Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view modules/sample/sample.c @ 802:19dfb459d51a
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-04-03 10:47:37 by ben]
fix tty problem et al
internals/internals.texi: Add section on correctly merging a branch back into the trunk.
console-tty.c, eval.c, event-unixoid.c, file-coding.c, file-coding.h, lisp.h, print.c, sysdep.c: Fix data corruption error in print.c from print_depth becoming
negative. Borrow primitives internal_bind_int,
internal_bind_lisp_object from my stderr-proc ws, soon to be
integrated; use them to properly bind print_depth et al.
First fix for TTY problem. The basic problem is I switched things
so that the TTY I/O is filtered through a coding system, for the
support of kterm and such, that speak JIS or similar
encodings. (#### I ***swear*** I had this working way back in
19.12.) Anyway, this introduced buffering issues, in which instead
of one char being read, it tried to read 1024 chars. I tried
setting the stdin descriptor non-blocking, but it doesn't appear
to work on Cygwin. (#### Andy, do you know anything about this?)
So I fixed it elsewhere. If you get weirdness on the TTY, look in
console-tty.c and see how it gets the coding system; maybe there's
a way to change it (and if not, there should be!).
Also fix warning in sysdep.c.
| author | ben |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 03 Apr 2002 10:47:52 +0000 |
| parents | abe6d1db359e |
| children |
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/* * Very simple sample module. Illustrates most of the salient features * of Emacs dynamic modules. * (C) Copyright 1998, 1999 J. Kean Johnston. All rights reserved. */ #include <emodules.h> /* * This sample introduces three new Lisp objects to the Lisp reader. * The first, a simple boolean value, and the second a string. The * Third is a sample function that simply prints a message. */ int sample_bool; Lisp_Object Vsample_string; DEFUN ("sample-function", Fsample_function, 0, 0, "", /* This is a sample function loaded dynamically. You will notice in the source code for this module that the declaration is identical to internal Emacs functions. This makes it possible to use the exact same code in a dumped version of Emacs. */ ()) { message ("Eureka! It worked"); return Qt; } /* * Each dynamically loaded Emacs module is given a name at compile * time. This is a short name, and must be a valid part of a C * identifier. This name is used to construct the name of several * functions which must appear in the module source code. * The first such function, modules_of_XXXX, should load in any dependent * modules. This function is optional, and the module will still load if * it is not present in the module. * * The second function, which is NOT optional, is syms_of_XXXX, in which * all functions that the module will be provided are declared. This * function will contain calls to DEFSUBR(). * * The third function, which is also NOT optional, is vars_of_XXXX, in * which you declare all variables that the module provides. This * function will contain calls to DEFVAR_LISP(), DEFVAR_BOOL() etc. * * When declaring functions and variables in the syms_of_XXXX and * vars_of_XXXX functions, you use the exact same syntax that you * would as if this module were being compiled into the pure Emacs. * * All three of these functions are declared as void functions, * taking no parameters. Since this sample module is called 'sample', * the functions will be named 'modules_of_sample', 'syms_of_sample' * and 'vars_of_sample'. */ void modules_of_sample() { /* * This function isn't actually required as we will not be loading * in any dependent modules, but if we were, we would do something like: * emodules_load ("dependent.ell", "sample2", "1.0.0"); */ } void syms_of_sample() { DEFSUBR(Fsample_function); } void vars_of_sample() { DEFVAR_LISP ("sample-string", &Vsample_string /* This is a sample string, declared in a dynamic module. The syntax and conventions used for all normal Emacs variables apply equally to modules, using an identical syntax. */ ); DEFVAR_BOOL ("sample-boolean", &sample_bool /* *Sample boolean value, in a dynamic module. This is a user-settable variable, as indicated by the * as the first character of the description. Declared in a module exactly as it would be internally in Emacs. */ ); }
