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1 @c -*-texinfo-*- | |
2 @c This is part of the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual. | |
3 @c Copyright (C) 1995, 1996 Ben Wing. | |
4 @c See the file lispref.texi for copying conditions. | |
5 @setfilename ../../info/specifiers.info | |
6 @node Specifiers, Faces and Window-System Objects, Extents, top | |
7 @chapter Specifiers | |
8 @cindex specifier | |
9 | |
10 A specifier is an object used to keep track of a property whose value | |
11 may vary depending on the particular situation (e.g. particular buffer | |
12 displayed in a particular window) that it is used in. The value of many | |
13 built-in properties, such as the font, foreground, background, and such | |
14 properties of a face and variables such as | |
15 @code{modeline-shadow-thickness} and @code{top-toolbar-height}, is | |
16 actually a specifier object. The specifier object, in turn, is | |
17 ``instanced'' in a particular situation to yield the real value | |
18 of the property in that situation. | |
19 | |
20 @defun specifierp object | |
21 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a specifier. | |
22 @end defun | |
23 | |
24 @menu | |
25 * Introduction to Specifiers:: Specifiers provide a clean way for | |
26 display and other properties to vary | |
27 (under user control) in a wide variety | |
28 of contexts. | |
29 * Specifiers In-Depth:: Gory details about specifier innards. | |
30 * Specifier Instancing:: Instancing means obtaining the ``value'' of | |
31 a specifier in a particular context. | |
32 * Specifier Types:: Specifiers come in different flavors. | |
33 * Adding Specifications:: Specifications control a specifier's ``value'' | |
34 by giving conditions under which a | |
35 particular value is valid. | |
36 * Retrieving Specifications:: Querying a specifier's specifications. | |
37 * Specifier Tag Functions:: Working with specifier tags. | |
38 * Specifier Instancing Functions:: | |
39 Functions to instance a specifier. | |
40 * Specifier Example:: Making all this stuff clearer. | |
41 * Creating Specifiers:: Creating specifiers for your own use. | |
42 * Specifier Validation Functions:: | |
43 Validating the components of a specifier. | |
44 * Other Specification Functions:: | |
45 Other ways of working with specifications. | |
46 @end menu | |
47 | |
48 @node Introduction to Specifiers | |
49 @section Introduction to Specifiers | |
50 | |
51 Sometimes you may want the value of a property to vary depending on | |
52 the context the property is used in. A simple example of this in XEmacs | |
53 is buffer-local variables. For example, the variable | |
54 @code{modeline-format}, which controls the format of the modeline, can | |
55 have different values depending on the particular buffer being edited. | |
56 The variable has a default value which most modes will use, but a | |
57 specialized package such as Calendar might change the variable so | |
58 as to tailor the modeline to its own purposes. | |
59 | |
60 Other properties (such as those that can be changed by the | |
61 @code{modify-frame-parameters} function, for example the color of the | |
62 text cursor) can have frame-local values, although it might also make | |
63 sense for them to have buffer-local values. In other cases, you might | |
64 want the property to vary depending on the particular window within the | |
65 frame that applies (e.g. the top or bottom window in a split frame), the | |
66 device type that that frame appears on (X or tty), etc. Perhaps you can | |
67 envision some more complicated scenario where you want a particular | |
68 value in a specified buffer, another value in all other buffers | |
69 displayed on a particular frame, another value in all other buffers | |
70 displayed in all other frames on any mono (two-color, e.g. black and | |
71 white only) displays, and a default value in all other circumstances. | |
72 | |
73 A @dfn{specifier} is a generalization of this, allowing a great deal | |
74 of flexibility in controlling exactly what value a property has in which | |
75 circumstances. It is most commonly used for display properties, such as | |
76 an image or the foreground color of a face. As a simple example, you can | |
77 specify that the foreground of the default face be | |
78 | |
79 @itemize @bullet | |
80 @item | |
81 blue for a particular buffer | |
82 @item | |
83 green for all other buffers | |
84 @end itemize | |
85 | |
86 As a more complicated example, you could specify that the foreground of | |
87 the default face be | |
88 | |
89 @itemize @bullet | |
90 @item | |
91 forest green for all buffers displayed in a particular Emacs window, or | |
92 green if the X server doesn't recognize the color @samp{forest green} | |
93 @item | |
94 blue for all buffers displayed in a particular frame | |
95 @item | |
96 red for all other buffers displayed on a color device | |
97 @item | |
98 white for all other buffers | |
99 @end itemize | |
100 | |
101 @node Specifiers In-Depth | |
102 @section In-Depth Overview of a Specifier | |
103 @cindex specification (in a specifier) | |
104 @cindex domain (in a specifier) | |
105 @cindex locale (in a specifier) | |
106 @cindex instantiator (in a specifier) | |
107 @cindex instancing (in a specifier) | |
108 @cindex instance (in a specifier) | |
109 @cindex inst-list (in a specifier) | |
110 @cindex inst-pair (in a specifier) | |
111 @cindex tag (in a specifier) | |
112 @cindex tag set (in a specifier) | |
113 @cindex specifier, specification | |
114 @cindex specifier, domain | |
115 @cindex specifier, locale | |
116 @cindex specifier, instantiator | |
117 @cindex specifier, instancing | |
118 @cindex specifier, instance | |
119 @cindex specifier, inst-list | |
120 @cindex specifier, inst-pair | |
121 @cindex specifier, tag | |
122 @cindex specifier, tag set | |
123 | |
124 A specifier object encapsulates a set of @dfn{specifications}, each of | |
125 which says what its value should be if a particular condition applies. | |
126 For example, one specification might be ``The value should be | |
127 darkseagreen2 on X devices'' another might be ``The value should be blue | |
128 in the *Help* buffer''. In specifier terminology, these conditions are | |
129 called @dfn{locales} and the values are called @dfn{instantiators}. | |
130 Given a specifier, a logical question is ``What is its value in a | |
131 particular situation?'' This involves looking through the specifications | |
132 to see which ones apply to this particular situation, and perhaps | |
133 preferring one over another if more than one applies. In specifier | |
134 terminology, a ``particular situation'' is called a @dfn{domain}, and | |
135 determining its value in a particular domain is called @dfn{instancing}. | |
