Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/font-lock.c @ 826:6728e641994e
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-05-05 11:30:15 by ben]
syntax cache, 8-bit-format, lots of code cleanup
README.packages: Update info about --package-path.
i.c: Create an inheritable event and pass it on to XEmacs, so that ^C
can be handled properly. Intercept ^C and signal the event.
"Stop Build" in VC++ now works.
bytecomp-runtime.el: Doc string changes.
compat.el: Some attempts to redo this to
make it truly useful and fix the "multiple versions interacting
with each other" problem. Not yet done. Currently doesn't work.
files.el: Use with-obsolete-variable to avoid warnings in new revert-buffer code.
xemacs.mak: Split up CFLAGS into a version without flags specifying the C
library. The problem seems to be that minitar depends on zlib,
which depends specifically on libc.lib, not on any of the other C
libraries. Unless you compile with libc.lib, you get errors --
specifically, no _errno in the other libraries, which must make it
something other than an int. (#### But this doesn't seem to obtain
in XEmacs, which also uses zlib, and can be linked with any of the
C libraries. Maybe zlib is used differently and doesn't need
errno, or maybe XEmacs provides an int errno; ... I don't
understand.
Makefile.in.in: Fix so that packages are around when testing.
abbrev.c, alloc.c, buffer.c, buffer.h, bytecode.c, callint.c, casefiddle.c, casetab.c, casetab.h, charset.h, chartab.c, chartab.h, cmds.c, console-msw.h, console-stream.c, console-x.c, console.c, console.h, data.c, device-msw.c, device.c, device.h, dialog-msw.c, dialog-x.c, dired-msw.c, dired.c, doc.c, doprnt.c, dumper.c, editfns.c, elhash.c, emacs.c, eval.c, event-Xt.c, event-gtk.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, events.c, events.h, extents.c, extents.h, faces.c, file-coding.c, file-coding.h, fileio.c, fns.c, font-lock.c, frame-gtk.c, frame-msw.c, frame-x.c, frame.c, frame.h, glade.c, glyphs-gtk.c, glyphs-msw.c, glyphs-msw.h, glyphs-x.c, glyphs.c, glyphs.h, gui-msw.c, gui-x.c, gui.h, gutter.h, hash.h, indent.c, insdel.c, intl-win32.c, intl.c, keymap.c, lisp-disunion.h, lisp-union.h, lisp.h, lread.c, lrecord.h, lstream.c, lstream.h, marker.c, menubar-gtk.c, menubar-msw.c, menubar-x.c, menubar.c, minibuf.c, mule-ccl.c, mule-charset.c, mule-coding.c, mule-wnnfns.c, nas.c, objects-msw.c, objects-x.c, opaque.c, postgresql.c, print.c, process-nt.c, process-unix.c, process.c, process.h, profile.c, rangetab.c, redisplay-gtk.c, redisplay-msw.c, redisplay-output.c, redisplay-x.c, redisplay.c, redisplay.h, regex.c, regex.h, scrollbar-msw.c, search.c, select-x.c, specifier.c, specifier.h, symbols.c, symsinit.h, syntax.c, syntax.h, syswindows.h, tests.c, text.c, text.h, tooltalk.c, ui-byhand.c, ui-gtk.c, unicode.c, win32.c, window.c: Another big Ben patch.
-- FUNCTIONALITY CHANGES:
add partial support for 8-bit-fixed, 16-bit-fixed, and
32-bit-fixed formats. not quite done yet. (in particular, needs
functions to actually convert the buffer.) NOTE: lots of changes
to regex.c here. also, many new *_fmt() inline funs that take an
Internal_Format argument.
redo syntax cache code. make the cache per-buffer; keep the cache
valid across calls to functions that use it. also keep it valid
across insertions/deletions and extent changes, as much as is
possible. eliminate the junky regex-reentrancy code by passing in
the relevant lisp info to the regex routines as local vars.
add general mechanism in extents code for signalling extent changes.
fix numerous problems with the case-table implementation; yoshiki
never properly transferred many algorithms from old-style to
new-style case tables.
redo char tables to support a default argument, so that mapping
only occurs over changed args. change many chartab functions to
accept Lisp_Object instead of Lisp_Char_Table *.
comment out the code in font-lock.c by default, because
font-lock.el no longer uses it. we should consider eliminating it
entirely.
