view lisp/events.el @ 938:0391335b65dc

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-07-31 07:14:49 by michaels] 2002-07-17 Marcus Crestani <crestani@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de> Markus Kaltenbach <makalten@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de> Mike Sperber <mike@xemacs.org> configure flag to turn these changes on: --use-kkcc First we added a dumpable flag to lrecord_implementation. It shows, if the object is dumpable and should be processed by the dumper. * lrecord.h (struct lrecord_implementation): added dumpable flag (MAKE_LRECORD_IMPLEMENTATION): fitted the different makro definitions to the new lrecord_implementation and their calls. Then we changed mark_object, that it no longer needs a mark method for those types that have pdump descritions. * alloc.c: (mark_object): If the object has a description, the new mark algorithm is called, and the object is marked according to its description. Otherwise it uses the mark method like before. These procedures mark objects according to their descriptions. They are modeled on the corresponding pdumper procedures. (mark_with_description): (get_indirect_count): (structure_size): (mark_struct_contents): These procedures still call mark_object, this is needed while there are Lisp_Objects without descriptions left. We added pdump descriptions for many Lisp_Objects: * extents.c: extent_auxiliary_description * database.c: database_description * gui.c: gui_item_description * scrollbar.c: scrollbar_instance_description * toolbar.c: toolbar_button_description * event-stream.c: command_builder_description * mule-charset.c: charset_description * device-msw.c: devmode_description * dialog-msw.c: mswindows_dialog_id_description * eldap.c: ldap_description * postgresql.c: pgconn_description pgresult_description * tooltalk.c: tooltalk_message_description tooltalk_pattern_description * ui-gtk.c: emacs_ffi_description emacs_gtk_object_description * events.c: * events.h: * event-stream.c: * event-Xt.c: * event-gtk.c: * event-tty.c: To write a pdump description for Lisp_Event, we converted every struct in the union event to a Lisp_Object. So we created nine new Lisp_Objects: Lisp_Key_Data, Lisp_Button_Data, Lisp_Motion_Data, Lisp_Process_Data, Lisp_Timeout_Data, Lisp_Eval_Data, Lisp_Misc_User_Data, Lisp_Magic_Data, Lisp_Magic_Eval_Data. We also wrote makro selectors and mutators for the fields of the new designed Lisp_Event and added everywhere these new abstractions. We implemented XD_UNION support in (mark_with_description), so we can describe exspecially console/device specific data with XD_UNION. To describe with XD_UNION, we added a field to these objects, which holds the variant type of the object. This field is initialized in the appendant constructor. The variant is an integer, it has also to be described in an description, if XD_UNION is used. XD_UNION is used in following descriptions: * console.c: console_description (get_console_variant): returns the variant (create_console): added variant initialization * console.h (console_variant): the different console types * console-impl.h (struct console): added enum console_variant contype * device.c: device_description (Fmake_device): added variant initialization * device-impl.h (struct device): added enum console_variant devtype * objects.c: image_instance_description font_instance_description (Fmake_color_instance): added variant initialization (Fmake_font_instance): added variant initialization * objects-impl.h (struct Lisp_Color_Instance): added color_instance_type * objects-impl.h (struct Lisp_Font_Instance): added font_instance_type * process.c: process_description (make_process_internal): added variant initialization * process.h (process_variant): the different process types
author michaels
date Wed, 31 Jul 2002 07:14:49 +0000
parents 3ecd8885ac67
children a25c824ed558
line wrap: on
line source

;;; events.el --- event functions for XEmacs.

;; Copyright (C) 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Copyright (C) 1996-7 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
;; Copyright (C) 1996 Ben Wing.

;; Maintainer: Martin Buchholz
;; Keywords: internal, event, dumped

;; This file is part of XEmacs.

;; XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.

;; XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
;; General Public License for more details.

;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to the 
;; Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.

;;; Synched up with: Not in FSF.

;;; Commentary:

;; This file is dumped with XEmacs.