136 Most of the time, a domain is identified by a particular window. For | |
137 example, if the redisplay engine is drawing text in the default face in | |
138 a particular window, it retrieves the specifier for the foreground color | |
139 of the default face and @dfn{instances} it in the domain given by that | |
140 window; in other words, it asks the specifier, ``What is your value in | |
141 this window?''. | |
142 | |
143 More specifically, a specifier contains a set of @dfn{specifications}, | |
144 each of which associates a @dfn{locale} (a buffer object, a window | |
145 object, a frame object, a device object, or the symbol @code{global}) | |
146 with an @dfn{inst-list}, which is a list of one or more | |
147 @dfn{inst-pairs}. (For each possible locale, there can be at most one | |
148 specification containing that locale.) Each inst-pair is a cons of a | |
149 @dfn{tag set} (an unordered list of zero or more symbols, or @dfn{tags}) | |
150 and an @dfn{instantiator} (the allowed form of this varies depending on | |
151 the type of specifier). In a given specification, there may be more | |
152 than one inst-pair with the same tag set; this is unlike for locales. | |
153 | |
154 The tag set is used to restrict the sorts of devices over which the | |
155 instantiator is valid and to uniquely identify instantiators added by a | |
156 particular application, so that different applications can work on the | |
157 same specifier and not interfere with each other. Each tag can have a | |
158 @dfn{predicate} associated with it, which is a function of one argument | |
159 (a device) that specifies whether the tag matches that particular | |
160 device. (If a tag does not have a predicate, it matches all devices.) | |
161 All tags in a tag set must match a device for the associated inst-pair | |
162 to be instantiable over that device. (A null tag set is perfectly | |
163 valid.) | |
164 | |
165 The valid device types (normally @code{x}, @code{tty}, and | |
166 @code{stream}) and device classes (normally @code{color}, | |
167 @code{grayscale}, and @code{mono}) can always be used as tags, and match | |
168 devices of the associated type or class (@pxref{Consoles and Devices}). | |
169 User-defined tags may be defined, with an optional predicate specified. | |
170 An application can create its own tag, use it to mark all its | |
171 instantiators, and be fairly confident that it will not interfere with | |
172 other applications that modify the same specifier -- Functions that add | |
173 a specification to a specifier usually only overwrite existing | |
174 inst-pairs with the same tag set as was given, and a particular tag or | |
175 tag set can be specified when removing instantiators. | |
176 | |
177 When a specifier is instanced in a domain, both the locale and the tag | |
178 set can be viewed as specifying necessary conditions that must apply in | |
179 that domain for an instantiator to be considered as a possible result of | |
180 the instancing. More specific locales always override more general | |
181 locales (thus, there is no particular ordering of the specifications in | |
182 a specifier); however, the tag sets are simply considered in the order | |
183 that the inst-pairs occur in the specification's inst-list. | |
184 | |
185 Note also that the actual object that results from the instancing | |
186 (called an @dfn{instance object}) may not be the same as the instantiator | |
187 from which it was derived. For some specifier types (such as integer | |
188 specifiers and boolean specifiers), the instantiator will be returned | |
189 directly as the instance object. For other types, however, this | |
190 is not the case. For example, for font specifiers, the instantiator | |
191 is a font-description string and the instance object is a font-instance | |
192 object, which describes how the font is displayed on a particular device. | |
193 A font-instance object encapsulates such things as the actual font name | |
194 used to display the font on that device (a font-description string | |
195 under X is usually a wildcard specification that may resolve to | |
196 different font names, with possibly different foundries, widths, etc., | |
197 on different devices), the extra properties of that font on that | |
198 device, etc. Furthermore, this conversion (called @dfn{instantiation}) | |
199 might fail -- a font or color might not exist on a particular device, | |
200 for example. | |
201 | |
202 @node Specifier Instancing | |
203 @section How a Specifier Is Instanced | |
204 @cindex fallback (in a specifier) | |
205 @cindex specifier, fallback | |
206 | |
207 Instancing of a specifier in a particular window domain proceeds as | |
208 follows: | |
209 | |
210 @itemize @bullet | |
211 @item | |
212 First, XEmacs searches for a specification whose locale is the same as | |
213 the window's buffer. If that fails, the search is repeated, looking for | |
214 a locale that is the same as the window itself. If that fails, the | |
215 search is repeated using the window's frame, then using the device that | |
216 frame is on. Finally, the specification whose locale is the symbol | |
217 @code{global} (if there is such a specification) is considered. | |
218 @item | |
219 The inst-pairs contained in the specification that was found are | |
220 considered in their order in the inst-list, looking for one whose tag | |
221 set matches the device that is derived from the window domain. (The | |
222 tag set is an unordered list of zero or more tag symbols. For all | |
223 tags that have predicates associated with them, the predicate must | |
224 match the device.) | |
225 @item | |
226 If a matching tag set is found, the corresponding instantiator is passed | |
227 to the specifier's instantiation method, which is specific to the type | |
228 of the specifier. If it succeeds, the resulting instance object is | |
229 returned as the result of the instancing and the instancing is done. | |
230 Otherwise, the operation continues, looking for another matching | |
231 inst-pair in the current specification. | |
232 @item | |
233 When there are no more inst-pairs to be considered in the current | |
234 specification, the search starts over, looking for another specification | |
235 as in the first step above. | |
236 @item | |
237 If all specifications are exhausted and no instance object can be | |
238 derived, the instancing fails. (Actually, this is not completely true. | |
239 Some specifier objects for built-in properties have a @dfn{fallback} | |
240 value, which is either an inst-list or another specifier object, that is | |
241 consulted if the instancing is about to fail. If it is an inst-list, | |
242 the searching proceeds using the inst-pairs in that list. If it is a | |
