 1, 1, 0, /* | |
| 444 | 2719 Pause, without updating display, for SECONDS seconds. |
| 2720 SECONDS may be a float, allowing pauses for fractional parts of a second. | |
| 428 | 2721 |
| 2722 It is recommended that you never call sleep-for from inside of a process | |
| 444 | 2723 filter function or timer event (either synchronous or asynchronous). |
| 428 | 2724 */ |
| 2725 (seconds)) | |
| 2726 { | |
| 2727 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 2728 unsigned long msecs = lisp_number_to_milliseconds (seconds, 1); | |
| 2729 int id; | |
| 2730 Lisp_Object event = Qnil; | |
| 2731 int count; | |
| 2732 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 2733 | |
| 2734 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 2735 | |
| 2736 id = event_stream_generate_wakeup (msecs, 0, Qnil, Qnil, 0); | |
| 2737 event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2738 | |
| 2739 count = specpdl_depth (); | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2740 record_unwind_protect (sit_for_unwind, make_fixnum (id)); |
| 1268 | 2741 recursive_sit_for = 1; |
| 428 | 2742 |
| 2743 while (1) | |
| 2744 { | |
| 2745 /* If our timeout has arrived, we move along. */ | |
| 2746 if (!event_stream_wakeup_pending_p (id, 0)) | |
| 2747 goto DONE_LABEL; | |
| 2748 | |
| 2749 /* We're a generator of the command_event_queue, so we can't be a | |
| 2750 consumer as well. We don't care about command and eval-events | |
| 2751 anyway. | |
| 2752 */ | |
| 2753 next_event_internal (event, 0); /* blocks */ | |
| 2754 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 2755 { | |
| 2756 case timeout_event: | |
| 2757 /* We execute the event even if it's ours, and notice that it's | |
| 2758 happened above. */ | |
| 2759 case process_event: | |
| 2760 case pointer_motion_event: | |
| 2761 case magic_event: | |
| 2762 { | |
| 2763 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2764 break; | |
| 2765 } | |
| 2766 default: | |
| 2767 { | |
| 2768 enqueue_command_event_1 (event); | |
| 2769 break; | |
| 2770 } | |
| 2771 } | |
| 2772 } | |
| 2773 DONE_LABEL: | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2774 unbind_to_1 (count, make_fixnum (id)); |
| 428 | 2775 Fdeallocate_event (event); |
| 2776 UNGCPRO; | |
| 2777 return Qnil; | |
| 2778 } | |
| 2779 | |
| 2780 DEFUN ("sit-for", Fsit_for, 1, 2, 0, /* | |
| 444 | 2781 Perform redisplay, then wait SECONDS seconds or until user input is available. |
| 2782 SECONDS may be a float, meaning a fractional part of a second. | |
| 2783 Optional second arg NODISPLAY non-nil means don't redisplay; just wait. | |
| 428 | 2784 Redisplay is preempted as always if user input arrives, and does not |
| 2785 happen if input is available before it starts. | |
| 2786 Value is t if waited the full time with no input arriving. | |
| 2787 | |
| 2788 If sit-for is called from within a process filter function or timer | |
| 2789 event (either synchronous or asynchronous) it will return immediately. | |
| 2790 */ | |
| 2791 (seconds, nodisplay)) | |
| 2792 { | |
| 2793 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 2794 unsigned long msecs = lisp_number_to_milliseconds (seconds, 1); | |
| 2795 Lisp_Object event, result; | |
| 2796 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 2797 int id; | |
| 2798 int count; | |
| 2799 | |
| 2800 /* The unread-command-events count as pending input */ | |
| 2801 if (!NILP (Vunread_command_events) || !NILP (Vunread_command_event)) | |
| 2802 return Qnil; | |
| 2803 | |
| 2804 /* If the command-builder already has user-input on it (not eval events) | |
| 2805 then that means we're done too. | |
| 2806 */ | |
| 2807 if (!NILP (command_event_queue)) | |
| 2808 { | |
| 2809 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, command_event_queue) | |
| 2810 { | |
| 2811 if (command_event_p (event)) | |
| 2812 return Qnil; | |
| 2813 } | |
| 2814 } | |
| 2815 | |
| 2816 /* If we're in a macro, or noninteractive, or early in temacs, then | |
| 2817 don't wait. */ | |
| 2818 if (noninteractive || !NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) | |
| 2819 return Qnil; | |
| 2820 | |
| 2821 /* Recursive call from a filter function or timeout handler. */ | |
| 1268 | 2822 if (recursive_sit_for) |
| 428 | 2823 { |
| 2824 if (!event_stream_event_pending_p (1) && NILP (nodisplay)) | |
| 2825 redisplay (); | |
| 2826 return Qnil; | |
| 2827 } | |
| 2828 | |
| 2829 | |
| 2830 /* Otherwise, start reading events from the event_stream. | |
| 2831 Do this loop at least once even if (sit-for 0) so that we | |
| 2832 redisplay when no input pending. | |
| 2833 */ | |
| 2834 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 2835 event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2836 | |
| 2837 /* Generate the wakeup even if MSECS is 0, so that existing timeout/etc. | |
| 2838 events get processed. The old (pre-19.12) code special-cased this | |
| 2839 and didn't generate a wakeup, but the resulting behavior was less than | |
| 2840 ideal; viz. the occurrence of (sit-for 0.001) scattered throughout | |
| 2841 the E-Lisp universe. */ | |
| 2842 | |
| 2843 id = event_stream_generate_wakeup (msecs, 0, Qnil, Qnil, 0); | |
| 2844 | |
| 2845 count = specpdl_depth (); | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2846 record_unwind_protect (sit_for_unwind, make_fixnum (id)); |
| 1268 | 2847 recursive_sit_for = 1; |
| 428 | 2848 |
| 2849 while (1) | |
| 2850 { | |
| 2851 /* If there is no user input pending, then redisplay. | |
| 2852 */ | |
| 2853 if (!event_stream_event_pending_p (1) && NILP (nodisplay)) | |
| 2854 redisplay (); | |
| 2855 | |
| 2856 /* If our timeout has arrived, we move along. */ | |
| 2857 if (!event_stream_wakeup_pending_p (id, 0)) | |
| 2858 { | |
| 2859 result = Qt; | |
| 2860 goto DONE_LABEL; | |
| 2861 } | |
| 2862 | |
| 2863 /* We're a generator of the command_event_queue, so we can't be a | |
| 2864 consumer as well. In fact, we know there's nothing on the | |
| 2865 command_event_queue that we didn't just put there. | |
| 2866 */ | |
| 2867 next_event_internal (event, 0); /* blocks */ | |
| 2868 | |
| 2869 if (command_event_p (event)) | |
| 2870 { | |
| 2871 result = Qnil; | |
| 2872 goto DONE_LABEL; | |
| 2873 } | |
| 2874 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 2875 { | |
| 2876 case eval_event: | |
| 2877 { | |
| 2878 /* eval-events get delayed until later. */ | |
| 2879 enqueue_command_event (Fcopy_event (event, Qnil)); | |
| 2880 break; | |
| 2881 } | |
| 2882 | |
| 2883 case timeout_event: | |
| 2884 /* We execute the event even if it's ours, and notice that it's | |
| 2885 happened above. */ | |
| 2886 default: | |
| 2887 { | |
| 2888 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2889 break; | |
| 2890 } | |
| 2891 } | |
| 2892 } | |
| 2893 | |
| 2894 DONE_LABEL: | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
2895 unbind_to_1 (count, make_fixnum (id)); |
| 428 | 2896 |
| 2897 /* Put back the event (if any) that made Fsit_for() exit before the | |
| 2898 timeout. Note that it is being added to the back of the queue, which | |
| 2899 would be inappropriate if there were any user events on the queue | |
| 2900 already: we would be misordering them. But we know that there are | |
| 2901 no user-events on the queue, or else we would not have reached this | |
| 2902 point at all. | |
| 2903 */ | |
| 2904 if (NILP (result)) | |
| 2905 enqueue_command_event (event); | |
| 2906 else | |
| 2907 Fdeallocate_event (event); | |
| 2908 | |
| 2909 UNGCPRO; | |
| 2910 return result; | |
| 2911 } | |
| 2912 | |
| 442 | 2913 /* This handy little function is used by select-x.c to wait for replies |
| 2914 from processes that aren't really processes (e.g. the X server) */ | |
| 428 | 2915 void |
| 2916 wait_delaying_user_input (int (*predicate) (void *arg), void *predicate_arg) | |
| 2917 { | |
| 2918 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 2919 Lisp_Object event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 2920 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 2921 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 2922 | |
| 2923 while (!(*predicate) (predicate_arg)) | |
| 2924 { | |
| 2925 /* We're a generator of the command_event_queue, so we can't be a | |
| 2926 consumer as well. Also, we have no reason to consult the | |
| 2927 command_event_queue; there are only user and eval-events there, | |
| 2928 and we'd just have to put them back anyway. | |
| 2929 */ | |
| 2930 next_event_internal (event, 0); | |
| 2931 if (command_event_p (event) | |
| 2932 || (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == eval_event) | |
| 2933 || (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == magic_eval_event)) | |
| 2934 enqueue_command_event_1 (event); | |
| 2935 else | |
| 2936 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 2937 } | |
| 2938 UNGCPRO; | |
| 2939 } | |
| 2940 | |
| 2941 | |
| 2942 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 2943 /* dispatching events; command builder */ | |
| 2944 /**********************************************************************/ | |
| 2945 | |
| 2946 static void | |
| 2947 execute_internal_event (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 2948 { | |
| 1292 | 2949 PROFILE_DECLARE (); |
| 2950 | |
| 428 | 2951 /* events on dead channels get silently eaten */ |
| 2952 if (object_dead_p (XEVENT (event)->channel)) | |
| 2953 return; | |
| 2954 | |
| 1292 | 2955 PROFILE_RECORD_ENTERING_SECTION (QSexecute_internal_event); |
| 2956 | |
| 428 | 2957 /* This function can GC */ |
| 2958 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 2959 { | |
| 2960 case empty_event: | |
| 1292 | 2961 goto done; |
| 428 | 2962 |
| 2963 case eval_event: | |
| 2964 { | |
| 1204 | 2965 call1 (XEVENT_EVAL_FUNCTION (event), |
| 2966 XEVENT_EVAL_OBJECT (event)); | |
| 1292 | 2967 goto done; |
| 428 | 2968 } |
| 2969 | |
| 2970 case magic_eval_event: | |
| 2971 { | |
| 1204 | 2972 XEVENT_MAGIC_EVAL_INTERNAL_FUNCTION (event) |
| 2973 XEVENT_MAGIC_EVAL_OBJECT (event); | |
| 1292 | 2974 goto done; |
| 428 | 2975 } |
| 2976 | |
| 2977 case pointer_motion_event: | |
| 2978 { | |
| 2979 if (!NILP (Vmouse_motion_handler)) | |
| 2980 call1 (Vmouse_motion_handler, event); | |
| 1292 | 2981 goto done; |
| 428 | 2982 } |
| 2983 | |
| 2984 case process_event: | |
| 2985 { | |
| 1204 | 2986 Lisp_Object p = XEVENT_PROCESS_PROCESS (event); |
| 428 | 2987 Charcount readstatus; |
| 853 | 2988 int iter; |
| 2989 | |
| 2990 assert (PROCESSP (p)); | |
| 2991 for (iter = 0; iter < 2; iter++) | |
| 2992 { | |
| 2993 if (iter == 1 && !process_has_separate_stderr (p)) | |
| 2994 break; | |
| 2995 while ((readstatus = read_process_output (p, iter)) > 0) | |
| 2996 ; | |
| 2997 if (readstatus > 0) | |
| 2998 ; /* this clauses never gets executed but | |
| 2999 allows the #ifdefs to work cleanly. */ | |
| 428 | 3000 #ifdef EWOULDBLOCK |
| 853 | 3001 else if (readstatus == -1 && errno == EWOULDBLOCK) |
| 3002 ; | |
| 428 | 3003 #endif /* EWOULDBLOCK */ |
| 3004 #ifdef EAGAIN | |
| 853 | 3005 else if (readstatus == -1 && errno == EAGAIN) |
| 3006 ; | |
| 428 | 3007 #endif /* EAGAIN */ |
| 853 | 3008 else if ((readstatus == 0 && |
| 3009 /* Note that we cannot distinguish between no input | |
| 3010 available now and a closed pipe. | |
| 3011 With luck, a closed pipe will be accompanied by | |
| 3012 subprocess termination and SIGCHLD. */ | |
| 3013 (!network_connection_p (p) || | |
| 3014 /* | |
| 3015 When connected to ToolTalk (i.e. | |
| 3016 connected_via_filedesc_p()), it's not possible to | |
| 3017 reliably determine whether there is a message | |
| 3018 waiting for ToolTalk to receive. ToolTalk expects | |
| 3019 to have tt_message_receive() called exactly once | |
| 3020 every time the file descriptor becomes active, so | |
| 3021 the filter function forces this by returning 0. | |
| 3022 Emacs must not interpret this as a closed pipe. */ | |
| 3023 connected_via_filedesc_p (XPROCESS (p)))) | |
| 3024 | |
| 3025 /* On some OSs with ptys, when the process on one end of | |
| 3026 a pty exits, the other end gets an error reading with | |
| 3027 errno = EIO instead of getting an EOF (0 bytes read). | |
| 3028 Therefore, if we get an error reading and errno = | |
| 3029 EIO, just continue, because the child process has | |
| 3030 exited and should clean itself up soon (e.g. when we | |
| 3031 get a SIGCHLD). */ | |
| 535 | 3032 #ifdef EIO |
| 853 | 3033 || (readstatus == -1 && errno == EIO) |
| 428 | 3034 #endif |
| 535 | 3035 |
| 853 | 3036 ) |
| 3037 { | |
| 3038 /* Currently, we rely on SIGCHLD to indicate that the | |
| 3039 process has terminated. Unfortunately, on some systems | |
| 3040 the SIGCHLD gets missed some of the time. So we put an | |
| 3041 additional check in status_notify() to see whether a | |
| 3042 process has terminated. We must tell status_notify() | |
| 3043 to enable that check, and we do so now. */ | |
| 3044 kick_status_notify (); | |
| 3045 } | |
| 898 | 3046 else |
| 3047 { | |
| 3048 /* Deactivate network connection */ | |
| 3049 Lisp_Object status = Fprocess_status (p); | |
| 3050 if (EQ (status, Qopen) | |
| 3051 /* In case somebody changes the theory of whether to | |
| 3052 return open as opposed to run for network connection | |
| 3053 "processes"... */ | |
| 3054 || EQ (status, Qrun)) | |
| 3055 update_process_status (p, Qexit, 256, 0); | |
| 3056 deactivate_process (p); | |
| 3057 status_notify (); | |
| 3058 } | |
| 853 | 3059 |
| 3060 /* We must call status_notify here to allow the | |
| 3061 event_stream->unselect_process_cb to be run if appropriate. | |
| 3062 Otherwise, dead fds may be selected for, and we will get a | |
| 3063 continuous stream of process events for them. Since we don't | |
| 3064 return until all process events have been flushed, we would | |
| 3065 get stuck here, processing events on a process whose status | |
| 3025 | 3066 was `exit'. Call this after dispatch-event, or the fds will |
| 853 | 3067 have been closed before we read the last data from them. |
| 3068 It's safe for the filter to signal an error because | |
| 3069 status_notify() will be called on return to top-level. | |
| 3070 */ | |
| 3071 status_notify (); | |
| 428 | 3072 } |
| 1292 | 3073 goto done; |
| 428 | 3074 } |
| 3075 | |
| 3076 case timeout_event: | |
| 3077 { | |
| 440 | 3078 Lisp_Event *e = XEVENT (event); |
| 934 | 3079 |
| 1204 | 3080 if (!NILP (EVENT_TIMEOUT_FUNCTION (e))) |
| 3081 call1 (EVENT_TIMEOUT_FUNCTION (e), | |
| 3082 EVENT_TIMEOUT_OBJECT (e)); | |
| 1292 | 3083 goto done; |
| 428 | 3084 } |
| 3085 case magic_event: | |
| 3086 event_stream_handle_magic_event (XEVENT (event)); | |
| 1292 | 3087 goto done; |
| 428 | 3088 default: |
| 2500 | 3089 ABORT (); |
| 428 | 3090 } |
| 1292 | 3091 |
| 3092 done: | |
| 3093 PROFILE_RECORD_EXITING_SECTION (QSexecute_internal_event); | |
| 428 | 3094 } |
| 3095 | |
| 3096 | |
| 3097 | |
| 3098 static void | |
| 3099 this_command_keys_replace_suffix (Lisp_Object suffix, Lisp_Object chain) | |
| 3100 { | |
| 3101 Lisp_Object first_before_suffix = | |
| 3102 event_chain_find_previous (Vthis_command_keys, suffix); | |
| 3103 | |
| 3104 if (NILP (first_before_suffix)) | |
| 3105 Vthis_command_keys = chain; | |
| 3106 else | |
| 3107 XSET_EVENT_NEXT (first_before_suffix, chain); | |
| 3108 deallocate_event_chain (suffix); | |
| 3109 Vthis_command_keys_tail = event_chain_tail (chain); | |
| 3110 } | |
| 3111 | |
| 3112 static void | |
| 3113 command_builder_replace_suffix (struct command_builder *builder, | |
| 3114 Lisp_Object suffix, Lisp_Object chain) | |
| 3115 { | |
| 3116 Lisp_Object first_before_suffix = | |