Don't output bell as ^G in console-stream when not a TTY.
add -mswindows-termination-handle to interface with i.c, so we can
properly kill a build.
add more error-checking to buffer/string macros.
add some additional buffer_or_string_() funs.
-- INTERFACE CHANGES AFFECTING MORE CODE:
switch the arguments of write_c_string and friends to be
consistent with write_fmt_string, which must have printcharfun
first.
change BI_* macros to BYTE_* for increased clarity; similarly for
bi_* local vars.
change VOID_TO_LISP to be a one-argument function. eliminate
no-longer-needed CVOID_TO_LISP.
-- char/string macro changes:
rename MAKE_CHAR() to make_emchar() for slightly less confusion
with make_char(). (The former generates an Emchar, the latter a
Lisp object. Conceivably we should rename make_char() -> wrap_char()
and similarly for make_int(), make_float().)
Similar changes for other *CHAR* macros -- we now consistently use
names with `emchar' whenever we are working with Emchars. Any
remaining name with just `char' always refers to a Lisp object.
rename macros with XSTRING_* to string_* except for those that
reference actual fields in the Lisp_String object, following
conventions used elsewhere.
rename set_string_{data,length} macros (the only ones to work with
a Lisp_String_* instead of a Lisp_Object) to set_lispstringp_*
to make the difference clear.
try to be consistent about caps vs. lowercase in macro/inline-fun
names for chars and such, which wasn't the case before. we now
reserve caps either for XFOO_ macros that reference object fields
(e.g. XSTRING_DATA) or for things that have non-function semantics,
e.g. directly modifying an arg (BREAKUP_EMCHAR) or evaluating an
arg (any arg) more than once. otherwise, use lowercase.
here is a summary of most of the macros/inline funs changed by all
of the above changes:
BYTE_*_P -> byte_*_p
XSTRING_BYTE -> string_byte
set_string_data/length -> set_lispstringp_data/length
XSTRING_CHAR_LENGTH -> string_char_length
XSTRING_CHAR -> string_emchar
INTBYTE_FIRST_BYTE_P -> intbyte_first_byte_p
INTBYTE_LEADING_BYTE_P -> intbyte_leading_byte_p
charptr_copy_char -> charptr_copy_emchar
LEADING_BYTE_* -> leading_byte_*
CHAR_* -> EMCHAR_*
*_CHAR_* -> *_EMCHAR_*
*_CHAR -> *_EMCHAR
CHARSET_BY_ -> charset_by_*
BYTE_SHIFT_JIS* -> byte_shift_jis*
BYTE_BIG5* -> byte_big5*
REP_BYTES_BY_FIRST_BYTE -> rep_bytes_by_first_byte
char_to_unicode -> emchar_to_unicode
valid_char_p -> valid_emchar_p
Change intbyte_strcmp -> qxestrcmp_c (duplicated functionality).
-- INTERFACE CHANGES AFFECTING LESS CODE:
use DECLARE_INLINE_HEADER in various places.
remove '#ifdef emacs' from XEmacs-only files.
eliminate CHAR_TABLE_VALUE(), which duplicated the functionality
of get_char_table().
add BUFFER_TEXT_LOOP to simplify iterations over buffer text.
define typedefs for signed and unsigned types of fixed sizes
(INT_32_BIT, UINT_32_BIT, etc.).
create ALIGN_FOR_TYPE as a higher-level interface onto ALIGN_SIZE;
fix code to use it.
add charptr_emchar_len to return the text length of the character
pointed to by a ptr; use it in place of
charcount_to_bytecount(..., 1). add emchar_len to return the text
length of a given character.
add types Bytexpos and Charxpos to generalize Bytebpos/Bytecount
and Charbpos/Charcount, in code (particularly, the extents code
and redisplay code) that works with either kind of index. rename
redisplay struct params with names such as `charbpos' to
e.g. `charpos' when they are e.g. a Charxpos, not a Charbpos.
eliminate xxDEFUN in place of DEFUN; no longer necessary with
changes awhile back to doc.c.
split up big ugly combined list of EXFUNs in lisp.h on a
file-by-file basis, since other prototypes are similarly split.
rewrite some "*_UNSAFE" macros as inline funs and eliminate the
_UNSAFE suffix.
move most string code from lisp.h to text.h; the string code and
text.h code is now intertwined in such a fashion that they need
to be in the same place and partially interleaved. (you can't
create forward references for inline funs)
automated/lisp-tests.el, automated/symbol-tests.el, automated/test-harness.el: Fix test harness to output FAIL messages to stderr when in
batch mode.