243 specifier, the entire instancing starts over using that specifier | |
244 instead of the given one. Fallback values are set by the C code and | |
245 cannot be modified, except perhaps indirectly, using any Lisp functions. | |
246 The purpose of them is to supply some values to make sure that | |
247 instancing of built-in properties can't fail and to implement some basic | |
248 specifier inheritance, such as the fact that faces inherit their | |
249 properties from the @code{default} face.) | |
250 @end itemize | |
251 | |
252 It is also possible to instance a specifier over a frame domain or | |
253 device domain instead of over a window domain. The C code, for example, | |
254 instances the @code{top-toolbar-height} variable over a frame domain in | |
255 order to determine the height of a frame's top toolbar. Instancing over | |
256 a frame or device is similar to instancing over a window except that | |
257 specifications for locales that cannot be derived from the domain are | |
258 ignored. Specifically, instancing over a frame looks first for frame | |
259 locales, then device locales, then the @code{global} locale. Instancing | |
260 over a device domain looks only for device locales and the @code{global} | |
261 locale. | |
262 | |
263 @node Specifier Types | |
264 @section Specifier Types | |
265 | |
266 There are various different types of specifiers. The type of a | |
267 specifier controls what sorts of instantiators are valid, how an | |
268 instantiator is instantiated, etc. Here is a list of built-in specifier | |
269 types: | |
270 | |
271 @table @code | |
272 @item boolean | |
273 The valid instantiators are the symbols @code{t} and @code{nil}. | |
274 Instance objects are the same as instantiators so no special | |
275 instantiation function is needed. | |
276 | |
277 @item integer | |
278 The valid instantiators are integers. Instance objects are the same as | |
279 instantiators so no special instantiation function is needed. | |
280 @code{modeline-shadow-thickness} is an example of an integer specifier | |
281 (negative thicknesses indicate that the shadow is drawn recessed instead | |
282 of raised). | |
283 | |
284 @item natnum | |
285 The valid instantiators are natnums (non-negative integers). Instance | |
286 objects are the same as instantiators so no special instantiation | |
287 function is needed. Natnum specifiers are used for dimension variables | |
288 such as @code{top-toolbar-height}. | |
289 | |
290 @item generic | |
291 All Lisp objects are valid instantiators. Instance objects are the same | |
292 as instantiators so no special instantiation function is needed. | |
293 | |
294 @item font | |
295 The valid instantiators are strings describing fonts or vectors | |
296 indicating inheritance from the font of some face. Instance objects | |
297 are font-instance objects, which are specific to a particular device. | |
298 The instantiation method in this specifier can fail, unlike for | |
299 integer, natnum, boolean, and generic specifiers. | |
300 | |
301 @item color | |
302 The valid instantiators are strings describing colors or vectors | |
303 indicating inheritance from the foreground or background of some face. | |
304 Instance objects are color-instance objects, which are specific to a | |
305 particular device. The instantiation method in this specifier can fail, | |
306 as for font specifiers. | |
307 | |
308 @item image | |
309 Images are perhaps the most complicated type of built-in specifier. The | |
310 valid instantiators are strings (a filename, inline data for a pixmap, | |
311 or text to be displayed in a text glyph) or vectors describing inline | |
312 data of various sorts or indicating inheritance from the | |
313 background-pixmap property of some face. Instance objects are either | |
314 strings (for text images), image-instance objects (for pixmap images), | |
315 or subwindow objects (for subwindow images). The instantiation method | |
316 in this specifier can fail, as for font and color specifiers. | |
317 | |
318 @item face-boolean | |
319 The valid instantiators are the symbols @code{t} and @code{nil} and | |
320 vectors indicating inheritance from a boolean property of some face. | |
321 Specifiers of this sort are used for all of the built-in boolean | |
322 properties of faces. Instance objects are either the symbol @code{t} | |
323 or the symbol @code{nil}. | |
324 | |
325 @item toolbar | |
326 The valid instantiators are toolbar descriptors, which are lists | |
327 of toolbar-button descriptors (each of which is a vector of two | |
328 or four elements). @xref{Toolbar} for more information. | |
329 @end table | |
330 | |
331 @xref{Faces and Window-System Objects} for more information on fonts, | |
332 colors, and face-boolean specifiers. @xref{Glyphs} for more information | |
333 about image specifiers. @xref{Toolbar} for more information on toolbar | |
334 specifiers. | |
335 | |
336 @defun specifier-type specifier | |
337 This function returns the type of @var{specifier}. The returned value | |
338 will be a symbol: one of @code{integer}, @code{boolean}, etc., as | |
339 listed in the above table. | |
340 @end defun | |
341 | |
342 Functions are also provided to query whether an object is a particular | |
343 kind of specifier: | |
344 | |
345 @defun boolean-specifier-p object | |
346 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a boolean | |
347 specifier. | |
348 @end defun | |
349 | |
350 @defun integer-specifier-p object | |
351 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is an integer | |
352 specifier. | |
353 @end defun | |
354 | |
355 @defun natnum-specifier-p object | |
356 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a natnum | |
357 specifier. | |
358 @end defun | |
359 | |
360 @defun generic-specifier-p object | |
361 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a generic | |
362 specifier. | |
363 @end defun | |
364 | |
365 @defun face-boolean-specifier-p object | |
366 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a face-boolean | |
367 specifier. | |
368 @end defun | |
369 | |
370 @defun toolbar-specifier-p object | |
371 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a toolbar | |
372 specifier. | |
373 @end defun | |
374 | |
375 @defun font-specifier-p object | |
376 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a font | |
377 specifier. | |
378 @end defun | |
379 | |
380 @defun color-specifier-p object | |
381 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a color | |
382 specifier. | |
383 @end defun | |
384 | |
385 @defun image-specifier-p object | |
386 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is an image | |
387 specifier. | |
388 @end defun | |
389 | |
390 @node Adding Specifications | |