| 3117 event_chain_find_previous (builder->current_events, suffix); | |
| 3118 | |
| 3119 if (NILP (first_before_suffix)) | |
| 3120 builder->current_events = chain; | |
| 3121 else | |
| 3122 XSET_EVENT_NEXT (first_before_suffix, chain); | |
| 3123 deallocate_event_chain (suffix); | |
| 3124 builder->most_current_event = event_chain_tail (chain); | |
| 3125 } | |
| 3126 | |
| 3127 static Lisp_Object | |
| 3128 command_builder_find_leaf_1 (struct command_builder *builder) | |
| 3129 { | |
| 3130 Lisp_Object event0 = builder->current_events; | |
| 3131 | |
| 3132 if (NILP (event0)) | |
| 3133 return Qnil; | |
| 3134 | |
| 3135 return event_binding (event0, 1); | |
| 3136 } | |
| 3137 | |
| 1268 | 3138 static void |
| 3139 maybe_kbd_translate (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 3140 { | |
| 3141 Ichar c; | |
| 3142 int did_translate = 0; | |
| 3143 | |
| 3144 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) != key_press_event) | |
| 3145 return; | |
| 3146 if (!HASH_TABLEP (Vkeyboard_translate_table)) | |
| 3147 return; | |
| 3148 if (EQ (Fhash_table_count (Vkeyboard_translate_table), Qzero)) | |
| 3149 return; | |
| 3150 | |
| 2828 | 3151 c = event_to_character (event, 0, 0); |
| 1268 | 3152 if (c != -1) |
| 3153 { | |
| 3154 Lisp_Object traduit = Fgethash (make_char (c), Vkeyboard_translate_table, | |
| 3155 Qnil); | |
| 3156 if (!NILP (traduit) && SYMBOLP (traduit)) | |
| 3157 { | |
| 3158 XSET_EVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event, traduit); | |
| 3159 XSET_EVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (event, 0); | |
| 3160 did_translate = 1; | |
| 3161 } | |
| 3162 else if (CHARP (traduit)) | |
| 3163 { | |
| 3164 /* This used to call Fcharacter_to_event() directly into EVENT, | |
| 3165 but that can eradicate timestamps and other such stuff. | |
| 3166 This way is safer. */ | |
| 3167 Lisp_Object ev2 = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 3168 | |
| 3169 character_to_event (XCHAR (traduit), XEVENT (ev2), | |
|
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parents:
4775
diff
changeset
|
3170 XCONSOLE (XEVENT_CHANNEL (event)), |
|
2fd201d73a92
Call character_to_event on characters received from XIM, event-Xt.c
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4775
diff
changeset
|
3171 high_bit_is_meta, 1); |
| 1268 | 3172 XSET_EVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event, XEVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (ev2)); |
| 3173 XSET_EVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (event, XEVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (ev2)); | |
| 3174 Fdeallocate_event (ev2); | |
| 3175 did_translate = 1; | |
| 3176 } | |
| 3177 } | |
| 3178 | |
| 3179 if (!did_translate) | |
| 3180 { | |
| 3181 Lisp_Object traduit = Fgethash (XEVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event), | |
| 3182 Vkeyboard_translate_table, Qnil); | |
| 3183 if (!NILP (traduit) && SYMBOLP (traduit)) | |
| 3184 { | |
| 3185 XSET_EVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event, traduit); | |
| 3186 did_translate = 1; | |
| 3187 } | |
| 3188 else if (CHARP (traduit)) | |
| 3189 { | |
| 3190 /* This used to call Fcharacter_to_event() directly into EVENT, | |
| 3191 but that can eradicate timestamps and other such stuff. | |
| 3192 This way is safer. */ | |
| 3193 Lisp_Object ev2 = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 3194 | |
| 3195 character_to_event (XCHAR (traduit), XEVENT (ev2), | |
|
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4775
diff
changeset
|
3196 XCONSOLE (XEVENT_CHANNEL (event)), |
|
2fd201d73a92
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4775
diff
changeset
|
3197 high_bit_is_meta, 1); |
| 1268 | 3198 XSET_EVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event, XEVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (ev2)); |
| 3199 XSET_EVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (event, | |
| 3200 XEVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (event) | | |
| 3201 XEVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (ev2)); | |
| 3202 | |
| 3203 Fdeallocate_event (ev2); | |
| 3204 did_translate = 1; | |
| 3205 } | |
| 3206 } | |
| 3207 | |
| 3208 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 3209 if (did_translate) | |
| 3210 DEBUG_PRINT_EMACS_EVENT ("->keyboard-translate-table", event); | |
| 3211 #endif | |
| 3212 } | |
| 3213 | |
| 428 | 3214 /* See if we can do function-key-map or key-translation-map translation |
| 3215 on the current events in the command builder. If so, do this, and | |
| 771 | 3216 return the resulting binding, if any. |
| 3217 | |
| 3218 DID_MUNGE must be initialized before calling this function. If munging | |
| 3219 happened, DID_MUNGE will be non-zero; otherwise, it will be left alone. | |
| 3220 */ | |
| 428 | 3221 |
| 3222 static Lisp_Object | |
| 3223 munge_keymap_translate (struct command_builder *builder, | |
| 3224 enum munge_me_out_the_door munge, | |
| 771 | 3225 int has_normal_binding_p, int *did_munge) |
| 428 | 3226 { |
| 3227 Lisp_Object suffix; | |
| 3228 | |
| 1204 | 3229 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (suffix, builder->first_mungeable_event[munge]) |
| 428 | 3230 { |
| 3231 Lisp_Object result = munging_key_map_event_binding (suffix, munge); | |
| 3232 | |
| 3233 if (NILP (result)) | |
| 3234 continue; | |
| 3235 | |
| 3236 if (KEYMAPP (result)) | |
| 3237 { | |
| 3238 if (NILP (builder->last_non_munged_event) | |
| 3239 && !has_normal_binding_p) | |
| 3240 builder->last_non_munged_event = builder->most_current_event; | |
| 3241 } | |
| 3242 else | |
| 3243 builder->last_non_munged_event = Qnil; | |
| 3244 | |
| 3245 if (!KEYMAPP (result) && | |
| 3246 !VECTORP (result) && | |
| 3247 !STRINGP (result)) | |
| 3248 { | |
| 3249 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 3250 GCPRO1 (suffix); | |
| 3251 result = call1 (result, Qnil); | |
| 3252 UNGCPRO; | |
| 3253 if (NILP (result)) | |
| 3254 return Qnil; | |
| 3255 } | |
| 3256 | |
| 3257 if (KEYMAPP (result)) | |
| 3258 return result; | |
| 3259 | |
| 3260 if (VECTORP (result) || STRINGP (result)) | |
| 3261 { | |
| 3262 Lisp_Object new_chain = key_sequence_to_event_chain (result); | |
| 3263 Lisp_Object tempev; | |
| 3264 | |
| 3265 /* If the first_mungeable_event of the other munger is | |
| 3266 within the events we're munging, then it will point to | |
| 3267 deallocated events afterwards, which is bad -- so make it | |
| 3268 point at the beginning of the munged events. */ | |
| 3269 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (tempev, suffix) | |
| 3270 { | |
| 3271 Lisp_Object *mungeable_event = | |
| 1204 | 3272 &builder->first_mungeable_event[1 - munge]; |
| 428 | 3273 if (EQ (tempev, *mungeable_event)) |
| 3274 { | |
| 3275 *mungeable_event = new_chain; | |
| 3276 break; | |
| 3277 } | |
| 3278 } | |
| 3279 | |
| 771 | 3280 /* Now munge the current event chain in the command builder. */ |
| 428 | 3281 command_builder_replace_suffix (builder, suffix, new_chain); |
| 1204 | 3282 builder->first_mungeable_event[munge] = Qnil; |
| 771 | 3283 |
| 3284 *did_munge = 1; | |
| 428 | 3285 |
| 793 | 3286 return command_builder_find_leaf_1 (builder); |
| 428 | 3287 } |
| 3288 | |
| 563 | 3289 signal_error (Qinvalid_key_binding, |
| 3290 (munge == MUNGE_ME_FUNCTION_KEY ? | |
| 3291 "Invalid binding in function-key-map" : | |
| 3292 "Invalid binding in key-translation-map"), | |
| 3293 result); | |
| 428 | 3294 } |
| 3295 | |
| 3296 return Qnil; | |
| 3297 } | |
| 3298 | |
| 2828 | 3299 /* Same as command_builder_find_leaf() below, but without offering the |
| 3300 platform-specific event code the opportunity to give a default binding of | |
| 3301 an unseen keysym to self-insert-command, and without the fallback to | |
| 3302 other keymaps for lookups that allows someone with a Cyrillic keyboard | |
| 3303 to pretend it's Qwerty for C-x C-f, for example. */ | |
| 771 | 3304 |
| 428 | 3305 static Lisp_Object |
| 2828 | 3306 command_builder_find_leaf_no_jit_binding (struct command_builder *builder, |
| 771 | 3307 int allow_misc_user_events_p, |
| 3308 int *did_munge) | |
| 428 | 3309 { |
| 3310 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 3311 Lisp_Object result; | |
| 3312 Lisp_Object evee = builder->current_events; | |
| 3313 | |
| 3314 if (XEVENT_TYPE (evee) == misc_user_event) | |
| 3315 { | |
| 3316 if (allow_misc_user_events_p && (NILP (XEVENT_NEXT (evee)))) | |
| 1204 | 3317 return list2 (XEVENT_EVAL_FUNCTION (evee), |
| 3318 XEVENT_EVAL_OBJECT (evee)); | |
| 428 | 3319 else |
| 3320 return Qnil; | |
| 3321 } | |
| 3322 | |
| 442 | 3323 /* if we're currently in a menu accelerator, check there for further |
| 3324 events */ | |
| 3325 /* #### fuck me! who wrote this crap? think "abstraction", baby. */ | |
| 771 | 3326 /* #### this horribly-written crap can mess with global state, which |
| 3327 this function should not do. i'm not fixing it now. someone | |
| 3328 needs to go and rewrite that shit correctly. --ben */ | |
| 1268 | 3329 #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) && defined (LWLIB_MENUBARS_LUCID) |
| 442 | 3330 if (x_kludge_lw_menu_active ()) |
| 428 | 3331 { |
| 3332 return command_builder_operate_menu_accelerator (builder); | |
| 3333 } | |
| 3334 else | |
| 3335 { | |
| 3336 result = Qnil; | |
| 3337 if (EQ (Vmenu_accelerator_enabled, Qmenu_force)) | |
| 3338 result = command_builder_find_menu_accelerator (builder); | |
| 3339 if (NILP (result)) | |
| 3340 #endif | |
| 3341 result = command_builder_find_leaf_1 (builder); | |
| 1268 | 3342 #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) && defined (LWLIB_MENUBARS_LUCID) |
| 428 | 3343 if (NILP (result) |
| 3344 && EQ (Vmenu_accelerator_enabled, Qmenu_fallback)) | |
| 3345 result = command_builder_find_menu_accelerator (builder); | |
| 3346 } | |
| 3347 #endif | |
| 3348 | |
| 3349 /* Check to see if we have a potential function-key-map match. */ | |
| 3350 if (NILP (result)) | |
| 771 | 3351 result = munge_keymap_translate (builder, MUNGE_ME_FUNCTION_KEY, 0, |
| 3352 did_munge); | |
| 3353 | |
| 428 | 3354 /* Check to see if we have a potential key-translation-map match. */ |
| 3355 { | |
| 3356 Lisp_Object key_translate_result = | |
| 3357 munge_keymap_translate (builder, MUNGE_ME_KEY_TRANSLATION, | |
| 771 | 3358 !NILP (result), did_munge); |
| 428 | 3359 if (!NILP (key_translate_result)) |
| 771 | 3360 result = key_translate_result; |
| 428 | 3361 } |
| 3362 | |
| 3363 if (!NILP (result)) | |
| 3364 return result; | |
| 3365 | |
| 3366 /* If key-sequence wasn't bound, we'll try some fallbacks. */ | |
| 3367 | |
| 3368 /* If we didn't find a binding, and the last event in the sequence is | |
| 3369 a shifted character, then try again with the lowercase version. */ | |
| 3370 | |
| 3371 if (XEVENT_TYPE (builder->most_current_event) == key_press_event | |
| 3372 && !NILP (Vretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted)) | |
| 3373 { | |
| 1204 | 3374 if (event_upshifted_p (builder->most_current_event)) |
| 428 | 3375 { |
| 771 | 3376 Lisp_Object neubauten = copy_command_builder (builder, 0); |
| 3377 struct command_builder *neub = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (neubauten); | |
| 3378 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 3379 | |
| 3380 GCPRO1 (neubauten); | |
| 1204 | 3381 downshift_event (event_chain_tail (neub->current_events)); |
| 771 | 3382 result = |
| 2828 | 3383 command_builder_find_leaf_no_jit_binding |
| 771 | 3384 (neub, allow_misc_user_events_p, did_munge); |
| 3385 | |
| 428 | 3386 if (!NILP (result)) |
| 771 | 3387 { |
| 3388 copy_command_builder (neub, builder); | |
| 3389 *did_munge = 1; | |
| 3390 } | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
3391 free_normal_lisp_object (wrap_command_builder (neub)); |
| 771 | 3392 UNGCPRO; |
| 3393 if (!NILP (result)) | |
| 428 | 3394 return result; |
| 3395 } | |
| 3396 } | |
| 3397 | |
| 3398 /* help-char is `auto-bound' in every keymap */ | |
| 3399 if (!NILP (Vprefix_help_command) && | |
| 1204 | 3400 event_matches_key_specifier_p (builder->most_current_event, Vhelp_char)) |
| 428 | 3401 return Vprefix_help_command; |
| 3402 | |
| 771 | 3403 return Qnil; |
| 3404 } | |
| 3405 | |
| 3406 /* Compare the current state of the command builder against the local and | |
| 3407 global keymaps, and return the binding. If there is no match, try again, | |
| 3408 case-insensitively. The return value will be one of: | |
| 3409 -- nil (there is no binding) | |
| 3410 -- a keymap (part of a command has been specified) | |
| 3411 -- a command (anything that satisfies `commandp'; this includes | |
| 3412 some symbols, lists, subrs, strings, vectors, and | |
| 3413 compiled-function objects) | |
| 3414 | |
| 3415 This may "munge" the current event chain in the command builder; | |
| 3416 i.e. the sequence might be mutated into a different sequence, | |
| 3417 which we then pretend is what the user actually typed instead of | |
| 3418 the passed-in sequence. This happens as a result of: | |
| 3419 | |
| 3420 -- key-translation-map changes | |
| 3421 -- function-key-map changes | |
| 3422 -- retry-undefined-key-binding-unshifted (q.v.) | |
| 3423 -- "Russian C-x problem" changes (see definition of struct key_data, | |
| 3424 events.h) | |
| 3425 | |
| 3426 DID_MUNGE must be initialized before calling this function. If munging | |
| 3427 happened, DID_MUNGE will be non-zero; otherwise, it will be left alone. | |
| 2828 | 3428 |
| 3429 (The above was Ben, I think.) | |
| 3430 | |
| 3431 It might be nice to have lookup-key call this function, directly or | |
| 3432 indirectly. Though it is arguably the right thing if lookup-key fails on | |
| 3433 a keysym that the X11 event code hasn't seen. There's no way to know if | |
| 3434 that keysym is generatable by the keyboard until it's generated, | |
| 3435 therefore there's no reasonable expectation that it be bound before it's | |
| 3436 generated--all the other default bindings depend on our knowing the | |
| 3437 keyboard layout and relying on it. And describe-key works without it, so | |
| 3438 I think we're fine. | |
| 3439 | |
| 3440 Some weirdness with this code--try this on a keyboard where X11 will | |
| 3441 produce ediaeresis with dead-diaeresis and e, but it's not produced by | |
| 3442 any other combination of keys on the keyboard; | |
| 3443 | |
| 3444 (defun ding-command () | |
| 3445 (interactive) | |
| 3446 (ding)) | |
| 3447 | |
| 3448 (define-key global-map 'ediaeresis 'ding-command) | |
| 3449 | |
| 3450 Now, pressing dead-diaeresis and then e will ding. Next; | |
| 3451 | |
| 3452 (define-key global-map 'ediaeresis 'self-insert-command) | |
| 3453 | |
| 3454 and press dead-diaeresis and then e. It'll give you "Invalid argument: | |
| 3455 typed key has no ASCII equivalent" Then; | |
| 3456 | |
| 3457 (define-key global-map 'ediaeresis nil) | |
| 3458 | |
| 3459 and press the combination again; it'll self-insert. The moral of the | |
| 3460 story is, if you want to suppress all bindings to a non-ASCII X11 key, | |
| 3461 bind it to a trivial no-op command, because the automatic mapping to | |
| 3462 self-insert-command will happen if there's no existing binding for the | |
| 3463 symbol. I can't see a way around this. -- Aidan Kehoe, 2005-05-14 */ | |
| 771 | 3464 |
| 3465 static Lisp_Object | |
| 3466 command_builder_find_leaf (struct command_builder *builder, | |
| 3467 int allow_misc_user_events_p, | |
| 3468 int *did_munge) | |
| 3469 { | |
| 3470 Lisp_Object result = | |
| 2828 | 3471 command_builder_find_leaf_no_jit_binding |