Fix up some problems in lisp-tests/symbol-tests that were
causing spurious failures.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Sun, 05 May 2002 11:33:57 +0000 |
parents | fdefd0186b75 |
children | bf645ed7cfe3 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Routines to compute the current syntactic context, for font-lock mode. Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 1995 Sun Microsystems, 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. */ /* Synched up with: Not in FSF. */ /* This code computes the syntactic context of the current point, that is, whether point is within a comment, a string, what have you. It does this by picking a point "known" to be outside of any syntactic constructs and moving forward, examining the syntax of each character. Two caches are used: one caches the last point computed, and the other caches the last point at the beginning of a line. This makes there be little penalty for moving left-to-right on a line a character at a time; makes starting over on a line be cheap; and makes random-accessing within a line relatively cheap. When we move to a different line farther down in the file (but within the current top-level form) we simply continue computing forward. If we move backward more than a line, or move beyond the end of the current tlf, or switch buffers, then we call `beginning-of-defun' and start over from there. #### We should really rewrite this to keep extents over the buffer that hold the current syntactic information. This would be a big win. This way there would be no guessing or incorrect results. */ #if 0 /* no longer used */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "insdel.h" #include "syntax.h" Lisp_Object Qcomment; Lisp_Object Qblock_comment; Lisp_Object Qbeginning_of_defun; enum syntactic_context { context_none, context_string, context_comment, context_block_comment, context_generic_comment, context_generic_string }; enum block_comment_context { ccontext_none, ccontext_start1, ccontext_start2, ccontext_end1 }; enum comment_style { comment_style_none, comment_style_a, comment_style_b }; struct context_cache { Charbpos start_point; /* beginning of defun */ Charbpos cur_point; /* cache location */ Charbpos end_point; /* end of defun */ struct buffer *buffer; /* does this need to be staticpro'd? */ enum syntactic_context context; /* single-char-syntax state */ enum block_comment_context ccontext; /* block-comment state */ enum comment_style style; /* which comment group */ Emchar scontext; /* active string delimiter */ int depth; /* depth in parens */ int backslash_p; /* just read a backslash */ int needs_its_head_reexamined; /* we're apparently outside of a top level form, and far away from it. This is a bad situation because it will lead to constant slowness as we keep going way back to that form and moving forward again. In this case, we try to compute a "pseudo- top-level-form" where the depth is 0 and the context is none at both ends. */ }; /* We have two caches; one for the current point and one for the beginning of line. We used to rely on the caller to tell us when to invalidate them, but now we do it ourselves; it lets us be smarter. */ static struct context_cache context_cache; static struct context_cache bol_context_cache; int font_lock_debug; #define reset_context_cache(cc) memset (cc, 0, sizeof (struct context_cache)) /* This function is called from signal_after_change() to tell us when textual changes are made so we can flush our caches when necessary. We make the following somewhat heuristic assumptions: (remember that current_point is always >= start_point, but may be less than or greater than end_point (we might not be inside any top-level form)). 1) Textual changes before the beginning of the current top-level form don't affect anything; all we need to do is offset the caches appropriately. 2) Textual changes right at the beginning of the current top-level form messes things up and requires that we flush the caches. 3) Textual changes after the beginning of the current top-level form and before one or both or the caches invalidates the corresponding cache(s). 4) Textual changes after the caches and before the end of the current top-level form don't affect anything; all we need to do is offset the caches appropriately. 5) Textual changes right at the end of the current top-level form necessitate recomputing that end value. 