391 @section Adding specifications to a Specifier | |
392 | |
393 @defun add-spec-to-specifier specifier instantiator &optional locale tag-set how-to-add | |
394 This function adds a specification to @var{specifier}. The | |
395 specification maps from @var{locale} (which should be a buffer, window, | |
396 frame, device, or the symbol @code{global}, and defaults to | |
397 @code{global}) to @var{instantiator}, whose allowed values depend on the | |
398 type of the specifier. Optional argument @var{tag-set} limits the | |
399 instantiator to apply only to the specified tag set, which should be a | |
400 list of tags all of which must match the device being instantiated over | |
401 (tags are a device type, a device class, or tags defined with | |
402 @code{define-specifier-tag}). Specifying a single symbol for | |
403 @var{tag-set} is equivalent to specifying a one-element list containing | |
404 that symbol. Optional argument @var{how-to-add} specifies what to do if | |
405 there are already specifications in the specifier. It should be one of | |
406 | |
407 @table @code | |
408 @item prepend | |
409 Put at the beginning of the current list of instantiators for @var{locale}. | |
410 @item append | |
411 Add to the end of the current list of instantiators for @var{locale}. | |
412 @item remove-tag-set-prepend | |
413 This is the default. Remove any existing instantiators whose tag set is | |
414 the same as @var{tag-set}; then put the new instantiator at the | |
415 beginning of the current list. | |
416 @item remove-tag-set-append | |
417 Remove any existing instantiators whose tag set is the same as | |
418 @var{tag-set}; then put the new instantiator at the end of the current | |
419 list. | |
420 @item remove-locale | |
421 Remove all previous instantiators for this locale before adding the new | |
422 spec. | |
423 @item remove-locale-type | |
424 Remove all specifications for all locales of the same type as | |
425 @var{locale} (this includes @var{locale} itself) before adding the new | |
426 spec. | |
427 @item remove-all | |
428 Remove all specifications from the specifier before adding the new spec. | |
429 @end table | |
430 | |
431 @code{remove-tag-set-prepend} is the default. | |
432 | |
433 You can retrieve the specifications for a particular locale or locale type | |
434 with the function @code{specifier-spec-list} or @code{specifier-specs}. | |
435 @end defun | |
436 | |
437 @defun add-spec-list-to-specifier specifier spec-list &optional how-to-add | |
438 This function adds a @dfn{spec-list} (a list of specifications) to | |
439 @var{specifier}. The format of a spec-list is | |
440 | |
441 @example | |
442 @code{((@var{locale} (@var{tag-set} . @var{instantiator}) ...) ...)} | |
443 @end example | |
444 | |
445 where | |
446 | |
447 @itemize @bullet | |
448 @item | |
449 @var{locale} := a buffer, a window, a frame, a device, or @code{global} | |
450 @item | |
451 @var{tag-set} := an unordered list of zero or more @var{tags}, each of | |
452 which is a symbol | |
453 @item | |
454 @var{tag} := a device class (@pxref{Consoles and Devices}), a device type, | |
455 or a tag defined with @code{define-specifier-tag} | |
456 @item | |
457 @var{instantiator} := format determined by the type of specifier | |
458 @end itemize | |
459 | |
460 The pair @code{(@var{tag-set} . @var{instantiator})} is called an | |
461 @dfn{inst-pair}. A list of inst-pairs is called an @dfn{inst-list}. | |
462 The pair @code{(@var{locale} . @var{inst-list})} is called a | |
463 @dfn{specification}. A spec-list, then, can be viewed as a list of | |
464 specifications. | |
465 | |
466 @var{how-to-add} specifies how to combine the new specifications with | |
467 the existing ones, and has the same semantics as for | |
468 @code{add-spec-to-specifier}. | |
469 | |
470 In many circumstances, the higher-level function @code{set-specifier} is | |
471 more convenient and should be used instead. | |
472 @end defun | |
473 | |
474 @defun set-specifier specifier value &optional how-to-add | |
475 This function adds some specifications to @var{specifier}. @var{value} | |
476 can be a single instantiator or tagged instantiator (added as a global | |
477 specification), a list of tagged and/or untagged instantiators (added as | |
478 a global specification), a cons of a locale and instantiator or locale | |
479 and instantiator list, a list of such conses, or nearly any other | |
480 reasonable form. More specifically, @var{value} can be anything | |
481 accepted by @code{canonicalize-spec-list}. | |
482 | |
483 @var{how-to-add} is the same as in @code{add-spec-to-specifier}. | |
484 | |
485 Note that @code{set-specifier} is exactly complementary to | |
486 @code{specifier-specs} except in the case where @var{specifier} has no | |
487 specs at all in it but @code{nil} is a valid instantiator (in that case, | |
488 @code{specifier-specs} will return @code{nil} (meaning no specs) and | |
489 @code{set-specifier} will interpret the @code{nil} as meaning ``I'm | |
490 adding a global instantiator and its value is @code{nil}''), or in | |
491 strange cases where there is an ambiguity between a spec-list and an | |
492 inst-list, etc. (The built-in specifier types are designed in such a way | |
493 as to avoid any such ambiguities.) | |
494 | |
495 If you want to work with spec-lists, you should probably not use these | |
496 functions, but should use the lower-level functions | |
497 @code{specifier-spec-list} and @code{add-spec-list-to-specifier}. These | |
498 functions always work with fully-qualified spec-lists; thus, there is no | |
499 ambiguity. | |
500 @end defun | |
501 | |
502 @defun canonicalize-inst-pair inst-pair specifier-type &optional noerror | |
503 This function canonicalizes the given @var{inst-pair}. | |
504 | |
505 @var{specifier-type} specifies the type of specifier that this | |
506 @var{spec-list} will be used for. | |
507 | |
508 Canonicalizing means converting to the full form for an inst-pair, i.e. | |
509 @code{(@var{tag-set} . @var{instantiator})}. A single, untagged | |
510 instantiator is given a tag set of @code{nil} (the empty set), and a | |
511 single tag is converted into a tag set consisting only of that tag. | |
512 | |
513 If @var{noerror} is non-@code{nil}, signal an error if the inst-pair is | |
514 invalid; otherwise return @code{t}. | |
515 @end defun | |
516 | |
517 @defun canonicalize-inst-list inst-list specifier-type &optional noerror | |
518 This function canonicalizes the given @var{inst-list} (a list of | |
519 inst-pairs). | |
520 | |
521 @var{specifier-type} specifies the type of specifier that this @var{inst-list} | |
522 will be used for. | |
523 | |
524 Canonicalizing means converting to the full form for an inst-list, i.e. | |