| 771 | 3472 (builder, allow_misc_user_events_p, did_munge); |
| 2828 | 3473 Lisp_Object event, console, channel, lookup_res; |
| 3474 int redolookup = 0, i; | |
| 771 | 3475 |
| 3476 if (!NILP (result)) | |
| 3477 return result; | |
| 3478 | |
| 2828 | 3479 /* If some of the events are keyboard events, and this is the first time |
| 3480 the platform event code has seen their keysyms--which will be the case | |
| 3481 the first time we see a composed keysym on X11, for example--offer it | |
| 3482 the chance to define them as a self-insert-command, and do the lookup | |
| 3483 again. | |
| 3484 | |
| 3485 This isn't Mule-specific; in a world where x-iso8859-1.el is gone, it's | |
| 3486 needed for non-Mule too. | |
| 3487 | |
| 3488 Probably this can just be limited to the checking the last | |
| 3489 keypress. */ | |
| 3490 | |
| 3491 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, builder->current_events) | |
| 3492 { | |
| 3493 /* We can ignore key release events because the preceding presses will | |
| 3494 have initiated the mapping. */ | |
| 3495 if (key_press_event != XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 3496 continue; | |
| 3497 | |
| 3498 channel = XEVENT_CHANNEL (event); | |
| 3499 if (object_dead_p (channel)) | |
| 3500 continue; | |
| 3501 | |
| 3502 console = CDFW_CONSOLE (channel); | |
| 3503 if (NILP (console)) | |
| 3504 console = Vselected_console; | |
| 3505 | |
| 3506 if (CONSOLE_LIVE_P(XCONSOLE(console))) | |
| 3507 { | |
| 3508 lookup_res = MAYBE_LISP_CONMETH(XCONSOLE(console), | |
| 3509 perhaps_init_unseen_key_defaults, | |
| 3510 (XCONSOLE(console), | |
| 3511 XEVENT_KEY_KEYSYM(event))); | |
| 3512 if (EQ(lookup_res, Qt)) | |
| 3513 { | |
| 3514 redolookup += 1; | |
| 3515 } | |
| 3516 } | |
| 3517 } | |
| 3518 | |
| 3519 if (redolookup) | |
| 428 | 3520 { |
| 2828 | 3521 result = command_builder_find_leaf_no_jit_binding |
| 3522 (builder, allow_misc_user_events_p, did_munge); | |
| 3523 if (!NILP (result)) | |
| 3524 { | |
| 3525 return result; | |
| 3526 } | |
| 3527 } | |
| 3528 | |
| 3529 /* The old composed-character-default-binding handling that used to be | |
| 3530 here was wrong--if a user wants to bind a given key to something other | |
| 3531 than self-insert-command, then they should go ahead and do it, we won't | |
| 3532 override it, and the sane thing to do with any key that has a known | |
| 3533 character correspondence is _always_ to default it to | |
| 3534 self-insert-command, nothing else. | |
| 3535 | |
| 3536 I'm adding the variable to control whether "Russian C-x processing" is | |
| 3537 used because I have a feeling that it's not always the most appropriate | |
| 3538 thing to do--in cases where people are using a non-Qwerty | |
| 3539 Roman-alphabet layout, do they really want C-x with some random letter | |
| 3540 to call `switch-to-buffer'? I can imagine that being very confusing, | |
| 3541 certainly for new users, and it might be that defaulting the value for | |
| 3542 `try-alternate-layouts-for-commands' as part of the language | |
| 3543 environment is the right thing to do, only defaulting to `t' for those | |
| 3544 languages that don't use the Roman alphabet. | |
| 3545 | |
| 3546 Much of that reasoning is tentative on my part, and feel free to change | |
| 3547 this code if you have more experience with the problem and an intuition | |
| 3548 that differs from mine. (Aidan Kehoe, 2005-05-29)*/ | |
| 3549 | |
| 3550 if (!try_alternate_layouts_for_commands) | |
| 3551 { | |
| 3552 return Qnil; | |
| 428 | 3553 } |
| 2828 | 3554 |
| 3555 if (key_press_event == XEVENT_TYPE (builder->most_current_event)) | |
| 3556 { | |
| 3557 Lisp_Object ev = builder->most_current_event, newbuilder; | |
| 3558 Ichar this_alternative; | |
| 3559 | |
| 3560 struct command_builder *newb; | |
| 3561 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 3562 | |
| 3563 /* Ignore the value for CURRENT_LANGENV, because we've checked it | |
| 3564 already, above. */ | |
| 3565 for (i = KEYCHAR_CURRENT_LANGENV, ++i; i < KEYCHAR_LAST; ++i) | |
| 3566 { | |
| 3567 this_alternative = XEVENT_KEY_ALT_KEYCHARS(ev, i); | |
| 3568 | |
| 3569 if (0 == this_alternative) | |
| 3570 continue; | |
| 3571 | |
| 3572 newbuilder = copy_command_builder(builder, 0); | |
| 3573 GCPRO1(newbuilder); | |
| 3574 | |
| 3575 newb = XCOMMAND_BUILDER(newbuilder); | |
| 3576 | |
| 2830 | 3577 XSET_EVENT_KEY_KEYSYM(event_chain_tail |
| 3578 (XCOMMAND_BUILDER(newbuilder)->current_events), | |
| 2828 | 3579 make_char(this_alternative)); |
| 3580 | |
| 3581 result = command_builder_find_leaf_no_jit_binding | |
| 3582 (newb, allow_misc_user_events_p, did_munge); | |
| 3583 | |
| 3584 if (!NILP (result)) | |
| 3585 { | |
| 3586 copy_command_builder (newb, builder); | |
| 3587 *did_munge = 1; | |
| 3588 } | |
| 2830 | 3589 else if (event_upshifted_p |
| 3590 (XCOMMAND_BUILDER(newbuilder)->most_current_event) && | |
| 2828 | 3591 !NILP (Vretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted) |
| 3592 && isascii(this_alternative)) | |
| 3593 { | |
| 2830 | 3594 downshift_event (event_chain_tail |
| 3595 (XCOMMAND_BUILDER(newbuilder)->current_events)); | |
| 3596 XSET_EVENT_KEY_KEYSYM(event_chain_tail | |
| 3597 (newb->current_events), | |
| 2828 | 3598 make_char(tolower(this_alternative))); |
| 3599 result = command_builder_find_leaf_no_jit_binding | |
| 3600 (newb, allow_misc_user_events_p, did_munge); | |
| 3601 } | |
| 3602 | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
3603 free_normal_lisp_object (wrap_command_builder (newb)); |
| 2828 | 3604 UNGCPRO; |
| 3605 | |
| 3606 if (!NILP (result)) | |
| 3607 return result; | |
| 3608 } | |
| 3609 } | |
| 428 | 3610 |
| 3611 return Qnil; | |
| 3612 } | |
| 3613 | |
| 771 | 3614 /* Like command_builder_find_leaf but update this-command-keys and the |
| 3615 echo area as necessary when the current event chain was munged. */ | |
| 3616 | |
| 3617 static Lisp_Object | |
| 3618 command_builder_find_leaf_and_update_global_state (struct command_builder * | |
| 3619 builder, | |
| 3620 int | |
| 3621 allow_misc_user_events_p) | |
| 3622 { | |
| 3623 int did_munge = 0; | |
| 3624 int orig_length = event_chain_count (builder->current_events); | |
| 3625 Lisp_Object result = command_builder_find_leaf (builder, | |
| 3626 allow_misc_user_events_p, | |
| 3627 &did_munge); | |
| 3628 | |
| 3629 if (did_munge) | |
| 3630 { | |
| 3631 int tck_length = event_chain_count (Vthis_command_keys); | |
| 3632 | |
| 3633 /* We just assume that the events we just replaced are | |
| 3634 sitting in copied form at the end of this-command-keys. | |
| 3635 If the user did weird things with `dispatch-event' this | |
| 3636 may not be the case, but at least we make sure we won't | |
| 3637 crash. */ | |
| 3638 | |
| 3639 if (tck_length >= orig_length) | |
| 3640 { | |
| 3641 Lisp_Object new_chain = | |
| 3642 copy_event_chain (builder->current_events); | |
| 3643 this_command_keys_replace_suffix | |
| 3644 (event_chain_nth (Vthis_command_keys, tck_length - orig_length), | |
| 3645 new_chain); | |
| 3646 | |
| 3647 regenerate_echo_keys_from_this_command_keys (builder); | |
| 3648 } | |
| 3649 } | |
| 3650 | |
| 3651 if (NILP (result)) | |
| 3652 { | |
| 3653 /* If we read extra events attempting to match a function key but end | |
| 3654 up failing, then we release those events back to the command loop | |
| 3655 and fail on the original lookup. The released events will then be | |
| 3656 reprocessed in the context of the first part having failed. */ | |
| 3657 if (!NILP (builder->last_non_munged_event)) | |
| 3658 { | |
| 3659 Lisp_Object event0 = builder->last_non_munged_event; | |
| 3660 | |
| 3661 /* Put the commands back on the event queue. */ | |
| 3662 enqueue_event_chain (XEVENT_NEXT (event0), | |
| 3663 &command_event_queue, | |
| 3664 &command_event_queue_tail); | |
| 3665 | |
| 3666 /* Then remove them from the command builder. */ | |
| 3667 XSET_EVENT_NEXT (event0, Qnil); | |
| 3668 builder->most_current_event = event0; | |
| 3669 builder->last_non_munged_event = Qnil; | |
| 3670 } | |
| 3671 } | |
| 3672 | |
| 3673 return result; | |
| 3674 } | |
| 428 | 3675 |
| 3676 /* Every time a command-event (a key, button, or menu selection) is read by | |
| 3677 Fnext_event(), it is stored in the recent_keys_ring, in Vlast_input_event, | |
| 3678 and in Vthis_command_keys. (Eval-events are not stored there.) | |
| 3679 | |
| 3680 Every time a command is invoked, Vlast_command_event is set to the last | |
| 3681 event in the sequence. | |
| 3682 | |
| 3683 This means that Vthis_command_keys is really about "input read since the | |
| 3684 last command was executed" rather than about "what keys invoked this | |
| 3685 command." This is a little counterintuitive, but that's the way it | |
| 3686 has always worked. | |
| 3687 | |
| 3688 As an extra kink, the function read-key-sequence resets/updates the | |
| 3689 last-command-event and this-command-keys. It doesn't append to the | |
| 3690 command-keys as read-char does. Such are the pitfalls of having to | |
| 3691 maintain compatibility with a program for which the only specification | |
| 3692 is the code itself. | |
| 3693 | |
| 3694 (We could implement recent_keys_ring and Vthis_command_keys as the same | |
| 3695 data structure.) | |
| 3696 */ | |
| 3697 | |
| 3698 DEFUN ("recent-keys", Frecent_keys, 0, 1, 0, /* | |
| 3699 Return a vector of recent keyboard or mouse button events read. | |
| 3700 If NUMBER is non-nil, not more than NUMBER events will be returned. | |
| 3701 Change number of events stored using `set-recent-keys-ring-size'. | |
| 3702 | |
| 3703 This copies the event objects into a new vector; it is safe to keep and | |
| 3704 modify them. | |
| 3705 */ | |
| 3706 (number)) | |
| 3707 { | |
| 3708 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 3709 Lisp_Object val = Qnil; | |
| 3710 int nwanted; | |
| 3711 int start, nkeys, i, j; | |
| 3712 GCPRO1 (val); | |
| 3713 | |
| 3714 if (NILP (number)) | |
| 3715 nwanted = recent_keys_ring_size; | |
| 3716 else | |
| 3717 { | |
|
5307
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
3718 check_integer_range (number, Qzero, |
|
5736
3192994c49ca
Convert C (un)signed long long values to bignums properly.
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
5722
diff
changeset
|
3719 make_fixnum (ARRAY_DIMENSION_LIMIT)); |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3720 nwanted = XFIXNUM (number); |
| 428 | 3721 } |
| 3722 | |
| 3723 /* Create the keys ring vector, if none present. */ | |
| 3724 if (NILP (Vrecent_keys_ring)) | |
| 3725 { | |
| 3726 Vrecent_keys_ring = make_vector (recent_keys_ring_size, Qnil); | |
| 3727 /* And return nothing in particular. */ | |
| 446 | 3728 RETURN_UNGCPRO (make_vector (0, Qnil)); |
| 428 | 3729 } |
| 3730 | |
| 3731 if (NILP (XVECTOR_DATA (Vrecent_keys_ring)[recent_keys_ring_index])) | |
| 3732 /* This means the vector has not yet wrapped */ | |
| 3733 { | |
| 3734 nkeys = recent_keys_ring_index; | |
| 3735 start = 0; | |
| 3736 } | |
| 3737 else | |
| 3738 { | |
| 3739 nkeys = recent_keys_ring_size; | |
| 3740 start = ((recent_keys_ring_index == nkeys) ? 0 : recent_keys_ring_index); | |
| 3741 } | |
| 3742 | |
| 3743 if (nwanted < nkeys) | |
| 3744 { | |
| 3745 start += nkeys - nwanted; | |
| 3746 if (start >= recent_keys_ring_size) | |
| 3747 start -= recent_keys_ring_size; | |
| 3748 nkeys = nwanted; | |
| 3749 } | |
| 3750 else | |
| 3751 nwanted = nkeys; | |
| 3752 | |
| 3753 val = make_vector (nwanted, Qnil); | |
| 3754 | |
| 3755 for (i = 0, j = start; i < nkeys; i++) | |
| 3756 { | |
| 3757 Lisp_Object e = XVECTOR_DATA (Vrecent_keys_ring)[j]; | |
| 3758 | |
|
5050
6f2158fa75ed
Fix quick-build, use asserts() in place of ABORT()
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4976
diff
changeset
|
3759 assert (!NILP (e)); |
| 428 | 3760 XVECTOR_DATA (val)[i] = Fcopy_event (e, Qnil); |
| 3761 if (++j >= recent_keys_ring_size) | |
| 3762 j = 0; | |
| 3763 } | |
| 3764 UNGCPRO; | |
| 3765 return val; | |
| 3766 } | |
| 3767 | |
| 3768 | |
| 3769 DEFUN ("recent-keys-ring-size", Frecent_keys_ring_size, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 3770 The maximum number of events `recent-keys' can return. | |
| 3771 */ | |
| 3772 ()) | |
| 3773 { | |
|
5581
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Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3774 return make_fixnum (recent_keys_ring_size); |
| 428 | 3775 } |
| 3776 | |
| 3777 DEFUN ("set-recent-keys-ring-size", Fset_recent_keys_ring_size, 1, 1, 0, /* | |
| 3778 Set the maximum number of events to be stored internally. | |
| 3779 */ | |
| 3780 (size)) | |
| 3781 { | |
| 3782 Lisp_Object new_vector = Qnil; | |
| 3783 int i, j, nkeys, start, min; | |
| 3784 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 3785 | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3786 CHECK_FIXNUM (size); |
|
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3787 if (XFIXNUM (size) <= 0) |
| 563 | 3788 invalid_argument ("Recent keys ring size must be positive", size); |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3789 if (XFIXNUM (size) == recent_keys_ring_size) |
| 428 | 3790 return size; |
| 3791 | |
| 446 | 3792 GCPRO1 (new_vector); |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3793 new_vector = make_vector (XFIXNUM (size), Qnil); |
| 428 | 3794 |
| 3795 if (NILP (Vrecent_keys_ring)) | |
| 3796 { | |
| 3797 Vrecent_keys_ring = new_vector; | |
| 446 | 3798 RETURN_UNGCPRO (size); |
| 428 | 3799 } |
| 3800 | |
| 3801 if (NILP (XVECTOR_DATA (Vrecent_keys_ring)[recent_keys_ring_index])) | |
| 3802 /* This means the vector has not yet wrapped */ | |
| 3803 { | |
| 3804 nkeys = recent_keys_ring_index; | |
| 3805 start = 0; | |
| 3806 } | |
| 3807 else | |
| 3808 { | |
| 3809 nkeys = recent_keys_ring_size; | |
| 3810 start = ((recent_keys_ring_index == nkeys) ? 0 : recent_keys_ring_index); | |
| 3811 } | |
| 3812 | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3813 if (XFIXNUM (size) > nkeys) |
| 428 | 3814 min = nkeys; |
| 3815 else | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3816 min = XFIXNUM (size); |
| 428 | 3817 |
| 3818 for (i = 0, j = start; i < min; i++) | |
| 3819 { | |
| 3820 XVECTOR_DATA (new_vector)[i] = XVECTOR_DATA (Vrecent_keys_ring)[j]; | |
| 3821 if (++j >= recent_keys_ring_size) | |
| 3822 j = 0; | |
| 3823 } | |
|
5581
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Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
3824 recent_keys_ring_size = XFIXNUM (size); |
| 428 | 3825 recent_keys_ring_index = (i < recent_keys_ring_size) ? i : 0; |
| 3826 | |
| 3827 Vrecent_keys_ring = new_vector; | |
| 3828 | |
| 3829 UNGCPRO; | |
| 3830 return size; | |
| 3831 } | |
| 3832 | |
| 3833 /* Vthis_command_keys having value Qnil means that the next time | |
| 3834 push_this_command_keys is called, it should start over. | |
| 3835 The times at which the command-keys are reset | |
| 3836 (instead of merely being augmented) are pretty counterintuitive. | |
| 3837 (More specifically: | |
| 3838 | |
| 3839 -- We do not reset this-command-keys when we finish reading a | |
| 3840 command. This is because some commands (e.g. C-u) act | |
| 3841 like command prefixes; they signal this by setting prefix-arg | |
| 3842 to non-nil. | |
| 3843 -- Therefore, we reset this-command-keys when we finish | |
| 3844 executing a command, unless prefix-arg is set. | |
| 3845 -- However, if we ever do a non-local exit out of a command | |
| 3846 loop (e.g. an error in a command), we need to reset | |
| 3847 this-command-keys. We do this by calling reset_this_command_keys() | |