6) Textual changes after the end of the current top-level form are ignored. */ void font_lock_maybe_update_syntactic_caches (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos start, Charbpos orig_end, Charbpos new_end) { /* Note: either both context_cache and bol_context_cache are valid and point to the same buffer, or both are invalid. If we have to invalidate just context_cache, we recopy it from bol_context_cache. */ if (context_cache.buffer != buf) /* caches don't apply */ return; /* NOTE: The order of the if statements below is important. If you change them around unthinkingly, you will probably break something. */ if (orig_end <= context_cache.start_point - 1) { /* case 1: before the beginning of the current top-level form */ Charcount diff = new_end - orig_end; if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 1\n"); context_cache.start_point += diff; context_cache.cur_point += diff; context_cache.end_point += diff; bol_context_cache.start_point += diff; bol_context_cache.cur_point += diff; bol_context_cache.end_point += diff; } else if (start <= context_cache.start_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 2\n"); /* case 2: right at the current top-level form (paren that starts top level form got deleted or moved away from the newline it was touching) */ reset_context_cache (&context_cache); reset_context_cache (&bol_context_cache); } /* OK, now we know that the start is after the beginning of the current top-level form. */ else if (start < bol_context_cache.cur_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 3 (1)\n"); /* case 3: after the beginning of the current top-level form and before both of the caches */ reset_context_cache (&context_cache); reset_context_cache (&bol_context_cache); } else if (start < context_cache.cur_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 3 (2)\n"); /* case 3: but only need to invalidate one cache */ context_cache = bol_context_cache; } /* OK, now we know that the start is after the caches. */ else if (start >= context_cache.end_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 6\n"); /* case 6: after the end of the current top-level form and after the caches. */ } else if (orig_end <= context_cache.end_point - 2) { /* case 4: after the caches and before the end of the current top-level form */ Charcount diff = new_end - orig_end; if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 4\n"); context_cache.end_point += diff; bol_context_cache.end_point += diff; } else { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("font-lock; Case 5\n"); /* case 5: right at the end of the current top-level form */ context_cache.end_point = context_cache.start_point - 1; bol_context_cache.end_point = context_cache.start_point - 1; } } /* This function is called from Fkill_buffer(). */ void font_lock_buffer_was_killed (struct buffer *buf) { if (context_cache.buffer == buf) { reset_context_cache (&context_cache); reset_context_cache (&bol_context_cache); } } static Charbpos beginning_of_defun (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pt) { /* This function can GC */ Charbpos opt = BUF_PT (buf); if (pt == BUF_BEGV (buf)) return pt; BUF_SET_PT (buf, pt); /* There used to be some kludginess to call c++-beginning-of-defun if we're in C++ mode. There's no point in this any more; we're using cc-mode. If you really want to get the old c++ mode working, fix it rather than the C code. */ call0_in_buffer (buf, Qbeginning_of_defun); pt = BUF_PT (buf); BUF_SET_PT (buf, opt); return pt; } static Charbpos end_of_defun (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pt) { Lisp_Object retval = scan_lists (buf, pt, 1, 0, 0, 1); if (NILP (retval)) return BUF_ZV (buf); else return XINT (retval); } /* Set up context_cache for attempting to determine the syntactic context in buffer BUF at point PT. */ static void setup_context_cache (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pt) { int recomputed_start_point = 0; /* This function can GC */ if (context_cache.buffer != buf || pt < context_cache.start_point) { start_over: if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("reset context cache\n"); /* OK, completely invalid. */ reset_context_cache (&context_cache); reset_context_cache (&bol_context_cache); } if (!context_cache.buffer) { /* Need to recompute the start point. */ if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("recompute start\n"); context_cache.start_point = beginning_of_defun (buf, pt); recomputed_start_point = 1; bol_context_cache.start_point = context_cache.start_point; bol_context_cache.buffer = context_cache.buffer = buf; } if (context_cache.end_point < context_cache.start_point) { /* Need to recompute the end point. */ if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("recompute end\n"); context_cache.end_point = end_of_defun (buf, context_cache.start_point); bol_context_cache.end_point = context_cache.end_point; } if (bol_context_cache.cur_point == 0 || pt < bol_context_cache.cur_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("reset to start\n"); if (pt > context_cache.end_point /* 3000 is some arbitrary delta but seems reasonable; about the size of a reasonable function */ && pt - context_cache.end_point > 3000) /* If we're far past the end of the top level form, don't