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1 This directory contains the source files for the C component of XEmacs.
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2 Nothing in this directory is needed for using XEmacs once it is built
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3 and installed, if the dumped Emacs is copied elsewhere.
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4
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5 See the files ../README and then ../INSTALL for installation instructions.
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6
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7 Under Unix, the file `Makefile.in.in' is used as a template by the script
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8 `../configure' to produce `Makefile.in'. The same script then uses `cpp'
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9 to produce the machine-dependent `Makefile' from `Makefile.in';
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10 `Makefile' is the file which actually controls the compilation of
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11 Emacs. Most of this should work transparently to the user; you should
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12 only need to run `../configure', and then type `make'.
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13
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14 General changes for XEmacs:
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15 ---------------------------
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16 1. Lisp objects.
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17
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18 -- XFASTINT has been eliminated. Use of this expression as an lvalue
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19 is incompatible with the union form of Lisp objects, and use as
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20 an rvalue is likely to lead to errors and doesn't really save much
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21 time. Expressions of the form `XFASTINT (obj) = num;' get replaced
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22 by `obj = make_int (num);' or `XSETINT (obj, num);' and
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23 expressions of the form `num = XFASTINT (obj);' get replaced by
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24 `num = XINT (obj);'. Use Qzero in place of `make_int (0)'.
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25
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26 -- Use of XTYPE gets replaced by the appropriate predicate. Using
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27 XTYPE only works for the small number of types that are not stored
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28 using the Lisp_Record type (int, cons, string, and vector). For
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29 example, `(XTYPE (foo) == Lisp_Buffer)' gets replaced by
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30 `(BUFFERP (foo))'.
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31
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32 -- `XSET (obj, Lisp_Int, num)' gets replaced by `XSETINT (obj, num)',
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33 for consistency.
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34
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35 -- Some occurrences of XSET need to get replaced by XSETR --
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36 specifically, those where the type is not a primitive type
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37 (primitive types are int, cons, string, and vector).
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38
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39 -- References to `XSTRING (obj)->size' get replaced with
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40 `XSTRING_LENGTH (obj)'. This is currently for cosmetic reasons
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41 but there may be other reasons in the future. (This change is
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42 currently incomplete in the source files.)
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43
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44
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45 2. Storage classes:
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46
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47 -- All occurrences of `register' should be replaced by `REGISTER'.
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48 It interferes with backtraces so we disable it if DEBUG_XEMACS
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49 is defined.
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50
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51
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52 3. Errors, messages, I18N3 snarfing:
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53
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54 -- Errors are continuable in XEmacs but are not in FSF Emacs.
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55 Therefore, it's important that functions do something reasonable
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56 if an error gets continued. If you want to signal a non-
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57 continuable error, the call to Fsignal() gets put inside a
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58 `while (1)' loop. To facilitate this, and also for proper I18N3
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59 message snarfing, most calls to Fsignal() have been replaced by
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60 calls to signal_error(), signal_simple_error(), etc. Look at
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61 eval.c for a classification of various error functions.
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62
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63 -- Constant strings occurring in source files need to get wrapped
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64 in a call to GETTEXT (or if inside of a call to `build_string',
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65 change that function to `build_translated_string') if they don't
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66 occur in certain places where the I18N3 message snarfer will see
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67 them. For a complete discussion of this, see the file
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68 lib-src/make-msgfile.lex.
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69
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70 NOTE: I18N3 support is not currently working, so the above may
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71 or may not apply. Thus it is not a good idea to add random
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72 GETTEXTs, unless you really know what you are doing.
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73
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74 -- Calls to `fprintf (stderr, ...)' and `printf (...)' get replaced
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75 with calls to `stderr_out' and `stdout_out'. This is for I18N3
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76 message snarfing.
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77
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78 4. Initialization:
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79
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80 -- FSF constructs like `obj = intern ("string"); staticpro (&obj);'
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81 get replaced by `defsymbol (&obj);'. This is for code cleanness
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82 and better purespace usage.
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83 -- FSF constructs like
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84 obj = intern ("error");
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85 Fput (obj, Qerror_message, "message");
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86 Fput (obj, Qerror_conditions, some list);
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87 get replaced by calls to deferror(). See the definition of
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88 deferror() for how the correct arguments to pass. This is for
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89 code cleanness and I18N3 message snarfing.
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90 -- Code in keys_of_foo() functions has been moved into Lisp.
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