| 3848 from cmdloop.c, whenever an error causes an invocation of the | |
| 3849 default error handler, and whenever there's a throw to top-level.) | |
| 3850 */ | |
| 3851 | |
| 3852 void | |
| 3853 reset_this_command_keys (Lisp_Object console, int clear_echo_area_p) | |
| 3854 { | |
| 757 | 3855 if (!NILP (console)) |
| 3856 { | |
| 3857 /* console is nil if we just deleted the console as a result of C-x 5 | |
| 3858 0. Unfortunately things are currently in a messy situation where | |
| 3859 some stuff is console-local and other stuff isn't, so we need to | |
| 3860 do everything that's not console-local. */ | |
| 3861 struct command_builder *command_builder = | |
| 3862 XCOMMAND_BUILDER (XCONSOLE (console)->command_builder); | |
| 3863 | |
| 3864 reset_key_echo (command_builder, clear_echo_area_p); | |
| 3865 reset_current_events (command_builder); | |
| 3866 } | |
| 3867 else | |
| 3868 reset_key_echo (0, clear_echo_area_p); | |
| 428 | 3869 |
| 3870 deallocate_event_chain (Vthis_command_keys); | |
| 3871 Vthis_command_keys = Qnil; | |
| 3872 Vthis_command_keys_tail = Qnil; | |
| 3873 } | |
| 3874 | |
| 3875 static void | |
| 3876 push_this_command_keys (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 3877 { | |
| 3025 | 3878 Lisp_Object new_ = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); |
| 3879 | |
| 3880 Fcopy_event (event, new_); | |
| 3881 enqueue_event (new_, &Vthis_command_keys, &Vthis_command_keys_tail); | |
| 428 | 3882 } |
| 3883 | |
| 3884 /* The following two functions are used in call-interactively, | |
| 3885 for the @ and e specifications. We used to just use | |
| 3886 `current-mouse-event' (i.e. the last mouse event in this-command-keys), | |
| 3887 but FSF does it more generally so we follow their lead. */ | |
| 3888 | |
| 3889 Lisp_Object | |
| 3890 extract_this_command_keys_nth_mouse_event (int n) | |
| 3891 { | |
| 3892 Lisp_Object event; | |
| 3893 | |
| 3894 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, Vthis_command_keys) | |
| 3895 { | |
| 3896 if (EVENTP (event) | |
| 3897 && (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == button_press_event | |
| 3898 || XEVENT_TYPE (event) == button_release_event | |
| 3899 || XEVENT_TYPE (event) == misc_user_event)) | |
| 3900 { | |
| 3901 if (!n) | |
| 3902 { | |
| 2500 | 3903 /* must copy to avoid an ABORT() in next_event_internal() */ |
| 428 | 3904 if (!NILP (XEVENT_NEXT (event))) |
| 3905 return Fcopy_event (event, Qnil); | |
| 3906 else | |
| 3907 return event; | |
| 3908 } | |
| 3909 n--; | |
| 3910 } | |
| 3911 } | |
| 3912 | |
| 3913 return Qnil; | |
| 3914 } | |
| 3915 | |
| 3916 Lisp_Object | |
| 3917 extract_vector_nth_mouse_event (Lisp_Object vector, int n) | |
| 3918 { | |
| 3919 int i; | |
| 3920 int len = XVECTOR_LENGTH (vector); | |
| 3921 | |
| 3922 for (i = 0; i < len; i++) | |
| 3923 { | |
| 3924 Lisp_Object event = XVECTOR_DATA (vector)[i]; | |
| 3925 if (EVENTP (event)) | |
| 3926 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) | |
| 3927 { | |
| 3928 case button_press_event : | |
| 3929 case button_release_event : | |
| 3930 case misc_user_event : | |
| 3931 if (n == 0) | |
| 3932 return event; | |
| 3933 n--; | |
| 3934 break; | |
| 3935 default: | |
| 3936 continue; | |
| 3937 } | |
| 3938 } | |
| 3939 | |
| 3940 return Qnil; | |
| 3941 } | |
| 3942 | |
| 3943 static void | |
| 3944 push_recent_keys (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 3945 { | |
| 3946 Lisp_Object e; | |
| 3947 | |
| 3948 if (NILP (Vrecent_keys_ring)) | |
| 3949 Vrecent_keys_ring = make_vector (recent_keys_ring_size, Qnil); | |
| 3950 | |
| 3951 e = XVECTOR_DATA (Vrecent_keys_ring) [recent_keys_ring_index]; | |
| 3952 | |
| 3953 if (NILP (e)) | |
| 3954 { | |
| 3955 e = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 3956 XVECTOR_DATA (Vrecent_keys_ring) [recent_keys_ring_index] = e; | |
| 3957 } | |
| 3958 Fcopy_event (event, e); | |
| 3959 if (++recent_keys_ring_index == recent_keys_ring_size) | |
| 3960 recent_keys_ring_index = 0; | |
| 3961 } | |
| 3962 | |
| 3963 | |
| 3964 static Lisp_Object | |
| 3965 current_events_into_vector (struct command_builder *command_builder) | |
| 3966 { | |
| 3967 Lisp_Object vector; | |
| 3968 Lisp_Object event; | |
| 3969 int n = event_chain_count (command_builder->current_events); | |
| 3970 | |
| 3971 /* Copy the vector and the events in it. */ | |
| 3972 /* No need to copy the events, since they're already copies, and | |
| 3973 nobody other than the command-builder has pointers to them */ | |
| 3974 vector = make_vector (n, Qnil); | |
| 3975 n = 0; | |
| 3976 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, command_builder->current_events) | |
| 3977 XVECTOR_DATA (vector)[n++] = event; | |
| 3978 reset_command_builder_event_chain (command_builder); | |
| 3979 return vector; | |
| 3980 } | |
| 3981 | |
| 3982 | |
| 3983 /* | |
| 3984 Given the current state of the command builder and a new command event | |
| 3985 that has just been dispatched: | |
| 3986 | |
| 3987 -- add the event to the event chain forming the current command | |
| 3988 (doing meta-translation as necessary) | |
| 3989 -- return the binding of this event chain; this will be one of: | |
| 3990 -- nil (there is no binding) | |
| 3991 -- a keymap (part of a command has been specified) | |
| 3992 -- a command (anything that satisfies `commandp'; this includes | |
| 3993 some symbols, lists, subrs, strings, vectors, and | |
| 3994 compiled-function objects) | |
| 3995 */ | |
| 3996 static Lisp_Object | |
| 3997 lookup_command_event (struct command_builder *command_builder, | |
| 3998 Lisp_Object event, int allow_misc_user_events_p) | |
| 3999 { | |
| 4000 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 4001 struct frame *f = selected_frame (); | |
| 4002 /* Clear output from previous command execution */ | |
| 4003 if (!EQ (Qcommand, echo_area_status (f)) | |
| 4004 /* but don't let mouse-up clear what mouse-down just printed */ | |
| 4005 && (XEVENT (event)->event_type != button_release_event)) | |
| 4006 clear_echo_area (f, Qnil, 0); | |
| 4007 | |
| 4008 /* Add the given event to the command builder. | |
| 4009 Extra hack: this also updates the recent_keys_ring and Vthis_command_keys | |
| 4010 vectors to translate "ESC x" to "M-x" (for any "x" of course). | |
| 4011 */ | |
| 4012 { | |
| 4013 Lisp_Object recent = command_builder->most_current_event; | |
| 4014 | |
| 4015 if (EVENTP (recent) | |
| 1204 | 4016 && event_matches_key_specifier_p (recent, Vmeta_prefix_char)) |
| 428 | 4017 { |
| 440 | 4018 Lisp_Event *e; |
| 428 | 4019 /* When we see a sequence like "ESC x", pretend we really saw "M-x". |
| 4020 DoubleThink the recent-keys and this-command-keys as well. */ | |
| 4021 | |
| 4022 /* Modify the previous most-recently-pushed event on the command | |
| 4023 builder to be a copy of this one with the meta-bit set instead of | |
| 4024 pushing a new event. | |
| 4025 */ | |
| 4026 Fcopy_event (event, recent); | |
| 4027 e = XEVENT (recent); | |
| 934 | 4028 if (EVENT_TYPE (e) == key_press_event) |
| 1204 | 4029 SET_EVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (e, EVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (e) | |
| 4030 XEMACS_MOD_META); | |
| 934 | 4031 else if (EVENT_TYPE (e) == button_press_event |
| 4032 || EVENT_TYPE (e) == button_release_event) | |
| 1204 | 4033 SET_EVENT_BUTTON_MODIFIERS (e, EVENT_BUTTON_MODIFIERS (e) | |
| 4034 XEMACS_MOD_META); | |
| 428 | 4035 else |
| 2500 | 4036 ABORT (); |
| 428 | 4037 |
| 4038 { | |
| 4039 int tckn = event_chain_count (Vthis_command_keys); | |
| 4040 if (tckn >= 2) | |
| 4041 /* ??? very strange if it's < 2. */ | |
| 4042 this_command_keys_replace_suffix | |
| 4043 (event_chain_nth (Vthis_command_keys, tckn - 2), | |
| 4044 Fcopy_event (recent, Qnil)); | |
| 4045 } | |
| 4046 | |
| 4047 regenerate_echo_keys_from_this_command_keys (command_builder); | |
| 4048 } | |
| 4049 else | |
| 771 | 4050 command_builder_append_event (command_builder, event); |
| 428 | 4051 } |
| 4052 | |
| 4053 { | |
| 771 | 4054 Lisp_Object leaf = |
| 4055 command_builder_find_leaf_and_update_global_state | |
| 4056 (command_builder, | |
| 4057 allow_misc_user_events_p); | |
| 428 | 4058 struct gcpro gcpro1; |
| 4059 GCPRO1 (leaf); | |
| 4060 | |
| 4061 if (KEYMAPP (leaf)) | |
| 4062 { | |
| 442 | 4063 #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) && defined (LWLIB_MENUBARS_LUCID) |
| 4064 if (!x_kludge_lw_menu_active ()) | |
| 4065 #else | |
| 4066 if (1) | |
| 4067 #endif | |
| 428 | 4068 { |
| 4069 Lisp_Object prompt = Fkeymap_prompt (leaf, Qt); | |
| 4070 if (STRINGP (prompt)) | |
| 4071 { | |
| 4072 /* Append keymap prompt to key echo buffer */ | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4073 int buf_fill_pointer = command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer; |
| 428 | 4074 Bytecount len = XSTRING_LENGTH (prompt); |
| 4075 | |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4076 if (len + buf_fill_pointer + 1 |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4077 <= XSTRING_LENGTH (command_builder->echo_buf)) |
| 428 | 4078 { |
|
5803
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4079 memcpy (XSTRING_DATA (command_builder->echo_buf) |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4080 + buf_fill_pointer, |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4081 XSTRING_DATA (prompt), |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4082 len); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4083 copy_string_extents (command_builder->echo_buf, prompt, |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4084 buf_fill_pointer, 0, len); |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4085 |
|
b79e1e02bf01
Preserve extent information in the command builder code.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4086 init_string_ascii_begin (command_builder->echo_buf); |
|
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5801
diff
changeset
|
4087 bump_string_modiff (command_builder->echo_buf); |
|
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4088 sledgehammer_check_ascii_begin (command_builder->echo_buf); |
|
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parents:
5801
diff
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|
4089 |
|
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4090 /* Show the keymap prompt, but don't adjust the fill |
|
b79e1e02bf01
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4091 pointer to reflect it. */ |
|
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parents:
5801
diff
changeset
|
4092 command_builder->echo_buf_end |
|
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5801
diff
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|
4093 = command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer + len; |
| 428 | 4094 } |
| 4095 maybe_echo_keys (command_builder, 1); | |
| 4096 } | |
| 4097 else | |
| 4098 maybe_echo_keys (command_builder, 0); | |
| 4099 } | |
| 853 | 4100 /* #### i don't trust this at all. --ben */ |
| 4101 #if 0 | |
| 442 | 4102 else if (!NILP (Vquit_flag)) |
| 4103 { | |
| 4104 /* if quit happened during menu acceleration, pretend we read it */ | |
| 4105 struct console *con = XCONSOLE (Fselected_console ()); | |
| 1204 | 4106 |
| 4107 enqueue_command_event (Fcopy_event (CONSOLE_QUIT_EVENT (con), | |
| 4108 Qnil)); | |
| 442 | 4109 Vquit_flag = Qnil; |
| 4110 } | |
| 853 | 4111 #endif |
| 428 | 4112 } |
| 4113 else if (!NILP (leaf)) | |
| 4114 { | |
| 4115 if (EQ (Qcommand, echo_area_status (f)) | |
|
5803
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5801
diff
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|
4116 && command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer > 0) |
| 428 | 4117 { |
| 4118 /* If we had been echoing keys, echo the last one (without | |
| 4119 the trailing dash) and redisplay before executing the | |
| 4120 command. */ | |
|
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5801
diff
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|
4121 command_builder->echo_buf_end = |
|
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
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5801
diff
changeset
|
4122 command_builder->echo_buf_fill_pointer; |
| 428 | 4123 maybe_echo_keys (command_builder, 1); |
| 4124 Fsit_for (Qzero, Qt); | |
| 4125 } | |
| 4126 } | |
| 4127 RETURN_UNGCPRO (leaf); | |
| 4128 } | |
| 4129 } | |
| 4130 | |
| 479 | 4131 static int |
| 4932 | 4132 is_scrollbar_event (Lisp_Object USED_IF_SCROLLBARS (event)) |
| 479 | 4133 { |
| 516 | 4134 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS |
| 479 | 4135 Lisp_Object fun; |
| 4136 | |
| 934 | 4137 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) != misc_user_event) |
| 4138 return 0; | |
| 1204 | 4139 fun = XEVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event); |
| 479 | 4140 |
| 4141 return (EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_line_up) || | |
| 4142 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_line_down) || | |
| 4143 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_page_up) || | |
| 4144 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_page_down) || | |
| 4145 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_to_top) || | |
| 4146 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_to_bottom) || | |
| 4147 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_vertical_drag) || | |
| 4148 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_char_left) || | |
| 4149 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_char_right) || | |
| 4150 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_page_left) || | |
| 4151 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_page_right) || | |
| 4152 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_to_left) || | |
| 4153 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_to_right) || | |
| 4154 EQ (fun, Qscrollbar_horizontal_drag)); | |
| 516 | 4155 #else |
| 4156 return 0; | |
| 4157 #endif /* HAVE_SCROLLBARS */ | |
| 479 | 4158 } |
| 4159 | |
| 428 | 4160 static void |
| 4161 execute_command_event (struct command_builder *command_builder, | |
| 4162 Lisp_Object event) | |
| 4163 { | |
| 4164 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 4165 struct console *con = XCONSOLE (command_builder->console); | |
| 4166 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 4167 | |
| 4168 GCPRO1 (event); /* event may be freshly created */ | |
| 444 | 4169 |
| 479 | 4170 /* #### This call to is_scrollbar_event() isn't quite right, but |
| 4171 fixing properly it requires more work than can go into 21.4. | |
| 4172 (We really need to split out menu, scrollbar, dialog, and other | |
| 4173 types of events from misc-user, and put the remaining ones in a | |
| 4174 new `user-eval' type that behaves like an eval event but is a | |
| 4175 user event and thus has all of its semantics -- e.g. being | |
| 4176 delayed during `accept-process-output' and similar wait states.) | |
| 4177 | |
| 4178 The real issue here is that "user events" and "command events" | |
| 4179 are not the same thing, but are very much confused in | |
| 4180 event-stream.c. User events are, essentially, any event that | |
| 4181 should be delayed by accept-process-output, should terminate a | |
| 4182 sit-for, etc. -- basically, any event that needs to be processed | |
| 4183 synchronously with key and mouse events. Command events are | |
| 4184 those that participate in command building; scrollbar events | |
| 4185 clearly don't belong because they should be transparent in a | |