trust it; recompute it. */ { /* But don't get in an infinite loop doing this. If we're really far past the end of the top level form, try to compute a pseudo-top-level form. */ if (recomputed_start_point) context_cache.needs_its_head_reexamined = 1; else /* force recomputation */ goto start_over; } /* Go to the nearest end of the top-level form that's before us. */ if (pt > context_cache.end_point) pt = context_cache.end_point; else pt = context_cache.start_point; /* Reset current point to start of buffer. */ context_cache.cur_point = pt; context_cache.context = context_none; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; context_cache.style = comment_style_none; context_cache.scontext = '\000'; context_cache.depth = 0; /* #### shouldn't this be checking the character's syntax instead of explicitly testing for backslash characters? */ context_cache.backslash_p = ((pt > 1) && (BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, pt - 1) == '\\')); /* Note that the BOL context cache may not be at the beginning of the line, but that should be OK, nobody's checking. */ bol_context_cache = context_cache; return; } else if (pt < context_cache.cur_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("reset to bol\n"); /* bol cache is OK but current_cache is not. */ context_cache = bol_context_cache; return; } else if (pt <= context_cache.end_point) { if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("everything is OK\n"); /* in same top-level form. */ return; } { /* OK, we're past the end of the top-level form. */ Charbpos maxpt = max (context_cache.end_point, context_cache.cur_point); #if 0 int shortage; #endif if (font_lock_debug) stderr_out ("past end\n"); if (pt <= maxpt) /* OK, fine. */ return; #if 0 /* This appears to cause huge slowdowns in files which have no top-level forms. In any case, it's not really necessary that we know for sure the top-level form we're in; if we're in a form but the form we have recorded is the previous one, it will be OK. */ scan_buffer (buf, '\n', maxpt, pt, 1, &shortage, 1); if (!shortage) /* If there was a newline in the region past the known universe, we might be inside another top-level form, so start over. Otherwise, we're outside of any top-level forms and we know the one directly before us, so it's OK. */ goto start_over; #endif } } /* You'd think it wouldn't be necessary to cast something to the type it's already defined is, but if you're GCC, you apparently think differently */ #define SYNTAX_START_STYLE(c1, c2) \ ((enum comment_style) \ (SYNTAX_CODES_MATCH_START_P (c1, c2, SYNTAX_COMMENT_STYLE_A) ? \ comment_style_a : \ SYNTAX_CODES_MATCH_START_P (c1, c2, SYNTAX_COMMENT_STYLE_B) ? \ comment_style_b : \ comment_style_none)) #define SYNTAX_END_STYLE(c1, c2) \ ((enum comment_style) \ (SYNTAX_CODES_MATCH_END_P (c1, c2, SYNTAX_COMMENT_STYLE_A) ? \ comment_style_a : \ SYNTAX_CODES_MATCH_END_P (c1, c2, SYNTAX_COMMENT_STYLE_B) ? \ comment_style_b : \ comment_style_none)) #define SINGLE_SYNTAX_STYLE(c) \ ((enum comment_style) \ (SYNTAX_CODE_MATCHES_1CHAR_P (c, SYNTAX_COMMENT_STYLE_A) ? \ comment_style_a : \ SYNTAX_CODE_MATCHES_1CHAR_P (c, SYNTAX_COMMENT_STYLE_B) ? \ comment_style_b : \ comment_style_none)) /* Set up context_cache for position PT in BUF. */ static void find_context (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pt) { /* This function can GC */ Emchar prev_c, c; int prev_syncode, syncode; Charbpos target = pt; struct syntax_cache *scache; setup_context_cache (buf, pt); pt = context_cache.cur_point; scache = setup_buffer_syntax_cache (buf, pt - 1, 1); if (pt > BUF_BEGV (buf)) { c = BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, pt - 1); syncode = SYNTAX_CODE_FROM_CACHE (scache, c); } else { c = '\n'; /* to get bol_context_cache at point-min */ syncode = Swhitespace; } for (; pt < target; pt++, context_cache.cur_point = pt) { if (context_cache.needs_its_head_reexamined) { if (context_cache.depth == 0 && context_cache.context == context_none) { /* We've found an anchor spot. Try to put the start of defun within 6000 chars of the target, and the end of defun as close as possible. 