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view lisp/printer.el @ 4690:257b468bf2ca
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
This is necessary because there is no reasonable way to access the
corresponding mswindows-multibyte functionality from Lisp, and we need such
functionality if we're going to have a reliable and portable
#'query-coding-region implementation. However, this change doesn't yet
provide #'query-coding-region for the mswindow-multibyte coding systems,
there should be no functional differences between an XEmacs with this change
and one without it.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
This is necessary because there is no reasonable way to access the
corresponding mswindows-multibyte functionality from Lisp, and we
need such functionality if we're going to have a reliable and
portable #'query-coding-region implementation. However, this
change doesn't yet provide #'query-coding-region for the
mswindow-multibyte coding systems, there should be no functional
differences between an XEmacs with this change and one without it.
* mule-coding.c (struct fixed_width_coding_system):
Add a new coding system type, fixed_width, and implement it. It
uses the CCL infrastructure but has a much simpler creation API,
and its own query_method, formerly in lisp/mule/mule-coding.el.
* unicode.c:
Move the Unicode query method implementation here from
unicode.el.
* lisp.h: Declare Fmake_coding_system_internal, Fcopy_range_table
here.
* intl-win32.c (complex_vars_of_intl_win32):
Use Fmake_coding_system_internal, not Fmake_coding_system.
* general-slots.h: Add Qsucceeded, Qunencodable, Qinvalid_sequence
here.
* file-coding.h (enum coding_system_variant):
Add fixed_width_coding_system here.
(struct coding_system_methods):
Add query_method and query_lstream_method to the coding system
methods.
Provide flags for the query methods.
Declare the default query method; initialise it correctly in
INITIALIZE_CODING_SYSTEM_TYPE.
* file-coding.c (default_query_method):
New function, the default query method for coding systems that do
not set it. Moved from coding.el.
(make_coding_system_1):
Accept new elements in PROPS in #'make-coding-system; aliases, a
list of aliases; safe-chars and safe-charsets (these were
previously accepted but not saved); and category.
(Fmake_coding_system_internal):
New function, what used to be #'make-coding-system--on Mule
builds, we've now moved some of the functionality of this to
Lisp.
(Fcoding_system_canonical_name_p):
Move this earlier in the file, since it's now called from within
make_coding_system_1.
(Fquery_coding_region):
Move the implementation of this here, from coding.el.
(complex_vars_of_file_coding):
Call Fmake_coding_system_internal, not Fmake_coding_system;
specify safe-charsets properties when we're a mule build.
* extents.h (mouse_highlight_priority, Fset_extent_priority,
Fset_extent_face, Fmap_extents):
Make these available to other C files.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
* coding.el:
Consolidate code that depends on the presence or absence of Mule
at the end of this file.
(default-query-coding-region, query-coding-region):
Move these functions to C.
(default-query-coding-region-safe-charset-skip-chars-map):
Remove this variable, the corresponding C variable is
Vdefault_query_coding_region_chartab_cache in file-coding.c.
(query-coding-string): Update docstring to reflect actual multiple
values, be more careful about not modifying a range table that
we're currently mapping over.
(encode-coding-char): Make the implementation of this simpler.
(featurep 'mule): Autoload #'make-coding-system from
mule/make-coding-system.el if we're a mule build; provide an
appropriate compiler macro.
Do various non-mule compatibility things if we're not a mule
build.
* update-elc.el (additional-dump-dependencies):
Add mule/make-coding-system as a dump time dependency if we're a
mule build.
* unicode.el (ccl-encode-to-ucs-2):
(decode-char):
(encode-char):
Move these earlier in the file, for the sake of some byte compile
warnings.
(unicode-query-coding-region):
Move this to unicode.c
* mule/make-coding-system.el:
New file, not dumped. Contains the functionality to rework the
arguments necessary for fixed-width coding systems, and contains
the implementation of #'make-coding-system, which now calls
#'make-coding-system-internal.