| 4186 sequence like C-x @ h <scrollbar-drag> x, which used to cause a | |
| 4187 crash before checks similar to the is_scrollbar_event() call were | |
| 4188 added. Do other events belong with scrollbar events? I'm not | |
| 4189 sure; we need to categorize all misc-user events and see what | |
| 4190 their semantics are. | |
| 4191 | |
| 4192 (You might ask, why do scrollbar events need to be user events? | |
| 4193 That's a good question. The answer seems to be that they can | |
| 4194 change point, and having this happen asynchronously would be a | |
| 4195 very bad idea. According to the "proper" functioning of | |
| 4196 scrollbars, this should not happen, but XEmacs does not allow | |
| 4197 point to go outside of the window.) | |
| 4198 | |
| 4199 Scrollbar events and similar non-command events should obviously | |
| 4200 not be recorded in this-command-keys, so we need to check for | |
| 4201 this in next-event. | |
| 4202 | |
| 4203 #### We call reset_current_events() twice in this function -- | |
| 4204 #### here, and later as a result of reset_this_command_keys(). | |
| 4205 #### This is almost certainly wrong; need to figure out what's | |
| 4206 #### correct. | |
| 4207 | |
| 4208 #### We need to figure out what's really correct w.r.t. scrollbar | |
| 4209 #### events. With these new fixes in, it actually works to do | |
| 4210 #### C-x <scrollbar-drag> 5 2, but the key echo gets messed up | |
| 4211 #### (starts over at 5). We really need to be special-casing | |
| 4212 #### scrollbar events at a lower level, and not really passing | |
| 4213 #### them through the command builder at all. (e.g. do scrollbar | |
| 4214 #### events belong in macros??? doubtful; probably only the | |
| 4215 #### point movement, if any, belongs, special-cased as a | |
| 4216 #### pseudo-issued M-x goto-char command). #### Need more work | |
| 4217 #### here. Do this when separating out scrollbar events. | |
| 4218 */ | |
| 4219 | |
| 4220 if (!is_scrollbar_event (event)) | |
| 444 | 4221 reset_current_events (command_builder); |
| 428 | 4222 |
| 4223 switch (XEVENT (event)->event_type) | |
| 4224 { | |
| 4225 case key_press_event: | |
| 4226 Vcurrent_mouse_event = Qnil; | |
| 4227 break; | |
| 4228 case button_press_event: | |
| 4229 case button_release_event: | |
| 4230 case misc_user_event: | |
| 4231 Vcurrent_mouse_event = Fcopy_event (event, Qnil); | |
| 4232 break; | |
| 4233 default: break; | |
| 4234 } | |
| 4235 | |
| 4236 /* Store the last-command-event. The semantics of this is that it | |
| 4237 is the last event most recently involved in command-lookup. */ | |
| 4238 if (!EVENTP (Vlast_command_event)) | |
| 4239 Vlast_command_event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 4240 if (XEVENT (Vlast_command_event)->event_type == dead_event) | |
| 4241 { | |
| 4242 Vlast_command_event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 563 | 4243 invalid_state ("Someone deallocated the last-command-event!", Qunbound); |
| 428 | 4244 } |
| 4245 | |
| 4246 if (! EQ (event, Vlast_command_event)) | |
| 4247 Fcopy_event (event, Vlast_command_event); | |
| 4248 | |
| 4249 /* Note that last-command-char will never have its high-bit set, in | |
| 4250 an effort to sidestep the ambiguity between M-x and oslash. */ | |
| 4251 Vlast_command_char = Fevent_to_character (Vlast_command_event, | |
| 2862 | 4252 Qnil, Qnil, Qnil); |
| 428 | 4253 |
| 4254 /* Actually call the command, with all sorts of hair to preserve or clear | |
| 4255 the echo-area and region as appropriate and call the pre- and post- | |
| 4256 command-hooks. */ | |
| 4257 { | |
| 4258 int old_kbd_macro = con->kbd_macro_end; | |
| 4259 struct window *w = XWINDOW (Fselected_window (Qnil)); | |
| 4260 | |
| 4261 /* We're executing a new command, so the old value is irrelevant. */ | |
| 4262 zmacs_region_stays = 0; | |
| 4263 | |
| 4264 /* If the previous command tried to force a specific window-start, | |
| 4265 reset the flag in case this command moves point far away from | |
| 4266 that position. Also, reset the window's buffer's change | |
| 4267 information so that we don't trigger an incremental update. */ | |
| 4268 if (w->force_start) | |
| 4269 { | |
| 4270 w->force_start = 0; | |
| 4271 buffer_reset_changes (XBUFFER (w->buffer)); | |
| 4272 } | |
| 4273 | |
| 4274 pre_command_hook (); | |
| 4275 | |
| 934 | 4276 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == misc_user_event) |
| 4277 { | |
| 1204 | 4278 call1 (XEVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event), |
| 4279 XEVENT_MISC_USER_OBJECT (event)); | |
| 934 | 4280 } |
| 428 | 4281 else |
| 4282 { | |
| 4283 Fcommand_execute (Vthis_command, Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 4284 } | |
| 4285 | |
| 4286 post_command_hook (); | |
| 4287 | |
| 757 | 4288 /* Console might have been deleted by command */ |
| 4289 if (CONSOLE_LIVE_P (con) && !NILP (con->prefix_arg)) | |
| 428 | 4290 { |
| 4291 /* Commands that set the prefix arg don't update last-command, don't | |
| 4292 reset the echoing state, and don't go into keyboard macros unless | |
| 444 | 4293 followed by another command. Also don't quit here. */ |
| 4294 int speccount = specpdl_depth (); | |
| 4295 specbind (Qinhibit_quit, Qt); | |
| 428 | 4296 maybe_echo_keys (command_builder, 0); |
| 771 | 4297 unbind_to (speccount); |
| 428 | 4298 |
| 4299 /* If we're recording a keyboard macro, and the last command | |
| 4300 executed set a prefix argument, then decrement the pointer to | |
| 4301 the "last character really in the macro" to be just before this | |
| 4302 command. This is so that the ^U in "^U ^X )" doesn't go onto | |
| 4303 the end of macro. */ | |
| 4304 if (!NILP (con->defining_kbd_macro)) | |
| 4305 con->kbd_macro_end = old_kbd_macro; | |
| 4306 } | |
| 4307 else | |
| 4308 { | |
| 4309 /* Start a new command next time */ | |
| 4310 Vlast_command = Vthis_command; | |
| 442 | 4311 Vlast_command_properties = Vthis_command_properties; |
| 4312 Vthis_command_properties = Qnil; | |
| 4313 | |
| 428 | 4314 /* Emacs 18 doesn't unconditionally clear the echoed keystrokes, |
| 4315 so we don't either */ | |
| 479 | 4316 |
| 4317 if (!is_scrollbar_event (event)) | |
| 771 | 4318 reset_this_command_keys (CONSOLE_LIVE_P (con) ? wrap_console (con) |
| 757 | 4319 : Qnil, 0); |
| 428 | 4320 } |
| 4321 } | |
| 4322 | |
| 4323 UNGCPRO; | |
| 4324 } | |
| 4325 | |
| 4326 /* Run the pre command hook. */ | |
| 4327 | |
| 4328 static void | |
| 4329 pre_command_hook (void) | |
| 4330 { | |
| 4331 last_point_position = BUF_PT (current_buffer); | |
| 793 | 4332 last_point_position_buffer = wrap_buffer (current_buffer); |
| 428 | 4333 /* This function can GC */ |
| 853 | 4334 safe_run_hook_trapping_problems |
| 1333 | 4335 (Qcommand, Qpre_command_hook, |
| 4336 INHIBIT_EXISTING_PERMANENT_DISPLAY_OBJECT_DELETION); | |
| 442 | 4337 |
| 4338 /* This is a kludge, but necessary; see simple.el */ | |
| 4339 call0 (Qhandle_pre_motion_command); | |
| 428 | 4340 } |
| 4341 | |
| 4342 /* Run the post command hook. */ | |
| 4343 | |
| 4344 static void | |
| 4345 post_command_hook (void) | |
| 4346 { | |
| 4347 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 4348 /* Turn off region highlighting unless this command requested that | |
| 4349 it be left on, or we're in the minibuffer. We don't turn it off | |
| 4350 when we're in the minibuffer so that things like M-x write-region | |
| 4351 still work! | |
| 4352 | |
| 4353 This could be done via a function on the post-command-hook, but | |
| 4354 we don't want the user to accidentally remove it. | |
| 4355 */ | |
| 4356 | |
| 4357 Lisp_Object win = Fselected_window (Qnil); | |
| 4358 | |
| 4359 /* If the last command deleted the frame, `win' might be nil. | |
| 4360 It seems safest to do nothing in this case. */ | |
| 442 | 4361 /* Note: Someone added the following comment and put #if 0's around |
| 4362 this code, not realizing that doing this invites a crash in the | |
| 4363 line after. */ | |
| 440 | 4364 /* #### This doesn't really fix the problem, |
| 428 | 4365 if delete-frame is called by some hook */ |
| 4366 if (NILP (win)) | |
| 4367 return; | |
| 442 | 4368 |
| 4369 /* This is a kludge, but necessary; see simple.el */ | |
| 4370 call0 (Qhandle_post_motion_command); | |
| 428 | 4371 |
| 4372 if (! zmacs_region_stays | |
| 4373 && (!MINI_WINDOW_P (XWINDOW (win)) | |
| 4374 || EQ (zmacs_region_buffer (), WINDOW_BUFFER (XWINDOW (win))))) | |
| 4375 zmacs_deactivate_region (); | |
| 4376 else | |
| 4377 zmacs_update_region (); | |
| 4378 | |
| 853 | 4379 safe_run_hook_trapping_problems |
| 1333 | 4380 (Qcommand, Qpost_command_hook, |
|
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Mike Sperber <sperber@deinprogramm.de>
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diff
changeset
|
4381 NO_INHIBIT_THROWS); |
| 853 | 4382 |
| 4383 #if 0 /* FSF Emacs */ | |
| 4384 if (!NILP (current_buffer->mark_active)) | |
| 4385 { | |
| 4386 if (!NILP (Vdeactivate_mark) && !NILP (Vtransient_mark_mode)) | |
| 4387 { | |
| 4388 current_buffer->mark_active = Qnil; | |
| 4389 run_hook (intern ("deactivate-mark-hook")); | |
| 4390 } | |
| 4391 else if (current_buffer != prev_buffer || | |
| 4392 BUF_MODIFF (current_buffer) != prev_modiff) | |
| 4393 run_hook (intern ("activate-mark-hook")); | |
| 4394 } | |
| 4395 #endif /* FSF Emacs */ | |
| 428 | 4396 |
| 4397 /* #### Kludge!!! This is necessary to make sure that things | |
| 4398 are properly positioned even if post-command-hook moves point. | |
| 4399 #### There should be a cleaner way of handling this. */ | |
| 4400 call0 (Qauto_show_make_point_visible); | |
| 4401 } | |
| 4402 | |
| 4403 | |
| 4404 DEFUN ("dispatch-event", Fdispatch_event, 1, 1, 0, /* | |
| 444 | 4405 Given an event object EVENT as returned by `next-event', execute it. |
| 428 | 4406 |
| 4407 Key-press, button-press, and button-release events get accumulated | |
| 4408 until a complete key sequence (see `read-key-sequence') is reached, | |
| 4409 at which point the sequence is looked up in the current keymaps and | |
| 4410 acted upon. | |
| 4411 | |
| 4412 Mouse motion events cause the low-level handling function stored in | |
| 4413 `mouse-motion-handler' to be called. (There are very few circumstances | |
| 4414 under which you should change this handler. Use `mode-motion-hook' | |
| 4415 instead.) | |
| 4416 | |
| 4417 Menu, timeout, and eval events cause the associated function or handler | |
| 4418 to be called. | |
| 4419 | |
| 4420 Process events cause the subprocess's output to be read and acted upon | |
| 4421 appropriately (see `start-process'). | |
| 4422 | |
| 4423 Magic events are handled as necessary. | |
| 4424 */ | |
| 4425 (event)) | |
| 4426 { | |
| 4427 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 4428 struct command_builder *command_builder; | |
| 440 | 4429 Lisp_Event *ev; |
| 428 | 4430 Lisp_Object console; |
| 4431 Lisp_Object channel; | |
| 1292 | 4432 PROFILE_DECLARE (); |
| 428 | 4433 |
| 4434 CHECK_LIVE_EVENT (event); | |
| 4435 ev = XEVENT (event); | |
| 4436 | |
| 4437 /* events on dead channels get silently eaten */ | |
| 4438 channel = EVENT_CHANNEL (ev); | |
| 4439 if (object_dead_p (channel)) | |
| 4440 return Qnil; | |
| 4441 | |
| 1292 | 4442 PROFILE_RECORD_ENTERING_SECTION (Qdispatch_event); |
| 4443 | |
| 428 | 4444 /* Some events don't have channels (e.g. eval events). */ |
| 4445 console = CDFW_CONSOLE (channel); | |
| 4446 if (NILP (console)) | |
| 4447 console = Vselected_console; | |
| 4448 else if (!EQ (console, Vselected_console)) | |
| 4449 Fselect_console (console); | |
| 4450 | |
| 4451 command_builder = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (XCONSOLE (console)->command_builder); | |
| 934 | 4452 switch (XEVENT_TYPE (event)) |
| 428 | 4453 { |
| 4454 case button_press_event: | |
| 4455 case button_release_event: | |
| 4456 case key_press_event: | |
| 4457 { | |
| 4458 Lisp_Object leaf = lookup_command_event (command_builder, event, 1); | |
| 4459 | |
|
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
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5307
diff
changeset
|
4460 lookedup: |
| 428 | 4461 if (KEYMAPP (leaf)) |
| 4462 /* Incomplete key sequence */ | |
| 4463 break; | |
| 4464 if (NILP (leaf)) | |
| 4465 { | |
| 4466 /* At this point, we know that the sequence is not bound to a | |
| 4467 command. Normally, we beep and print a message informing the | |
| 4468 user of this. But we do not beep or print a message when: | |
| 4469 | |
| 4470 o the last event in this sequence is a mouse-up event; or | |
| 4471 o the last event in this sequence is a mouse-down event and | |
| 4472 there is a binding for the mouse-up version. | |
| 4473 | |
| 4474 That is, if the sequence ``C-x button1'' is typed, and is not | |
| 4475 bound to a command, but the sequence ``C-x button1up'' is bound | |
| 4476 to a command, we do not complain about the ``C-x button1'' | |
| 4477 sequence. If neither ``C-x button1'' nor ``C-x button1up'' is | |
| 4478 bound to a command, then we complain about the ``C-x button1'' | |
| 4479 sequence, but later will *not* complain about the | |
| 4480 ``C-x button1up'' sequence, which would be redundant. | |
| 4481 | |
| 4482 This is pretty hairy, but I think it's the most intuitive | |
| 4483 behavior. | |
| 4484 */ | |
| 4485 Lisp_Object terminal = command_builder->most_current_event; | |
| 4486 | |
| 4487 if (XEVENT_TYPE (terminal) == button_press_event) | |
| 4488 { | |
| 4489 int no_bitching; | |
| 4490 /* Temporarily pretend the last event was an "up" instead of a | |
| 4491 "down", and look up its binding. */ | |
| 4492 XEVENT_TYPE (terminal) = button_release_event; | |
| 4493 /* If the "up" version is bound, don't complain. */ | |
| 4494 no_bitching | |
| 771 | 4495 = !NILP (command_builder_find_leaf_and_update_global_state |
| 4496 (command_builder, 0)); | |
| 428 | 4497 /* Undo the temporary changes we just made. */ |
| 4498 XEVENT_TYPE (terminal) = button_press_event; | |
| 4499 if (no_bitching) | |
| 4500 { | |
| 4501 /* Pretend this press was not seen (treat as a prefix) */ | |
| 4502 if (EQ (command_builder->current_events, terminal)) | |
| 4503 { | |
| 4504 reset_current_events (command_builder); | |
| 4505 } | |
| 4506 else | |
| 4507 { | |
| 4508 Lisp_Object eve; | |
| 4509 | |
| 4510 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (eve, command_builder->current_events) | |
| 4511 if (EQ (XEVENT_NEXT (eve), terminal)) | |
| 4512 break; | |
| 4513 | |
| 4514 Fdeallocate_event (command_builder-> | |
| 4515 most_current_event); | |
| 4516 XSET_EVENT_NEXT (eve, Qnil); | |
| 4517 command_builder->most_current_event = eve; | |
| 4518 } | |
| 4519 maybe_echo_keys (command_builder, 1); | |
| 4520 break; | |
| 4521 } | |
| 4522 } | |
| 4523 | |
| 4524 /* Complain that the typed sequence is not defined, if this is the | |
| 4525 kind of sequence that warrants a complaint. */ | |
| 4526 XCONSOLE (console)->defining_kbd_macro = Qnil; | |
| 4527 XCONSOLE (console)->prefix_arg = Qnil; | |
| 4528 /* Don't complain about undefined button-release events */ | |
| 4529 if (XEVENT_TYPE (terminal) != button_release_event) | |
| 4530 { | |
| 4531 Lisp_Object keys = current_events_into_vector (command_builder); | |
| 4532 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 4533 | |
| 4534 /* Run the pre-command-hook before barfing about an undefined | |
| 4535 key. */ | |
| 4536 Vthis_command = Qnil; | |
| 4537 GCPRO1 (keys); | |
| 4538 pre_command_hook (); | |
| 4539 UNGCPRO; | |
|
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|
4540 |
|
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diff