525 @code{((@var{tag-set} . @var{instantiator}) ...)}. This function | |
526 accepts a single inst-pair or any abbrevation thereof or a list of | |
527 (possibly abbreviated) inst-pairs. (See @code{canonicalize-inst-pair}.) | |
528 | |
529 If @var{noerror} is non-@code{nil}, signal an error if the inst-list is | |
530 invalid; otherwise return @code{t}. | |
531 @end defun | |
532 | |
533 @defun canonicalize-spec spec specifier-type &optional noerror | |
534 This function canonicalizes the given @var{spec} (a specification). | |
535 | |
536 @var{specifier-type} specifies the type of specifier that this | |
537 @var{spec-list} will be used for. | |
538 | |
539 Canonicalizing means converting to the full form for a spec, i.e. | |
540 @code{(@var{locale} (@var{tag-set} . @var{instantiator}) ...)}. This | |
541 function accepts a possibly abbreviated inst-list or a cons of a locale | |
542 and a possibly abbreviated inst-list. (See | |
543 @code{canonicalize-inst-list}.) | |
544 | |
545 If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, signal an error if the specification is | |
546 invalid; otherwise return @code{t}. | |
547 @end defun | |
548 | |
549 @defun canonicalize-spec-list spec-list specifier-type &optional noerror | |
550 This function canonicalizes the given @var{spec-list} (a list of | |
551 specifications). | |
552 | |
553 @var{specifier-type} specifies the type of specifier that this | |
554 @var{spec-list} will be used for. | |
555 | |
556 Canonicalizing means converting to the full form for a spec-list, i.e. | |
557 @code{((@var{locale} (@var{tag-set} . @var{instantiator}) ...) ...)}. | |
558 This function accepts a possibly abbreviated specification or a list of | |
559 such things. (See @code{canonicalize-spec}.) This is the function used | |
560 to convert spec-lists accepted by @code{set-specifier} and such into a | |
561 form suitable for @code{add-spec-list-to-specifier}. | |
562 | |
563 This function tries extremely hard to resolve any ambiguities, | |
564 and the built-in specifier types (font, image, toolbar, etc.) are | |
565 designed so that there won't be any ambiguities. | |
566 | |
567 If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, signal an error if the spec-list is | |
568 invalid; otherwise return @code{t}. | |
569 @end defun | |
570 | |
571 @node Retrieving Specifications | |
572 @section Retrieving the Specifications from a Specifier | |
573 | |
574 @defun specifier-spec-list specifier &optional locale tag-set exact-p | |
575 This function returns the spec-list of specifications for | |
576 @var{specifier} in @var{locale}. | |
577 | |
578 If @var{locale} is a particular locale (a buffer, window, frame, device, | |
579 or the symbol @code{global}), a spec-list consisting of the | |
580 specification for that locale will be returned. | |
581 | |
582 If @var{locale} is a locale type (i.e. a symbol @code{buffer}, | |
583 @code{window}, @code{frame}, or @code{device}), a spec-list of the | |
584 specifications for all locales of that type will be returned. | |
585 | |
586 If @var{locale} is @code{nil} or the symbol @code{all}, a spec-list of | |
587 all specifications in @var{specifier} will be returned. | |
588 | |
589 @var{locale} can also be a list of locales, locale types, and/or | |
590 @code{all}; the result is as if @code{specifier-spec-list} were called | |
591 on each element of the list and the results concatenated together. | |
592 | |
593 Only instantiators where @var{tag-set} (a list of zero or more tags) is | |
594 a subset of (or possibly equal to) the instantiator's tag set are | |
595 returned. (The default value of@code{ nil} is a subset of all tag sets, | |
596 so in this case no instantiators will be screened out.) If @var{exact-p} | |
597 is non-@code{nil}, however, @var{tag-set} must be equal to an | |
598 instantiator's tag set for the instantiator to be returned. | |
599 @end defun | |
600 | |
601 @defun specifier-specs specifier &optional locale tag-set exact-p | |
602 This function returns the specification(s) for @var{specifier} in | |
603 @var{locale}. | |
604 | |
605 If @var{locale} is a single locale or is a list of one element | |
606 containing a single locale, then a ``short form'' of the instantiators | |
607 for that locale will be returned. Otherwise, this function is identical | |
608 to @code{specifier-spec-list}. | |
609 | |
610 The ``short form'' is designed for readability and not for ease of use | |
611 in Lisp programs, and is as follows: | |
612 | |
613 @enumerate | |
614 @item | |
615 If there is only one instantiator, then an inst-pair (i.e. cons of tag | |
616 and instantiator) will be returned; otherwise a list of inst-pairs will | |
617 be returned. | |
618 @item | |
619 For each inst-pair returned, if the instantiator's tag is @code{any}, | |
620 the tag will be removed and the instantiator itself will be returned | |
621 instead of the inst-pair. | |
622 @item | |
623 If there is only one instantiator, its value is @code{nil}, and its tag | |
624 is @code{any}, a one-element list containing @code{nil} will be returned | |
625 rather than just @code{nil}, to distinguish this case from there being | |
626 no instantiators at all. | |
627 @end enumerate | |
628 | |
629 @end defun | |
630 | |
631 @defun specifier-fallback specifier | |
632 This function returns the fallback value for @var{specifier}. Fallback | |
633 values are provided by the C code for certain built-in specifiers to | |
634 make sure that instancing won't fail even if all specs are removed from | |
635 the specifier, or to implement simple inheritance behavior (e.g. this | |
636 method is used to ensure that faces other than @code{default} inherit | |
637 their attributes from @code{default}). By design, you cannot change the | |
638 fallback value, and specifiers created with @code{make-specifier} will | |
639 never have a fallback (although a similar, Lisp-accessible capability | |
640 may be provided in the future to allow for inheritance). | |
641 | |
642 The fallback value will be an inst-list that is instanced like | |
643 any other inst-list, a specifier of the same type as @var{specifier} | |
644 (results in inheritance), or @code{nil} for no fallback. | |
645 | |
646 When you instance a specifier, you can explicitly request that the | |
647 fallback not be consulted. (The C code does this, for example, when | |
648 merging faces.) See @code{specifier-instance}. | |
649 @end defun | |
650 | |
651 @node Specifier Tag Functions | |
652 @section Working With Specifier Tags | |
653 | |
654 A specifier tag set is an entity that is attached to an instantiator | |
655 and can be used to restrict the scope of that instantiator to a | |
656 particular device class or device type and/or to mark instantiators | |