;;; Code:


(defun event-console (event)
  "Return the console that EVENT occurred on.
This will be nil for some types of events (e.g. eval events)."
  (cdfw-console (event-channel event)))

(defun event-device (event)
  "Return the device that EVENT occurred on.
This will be nil for some types of events (e.g. keyboard and eval events)."
  (dfw-device (event-channel event)))

(defun event-frame (event)
  "Return the frame that EVENT occurred on.
This will be nil for some types of events (e.g. keyboard and eval events)."
  (fw-frame (event-channel event)))

(defun event-buffer (event)
  "Return the buffer of the window over which mouse event EVENT occurred.
Return nil unless both (mouse-event-p EVENT) and
(event-over-text-area-p EVENT) are non-nil."
  (let ((window (event-window event)))
    (and (windowp window) (window-buffer window))))

(defalias 'allocate-event 'make-event)


(defun key-press-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a key-press event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'key-press (event-type object))))

(defun button-press-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a mouse button-press event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'button-press (event-type object))))

(defun button-release-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a mouse button-release event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'button-release (event-type object))))

(defun button-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a mouse button-press or button-release event."
  (and (event-live-p object)
       (memq (event-type object) '(button-press button-release))
       t))

(defun motion-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a mouse motion event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'motion (event-type object))))

(defun mouse-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a mouse button-press, button-release or motion event."
  (and (event-live-p object)
       (memq (event-type object) '(button-press button-release motion))
       t))

(defun process-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a process-output event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'process (event-type object))))

(defun timeout-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a timeout event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'timeout (event-type object))))

(defun eval-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is an eval event."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'eval (event-type object))))

(defun misc-user-event-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a misc-user event.
A misc-user event is a user event that is not a keypress or mouse click;
normally this means a menu selection or scrollbar action."
  (and (event-live-p object) (eq 'misc-user (event-type object))))

;; You could just as easily use event-glyph but we include this for
;; consistency.

(defun event-over-glyph-p (object)
  "Return t if OBJECT is a mouse event occurring over a glyph.
Mouse events are events of type button-press, button-release or motion."
  (and (event-live-p object) (event-glyph object) t))

(defun keyboard-translate (&rest pairs)
  "Translate character or keysym FROM to TO at a low level.
Multiple FROM-TO pairs may be specified.

See `keyboard-translate-table' for more information."
  (while pairs
    (puthash (pop pairs) (pop pairs) keyboard-translate-table)))

(put 'tab       'ascii-character ?\t)
(put 'linefeed  'ascii-character ?\n)
(put 'clear     'ascii-character 12)
(put 'return    'ascii-character ?\r)
(put 'escape    'ascii-character ?\e)
(put 'space	'ascii-character ? )

 ;; Do the same voodoo for the keypad keys.  I used to bind these to keyboard
 ;; macros (for instance, kp-0 was bound to "0") so that they would track the
 ;; bindings of the corresponding keys by default, but that made the display
 ;; of M-x describe-bindings much harder to read, so now we'll just bind them
 ;; to self-insert by default.  Not a big difference...
 
(put 'kp-0 'ascii-character ?0)
(put 'kp-1 'ascii-character ?1)
(put 'kp-2 'ascii-character ?2)
(put 'kp-3 'ascii-character ?3)
(put 'kp-4 'ascii-character ?4)
(put 'kp-5 'ascii-character ?5)
(put 'kp-6 'ascii-character ?6)
(put 'kp-7 'ascii-character ?7)
(put 'kp-8 'ascii-character ?8)
(put 'kp-9 'ascii-character ?9)

(put 'kp-space     'ascii-character ? )
(put 'kp-tab       'ascii-character ?\t)
(put 'kp-enter     'ascii-character ?\r)
(put 'kp-equal     'ascii-character ?=)
(put 'kp-multiply  'ascii-character ?*)
(put 'kp-add       'ascii-character ?+)
(put 'kp-separator 'ascii-character ?,)
(put 'kp-subtract  'ascii-character ?-)
(put 'kp-decimal   'ascii-character ?.)
(put 'kp-divide    'ascii-character ?/)

;;; events.el ends here