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|
4541 if (!NILP (Vthis_command)) |
|
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changeset
|
4542 { |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4543 /* Allow pre-command-hook to change the command to |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4544 something more useful, and avoid barfing. */ |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4545 leaf = Vthis_command; |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4546 if (!EQ (command_builder->most_current_event, |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4547 Vlast_command_event)) |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4548 { |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4549 reset_current_events (command_builder); |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4550 command_builder_append_event (command_builder, |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4551 Vlast_command_event); |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4552 } |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4553 goto lookedup; |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4554 } |
|
6f10ac29bf40
Be better about searching for chars typed via XIM and x-compose.el, isearch
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5307
diff
changeset
|
4555 |
| 428 | 4556 /* The post-command-hook doesn't run. */ |
| 4557 Fsignal (Qundefined_keystroke_sequence, list1 (keys)); | |
| 4558 } | |
| 4559 /* Reset the command builder for reading the next sequence. */ | |
| 4560 reset_this_command_keys (console, 1); | |
| 4561 } | |
| 4562 else /* key sequence is bound to a command */ | |
| 4563 { | |
| 430 | 4564 int magic_undo = 0; |
|
5307
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4565 Elemcount magic_undo_count = 20; |
| 430 | 4566 |
|
5691
b490ddbd42aa
Back out 7371081ce8f7, I have a better approach.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5689
diff
changeset
|
4567 Vthis_command = leaf; |
|
b490ddbd42aa
Back out 7371081ce8f7, I have a better approach.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5689
diff
changeset
|
4568 |
| 428 | 4569 /* Don't push an undo boundary if the command set the prefix arg, |
| 4570 or if we are executing a keyboard macro, or if in the | |
| 4571 minibuffer. If the command we are about to execute is | |
| 4572 self-insert, it's tricky: up to 20 consecutive self-inserts may | |
| 4573 be done without an undo boundary. This counter is reset as | |
| 4574 soon as a command other than self-insert-command is executed. | |
| 430 | 4575 |
| 442 | 4576 Programmers can also use the `self-insert-defer-undo' |
| 4577 property to install that behavior on functions other | |
| 430 | 4578 than `self-insert-command', or to change the magic |
| 442 | 4579 number 20 to something else. #### DOCUMENT THIS! */ |
| 430 | 4580 |
| 4581 if (SYMBOLP (leaf)) | |
| 4582 { | |
| 4583 Lisp_Object prop = Fget (leaf, Qself_insert_defer_undo, Qnil); | |
| 4584 if (NATNUMP (prop)) | |
|
5307
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4585 { |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4586 magic_undo = 1; |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
4587 if (FIXNUMP (prop)) |
|
5307
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4588 { |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
4589 magic_undo_count = XFIXNUM (prop); |
|
5307
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4590 } |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4591 #ifdef HAVE_BIGNUM |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4592 else if (BIGNUMP (prop) |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4593 && bignum_fits_emacs_int_p (XBIGNUM_DATA (prop))) |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4594 { |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4595 magic_undo_count |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4596 = bignum_to_emacs_int (XBIGNUM_DATA (prop)); |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4597 } |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4598 #endif |
|
c096d8051f89
Have NATNUMP give t for positive bignums; check limits appropriately.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5191
diff
changeset
|
4599 } |
| 430 | 4600 else if (!NILP (prop)) |
| 4601 magic_undo = 1; | |
| 4602 else if (EQ (leaf, Qself_insert_command)) | |
| 4603 magic_undo = 1; | |
| 4604 } | |
| 4605 | |
| 4606 if (!magic_undo) | |
| 428 | 4607 command_builder->self_insert_countdown = 0; |
| 4608 if (NILP (XCONSOLE (console)->prefix_arg) | |
| 4609 && NILP (Vexecuting_macro) | |
| 4610 && command_builder->self_insert_countdown == 0) | |
| 4611 Fundo_boundary (); | |
| 4612 | |
| 430 | 4613 if (magic_undo) |
| 428 | 4614 { |
| 4615 if (--command_builder->self_insert_countdown < 0) | |
| 430 | 4616 command_builder->self_insert_countdown = magic_undo_count; |
| 428 | 4617 } |
| 4618 execute_command_event | |
| 4619 (command_builder, | |
| 444 | 4620 internal_equal (event, command_builder->most_current_event, 0) |
| 428 | 4621 ? event |
| 4622 /* Use the translated event that was most recently seen. | |
| 4623 This way, last-command-event becomes f1 instead of | |
| 4624 the P from ESC O P. But we must copy it, else we'll | |
| 4625 lose when the command-builder events are deallocated. */ | |
| 444 | 4626 : Fcopy_event (command_builder->most_current_event, Qnil)); |
| 428 | 4627 } |
| 4628 break; | |
| 4629 } | |
| 4630 case misc_user_event: | |
| 4631 { | |
| 4632 /* Jamie said: | |
| 4633 | |
| 4634 We could just always use the menu item entry, whatever it is, but | |
| 4635 this might break some Lisp code that expects `this-command' to | |
| 4636 always contain a symbol. So only store it if this is a simple | |
| 4637 `call-interactively' sort of menu item. | |
| 4638 | |
| 4639 But this is bogus. `this-command' could be a string or vector | |
| 4640 anyway (for keyboard macros). There's even one instance | |
| 4641 (in pending-del.el) of `this-command' getting set to a cons | |
| 4642 (a lambda expression). So in the `eval' case I'll just | |
| 4643 convert it into a lambda expression. | |
| 4644 */ | |
| 1204 | 4645 if (EQ (XEVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event), Qcall_interactively) |
| 4646 && SYMBOLP (XEVENT_MISC_USER_OBJECT (event))) | |
| 4647 Vthis_command = XEVENT_MISC_USER_OBJECT (event); | |
| 4648 else if (EQ (XEVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event), Qeval)) | |
| 934 | 4649 Vthis_command = |
| 1204 | 4650 Fcons (Qlambda, Fcons (Qnil, XEVENT_MISC_USER_OBJECT (event))); |
| 4651 else if (SYMBOLP (XEVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event))) | |
| 934 | 4652 /* A scrollbar command or the like. */ |
| 1204 | 4653 Vthis_command = XEVENT_MISC_USER_FUNCTION (event); |
| 428 | 4654 else |
| 4655 /* Huh? */ | |
| 4656 Vthis_command = Qnil; | |
| 4657 | |
| 4658 /* clear the echo area */ | |
| 4659 reset_key_echo (command_builder, 1); | |
| 4660 | |
| 4661 command_builder->self_insert_countdown = 0; | |
| 4662 if (NILP (XCONSOLE (console)->prefix_arg) | |
| 4663 && NILP (Vexecuting_macro) | |
| 4664 && !EQ (minibuf_window, Fselected_window (Qnil))) | |
| 4665 Fundo_boundary (); | |
| 4666 execute_command_event (command_builder, event); | |
| 4667 break; | |
| 4668 } | |
| 4669 default: | |
| 4670 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 4671 break; | |
| 4672 } | |
| 1292 | 4673 |
| 4674 PROFILE_RECORD_EXITING_SECTION (Qdispatch_event); | |
| 428 | 4675 return Qnil; |
| 4676 } | |
| 4677 | |
| 4678 DEFUN ("read-key-sequence", Fread_key_sequence, 1, 3, 0, /* | |
| 4679 Read a sequence of keystrokes or mouse clicks. | |
| 4680 Returns a vector of the event objects read. The vector and the event | |
| 444 | 4681 objects it contains are freshly created (and so will not be side-effected |
| 428 | 4682 by subsequent calls to this function). |
| 4683 | |
| 4684 The sequence read is sufficient to specify a non-prefix command starting | |
| 4685 from the current local and global keymaps. A C-g typed while in this | |
| 4686 function is treated like any other character, and `quit-flag' is not set. | |
| 4687 | |
| 4688 First arg PROMPT is a prompt string. If nil, do not prompt specially. | |
| 444 | 4689 |
| 4690 Second optional arg CONTINUE-ECHO non-nil means this key echoes as a | |
| 4691 continuation of the previous key. | |
| 4692 | |
| 4693 Third optional arg DONT-DOWNCASE-LAST non-nil means do not convert the | |
| 4694 last event to lower case. (Normally any upper case event is converted | |
| 4695 to lower case if the original event is undefined and the lower case | |
| 4696 equivalent is defined.) This argument is provided mostly for FSF | |
| 4697 compatibility; the equivalent effect can be achieved more generally by | |
| 4698 binding `retry-undefined-key-binding-unshifted' to nil around the call | |
| 4699 to `read-key-sequence'. | |
| 428 | 4700 |
| 4701 If the user selects a menu item while we are prompting for a key-sequence, | |
| 4702 the returned value will be a vector of a single menu-selection event. | |
| 4703 An error will be signalled if you pass this value to `lookup-key' or a | |
| 4704 related function. | |
| 4705 | |
| 4706 `read-key-sequence' checks `function-key-map' for function key | |
| 444 | 4707 sequences, where they wouldn't conflict with ordinary bindings. |
| 4708 See `function-key-map' for more details. | |
| 428 | 4709 */ |
| 4710 (prompt, continue_echo, dont_downcase_last)) | |
| 4711 { | |
| 4712 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 4713 struct console *con = XCONSOLE (Vselected_console); /* #### correct? | |
| 4714 Probably not -- see | |
| 4715 comment in | |
| 4716 next-event */ | |
| 4717 struct command_builder *command_builder = | |
| 4718 XCOMMAND_BUILDER (con->command_builder); | |
| 4719 Lisp_Object result; | |
| 4720 Lisp_Object event = Fmake_event (Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 4721 int speccount = specpdl_depth (); | |
| 4722 struct gcpro gcpro1; | |
| 4723 GCPRO1 (event); | |
| 4724 | |
| 707 | 4725 record_unwind_protect (Fset_buffer, Fcurrent_buffer ()); |
| 428 | 4726 if (!NILP (prompt)) |
| 4727 CHECK_STRING (prompt); | |
| 4728 /* else prompt = Fkeymap_prompt (current_buffer->keymap); may GC */ | |
| 4729 QUIT; | |
| 4730 | |
| 4731 if (NILP (continue_echo)) | |
| 771 | 4732 reset_this_command_keys (wrap_console (con), 1); |
| 428 | 4733 |
| 4734 if (!NILP (dont_downcase_last)) | |
| 4735 specbind (Qretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted, Qnil); | |
| 4736 | |
| 4737 for (;;) | |
| 4738 { | |
| 4739 Fnext_event (event, prompt); | |
| 4740 /* restore the selected-console damage */ | |
| 4741 con = event_console_or_selected (event); | |
| 4742 command_builder = XCOMMAND_BUILDER (con->command_builder); | |
| 4743 if (! command_event_p (event)) | |
| 4744 execute_internal_event (event); | |
| 4745 else | |
| 4746 { | |
| 934 | 4747 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == misc_user_event) |
| 428 | 4748 reset_current_events (command_builder); |
| 4749 result = lookup_command_event (command_builder, event, 1); | |
| 4750 if (!KEYMAPP (result)) | |
| 4751 { | |
| 4752 result = current_events_into_vector (command_builder); | |
| 4753 reset_key_echo (command_builder, 0); | |
| 4754 break; | |
| 4755 } | |
| 4756 prompt = Qnil; | |
| 4757 } | |
| 4758 } | |
| 4759 | |
| 4760 Fdeallocate_event (event); | |
| 771 | 4761 RETURN_UNGCPRO (unbind_to_1 (speccount, result)); |
| 428 | 4762 } |
| 4763 | |
| 4764 DEFUN ("this-command-keys", Fthis_command_keys, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 4765 Return a vector of the keyboard or mouse button events that were used | |
| 4766 to invoke this command. This copies the vector and the events; it is safe | |
| 4767 to keep and modify them. | |
| 4768 */ | |
| 4769 ()) | |
| 4770 { | |
| 4771 Lisp_Object event; | |
| 4772 Lisp_Object result; | |
| 4773 int len; | |
| 4774 | |
| 4775 if (NILP (Vthis_command_keys)) | |
| 4776 return make_vector (0, Qnil); | |
| 4777 | |
| 4778 len = event_chain_count (Vthis_command_keys); | |
| 4779 | |
| 4780 result = make_vector (len, Qnil); | |
| 4781 len = 0; | |
| 4782 EVENT_CHAIN_LOOP (event, Vthis_command_keys) | |
| 4783 XVECTOR_DATA (result)[len++] = Fcopy_event (event, Qnil); | |
| 4784 return result; | |
| 4785 } | |
| 4786 | |
| 4787 DEFUN ("reset-this-command-lengths", Freset_this_command_lengths, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 4788 Used for complicated reasons in `universal-argument-other-key'. | |
| 4789 | |
| 4790 `universal-argument-other-key' rereads the event just typed. | |
| 4791 It then gets translated through `function-key-map'. | |
| 4792 The translated event gets included in the echo area and in | |
| 4793 the value of `this-command-keys' in addition to the raw original event. | |
| 4794 That is not right. | |
| 4795 | |
| 4796 Calling this function directs the translated event to replace | |
| 4797 the original event, so that only one version of the event actually | |
| 430 | 4798 appears in the echo area and in the value of `this-command-keys'. |
| 428 | 4799 */ |
| 4800 ()) | |
| 4801 { | |
| 4802 /* #### I don't understand this at all, so currently it does nothing. | |
| 4803 If there is ever a problem, maybe someone should investigate. */ | |
| 4804 return Qnil; | |
| 4805 } | |
| 4806 | |
| 4807 | |
| 4808 static void | |
| 4809 dribble_out_event (Lisp_Object event) | |
| 4810 { | |
| 4811 if (NILP (Vdribble_file)) | |
| 4812 return; | |
| 4813 | |
| 934 | 4814 if (XEVENT_TYPE (event) == key_press_event && |
| 1204 | 4815 !XEVENT_KEY_MODIFIERS (event)) |
| 934 | 4816 { |
| 1204 | 4817 Lisp_Object keysym = XEVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event); |
| 4818 if (CHARP (XEVENT_KEY_KEYSYM (event))) | |
| 428 | 4819 { |
| 867 | 4820 Ichar ch = XCHAR (keysym); |
| 4821 Ibyte str[MAX_ICHAR_LEN]; | |
| 4822 Bytecount len = set_itext_ichar (str, ch); | |
| 428 | 4823 Lstream_write (XLSTREAM (Vdribble_file), str, len); |
| 4824 } | |
| 826 | 4825 else if (string_char_length (XSYMBOL (keysym)->name) == 1) |
| 428 | 4826 /* one-char key events are printed with just the key name */ |
| 4827 Fprinc (keysym, Vdribble_file); | |
| 4828 else if (EQ (keysym, Qreturn)) | |
|
5820
b3824b7f5627
Some changes to eliminate warnings with Apple clang version 1.7.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5814
diff
changeset
|
4829 (void) Lstream_putc (XLSTREAM (Vdribble_file), '\n'); |
| 428 | 4830 else if (EQ (keysym, Qspace)) |
|
5820
b3824b7f5627
Some changes to eliminate warnings with Apple clang version 1.7.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5814
diff
changeset
|
4831 (void) Lstream_putc (XLSTREAM (Vdribble_file), ' '); |
| 428 | 4832 else |
| 4833 Fprinc (event, Vdribble_file); | |
| 4834 } | |
| 4835 else | |
| 4836 Fprinc (event, Vdribble_file); | |
| 4837 Lstream_flush (XLSTREAM (Vdribble_file)); | |
| 4838 } | |
| 4839 | |
| 4840 DEFUN ("open-dribble-file", Fopen_dribble_file, 1, 1, | |
| 4841 "FOpen dribble file: ", /* | |
| 444 | 4842 Start writing all keyboard characters to a dribble file called FILENAME. |
| 4843 If FILENAME is nil, close any open dribble file. | |
| 428 | 4844 */ |
| 444 | 4845 (filename)) |
| 428 | 4846 { |
| 4847 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 4848 /* XEmacs change: always close existing dribble file. */ | |
| 4849 /* FSFmacs uses FILE *'s here. With lstreams, that's unnecessary. */ | |
| 4850 if (!NILP (Vdribble_file)) | |
| 4851 { | |
| 4852 Lstream_close (XLSTREAM (Vdribble_file)); | |