6000 is also arbitrary but tries to strike a balance between two conflicting pulls when dealing with a file that has lots of stuff sitting outside of a top- level form: a) If you move past the start of defun, you will have to recompute defun, which in this case means that start of defun goes all the way back to the beginning of the file; so you want to set start of defun a ways back from the current point. b) If you move a line backwards but within start of defun, you have to move back to start of defun; so you don't want start of defun too far from the current point. */ if (target - context_cache.start_point > 6000) context_cache.start_point = pt; context_cache.end_point = pt; bol_context_cache = context_cache; } } UPDATE_SYNTAX_CACHE_FORWARD (scache, pt); prev_c = c; prev_syncode = syncode; c = BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, pt); syncode = SYNTAX_CODE_FROM_CACHE (scache, c); if (prev_c == '\n') bol_context_cache = context_cache; if (context_cache.backslash_p) { context_cache.backslash_p = 0; continue; } switch (SYNTAX_FROM_CODE (syncode)) { case Sescape: context_cache.backslash_p = 1; break; case Sopen: if (context_cache.context == context_none) context_cache.depth++; break; case Sclose: if (context_cache.context == context_none) context_cache.depth--; break; case Scomment: if (context_cache.context == context_none) { context_cache.context = context_comment; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; context_cache.style = SINGLE_SYNTAX_STYLE (syncode); if (context_cache.style == comment_style_none) abort (); } break; case Sendcomment: if (context_cache.style != SINGLE_SYNTAX_STYLE (syncode)) ; else if (context_cache.context == context_comment) { context_cache.context = context_none; context_cache.style = comment_style_none; } else if (context_cache.context == context_block_comment && (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start2 || context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_end1)) { context_cache.context = context_none; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; context_cache.style = comment_style_none; } break; case Sstring: { if (context_cache.context == context_string && context_cache.scontext == c) { context_cache.context = context_none; context_cache.scontext = '\000'; } else if (context_cache.context == context_none) { Lisp_Object stringtermobj = syntax_match (scache->current_syntax_table, c); Emchar stringterm; if (CHARP (stringtermobj)) stringterm = XCHAR (stringtermobj); else stringterm = c; context_cache.context = context_string; context_cache.scontext = stringterm; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; } break; } case Scomment_fence: { if (context_cache.context == context_generic_comment) { context_cache.context = context_none; } else if (context_cache.context == context_none) { context_cache.context = context_generic_comment; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; } break; } case Sstring_fence: { if (context_cache.context == context_generic_string) { context_cache.context = context_none; } else if (context_cache.context == context_none) { context_cache.context = context_generic_string; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; } break; } default: ; } /* That takes care of the characters with manifest syntax. Now we've got to hack multi-char sequences that start and end block comments. */ if ((SYNTAX_CODE_COMMENT_BITS (syncode) & SYNTAX_SECOND_CHAR_START) && context_cache.context == context_none && context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start1 && SYNTAX_CODES_START_P (prev_syncode, syncode) /* the two chars match */ ) { context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_start2; context_cache.style = SYNTAX_START_STYLE (prev_syncode, syncode); if (context_cache.style == comment_style_none) abort (); } else if ((SYNTAX_CODE_COMMENT_BITS (syncode) & SYNTAX_FIRST_CHAR_START) && context_cache.context == context_none && (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_none || context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start1)) { context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_start1; context_cache.style = comment_style_none; /* should be this already*/ } else if ((SYNTAX_CODE_COMMENT_BITS (syncode) & SYNTAX_SECOND_CHAR_END) && context_cache.context == (enum syntactic_context) context_block_comment && context_cache.ccontext == (enum block_comment_context) ccontext_end1 && SYNTAX_CODES_END_P (prev_syncode, syncode) && /* the two chars match */ context_cache.style == SYNTAX_END_STYLE (prev_syncode, syncode) ) { context_cache.context = context_none; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; context_cache.style = comment_style_none; } else if ((SYNTAX_CODE_COMMENT_BITS (syncode) & SYNTAX_FIRST_CHAR_END) && context_cache.context == context_block_comment && context_cache.style == SINGLE_SYNTAX_STYLE (syncode) && (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start2 || context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_end1)) /* #### is it right to check for end1 here?? yes, because this might be a repetition of the first char of a comment-end sequence. ie, '/xxx foo xxx/' or '/xxx foo x/', where 'x' = '*' -- mct */ { if (context_cache.style == comment_style_none) abort (); context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_end1; } else if (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start1) { if (context_cache.context != context_none) abort (); context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_none; } else