* mule/vietnamese.el (viscii):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-2):
(windows-1250):
(iso-8859-3):
(iso-8859-4):
(iso-8859-14):
(iso-8859-15):
(iso-8859-16):
(iso-8859-9):
(macintosh):
(windows-1252):
* mule/hebrew.el (iso-8859-8):
* mule/greek.el (iso-8859-7):
(windows-1253):
* mule/cyrillic.el (iso-8859-5):
(koi8-r):
(koi8-u):
(windows-1251):
(alternativnyj):
(koi8-ru):
(koi8-t):
(koi8-c):
(koi8-o):
* mule/arabic.el (iso-8859-6):
(windows-1256):
Move all these coding systems to being of type fixed-width, not of
type CCL. This allows the distinct query-coding-region for them to
be in C, something which will eventually allow us to implement
query-coding-region for the mswindows-multibyte coding systems.
* mule/general-late.el (posix-charset-to-coding-system-hash):
Document why we're pre-emptively persuading the byte compiler that
the ELC for this file needs to be written using escape-quoted.
Call #'set-unicode-query-skip-chars-args, now the Unicode
query-coding-region implementation is in C.
* mule/thai-xtis.el (tis-620):
Don't bother checking whether we're XEmacs or not here.
* mule/mule-coding.el:
Move the eight bit fixed-width functionality from this file to
make-coding-system.el.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/mule-tests.el:
Check a coding system's type, not an 8-bit-fixed property, for
whether that coding system should be treated as a fixed-width
coding system.
* automated/query-coding-tests.el:
Don't test the query coding functionality for mswindows-multibyte
coding systems, it's not yet implemented.
| author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 19 Sep 2009 22:53:13 +0100 |
| parents | 554b9d31e7a5 |
| children | 308d34e9f07d |
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;;; printer.el --- support for hard-copy printing in XEmacs ;; Copyright (C) 2000, 2002 Ben Wing. ;; Copyright (C) 2000 Kirill Katsnelson. ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team ;; Keywords: printer, printing, internal, 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, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA ;; 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Synched up with: Not in FSF. ;;; Authorship: ;; Created 2000 by Ben Wing, to provide the high-level interface onto the ;; print support implemented by Kirill Katsnelson. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;; generic printing code ;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;; #### should be named print-buffer, but that's currently in ;; lpr-buffer with some horrible definition: print-buffer == "print with ;; headings", lpr-buffer == "print without headings", and the headings are ;; generated by calling the external program "pr"! This is major stone-age ;; here! ;; ;; I propose junking that package entirely and creating a unified, ;; modern API here that will work well with modern GUI's on top of it, ;; and with various different actual implementations (e.g. lpr or the ;; pretty-print package on Unix, built-in msprinter support on ;; Windows), where the workings of a particular implementation is ;; hidden from the user and there is a consistent set of options to ;; control how to print, which works across all implementations. ;; ;; The code here currently only really supports Windows. (defgroup printing nil "Generic printing support." :group 'wp) (defcustom printer-name nil "*Name of printer to print to. If nil, use default. Under Windows, use `mswindows-printer-list' to get names of installed printers." :type 'string :group 'printing) (defstruct Print-context pageno window start-time printer-name) (defvar printer-current-device nil) (defun Printer-get-device () (or printer-current-device (setq printer-current-device (make-device 'msprinter printer-name)))) (defun Printer-clear-device () ;; relying on GC to delete the device is too error-prone since there ;; only can be one anyway. (and printer-current-device (delete-device printer-current-device)) (setq printer-current-device nil)) (defcustom printer-page-header '((face bold date) nil (face bold buffer-name)) "*Controls printed page header. This can be: - nil. Header is not printed. - An fbound symbol or lambda expression. The function is called with one parameter, a print-context object, every time the headers need to be set