| 4853 Vdribble_file = Qnil; | |
| 4854 } | |
| 444 | 4855 if (!NILP (filename)) |
| 428 | 4856 { |
| 4857 int fd; | |
| 4858 | |
| 444 | 4859 filename = Fexpand_file_name (filename, Qnil); |
| 771 | 4860 fd = qxe_open (XSTRING_DATA (filename), |
| 4861 O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC | O_CREAT | OPEN_BINARY, | |
| 4862 CREAT_MODE); | |
| 428 | 4863 if (fd < 0) |
| 563 | 4864 report_file_error ("Unable to create dribble file", filename); |
|
5814
a216b3c2b09e
Add TLS support. See xemacs-patches message with ID
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
5804
diff
changeset
|
4865 Vdribble_file = make_filedesc_output_stream (fd, 0, 0, LSTR_CLOSING, |
|
a216b3c2b09e
Add TLS support. See xemacs-patches message with ID
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
5804
diff
changeset
|
4866 NULL); |
| 428 | 4867 #ifdef MULE |
| 4868 Vdribble_file = | |
| 771 | 4869 make_coding_output_stream |
| 4870 (XLSTREAM (Vdribble_file), | |
| 800 | 4871 Qescape_quoted, CODING_ENCODE, 0); |
| 428 | 4872 #endif |
| 4873 } | |
| 4874 return Qnil; | |
| 4875 } | |
| 4876 | |
| 4877 | |
| 442 | 4878 |
| 4879 DEFUN ("current-event-timestamp", Fcurrent_event_timestamp, 0, 1, 0, /* | |
| 4880 Return the current event timestamp of the window system associated with CONSOLE. | |
| 4881 CONSOLE defaults to the selected console if omitted. | |
| 4882 */ | |
| 4883 (console)) | |
| 4884 { | |
| 4885 struct console *c = decode_console (console); | |
| 4886 int tiempo = event_stream_current_event_timestamp (c); | |
| 4887 | |
| 4888 /* This junk is so that timestamps don't get to be negative, but contain | |
| 4889 as many bits as this particular emacs will allow. | |
| 4890 */ | |
|
5581
56144c8593a8
Mechanically change INT to FIXNUM in our sources.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
5474
diff
changeset
|
4891 return make_fixnum (MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM & tiempo); |
| 442 | 4892 } |
| 4893 | |
| 4894 | |
| 428 | 4895 /************************************************************************/ |
| 4896 /* initialization */ | |
| 4897 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 4898 | |
| 4899 void | |
| 4900 syms_of_event_stream (void) | |
| 4901 { | |
|
5117
3742ea8250b5
Checking in final CVS version of workspace 'ben-lisp-object'
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
3025
diff
changeset
|
4902 INIT_LISP_OBJECT (command_builder); |
|
3742ea8250b5
Checking in final CVS version of workspace 'ben-lisp-object'
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
3025
diff
changeset
|
4903 INIT_LISP_OBJECT (timeout); |
| 442 | 4904 |
| 563 | 4905 DEFSYMBOL (Qdisabled); |
| 4906 DEFSYMBOL (Qcommand_event_p); | |
| 4907 | |
| 4908 DEFERROR_STANDARD (Qundefined_keystroke_sequence, Qsyntax_error); | |
| 4909 DEFERROR_STANDARD (Qinvalid_key_binding, Qinvalid_state); | |
| 428 | 4910 |
| 4911 DEFSUBR (Frecent_keys); | |
| 4912 DEFSUBR (Frecent_keys_ring_size); | |
| 4913 DEFSUBR (Fset_recent_keys_ring_size); | |
| 4914 DEFSUBR (Finput_pending_p); | |
| 4915 DEFSUBR (Fenqueue_eval_event); | |
| 4916 DEFSUBR (Fnext_event); | |
| 4917 DEFSUBR (Fnext_command_event); | |
| 4918 DEFSUBR (Fdiscard_input); | |
| 4919 DEFSUBR (Fsit_for); | |
| 4920 DEFSUBR (Fsleep_for); | |
| 4921 DEFSUBR (Faccept_process_output); | |
| 4922 DEFSUBR (Fadd_timeout); | |
| 4923 DEFSUBR (Fdisable_timeout); | |
| 4924 DEFSUBR (Fadd_async_timeout); | |
| 4925 DEFSUBR (Fdisable_async_timeout); | |
| 4926 DEFSUBR (Fdispatch_event); | |
| 442 | 4927 DEFSUBR (Fdispatch_non_command_events); |
| 428 | 4928 DEFSUBR (Fread_key_sequence); |
| 4929 DEFSUBR (Fthis_command_keys); | |
| 4930 DEFSUBR (Freset_this_command_lengths); | |
| 4931 DEFSUBR (Fopen_dribble_file); | |
| 442 | 4932 DEFSUBR (Fcurrent_event_timestamp); |
| 428 | 4933 |
| 563 | 4934 DEFSYMBOL (Qpre_command_hook); |
| 4935 DEFSYMBOL (Qpost_command_hook); | |
| 4936 DEFSYMBOL (Qunread_command_events); | |
| 4937 DEFSYMBOL (Qunread_command_event); | |
| 4938 DEFSYMBOL (Qpre_idle_hook); | |
| 4939 DEFSYMBOL (Qhandle_pre_motion_command); | |
| 4940 DEFSYMBOL (Qhandle_post_motion_command); | |
| 4941 DEFSYMBOL (Qretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted); | |
| 4942 DEFSYMBOL (Qauto_show_make_point_visible); | |
| 4943 | |
| 4944 DEFSYMBOL (Qself_insert_defer_undo); | |
| 4945 DEFSYMBOL (Qcancel_mode_internal); | |
| 1292 | 4946 |
| 4947 DEFSYMBOL (Qnext_event); | |
| 4948 DEFSYMBOL (Qdispatch_event); | |
|
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|
4949 |
|
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5050
diff
changeset
|
4950 DEFSYMBOL (Qsans_modifiers); |
| 428 | 4951 } |
| 4952 | |
| 4953 void | |
| 4954 reinit_vars_of_event_stream (void) | |
| 4955 { | |
| 4956 recent_keys_ring_index = 0; | |
| 4957 recent_keys_ring_size = 100; | |
| 4958 num_input_chars = 0; | |
| 4959 the_low_level_timeout_blocktype = | |
| 4960 Blocktype_new (struct low_level_timeout_blocktype); | |
| 4961 something_happened = 0; | |
| 1268 | 4962 recursive_sit_for = 0; |
| 4963 in_modal_loop = 0; | |
| 428 | 4964 } |
| 4965 | |
| 4966 void | |
| 4967 vars_of_event_stream (void) | |
| 4968 { | |
| 4969 Vrecent_keys_ring = Qnil; | |
| 4970 staticpro (&Vrecent_keys_ring); | |
| 4971 | |
| 4972 Vthis_command_keys = Qnil; | |
| 4973 staticpro (&Vthis_command_keys); | |
| 4974 Vthis_command_keys_tail = Qnil; | |
| 1204 | 4975 dump_add_root_lisp_object (&Vthis_command_keys_tail); |
| 428 | 4976 |
| 4977 command_event_queue = Qnil; | |
| 4978 staticpro (&command_event_queue); | |
| 4979 command_event_queue_tail = Qnil; | |
| 1204 | 4980 dump_add_root_lisp_object (&command_event_queue_tail); |
| 4981 | |
| 4982 dispatch_event_queue = Qnil; | |
| 4983 staticpro (&dispatch_event_queue); | |
| 4984 dispatch_event_queue_tail = Qnil; | |
| 4985 dump_add_root_lisp_object (&dispatch_event_queue_tail); | |
| 428 | 4986 |
| 4987 Vlast_selected_frame = Qnil; | |
| 4988 staticpro (&Vlast_selected_frame); | |
| 4989 | |
| 4990 pending_timeout_list = Qnil; | |
| 4991 staticpro (&pending_timeout_list); | |
| 4992 | |
| 4993 pending_async_timeout_list = Qnil; | |
| 4994 staticpro (&pending_async_timeout_list); | |
| 4995 | |
| 4996 last_point_position_buffer = Qnil; | |
| 4997 staticpro (&last_point_position_buffer); | |
| 4998 | |
|
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parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
4999 QSnext_event_internal = build_ascstring ("next_event_internal()"); |
| 1292 | 5000 staticpro (&QSnext_event_internal); |
|
4952
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4932
diff
changeset
|
5001 QSexecute_internal_event = build_ascstring ("execute_internal_event()"); |
| 1292 | 5002 staticpro (&QSexecute_internal_event); |
| 5003 | |
| 428 | 5004 DEFVAR_LISP ("echo-keystrokes", &Vecho_keystrokes /* |
| 5005 *Nonzero means echo unfinished commands after this many seconds of pause. | |
| 5006 */ ); | |
|
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5474
diff
changeset
|
5007 Vecho_keystrokes = make_fixnum (1); |
| 428 | 5008 |
| 5009 DEFVAR_INT ("auto-save-interval", &auto_save_interval /* | |
| 5010 *Number of keyboard input characters between auto-saves. | |
| 5011 Zero means disable autosaving due to number of characters typed. | |
| 5012 See also the variable `auto-save-timeout'. | |
| 5013 */ ); | |
| 5014 auto_save_interval = 300; | |
| 5015 | |
| 5016 DEFVAR_LISP ("pre-command-hook", &Vpre_command_hook /* | |
| 5017 Function or functions to run before every command. | |
| 5018 This may examine the `this-command' variable to find out what command | |
| 5019 is about to be run, or may change it to cause a different command to run. | |
| 853 | 5020 Errors while running the hook are caught and turned into warnings. |
| 428 | 5021 */ ); |
| 5022 Vpre_command_hook = Qnil; | |
| 5023 | |
| 5024 DEFVAR_LISP ("post-command-hook", &Vpost_command_hook /* | |
| 5025 Function or functions to run after every command. | |
| 5026 This may examine the `this-command' variable to find out what command | |
| 5027 was just executed. | |
| 5028 */ ); | |
| 5029 Vpost_command_hook = Qnil; | |
| 5030 | |
| 5031 DEFVAR_LISP ("pre-idle-hook", &Vpre_idle_hook /* | |
| 5032 Normal hook run when XEmacs it about to be idle. | |
| 5033 This occurs whenever it is going to block, waiting for an event. | |
| 5034 This generally happens as a result of a call to `next-event', | |
| 5035 `next-command-event', `sit-for', `sleep-for', `accept-process-output', | |
| 853 | 5036 or `get-selection'. Errors while running the hook are caught and |
| 5037 turned into warnings. | |
| 428 | 5038 */ ); |
| 5039 Vpre_idle_hook = Qnil; | |
| 5040 | |
| 5041 DEFVAR_BOOL ("focus-follows-mouse", &focus_follows_mouse /* | |
| 5042 *Variable to control XEmacs behavior with respect to focus changing. | |
| 5043 If this variable is set to t, then XEmacs will not gratuitously change | |
| 5044 the keyboard focus. XEmacs cannot in general detect when this mode is | |
| 5045 used by the window manager, so it is up to the user to set it. | |
| 5046 */ ); | |
| 5047 focus_follows_mouse = 0; | |
| 5048 | |
| 5049 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command-event", &Vlast_command_event /* | |
| 5050 Last keyboard or mouse button event that was part of a command. This | |
| 5051 variable is off limits: you may not set its value or modify the event that | |
| 5052 is its value, as it is destructively modified by `read-key-sequence'. If | |
| 5053 you want to keep a pointer to this value, you must use `copy-event'. | |
| 5054 */ ); | |
| 5055 Vlast_command_event = Qnil; | |
| 5056 | |
| 5057 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command-char", &Vlast_command_char /* | |
| 5058 If the value of `last-command-event' is a keyboard event, then | |
| 5059 this is the nearest ASCII equivalent to it. This is the value that | |
| 5060 `self-insert-command' will put in the buffer. Remember that there is | |
| 5061 NOT a 1:1 mapping between keyboard events and ASCII characters: the set | |
| 5062 of keyboard events is much larger, so writing code that examines this | |
| 5063 variable to determine what key has been typed is bad practice, unless | |
| 5064 you are certain that it will be one of a small set of characters. | |
| 5065 */ ); | |
| 5066 Vlast_command_char = Qnil; | |
| 5067 | |
| 5068 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-input-event", &Vlast_input_event /* | |
| 5069 Last keyboard or mouse button event received. This variable is off | |
| 5070 limits: you may not set its value or modify the event that is its value, as | |
| 5071 it is destructively modified by `next-event'. If you want to keep a pointer | |
| 5072 to this value, you must use `copy-event'. | |
| 5073 */ ); | |
| 5074 Vlast_input_event = Qnil; | |
| 5075 | |
| 5076 DEFVAR_LISP ("current-mouse-event", &Vcurrent_mouse_event /* | |
| 5077 The mouse-button event which invoked this command, or nil. | |
| 5078 This is usually what `(interactive "e")' returns. | |
| 5079 */ ); | |
| 5080 Vcurrent_mouse_event = Qnil; | |
| 5081 | |
| 5082 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-input-char", &Vlast_input_char /* | |
| 5083 If the value of `last-input-event' is a keyboard event, then | |
| 5084 this is the nearest ASCII equivalent to it. Remember that there is | |
| 5085 NOT a 1:1 mapping between keyboard events and ASCII characters: the set | |
| 5086 of keyboard events is much larger, so writing code that examines this | |
| 5087 variable to determine what key has been typed is bad practice, unless | |
| 5088 you are certain that it will be one of a small set of characters. | |
| 5089 */ ); | |
| 5090 Vlast_input_char = Qnil; | |
| 5091 | |
| 5092 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-input-time", &Vlast_input_time /* | |
| 5093 The time (in seconds since Jan 1, 1970) of the last-command-event, | |
| 5094 represented as a cons of two 16-bit integers. This is destructively | |
| 5095 modified, so copy it if you want to keep it. | |
| 5096 */ ); | |
| 5097 Vlast_input_time = Qnil; | |
| 5098 | |
| 5099 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command-event-time", &Vlast_command_event_time /* | |
| 5100 The time (in seconds since Jan 1, 1970) of the last-command-event, | |
| 5101 represented as a list of three integers. The first integer contains | |
| 5102 the most significant 16 bits of the number of seconds, and the second | |
| 5103 integer contains the least significant 16 bits. The third integer | |
| 5104 contains the remainder number of microseconds, if the current system | |
| 5105 supports microsecond clock resolution. This list is destructively | |
| 5106 modified, so copy it if you want to keep it. | |
| 5107 */ ); | |
| 5108 Vlast_command_event_time = Qnil; | |
| 5109 | |
| 5110 DEFVAR_LISP ("unread-command-events", &Vunread_command_events /* | |
| 5111 List of event objects to be read as next command input events. | |
| 5112 This can be used to simulate the receipt of events from the user. | |
| 5113 Normally this is nil. | |
| 5114 Events are removed from the front of this list. | |
| 5115 */ ); | |
| 5116 Vunread_command_events = Qnil; | |
| 5117 | |
| 5118 DEFVAR_LISP ("unread-command-event", &Vunread_command_event /* | |
| 5119 Obsolete. Use `unread-command-events' instead. | |
| 5120 */ ); | |
| 5121 Vunread_command_event = Qnil; | |
| 5122 | |
| 5123 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command", &Vlast_command /* | |
| 5124 The last command executed. Normally a symbol with a function definition, | |
| 5125 but can be whatever was found in the keymap, or whatever the variable | |
| 5126 `this-command' was set to by that command. | |
| 5127 */ ); | |
| 5128 Vlast_command = Qnil; | |
| 5129 | |
| 5130 DEFVAR_LISP ("this-command", &Vthis_command /* | |
| 5131 The command now being executed. | |
| 5132 The command can set this variable; whatever is put here | |
| 5133 will be in `last-command' during the following command. | |
| 5134 */ ); | |
| 5135 Vthis_command = Qnil; | |
| 5136 | |
| 442 | 5137 DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command-properties", &Vlast_command_properties /* |
| 5138 Value of `this-command-properties' for the last command. | |
| 5139 Used by commands to help synchronize consecutive commands, in preference | |
| 5140 to looking at `last-command' directly. | |
| 5141 */ ); | |
| 5142 Vlast_command_properties = Qnil; | |
| 5143 | |
| 5144 DEFVAR_LISP ("this-command-properties", &Vthis_command_properties /* | |
| 5145 Properties set by the current command. | |
| 5146 At the beginning of each command, the current value of this variable is | |
| 5147 copied to `last-command-properties', and then it is set to nil. Use `putf' | |
| 5148 to add properties to this variable. Commands should use this to communicate | |
| 5149 with pre/post-command hooks, subsequent commands, wrapping commands, etc. | |
| 5150 in preference to looking at and/or setting `this-command'. | |
| 5151 */ ); | |
| 5152 Vthis_command_properties = Qnil; | |
| 5153 | |
| 428 | 5154 DEFVAR_LISP ("help-char", &Vhelp_char /* |
| 5155 Character to recognize as meaning Help. | |
| 5156 When it is read, do `(eval help-form)', and display result if it's a string. | |
| 5157 If the value of `help-form' is nil, this char can be read normally. | |
| 5158 This can be any form recognized as a single key specifier. | |
| 5159 The help-char cannot be a negative number in XEmacs. | |
| 5160 */ ); | |
| 5161 Vhelp_char = make_char (8); /* C-h */ | |
| 5162 | |
| 5163 DEFVAR_LISP ("help-form", &Vhelp_form /* | |