657 added by a particular package so that they can be later removed. | |
658 | |
659 A specifier tag set consists of a list of zero of more specifier tags, | |
660 each of which is a symbol that is recognized by XEmacs as a tag. (The | |
661 valid device types and device classes are always tags, as are any tags | |
662 defined by @code{define-specifier-tag}.) It is called a ``tag set'' (as | |
663 opposed to a list) because the order of the tags or the number of times | |
664 a particular tag occurs does not matter. | |
665 | |
666 Each tag has a predicate associated with it, which specifies whether | |
667 that tag applies to a particular device. The tags which are device | |
668 types and classes match devices of that type or class. User-defined | |
669 tags can have any predicate, or none (meaning that all devices match). | |
670 When attempting to instance a specifier, a particular instantiator is | |
671 only considered if the device of the domain being instanced over matches | |
672 all tags in the tag set attached to that instantiator. | |
673 | |
674 Most of the time, a tag set is not specified, and the instantiator gets | |
675 a null tag set, which matches all devices. | |
676 | |
677 @defun valid-specifier-tag-p tag | |
678 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{tag} is a valid specifier | |
679 tag. | |
680 @end defun | |
681 | |
682 @defun valid-specifier-tag-set-p tag-set | |
683 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{tag-set} is a valid | |
684 specifier tag set. | |
685 @end defun | |
686 | |
687 @defun canonicalize-tag-set tag-set | |
688 This function canonicalizes the given tag set. Two canonicalized tag | |
689 sets can be compared with @code{equal} to see if they represent the same | |
690 tag set. (Specifically, canonicalizing involves sorting by symbol name | |
691 and removing duplicates.) | |
692 @end defun | |
693 | |
694 @defun device-matches-specifier-tag-set-p device tag-set | |
695 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{device} matches specifier | |
696 tag set @var{tag-set}. This means that @var{device} matches each tag in | |
697 the tag set. | |
698 @end defun | |
699 | |
700 @defun define-specifier-tag tag &optional predicate | |
701 This function defines a new specifier tag. If @var{predicate} is | |
702 specified, it should be a function of one argument (a device) that | |
703 specifies whether the tag matches that particular device. If | |
704 @var{predicate} is omitted, the tag matches all devices. | |
705 | |
706 You can redefine an existing user-defined specifier tag. However, you | |
707 cannot redefine the built-in specifier tags (the device types and | |
708 classes) or the symbols @code{nil}, @code{t}, @code{all}, or | |
709 @code{global}. | |
710 @end defun | |
711 | |
712 @defun device-matching-specifier-tag-list &optional device | |
713 This function returns a list of all specifier tags matching | |
714 @var{device}. @var{device} defaults to the selected device if omitted. | |
715 @end defun | |
716 | |
717 @defun specifier-tag-list | |
718 This function returns a list of all currently-defined specifier tags. | |
719 This includes the built-in ones (the device types and classes). | |
720 @end defun | |
721 | |
722 @defun specifier-tag-predicate tag | |
723 This function returns the predicate for the given specifier tag. | |
724 @end defun | |
725 | |
726 @node Specifier Instancing Functions | |
727 @section Functions for Instancing a Specifier | |
728 | |
729 @defun specifier-instance specifier &optional domain default no-fallback | |
730 This function instantiates @var{specifier} (return its value) in | |
731 @var{domain}. If no instance can be generated for this domain, return | |
732 @var{default}. | |
733 | |
734 @var{domain} should be a window, frame, or device. Other values that | |
735 are legal as a locale (e.g. a buffer) are not valid as a domain because | |
736 they do not provide enough information to identify a particular device | |
737 (see @code{valid-specifier-domain-p}). @var{domain} defaults to the | |
738 selected window if omitted. | |
739 | |
740 @dfn{Instantiating} a specifier in a particular domain means determining | |
741 the specifier's ``value'' in that domain. This is accomplished by | |
742 searching through the specifications in the specifier that correspond to | |
743 all locales that can be derived from the given domain, from specific to | |
744 general. In most cases, the domain is an Emacs window. In that case | |
745 specifications are searched for as follows: | |
746 | |
747 @enumerate | |
748 @item | |
749 A specification whose locale is the window's buffer; | |
750 @item | |
751 A specification whose locale is the window itself; | |
752 @item | |
753 A specification whose locale is the window's frame; | |
754 @item | |
755 A specification whose locale is the window's frame's device; | |
756 @item | |
757 A specification whose locale is the symbol @code{global}. | |
758 @end enumerate | |
759 | |
760 If all of those fail, then the C-code-provided fallback value for this | |
761 specifier is consulted (see @code{specifier-fallback}). If it is an | |
762 inst-list, then this function attempts to instantiate that list just as | |
763 when a specification is located in the first five steps above. If the | |
764 fallback is a specifier, @code{specifier-instance} is called recursively | |
765 on this specifier and the return value used. Note, however, that if the | |
766 optional argument @var{no-fallback} is non-@code{nil}, the fallback | |
767 value will not be consulted. | |
768 | |
769 Note that there may be more than one specification matching a particular | |
770 locale; all such specifications are considered before looking for any | |
771 specifications for more general locales. Any particular specification | |
772 that is found may be rejected because it is tagged to a particular | |
773 device class (e.g. @code{color}) or device type (e.g. @code{x}) or both | |
774 and the device for the given domain does not match this, or because the | |
775 specification is not valid for the device of the given domain (e.g. the | |
776 font or color name does not exist for this particular X server). | |
777 | |
778 The returned value is dependent on the type of specifier. For example, | |
779 for a font specifier (as returned by the @code{face-font} function), the | |
780 returned value will be a font-instance object. For images, the returned | |
781 value will be a string, pixmap, or subwindow. | |
782 @end defun | |
783 | |
784 @defun specifier-instance-from-inst-list specifier domain inst-list &optional default | |
785 This function attempts to convert a particular inst-list into an | |
786 instance. This attempts to instantiate @var{inst-list} in the given | |