up. It can use the function `print-context-property' to query the properties of this object. The return value is treated as if it was literally specified: i.e. it will be reprocessed. - A list of up to three elements, for left, center and right portions of the header. Each of these can be - nil, not to print the portion - A string, which will be printed literally. - A predefined symbol, on of the following: printer-name Name of printer being printed to short-file-name File name only, no path long-file-name File name with its path buffer-name Buffer name date Date current when printing started time Time current when printing started page Current printout page number, 1-based user-id User logon id user-name User full name - A list of three elements: (face FACE-NAME EXPR). EXPR is any of the items given here. The item will be displayed in the given face. - A cons of an extent and any of the items given here. The item will be displayed using the extent's face, begin-glyph and end-glyph properties. - A list, each element of which is any of the items given here. Each element of the list is rendered in sequence. For example, '(\"Page \" page) is rendered as \"Page 5\" on the fifth page. - An fbound symbol or lambda expression, called with one parameter, a print-context object, as above. The return value is treated as if it was literally specified: i.e. it will be reprocessed." :type 'sexp :group 'printing) (defcustom printer-page-footer '(nil (face bold ("Page " page))) "*Controls printed page footer. Format is the same as `printer-page-header'." :type 'sexp :group 'printing) (defun generate-header-element (element context) (cond ((null element) nil) ((stringp element) (insert element)) ((memq element '(printer-name short-file-name long-file-name buffer-name date time page user-id user-name)) (insert (print-context-property context element))) ((and (consp element) (eq 'face (car element))) (let ((p (point))) (generate-header-element (third element) context) (let ((x (make-extent p (point)))) (set-extent-face x (second element))))) ((and (consp element) (extentp (car element))) (let ((p (point))) (generate-header-element (cdr element) context) (let ((x (make-extent p (point)))) (set-extent-face x (extent-face (car element))) (set-extent-begin-glyph x (extent-begin-glyph (car element))) (set-extent-end-glyph x (extent-end-glyph (car element)))))) ((listp element) (mapcar #'(lambda (el) (generate-header-element el context)) element)) ((functionp element) (generate-header-element (funcall element context) context)) (t (error 'invalid-argument "Unknown header element" element)))) (defun generate-header-line (spec context) (let* ((left (first spec)) (middle (second spec)) (right (third spec)) (left-start (point)) (middle-start (progn (generate-header-element left context) (point))) (right-start (progn (generate-header-element middle context) (point))) (right-end (progn (generate-header-element right context) (point))) (left-width (- middle-start left-start)) (middle-width (- right-start middle-start)) (right-width (- right-end right-start)) (winwidth (- (window-width (Print-context-window context)) 2)) (spaces1 (max (- (/ (- winwidth middle-width) 2) left-width) 0)) (spaces2 (max (- (- winwidth right-width) (+ left-width spaces1 middle-width)) 0))) (goto-char right-start) (insert-char ?\ spaces2) (goto-char middle-start) (insert-char ?\ spaces1))) (defun print-context-property (print-context prop) "Return property PROP of PRINT-CONTEXT. Valid properties are print-buffer Buffer being printed print-window Window on printer device containing print buffer print-frame Frame on printer device corresponding to current page print-device Device referring to printer print-start-time Time current when printing started (`current-time' format) print-page Current printout page number, 1-based printer-name Name of printer being printed to short-file-name File name only, no path long-file-name File name with its path buffer-name Buffer name date Date current when printing started (as a string) time Time current when printing started (as a string) page Current printout page number, 1-based (as a string) user-id User logon id (as a string) user-name User full name" (let* ((window (Print-context-window print-context)) (pageno (Print-context-pageno print-context)) (start-time (Print-context-start-time print-context)) (printer-name (Print-context-printer-name print-context)) (buffer (window-buffer window))) (case prop (print-buffer buffer) (print-window window) (print-frame (window-frame window)) (print-device (frame-device (window-frame window))) (print-start-time start-time) (print-page pageno) (printer-name printer-name) (short-file-name (let ((name (buffer-file-name buffer))) (if name (file-name-nondirectory name) ""))) (long-file-name (let ((name (buffer-file-name buffer))) (or name ""))) (buffer-name (buffer-name buffer)) (date (format-time-string "%x" start-time)) (time (format-time-string "%X" start-time)) (page (format "%d" pageno)) (user-id (format "%d" (user-uid))) (user-name (format "%d" (user-login-name))) (t (error 'invalid-argument "Unrecognized print-context property" prop))))) (defun generic-page-setup () "Display the Page Setup dialog box. Changes made are recorded internally." (interactive) (let* ((d (Printer-get-device)) (props (condition-case err (make-dialog-box 'page-setup :device d :properties (declare-boundp default-msprinter-frame-plist)) (error (Printer-clear-device) (signal (car err) (cdr err)))))) (while props (with-boundp 'default-msprinter-frame-plist (setq default-msprinter-frame-plist (plist-put default-msprinter-frame-plist (car props) (cadr props)))) (setq props (cddr props))))) (defun generic-print-buffer (&optional buffer display-print-dialog) "Print buffer BUFFER using a printing method appropriate to the O.S. being run. Under Unix, `lpr' is normally used to spool out a no-frills version of the buffer, or the `ps-print' package is used to pretty-print the buffer to a PostScript printer. Under MS Windows, the built-in printing support is used. If DISPLAY-PRINT-DIALOG is t, the print dialog will first be displayed, allowing the user to select various printing settings \(e.g. which printer to print to, the range of pages, number of copies, modes such landscape/portrait/2-up/4-up [2 or 4 (small!) logical pages per physical page], etc.). At this point the user can cancel the printing operation using the dialog box, and `generic-print-buffer' will not print anything. When called interactively, use a prefix arg to suppress the display of the print dialog box. If BUFFER is nil or omitted, the current buffer is used." (interactive (list nil (not current-prefix-arg))) (condition-case err (let* ((print-region (and (interactive-p) (region-active-p))) (start (if print-region (region-beginning) (point-min buffer))) (end (if print-region (region-end) (point-max buffer)))) (if (or (not (valid-device-type-p 'msprinter)) (not display-print-dialog)) (generic-print-region start end buffer) (let* ((d (Printer-get-device)) (props (make-dialog-box 'print :device d :allow-selection print-region :selected-page-button (if print-region 'selection 'all)))) (and props (let ((really-print-region (eq (plist-get props 'selected-page-button) 'selection))) (generic-print-region (if really-print-region start (point-min buffer)) (if really-print-region end (point-max buffer)) buffer d props)))))) (error ;; Make sure we catch all errors thrown from the native code. (Printer-clear-device) (signal (car err) (cdr err))))) (defun generic-print-region (start end &optional buffer print-device props) "Print region using a printing method appropriate to the O.S. being run. The region between START and END of BUFFER (defaults to the current buffer) is printed. Under Unix, `lpr' is normally used to spool out a no-frills version of the buffer, or the `ps-print' package is used to pretty-print the buffer to a PostScript printer. Under MS Windows, the built-in printing support is used. Optional PRINT-DEVICE is a device, already created, to use to do the printing. This is typically used when this function was invoked from `generic-print-buffer' and it displayed a dialog box. That function created the device, and then the dialog box stuffed it with the user's selections of how the buffer should be printed. PROPS, if given, is typically the plist returned from the call to `make-dialog-box' that displayed the Print box. It contains properties relevant to us when we print. Recognized properties are the same as those in `make-dialog-box': name Printer device name. If omitted, the current system-selected printer will