Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/font-mgr.h @ 5908:6174848f3e6c
Use parse_integer() in read_atom(); support bases with ratios like integers
src/ChangeLog addition:
2015-05-08 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* data.c (init_errors_once_early):
Move the Qunsupported_type here from numbers.c, so it's available
when the majority of our types are not supported.
* general-slots.h: Add it here, too.
* number.c: Remove the definition of Qunsupported_type from here.
* lread.c (read_atom):
Check if the first character could reflect a rational, if so, call
parse_integer(), don't check the syntax of the other
characters. This allows us to accept the non-ASCII digit
characters too.
If that worked partially, but not completely, and the next char is
a slash, try to parse as a ratio.
If that fails, try isfloat_string(), but only if the first
character could plausibly be part of a float.
Otherwise, treat as a symbol.
* lread.c (read_rational):
Rename from read_integer. Handle ratios with the same radix
specification as was used for integers.
* lread.c (read1):
Rename read_integer in this function. Support the Common Lisp
#NNNrMMM syntax for parsing a number MMM of arbitrary radix NNN.
man/ChangeLog addition:
2015-05-08 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* lispref/numbers.texi (Numbers):
Describe the newly-supported arbitrary-base syntax for rationals
(integers and ratios). Describe that ratios can take the same base
specification as integers, something also new.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2015-05-08 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/lisp-reader-tests.el:
Check the arbitrary-base integer reader syntax support, just
added. Check the reader base support for ratios, just added.
Check the non-ASCII-digit support in the reader, just added.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 09 May 2015 00:40:57 +0100 |
parents | 6928877dbc26 |
children |
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/* Lisp font data structures for X and Xft. Copyright (C) 2003 Eric Knauel and Matthias Neubauer Copyright (C) 2005 Eric Knauel Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Authors: Eric Knauel <knauel@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de> Matthias Neubauer <neubauer@informatik.uni-freiburg.de> Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org> Created: 27 Oct 2003 Updated: 05 Mar 2005 by Stephen J. Turnbull 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ /* Synched up with: Not in GNU Emacs. */ /* This module provides the Lisp interface to fonts in X11, including Xft, but (at least at first) not GTK+ or Qt. It should be renamed to fonts-x.h. Sealevel code should be in ../lwlib/lwlib-fonts.h or ../lwlib/lwlib-colors.h. */ #ifndef INCLUDED_font_mgr_h_ #define INCLUDED_font_mgr_h_ #include "../lwlib/lwlib-fonts.h" #include "../lwlib/lwlib-colors.h" extern Fixnum debug_xft; /* Standard for fontconfig. Use a macro to show we're not guessing. */ #define Qfc_font_name_encoding Qutf_8 #define XE_XLFD_MAKE_LISP_STRING(s) (make_string(s, strlen(s))) struct fc_pattern { NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_HEADER header; FcPattern *fcpatPtr; }; typedef struct fc_pattern fc_pattern; DECLARE_LISP_OBJECT(fc_pattern, struct fc_pattern); #define XFC_PATTERN(x) XRECORD (x, fc_pattern, struct fc_pattern) #define wrap_fc_pattern(p) wrap_record (p, fc_pattern) #define FC_PATTERNP(x) RECORDP (x, fc_pattern) #define CHECK_FC_PATTERN(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, fc_pattern) #define CONCHECK_FC_PATTERN(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, fc_pattern) #define XFC_PATTERN_PTR(x) (XFC_PATTERN(x)->fcpatPtr) #define FONTCONFIG_EXPOSE_CONFIG #ifdef FONTCONFIG_EXPOSE_CONFIG struct fc_config { NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_HEADER header; FcConfig *fccfgPtr; }; typedef struct fc_config fc_config; DECLARE_LISP_OBJECT(fc_config, struct fc_config); #define XFC_CONFIG(x) XRECORD (x, fc_config, struct fc_config) #define wrap_fc_config(p) wrap_record (p, fc_config) #define FC_CONFIGP(x) RECORDP (x, fc_config) #define CHECK_FC_CONFIG(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, fc_config) #define CONCHECK_FC_CONFIG(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, fc_config) #define XFC_CONFIG_PTR(x) (XFC_CONFIG(x)->fccfgPtr) #endif /* FONTCONFIG_EXPOSE_CONFIG */ #ifdef HAVE_XFT #ifndef HAVE_FCCONFIGGETRESCANINTERVAL /* Older fontconfig versions misspell this function name. */ #define FcConfigGetRescanInterval FcConfigGetRescanInverval #endif /* */ #ifndef HAVE_FCCONFIGSETRESCANINTERVAL /* Older fontconfig versions misspell this function name. */ #define FcConfigSetRescanInterval FcConfigSetRescanInverval #endif /* */ /* The format of a fontname (as returned by fontconfig) is not well-documented, But the character repertoire is represented in an ASCII-compatible way. See fccharset.c (FcCharSetUnparse). So we can use UTF-8 for long names. Currently we have a hack where different versions of the unparsed name are used in different contexts fairly arbitrarily. I don't think this is close to coherency; even without the charset and lang properties fontconfig names are too unwieldy to use. We need to rethink the approach here. I think probably Lisp_Font_Instance.name should contain the font name as specified to Lisp (almost surely much shorter than shortname, even, and most likely wildcarded), while Lisp_Font_Instance.truename should contain the longname. For now, I'm going to #ifdef the return values defaulting to short. -- sjt */ /* DEBUGGING STUFF */ /* print message to stderr: one internal-format string argument */ #define DEBUG_XFT0(level,s) \ if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (s) /* print message to stderr: one formatted argument */ #define DEBUG_XFT1(level,format,x1) \ if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1) /* print message to stderr: two formatted arguments */ #define DEBUG_XFT2(level,format,x1,x2) \ if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1, x2) /* print message to stderr: three formatted arguments */ #define DEBUG_XFT3(level,format,x1,x2,x3) \ if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1, x2, x3) /* print message to stderr: four formatted arguments */ #define DEBUG_XFT4(level,format,x1,x2,x3,x4) \ if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1, x2, x3, x4) /* print an Xft pattern to stderr LEVEL is the debug level (to compare to debug_xft) FORMAT is a newline-terminated printf format with one %s for the pattern and must be internal format (eg, pure ASCII) PATTERN is an FcPattern *. */ #define PRINT_XFT_PATTERN(level,format,pattern) \ do { \ DECLARE_EISTRING (eistrpxft_name); \ Extbyte *name; \ FcPattern* temp = FcPatternDuplicate (pattern); \ FcPatternDel (temp, FC_CHARSET); \ name = (Extbyte *) FcNameUnparse (temp); \ FcPatternDestroy (temp); \ eicpy_ext(eistrpxft_name, \ name ? name : "FONT WITH NULL NAME", \ Qfc_font_name_encoding); \ DEBUG_XFT1 (level, format, eidata(eistrpxft_name)); \ free (name); \ } while (0) /* print a progress message LEVEL is the debug level (to compare to debug_xft) FONT is the Xft font name in Mule internal encoding (from an eistring). LANG is the language being checked for support (must be ASCII). */ #define CHECKING_LANG(level,font,lang) \ do { \ DEBUG_XFT2 (level, "checking if %s handles %s\n", font, lang); \ } while (0) #else /* HAVE_XFT */ #endif /* HAVE_XFT */ #endif /* INCLUDED_font_mgr_h_ */