787 @var{domain}, as if @var{inst-list} existed in a specification in | |
788 @var{specifier}. If the instantiation fails, @var{default} is returned. | |
789 In most circumstances, you should not use this function; use | |
790 @code{specifier-instance} instead. | |
791 @end defun | |
792 | |
793 @node Specifier Example | |
794 @section Example of Specifier Usage | |
795 | |
796 Now let us present an example to clarify the theoretical discussions we | |
797 have been through. In this example, we will use the general specifier | |
798 functions for clarity. Keep in mind that many types of specifiers, and | |
799 some other types of objects that are associated with specifiers | |
800 (e.g. faces), provide convenience functions making it easier to work | |
801 with objects of that type. | |
802 | |
803 Let us consider the background color of the default face. A specifier | |
804 is used to specify how that color will appear in different domains. | |
805 First, let's retrieve the specifier: | |
806 | |
807 @example | |
808 (setq sp (face-property 'default 'background)) | |
809 @result{} #<color-specifier 0x3da> | |
810 @end example | |
811 | |
812 @example | |
813 (specifier-specs sp) | |
814 @result{} ((#<buffer "device.c"> (nil . "forest green")) | |
815 (#<window on "Makefile" 0x8a2b> (nil . "hot pink")) | |
816 (#<x-frame "emacs" 0x4ac> (nil . "puke orange") | |
817 (nil . "moccasin")) | |
818 (#<x-frame "VM" 0x4ac> (nil . "magenta")) | |
819 (global ((tty) . "cyan") (nil . "white")) | |
820 ) | |
821 @end example | |
822 | |
823 Then, say we want to determine what the background color of the default | |
824 face is for the window currently displaying the buffer @samp{*scratch*}. | |
825 We call | |
826 | |
827 @example | |
828 (get-buffer-window "*scratch*") | |
829 @result{} #<window on "*scratch*" 0x4ad> | |
830 (window-frame (get-buffer-window "*scratch*")) | |
831 @result{} #<x-frame "emacs" 0x4ac> | |
832 (specifier-instance sp (get-buffer-window "*scratch*")) | |
833 @result{} #<color-instance moccasin 47=(FFFF,E4E4,B5B5) 0x6309> | |
834 @end example | |
835 | |
836 Note that we passed a window to @code{specifier-instance}, not a buffer. | |
837 We cannot pass a buffer because a buffer by itself does not provide enough | |
838 information. The buffer might not be displayed anywhere at all, or | |
839 could be displayed in many different frames on different devices. | |
840 | |
841 The result is arrived at like this: | |
842 | |
843 @enumerate | |
844 @item | |
845 First, we look for a specification matching the buffer displayed in the | |
846 window, i.e. @samp{*scratch}. There are none, so we proceed. | |
847 @item | |
848 Then, we look for a specification matching the window itself. Again, there | |
849 are none. | |
850 @item | |
851 Then, we look for a specification matching the window's frame. The | |
852 specification @code{(#<x-frame "emacs" 0x4ac> . "puke orange")} is | |
853 found. We call the instantiation method for colors, passing it the | |
854 locale we were searching over (i.e. the window, in this case) and the | |
855 instantiator (@samp{"puke orange"}). However, the particular device | |
856 which this window is on (let's say it's an X connection) doesn't | |
857 recognize the color @samp{"puke orange"}, so the specification is | |
858 rejected. | |
859 @item | |
860 So we continue looking for a specification matching the window's frame. | |
861 We find @samp{(#<x-frame "emacs" 0x4ac> . "moccasin")}. Again, we | |
862 call the instantiation method for colors. This time, the X server | |
863 our window is on recognizes the color @samp{moccasin}, and so the | |
864 instantiation method succeeds and returns a color instance. | |
865 @end enumerate | |
866 | |
867 @node Creating Specifiers | |
868 @section Creating New Specifier Objects | |
869 | |
870 @defun make-specifier type | |
871 This function creates a new specifier. | |
872 | |
873 A specifier is an object that can be used to keep track of a property | |
874 whose value can be per-buffer, per-window, per-frame, or per-device, | |
875 and can further be restricted to a particular device-type or device-class. | |
876 Specifiers are used, for example, for the various built-in properties of a | |
877 face; this allows a face to have different values in different frames, | |
878 buffers, etc. For more information, see `specifier-instance', | |
879 `specifier-specs', and `add-spec-to-specifier'; or, for a detailed | |
880 description of specifiers, including how they are instantiated over a | |
881 particular domain (i.e. how their value in that domain is determined), | |
882 see the chapter on specifiers in the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual. | |
883 | |
884 @var{type} specifies the particular type of specifier, and should be one | |
885 of the symbols @code{generic}, @code{integer}, @code{natnum}, | |
886 @code{boolean}, @code{color}, @code{font}, @code{image}, | |
887 @code{face-boolean}, or @code{toolbar}. | |
888 | |
889 For more information on particular types of specifiers, see the | |
890 functions @code{generic-specifier-p}, @code{integer-specifier-p}, | |
891 @code{natnum-specifier-p}, @code{boolean-specifier-p}, | |
892 @code{color-specifier-p}, @code{font-specifier-p}, | |
893 @code{image-specifier-p}, @code{face-boolean-specifier-p}, and | |
894 @code{toolbar-specifier-p}. | |
895 @end defun | |
896 | |
897 @defun make-specifier-and-init type spec-list &optional dont-canonicalize | |
898 This function creates and initialize a new specifier. | |
899 | |
900 This is a front-end onto @code{make-specifier} that allows you to create | |
901 a specifier and add specs to it at the same time. @var{type} specifies | |
902 the specifier type. @var{spec-list} supplies the specification(s) to be | |
903 added to the specifier. Normally, almost any reasonable abbreviation of | |
904 the full spec-list form is accepted, and is converted to the full form; | |
905 however, if optional argument @var{dont-canonicalize} is non-@code{nil}, | |
906 this conversion is not performed, and the @var{spec-list} must already | |
907 be in full form. See @code{canonicalize-spec-list}. | |
908 @end defun | |
909 | |
910 @node Specifier Validation Functions | |
911 @section Functions for Checking the Validity of Specifier Components | |
912 | |
913 @defun valid-specifier-domain-p domain | |
914 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{domain} is a valid | |
915 specifier domain. A domain is used to instance a specifier | |
916 (i.e. determine the specifier's value in that domain). Valid domains | |
917 are a window, frame, or device. (@code{nil} is not valid.) | |
918 @end defun | |
919 | |
920 @defun valid-specifier-locale-p locale | |
921 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{locale} is a valid | |