be used. from-page First page to print, 1-based. If omitted, printing starts from the beginning. to-page Last page to print, inclusive, If omitted, printing ends at the end. copies Number of copies to print. If omitted, one copy is printed." (cond ((valid-device-type-p 'msprinter) ;; loop, printing one copy of document per loop. kill and ;; re-create the frame each time so that we eject the piece ;; of paper at the end even if we're printing more than one ;; page per sheet of paper. (let ((copies (plist-get props 'copies 1)) ;; This is not relevant to printing and can mess up ;; msprinter frame sizing default-frame-plist) (while (> copies 0) (let (d f header-buffer footer-buffer) (setq buffer (decode-buffer buffer)) (unwind-protect (with-current-buffer buffer (save-restriction (narrow-to-region start end) (setq d (or print-device (Printer-get-device))) (setq f (make-frame (list* 'name (concat (substitute ?_ ?. (buffer-name buffer)) " - XEmacs") '(menubar-visible-p nil has-modeline-p nil default-toolbar-visible-p nil default-gutter-visible-p nil minibuffer none modeline-shadow-thickness 0 vertical-scrollbar-visible-p nil horizontal-scrollbar-visible-p nil [default foreground] "black" [default background] "white")) d)) (let* ((w (frame-root-window f)) (vertdpi (cdr (device-system-metric d 'device-dpi))) (pixel-vertical-clip-threshold (/ vertdpi 2)) (from-page (plist-get props 'from-page 1)) (to-page (plist-get props 'to-page)) (context (make-Print-context :start-time (current-time) ;; #### bogus! we need accessors for ;; print-settings objects. :printer-name (or (plist-get props 'name) printer-name (declare-fboundp (mswindows-get-default-printer) )))) header-window footer-window) (when printer-page-header (let ((window-min-height 2)) (setq header-window w) (setq w (split-window w 2))) (setq header-buffer (generate-new-buffer " *header*")) (set-window-buffer header-window header-buffer)) (when printer-page-footer (let ((window-min-height 2)) (setq footer-window (split-window w (- (window-height w) 2)))) (setq footer-buffer (generate-new-buffer " *footer*")) (set-window-buffer footer-window footer-buffer)) (setf (Print-context-window context) w) (let ((last-end 0) ; bufpos at end of previous page reached-end ; t if we've reached the end of the ; text we're printing (pageno 1)) (set-window-buffer w buffer) (set-window-start w start) ;; loop, printing one page per loop (while (and (not reached-end) ;; stop at end of region of text or ;; outside of ranges of pages given (or (not to-page) (<= pageno to-page))) (setf (Print-context-pageno context) pageno) ;; only actually print the page if it's in the ;; range. (when (>= pageno from-page) (when printer-page-header (with-current-buffer header-buffer (erase-buffer) (generate-header-line printer-page-header context) (goto-char (point-min)) (set-window-start header-window (point-min)))) (when printer-page-footer (with-current-buffer footer-buffer (erase-buffer) (insert "\n") (generate-header-line printer-page-footer context) (goto-char (point-min)) (set-window-start footer-window (point-min)))) (redisplay-frame f t) (print-job-eject-page f) ) ;; but use the GUARANTEE argument to `window-end' ;; so that we get the right value even if we ;; didn't do a redisplay. (let ((this-end (window-end w t)) (pixvis (window-last-line-visible-height w))) ;; in case we get stuck somewhere, bow out ;; rather than printing an infinite number of ;; pages. #### this will fail with an image ;; bigger than an entire page. but we really ;; need this check here. we should be more ;; clever in our check, to deal with this case. (if (or (= this-end last-end) ;; #### fuckme! window-end returns a ;; value outside of the valid range of ;; buffer positions!!! (>= this-end end)) (setq reached-end t) (setq last-end this-end) (set-window-start w this-end) (if pixvis (with-selected-window w ;; #### scroll-down should take a ;; window arg. (let ((window-pixel-scroll-increment pixvis)) (scroll-down 1)))))) (setq pageno (1+ pageno))))))) (and f (delete-frame f)) (and header-buffer (kill-buffer header-buffer)) (and footer-buffer (kill-buffer footer-buffer)))) (setq copies (1- copies))))) ((and (not (eq system-type 'windows-nt)) (fboundp 'lpr-region)) (declare-fboundp (lpr-region start end))) (t (error "No print support available"))))
