Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/lisp-union.h @ 815:66265f190a16
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-04-14 17:40:13 by jhar]
Undo accidental removal of reference to makeinfo-test
author | jhar |
---|---|
date | Sun, 14 Apr 2002 17:40:13 +0000 |
parents | 2b676dc88c66 |
children | 6728e641994e |
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/* Fundamental definitions for XEmacs Lisp interpreter -- union objects. Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 2002 Ben Wing. 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. */ /* Divergent from FSF. */ /* Definition of Lisp_Object type as a union. The declaration order of the objects within the struct members of the union is dependent on ENDIAN-ness. See lisp-disunion.h for more details. */ typedef union Lisp_Object { /* if non-valbits are at lower addresses */ #ifdef WORDS_BIGENDIAN struct { EMACS_UINT val : VALBITS; enum_field (Lisp_Type) type : GCTYPEBITS; } gu; struct { signed EMACS_INT val : INT_VALBITS; unsigned int bits : INT_GCBITS; } s; struct { EMACS_UINT val : INT_VALBITS; unsigned int bits : INT_GCBITS; } u; #else /* non-valbits are at higher addresses */ struct { enum_field (Lisp_Type) type : GCTYPEBITS; EMACS_UINT val : VALBITS; } gu; struct { unsigned int bits : INT_GCBITS; signed EMACS_INT val : INT_VALBITS; } s; struct { unsigned int bits : INT_GCBITS; EMACS_UINT val : INT_VALBITS; } u; #endif /* non-valbits are at higher addresses */ EMACS_UINT ui; signed EMACS_INT i; /* This was formerly declared 'void *v' etc. but that causes GCC to accept any (yes, any) pointer as the argument of a function declared to accept a Lisp_Object. */ struct nosuchstruct *v; const struct nosuchstruct *cv; } Lisp_Object; #define XCHARVAL(x) ((x).gu.val) # define XPNTRVAL(x) ((x).ui) INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object make_int (EMACS_INT val); INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object make_int (EMACS_INT val) { Lisp_Object obj; obj.s.bits = 1; obj.s.val = val; return obj; } #ifdef __cplusplus #define volatile_make_int(val) make_int (val) #else /* Ugh, need different definition to avoid compiler complaint in unix_send_process(). Furthermore, there's no way under C++, it seems, to declare something volatile and then return it. Perhaps I'd have to assign to something else instead? But in any case, the warnings about volatile clobbering doesn't occur in C++. I bet the thing is that C++ already has a built-in system for dealing with non-local exits and such, in a smart way that doesn't clobber registers, and incorporates longjmp() into that. */ INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object volatile_make_int (EMACS_INT val); INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object volatile_make_int (EMACS_INT val) { volatile Lisp_Object obj; obj.s.bits = 1; obj.s.val = val; return obj; } #endif /* __cplusplus */ INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object make_char (Emchar val); INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object make_char (Emchar val) { Lisp_Object obj; obj.gu.type = Lisp_Type_Char; obj.gu.val = val; return obj; } INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object wrap_pointer_1 (const void *ptr); INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Object wrap_pointer_1 (const void *ptr) { Lisp_Object obj; obj.ui = (EMACS_UINT) ptr; return obj; } extern Lisp_Object Qnull_pointer, Qzero; #define XREALINT(x) ((x).s.val) #define XUINT(x) ((x).u.val) #define XTYPE(x) ((x).gu.type) #define EQ(x,y) ((x).v == (y).v) #define INTP(x) ((x).s.bits) #define INT_PLUS(x,y) make_int (XINT (x) + XINT (y)) #define INT_MINUS(x,y) make_int (XINT (x) - XINT (y)) #define INT_PLUS1(x) make_int (XINT (x) + 1) #define INT_MINUS1(x) make_int (XINT (x) - 1) /* Convert between a (void *) and a Lisp_Object, as when the Lisp_Object is passed to a toolkit callback function */ #define VOID_TO_LISP(larg,varg) \ ((void) ((larg).v = (struct nosuchstruct *) (varg))) #define CVOID_TO_LISP(larg,varg) \ ((void) ((larg).cv = (const struct nosuchstruct *) (varg))) #define LISP_TO_VOID(larg) ((void *) ((larg).v)) #define LISP_TO_CVOID(larg) ((const void *) ((larg).cv)) /* Convert a Lisp_Object into something that can't be used as an lvalue. Useful for type-checking. */ #if (__GNUC__ > 1) #define NON_LVALUE(larg) ({ (larg); }) #else /* Well, you can't really do it without using a function call, and there's no real point in that; no-union-type is the rule, and that will catch errors. */ #define NON_LVALUE(larg) (larg) #endif