922 specifier locale. Valid locales are a device, a frame, a window, a | |
923 buffer, and @code{global}. (@code{nil} is not valid.) | |
924 @end defun | |
925 | |
926 @defun valid-specifier-locale-type-p locale-type | |
927 Given a specifier @var{locale-type}, this function returns non-nil if it | |
928 is valid. Valid locale types are the symbols @code{global}, | |
929 @code{device}, @code{frame}, @code{window}, and @code{buffer}. (Note, | |
930 however, that in functions that accept either a locale or a locale type, | |
931 @code{global} is considered an individual locale.) | |
932 @end defun | |
933 | |
934 @defun valid-specifier-type-p specifier-type | |
935 Given a @var{specifier-type}, this function returns non-@code{nil} if it | |
936 is valid. Valid types are @code{generic}, @code{integer}, | |
937 @code{boolean}, @code{color}, @code{font}, @code{image}, | |
938 @code{face-boolean}, and @code{toolbar}. | |
939 @end defun | |
940 | |
941 @defun valid-specifier-tag-p tag | |
942 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{tag} is a valid specifier | |
943 tag. | |
944 @end defun | |
945 | |
946 @defun valid-instantiator-p instantiator specifier-type | |
947 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{instantiator} is valid for | |
948 @var{specifier-type}. | |
949 @end defun | |
950 | |
951 @defun valid-inst-list-p inst-list type | |
952 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{inst-list} is valid for | |
953 specifier type @var{type}. | |
954 @end defun | |
955 | |
956 @defun valid-spec-list-p spec-list type | |
957 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{spec-list} is valid for | |
958 specifier type @var{type}. | |
959 @end defun | |
960 | |
961 @defun check-valid-instantiator instantiator specifier-type | |
962 This function signals an error if @var{instantiator} is invalid for | |
963 @var{specifier-type}. | |
964 @end defun | |
965 | |
966 @defun check-valid-inst-list inst-list type | |
967 This function signals an error if @var{inst-list} is invalid for | |
968 specifier type @var{type}. | |
969 @end defun | |
970 | |
971 @defun check-valid-spec-list spec-list type | |
972 This function signals an error if @var{spec-list} is invalid for | |
973 specifier type @var{type}. | |
974 @end defun | |
975 | |
976 @node Other Specification Functions | |
977 @section Other Functions for Working with Specifications in a Specifier | |
978 | |
979 @defun copy-specifier specifier &optional dest locale tag-set exact-p how-to-add | |
980 This function copies @var{specifier} to @var{dest}, or creates a new one | |
981 if @var{dest} is @code{nil}. | |
982 | |
983 If @var{dest} is @code{nil} or omitted, a new specifier will be created | |
984 and the specifications copied into it. Otherwise, the specifications | |
985 will be copied into the existing specifier in @var{dest}. | |
986 | |
987 If @var{locale} is @code{nil} or the symbol @code{all}, all | |
988 specifications will be copied. If @var{locale} is a particular locale, | |
989 the specification for that particular locale will be copied. If | |
990 @var{locale} is a locale type, the specifications for all locales of | |
991 that type will be copied. @var{locale} can also be a list of locales, | |
992 locale types, and/or @code{all}; this is equivalent to calling | |
993 @code{copy-specifier} for each of the elements of the list. See | |
994 @code{specifier-spec-list} for more information about @var{locale}. | |
995 | |
996 Only instantiators where @var{tag-set} (a list of zero or more tags) is | |
997 a subset of (or possibly equal to) the instantiator's tag set are | |
998 copied. (The default value of @code{nil} is a subset of all tag sets, | |
999 so in this case no instantiators will be screened out.) If @var{exact-p} | |
1000 is non-@code{nil}, however, @var{tag-set} must be equal to an | |
1001 instantiator's tag set for the instantiator to be copied. | |
1002 | |
1003 Optional argument @var{how-to-add} specifies what to do with existing | |
1004 specifications in @var{dest}. If nil, then whichever locales or locale | |
1005 types are copied will first be completely erased in @var{dest}. | |
1006 Otherwise, it is the same as in @code{add-spec-to-specifier}. | |
1007 @end defun | |
1008 | |
1009 @defun remove-specifier specifier &optional locale tag-set exact-p | |
1010 This function removes specification(s) for @var{specifier}. | |
1011 | |
1012 If @var{locale} is a particular locale (a buffer, window, frame, device, | |
1013 or the symbol @code{global}), the specification for that locale will be | |
1014 removed. | |
1015 | |
1016 If instead, @var{locale} is a locale type (i.e. a symbol @code{buffer}, | |
1017 @code{window}, @code{frame}, or @code{device}), the specifications for | |
1018 all locales of that type will be removed. | |
1019 | |
1020 If @var{locale} is @code{nil} or the symbol @code{all}, all | |
1021 specifications will be removed. | |
1022 | |
1023 @var{locale} can also be a list of locales, locale types, and/or | |
1024 @code{all}; this is equivalent to calling @code{remove-specifier} for | |
1025 each of the elements in the list. | |
1026 | |
1027 Only instantiators where @var{tag-set} (a list of zero or more tags) is | |
1028 a subset of (or possibly equal to) the instantiator's tag set are | |
1029 removed. (The default value of @code{nil} is a subset of all tag sets, | |
1030 so in this case no instantiators will be screened out.) If @var{exact-p} | |
1031 is non-@code{nil}, however, @var{tag-set} must be equal to an | |
1032 instantiator's tag set for the instantiator to be removed. | |
1033 @end defun | |
1034 | |
1035 @defun map-specifier specifier func &optional locale maparg | |
1036 This function applies @var{func} to the specification(s) for | |
1037 @var{locale} in @var{specifier}. | |
1038 | |
1039 If @var{locale} is a locale, @var{func} will be called for that locale. | |
1040 If @var{locale} is a locale type, @var{func} will be mapped over all | |
1041 locales of that type. If @var{locale} is @code{nil} or the symbol | |
1042 @code{all}, @var{func} will be mapped over all locales in | |
1043 @var{specifier}. | |
1044 | |
1045 @var{func} is called with four arguments: the @var{specifier}, the | |
1046 locale being mapped over, the inst-list for that locale, and the | |
1047 optional @var{maparg}. If any invocation of @var{func} returns | |
1048 non-@code{nil}, the mapping will stop and the returned value becomes the | |
1049 value returned from @code{map-specifier}. Otherwise, | |
1050 @code{map-specifier} returns @code{nil}. | |
1051 @end defun | |
1052 | |
1053 @defun specifier-locale-type-from-locale locale | |
1054 Given a specifier @var{locale}, this function returns its type. | |
1055 @end defun | |
1056 |