if (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_end1) { if (context_cache.context != context_block_comment) abort (); context_cache.context = context_none; context_cache.ccontext = ccontext_start2; } if (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start2 && context_cache.context == context_none) { context_cache.context = context_block_comment; if (context_cache.style == comment_style_none) abort (); } else if (context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_none && context_cache.context == context_block_comment) { context_cache.context = context_none; } } context_cache.needs_its_head_reexamined = 0; } static Lisp_Object context_to_symbol (enum syntactic_context context) { switch (context) { case context_none: return Qnil; case context_string: return Qstring; case context_comment: return Qcomment; case context_block_comment: return Qblock_comment; case context_generic_comment: return Qblock_comment; case context_generic_string: return Qstring; default: abort (); return Qnil; /* suppress compiler warning */ } } DEFUN ("buffer-syntactic-context", Fbuffer_syntactic_context, 0, 1, 0, /* Return the syntactic context of BUFFER at point. If BUFFER is nil or omitted, the current buffer is assumed. The returned value is one of the following symbols: nil ; meaning no special interpretation string ; meaning point is within a string comment ; meaning point is within a line comment block-comment ; meaning point is within a block comment See also the function `buffer-syntactic-context-depth', which returns the current nesting-depth within all parenthesis-syntax delimiters and the function `syntactically-sectionize', which will map a function over each syntactic context in a region. WARNING: this may alter match-data. */ (buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 0); find_context (buf, BUF_PT (buf)); return context_to_symbol (context_cache.context); } DEFUN ("buffer-syntactic-context-depth", Fbuffer_syntactic_context_depth, 0, 1, 0, /* Return the depth within all parenthesis-syntax delimiters at point. If BUFFER is nil or omitted, the current buffer is assumed. WARNING: this may alter match-data. */ (buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 0); find_context (buf, BUF_PT (buf)); return make_int (context_cache.depth); } DEFUN ("syntactically-sectionize", Fsyntactically_sectionize, 3, 4, 0, /* Call FUNCTION for each contiguous syntactic context in the region. Call the given function with four arguments: the start and end of the region, a symbol representing the syntactic context, and the current depth (as returned by the functions `buffer-syntactic-context' and `buffer-syntactic-context-depth'). When this function is called, the current buffer will be set to BUFFER. WARNING: this may alter match-data. */ (function, start, end, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ Charbpos s, pt, e; int edepth; enum syntactic_context this_context; Lisp_Object extent = Qnil; struct gcpro gcpro1; struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 0); get_buffer_range_char (buf, start, end, &s, &e, 0); pt = s; find_context (buf, pt); GCPRO1 (extent); while (pt < e) { Charbpos estart, eend; /* skip over "blank" areas, and bug out at end-of-buffer. */ while (context_cache.context == context_none) { pt++; if (pt >= e) goto DONE_LABEL; find_context (buf, pt); } /* We've found a non-blank area; keep going until we reach its end */ this_context = context_cache.context; estart = pt; /* Minor kludge: consider the comment-start character(s) a part of the comment. */ if (this_context == context_block_comment && context_cache.ccontext == ccontext_start2) estart -= 2; else if (this_context == context_comment || this_context == context_generic_comment ) estart -= 1; edepth = context_cache.depth; while (context_cache.context == this_context && pt < e) { pt++; find_context (buf, pt); } eend = pt; /* Minor kludge: consider the character which terminated the comment a part of the comment. */ if ((this_context == context_block_comment || this_context == context_comment || this_context == context_generic_comment ) && pt < e) eend++; if (estart == eend) continue; /* Make sure not to pass in values that are outside the actual bounds of this function. */ call4_in_buffer (buf, function, make_int (max (s, estart)), make_int (eend == e ? e : eend - 1), context_to_symbol (this_context), make_int (edepth)); } DONE_LABEL: UNGCPRO; return Qnil; } void syms_of_font_lock (void) { DEFSYMBOL (Qcomment); DEFSYMBOL (Qblock_comment); DEFSYMBOL (Qbeginning_of_defun); DEFSUBR (Fbuffer_syntactic_context); DEFSUBR (Fbuffer_syntactic_context_depth); DEFSUBR (Fsyntactically_sectionize); } void reinit_vars_of_font_lock (void) { xzero (context_cache); xzero (bol_context_cache); } void vars_of_font_lock (void) { reinit_vars_of_font_lock (); } #endif /* 0 */