| 5164 Form to execute when character help-char is read. | |
| 5165 If the form returns a string, that string is displayed. | |
| 5166 If `help-form' is nil, the help char is not recognized. | |
| 5167 */ ); | |
| 5168 Vhelp_form = Qnil; | |
| 5169 | |
| 5170 DEFVAR_LISP ("prefix-help-command", &Vprefix_help_command /* | |
| 5171 Command to run when `help-char' character follows a prefix key. | |
| 5172 This command is used only when there is no actual binding | |
| 5173 for that character after that prefix key. | |
| 5174 */ ); | |
| 5175 Vprefix_help_command = Qnil; | |
| 5176 | |
| 5177 DEFVAR_CONST_LISP ("keyboard-translate-table", &Vkeyboard_translate_table /* | |
| 5178 Hash table used as translate table for keyboard input. | |
| 5179 Use `keyboard-translate' to portably add entries to this table. | |
| 5180 Each key-press event is looked up in this table as follows: | |
| 5181 | |
| 5182 -- If an entry maps a symbol to a symbol, then a key-press event whose | |
| 5183 keysym is the former symbol (with any modifiers at all) gets its | |
| 5184 keysym changed and its modifiers left alone. This is useful for | |
| 5185 dealing with non-standard X keyboards, such as the grievous damage | |
| 5186 that Sun has inflicted upon the world. | |
| 442 | 5187 -- If an entry maps a symbol to a character, then a key-press event |
| 5188 whose keysym is the former symbol (with any modifiers at all) gets | |
| 5189 changed into a key-press event matching the latter character, and the | |
| 5190 resulting modifiers are the union of the original and new modifiers. | |
| 428 | 5191 -- If an entry maps a character to a character, then a key-press event |
| 5192 matching the former character gets converted to a key-press event | |
| 5193 matching the latter character. This is useful on ASCII terminals | |
| 5194 for (e.g.) making C-\\ look like C-s, to get around flow-control | |
| 5195 problems. | |
| 5196 -- If an entry maps a character to a symbol, then a key-press event | |
| 5197 matching the character gets converted to a key-press event whose | |
| 5198 keysym is the given symbol and which has no modifiers. | |
| 442 | 5199 |
| 5200 Here's an example: This makes typing parens and braces easier by rerouting | |
| 5201 their positions to eliminate the need to use the Shift key. | |
| 5202 | |
| 5203 (keyboard-translate ?[ ?() | |
| 5204 (keyboard-translate ?] ?)) | |
| 5205 (keyboard-translate ?{ ?[) | |
| 5206 (keyboard-translate ?} ?]) | |
| 5207 (keyboard-translate 'f11 ?{) | |
| 5208 (keyboard-translate 'f12 ?}) | |
| 428 | 5209 */ ); |
| 5210 | |
| 5211 DEFVAR_LISP ("retry-undefined-key-binding-unshifted", | |
| 5212 &Vretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted /* | |
| 5213 If a key-sequence which ends with a shifted keystroke is undefined | |
| 5214 and this variable is non-nil then the command lookup is retried again | |
| 5215 with the last key unshifted. (e.g. C-X C-F would be retried as C-X C-f.) | |
| 5216 If lookup still fails, a normal error is signalled. In general, | |
| 5217 you should *bind* this, not set it. | |
| 5218 */ ); | |
| 5219 Vretry_undefined_key_binding_unshifted = Qt; | |
| 5220 | |
| 442 | 5221 DEFVAR_BOOL ("modifier-keys-are-sticky", &modifier_keys_are_sticky /* |
| 5222 *Non-nil makes modifier keys sticky. | |
| 5223 This means that you can release the modifier key before pressing down | |
| 5224 the key that you wish to be modified. Although this is non-standard | |
| 5225 behavior, it is recommended because it reduces the strain on your hand, | |
| 5226 thus reducing the incidence of the dreaded Emacs-pinky syndrome. | |
| 444 | 5227 |
| 5228 Modifier keys are sticky within the inverval specified by | |
| 5229 `modifier-keys-sticky-time'. | |
| 442 | 5230 */ ); |
| 5231 modifier_keys_are_sticky = 0; | |
| 5232 | |
| 444 | 5233 DEFVAR_LISP ("modifier-keys-sticky-time", &Vmodifier_keys_sticky_time /* |
| 5234 *Modifier keys are sticky within this many milliseconds. | |
| 5235 If you don't want modifier keys sticking to be bounded, set this to | |
| 5236 non-integer value. | |
| 5237 | |
| 5238 This variable has no effect when `modifier-keys-are-sticky' is nil. | |
| 5239 Currently only implemented under X Window System. | |
| 5240 */ ); | |
|
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Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
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5474
diff
changeset
|
5241 Vmodifier_keys_sticky_time = make_fixnum (500); |
| 444 | 5242 |
| 428 | 5243 Vcontrolling_terminal = Qnil; |
| 5244 staticpro (&Vcontrolling_terminal); | |
| 5245 | |
| 5246 Vdribble_file = Qnil; | |
| 5247 staticpro (&Vdribble_file); | |
| 5248 | |
| 5249 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 5250 DEFVAR_INT ("debug-emacs-events", &debug_emacs_events /* | |
| 5251 If non-zero, display debug information about Emacs events that XEmacs sees. | |
| 5252 Information is displayed on stderr. | |
| 5253 | |
| 5254 Before the event, the source of the event is displayed in parentheses, | |
| 5255 and is one of the following: | |
| 5256 | |
| 5257 \(real) A real event from the window system or | |
| 5258 terminal driver, as far as XEmacs can tell. | |
| 5259 | |
| 5260 \(keyboard macro) An event generated from a keyboard macro. | |
| 5261 | |
| 5262 \(unread-command-events) An event taken from `unread-command-events'. | |
| 5263 | |
| 5264 \(unread-command-event) An event taken from `unread-command-event'. | |
| 5265 | |
| 5266 \(command event queue) An event taken from an internal queue. | |
| 5267 Events end up on this queue when | |
| 5268 `enqueue-eval-event' is called or when | |
| 5269 user or eval events are received while | |
| 5270 XEmacs is blocking (e.g. in `sit-for', | |
| 5271 `sleep-for', or `accept-process-output', | |
| 5272 or while waiting for the reply to an | |
| 5273 X selection). | |
| 5274 | |
| 5275 \(->keyboard-translate-table) The result of an event translated through | |
| 5276 keyboard-translate-table. Note that in | |
| 5277 this case, two events are printed even | |
| 5278 though only one is really generated. | |
| 5279 | |
| 5280 \(SIGINT) A faked C-g resulting when XEmacs receives | |
| 5281 a SIGINT (e.g. C-c was pressed in XEmacs' | |
| 5282 controlling terminal or the signal was | |
| 5283 explicitly sent to the XEmacs process). | |
| 5284 */ ); | |
| 5285 debug_emacs_events = 0; | |
| 5286 #endif | |
| 5287 | |
| 2828 | 5288 DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-input-event-recording", |
| 5289 &inhibit_input_event_recording /* | |
| 428 | 5290 Non-nil inhibits recording of input-events to recent-keys ring. |
| 5291 */ ); | |
| 5292 inhibit_input_event_recording = 0; | |
| 771 | 5293 |
| 428 | 5294 Vkeyboard_translate_table = |
|
5191
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5143
diff
changeset
|
5295 make_lisp_hash_table (100, HASH_TABLE_NON_WEAK, Qequal); |
| 2828 | 5296 |
| 5297 DEFVAR_BOOL ("try-alternate-layouts-for-commands", | |
| 5298 &try_alternate_layouts_for_commands /* | |
| 5299 Non-nil means that if looking up a command from a sequence of keys typed by | |
| 5300 the user would otherwise fail, try it again with some other keyboard | |
| 5301 layout. On X11, the only alternative to the default mapping is American | |
| 5302 QWERTY; on Windows, other mappings may be available, depending on things | |
| 5303 like the default language environment for the current user, for the system, | |
| 5304 &c. | |
| 5305 | |
| 5306 With a Russian keyboard layout on X11, for example, this means that | |
| 5307 C-Cyrillic_che C-Cyrillic_a, if you haven't given that sequence a binding | |
| 5308 yourself, will invoke `find-file.' This is because `Cyrillic_che' is | |
| 5309 physically where `x' is, and `Cyrillic_a' is where `f' is, on an American | |
| 5310 Qwerty layout, and, of course, C-x C-f is a default emacs binding for that | |
| 5311 command. | |
| 5312 */ ); | |
| 5313 try_alternate_layouts_for_commands = 1; | |
| 428 | 5314 } |
| 5315 | |
| 5316 void | |
| 5317 init_event_stream (void) | |
| 5318 { | |
| 814 | 5319 /* Normally we don't initialize the event stream when running a bare |
| 5320 temacs (the check for initialized) because it may do various things | |
| 5321 (e.g. under Xt) that we don't want any traces of in a dumped xemacs. | |
| 5322 However, sometimes we need to process events in a bare temacs (in | |
| 5323 particular, when make-docfile.el is executed); so we initialize as | |
| 5324 necessary in check_event_stream_ok(). */ | |
| 428 | 5325 if (initialized) |
| 5326 { | |
| 5327 #ifdef HAVE_UNIXOID_EVENT_LOOP | |
| 5328 init_event_unixoid (); | |
| 5329 #endif | |
| 5330 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 5331 if (!strcmp (display_use, "x")) | |
| 5332 init_event_Xt_late (); | |
| 5333 else | |
| 5334 #endif | |
| 462 | 5335 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 5336 if (!strcmp (display_use, "gtk")) | |
| 5337 init_event_gtk_late (); | |
| 5338 else | |
| 5339 #endif | |
| 428 | 5340 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS |
| 5341 if (!strcmp (display_use, "mswindows")) | |
| 5342 init_event_mswindows_late (); | |
| 5343 else | |
| 5344 #endif | |
| 5345 { | |
| 5346 /* For TTY's, use the Xt event loop if we can; it allows | |
| 5347 us to later open an X connection. */ | |
| 5348 #if defined (HAVE_MS_WINDOWS) && (!defined (HAVE_TTY) \ | |
| 5349 || (defined (HAVE_MSG_SELECT) \ | |
| 5350 && !defined (DEBUG_TTY_EVENT_STREAM))) | |
| 5351 init_event_mswindows_late (); | |
| 5352 #elif defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) && !defined (DEBUG_TTY_EVENT_STREAM) | |
| 5353 init_event_Xt_late (); | |
| 5354 #elif defined (HAVE_TTY) | |
| 5355 init_event_tty_late (); | |
| 5356 #endif | |
| 5357 } | |
| 5358 init_interrupts_late (); | |
| 5359 } | |
| 5360 } | |
| 5361 | |
| 5362 | |
| 5363 /* | |
| 853 | 5364 #### this comment is at least 8 years old and some may no longer apply. |
| 5365 | |
| 428 | 5366 useful testcases for v18/v19 compatibility: |
| 5367 | |
| 5368 (defun foo () | |
| 5369 (interactive) | |
| 5370 (setq unread-command-event (character-to-event ?A (allocate-event))) | |
| 5371 (setq x (list (read-char) | |
| 5372 ; (read-key-sequence "") ; try it with and without this | |
| 5373 last-command-char last-input-char | |
| 5374 (recent-keys) (this-command-keys)))) | |
| 5375 (global-set-key "\^Q" 'foo) | |
| 5376 | |
| 5377 without the read-key-sequence: | |
| 444 | 5378 ^Q ==> (?A ?\^Q ?A [... ^Q] [^Q]) |
| 5379 ^U^U^Q ==> (?A ?\^Q ?A [... ^U ^U ^Q] [^U ^U ^Q]) | |
| 5380 ^U^U^U^G^Q ==> (?A ?\^Q ?A [... ^U ^U ^U ^G ^Q] [^Q]) | |
| 428 | 5381 |
| 5382 with the read-key-sequence: | |
| 444 | 5383 ^Qb ==> (?A [b] ?\^Q ?b [... ^Q b] [b]) |
| 5384 ^U^U^Qb ==> (?A [b] ?\^Q ?b [... ^U ^U ^Q b] [b]) | |
| 5385 ^U^U^U^G^Qb ==> (?A [b] ?\^Q ?b [... ^U ^U ^U ^G ^Q b] [b]) | |
| 428 | 5386 |
| 5387 ;the evi-mode command "4dlj.j.j.j.j.j." is also a good testcase (gag) | |
| 5388 | |
| 5389 ;(setq x (list (read-char) quit-flag))^J^G | |
| 5390 ;(let ((inhibit-quit t)) (setq x (list (read-char) quit-flag)))^J^G | |
| 5391 ;for BOTH, x should get set to (7 t), but no result should be printed. | |
| 444 | 5392 ;; #### According to the doc of quit-flag, second test should return |
|
5384
3889ef128488
Fix misspelled words, and some grammar, across the entire source tree.
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
5371
diff
changeset
|
5393 ;; (?\^G nil). XEmacs accidentally returns the correct value. However, |
|
3889ef128488
Fix misspelled words, and some grammar, across the entire source tree.
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
5371
diff
changeset
|
5394 ;; XEmacs 21.1.12 and 21.2.36 both fail on the first test. |
| 428 | 5395 |
| 5396 ;also do this: make two frames, one viewing "*scratch*", the other "foo". | |
| 5397 ;in *scratch*, type (sit-for 20)^J | |
| 5398 ;wait a couple of seconds, move cursor to foo, type "a" | |
| 5399 ;a should be inserted in foo. Cursor highlighting should not change in | |
| 5400 ;the meantime. | |
| 5401 | |
| 5402 ;do it with sleep-for. move cursor into foo, then back into *scratch* | |
| 5403 ;before typing. | |
| 5404 ;repeat also with (accept-process-output nil 20) | |
| 5405 | |
| 5406 ;make sure ^G aborts sit-for, sleep-for and accept-process-output: | |
| 5407 | |
| 5408 (defun tst () | |
| 5409 (list (condition-case c | |
| 5410 (sleep-for 20) | |
| 5411 (quit c)) | |
| 5412 (read-char))) | |
| 5413 | |
| 444 | 5414 (tst)^Ja^G ==> ((quit) ?a) with no signal |
| 5415 (tst)^J^Ga ==> ((quit) ?a) with no signal | |
| 5416 (tst)^Jabc^G ==> ((quit) ?a) with no signal, and "bc" inserted in buffer | |
| 428 | 5417 |
| 5418 ; with sit-for only do the 2nd test. | |
| 5419 ; Do all 3 tests with (accept-process-output nil 20) | |
| 5420 | |
| 5421 Do this: | |
| 5422 (setq enable-recursive-minibuffers t | |
| 5423 minibuffer-max-depth nil) | |
| 5424 ESC ESC ESC ESC - there are now two minibuffers active | |
| 5425 C-g C-g C-g - there should be active 0, not 1 | |
| 5426 Similarly: | |
| 5427 C-x C-f ~ / ? - wait for "Making completion list..." to display | |
| 5428 C-g - wait for "Quit" to display | |
| 5429 C-g - minibuffer should not be active | |
| 5430 however C-g before "Quit" is displayed should leave minibuffer active. | |
| 5431 | |
| 5432 ;do it all in both v18 and v19 and make sure all results are the same. | |
| 5433 ;all of these cases matter a lot, but some in quite subtle ways. | |
| 5434 */ | |
| 5435 | |
| 5436 /* | |
| 5437 Additional test cases for accept-process-output, sleep-for, sit-for. | |
| 5438 Be sure you do all of the above checking for C-g and focus, too! | |
| 5439 | |
| 5440 ; Make sure that timer handlers are run during, not after sit-for: | |
| 5441 (defun timer-check () | |
| 5442 (add-timeout 2 '(lambda (ignore) (message "timer ran")) nil) | |
| 5443 (sit-for 5) | |
| 5444 (message "after sit-for")) | |
| 5445 | |
| 5446 ; The first message should appear after 2 seconds, and the final message | |
| 5447 ; 3 seconds after that. | |
| 5448 ; repeat above test with (sleep-for 5) and (accept-process-output nil 5) | |
| 5449 | |
| 5450 | |
| 5451 | |
| 5452 ; Make sure that process filters are run during, not after sit-for. | |
| 5453 (defun fubar () | |
| 5454 (message "sit-for = %s" (sit-for 30))) | |
| 5455 (add-hook 'post-command-hook 'fubar) | |
| 5456 | |
| 5457 ; Now type M-x shell RET | |
| 5458 ; wait for the shell prompt then send: ls RET | |
| 5459 ; the output of ls should fill immediately, and not wait 30 seconds. | |
| 5460 | |
| 5461 ; repeat above test with (sleep-for 30) and (accept-process-output nil 30) | |
| 5462 | |
| 5463 | |
| 5464 | |
| 5465 ; Make sure that recursive invocations return immediately: | |
| 5466 (defmacro test-diff-time (start end) | |
| 5467 `(+ (* (- (car ,end) (car ,start)) 65536.0) | |
| 5468 (- (cadr ,end) (cadr ,start)) | |
| 5469 (/ (- (caddr ,end) (caddr ,start)) 1000000.0))) | |
| 5470 | |
| 5471 (defun testee (ignore) | |
| 5472 (sit-for 10)) | |
| 5473 | |
| 5474 (defun test-them () | |
| 5475 (let ((start (current-time)) | |
| 5476 end) | |
| 5477 (add-timeout 2 'testee nil) | |
| 5478 (sit-for 5) | |
| 5479 (add-timeout 2 'testee nil) | |
| 5480 (sleep-for 5) | |
| 5481 (add-timeout 2 'testee nil) | |
| 5482 (accept-process-output nil 5) | |
| 5483 (setq end (current-time)) | |
| 5484 (test-diff-time start end))) | |
| 5485 | |
| 5486 (test-them) should sit for 15 seconds. | |
| 5487 Repeat with testee set to sleep-for and accept-process-output. | |
| 5488 These should each delay 36 seconds. | |
| 5489 | |
| 5490 */ |
