Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/specifier.h @ 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 | a5954632b187 |
children | e22b0213b713 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Generic specifier list implementation Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Board of Trustees, University of Illinois. Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 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. */ #ifndef INCLUDED_specifier_h_ #define INCLUDED_specifier_h_ /* MAGIC SPECIFIERS ================ Magic specifiers are used to provide fallback values for window system provided specifications, reflecting user preferences on the window system, such as default fonts, colors, scrollbar thickness etc. A magic specifier consists of two specifier objects. The first one behaves like a normal specifier in all senses. The second one, a ghost specifier, is a fallback value for the first one, and contains values provided by window system, resources etc. which reflect default settings for values being specified. A magic specifier has an "ultimate" fallback value, as any usual specifier does. This value, an inst-list, is stored in the fallback slot of the ghost specifier object. Ghost specifiers have the following properties: - Have back pointers to their parent specifiers. - Do not have instance data. Instead, they share parent's instance data. - Have the same methods structure pointer. - Share parent's caching scheme. - Store fallback value instead of their parents. Ghost specifiers normally are not modifiable at the lisp level, and only used to supply fallback instance values. They are accessible via (specifier-fallback), but are read-only. Although, under certain rare conditions, modification of ghost objects is allowed. This behavior is controlled by the global variable Vunlock_ghost_specifiers. It is not exposed to lisp, and is set during calls to lisp functions which initialize global, device and frame defaults, such as init-{global,frame,device}-{faces,toolbars,etc}. Thus, values supplied by resources or other means of a window system stored in externally unmodifiable ghost objects. Regular lisp code may thus freely modify the normal part of a magic specifier, and removing a specification for a particular domain causes the specification to consider ghost-provided fallback values, or its own fallback value. Rules of conduct for magic specifiers ------------------------------------- 1. recompute_*() functions always operate on the whole specifier when passed only a ghost object, by substituting it with their parent bodily object. 2. All specifier methods, except for instantiate method, are passed the bodily object of the magic specifier. Instantiate method is passed the specifier being instantiated. 3. Only bodily objects are passed to set_specifier_caching function, and only these may be cached. 4. All specifiers are added to Vall_specifiers list, both bodily and ghost. The pair of objects is always removed from the list at the same time. */ extern const struct struct_description specifier_methods_description; struct specifier_methods { const char *name; Lisp_Object predicate_symbol; /* Implementation specific methods: */ /* Create method: Initialize specifier data. Optional. */ void (*create_method) (Lisp_Object specifier); /* Mark method: Mark any lisp object within specifier data structure. Not required if no specifier data are Lisp_Objects. */ void (*mark_method) (Lisp_Object specifier); /* Equal method: Compare two specifiers. This is called after ensuring that the two specifiers are of the same type, and have the same specs. Quit is inhibited during the call so it is safe to call internal_equal(). If this function is not present, specifiers considered equal when the above conditions are met, i.e. as if the method returned non-zero. */ int (*equal_method) (Lisp_Object sp1, Lisp_Object sp2, int depth); /* Hash method: Hash specifier instance data. This has to hash only data structure of the specifier, as specs are hashed by the core code. If this function is not present, hashing behaves as if it returned zero. */ unsigned long (*hash_method) (Lisp_Object specifier, int depth); /* Validate method: Given an instantiator, verify that it's valid for this specifier type. If not, signal an error. If this function is not present, all instantiators are considered valid. */ void (*validate_method) (Lisp_Object instantiator); /* Copy method: Given an instantiator, copy the bits that we need to for this specifier type. If this function is not present, then Fcopy_tree is used. */ Lisp_Object (*copy_instantiator_method) (Lisp_Object instantiator); /* Validate-matchspec method: Given a matchspec, verify that it's valid for this specifier type. If not, signal an error. If this function is not present, *no* matchspecs are considered valid. Note that this differs from validate_method(). */ void (*validate_matchspec_method) (Lisp_Object matchspec); /* Instantiate method: Return SPECIFIER instance in DOMAIN, specified by INSTANTIATOR. MATCHSPEC specifies an additional constraints on the instance value (see the docstring for Fspecifier_matching_instance function). MATCHSPEC is passed Qunbound when no matching constraints are imposed. The method is called via call_with_suspended_errors(), so allowed to eval safely. DEPTH is a lisp integer denoting current depth of instantiation calls. This parameter should be passed as the initial depth value to functions which also instantiate specifiers (of which I can name specifier_instance) to avoid creating "external" specification loops. This method must presume that both INSTANTIATOR and MATCHSPEC are already validated by the corresponding validate_* methods, and may abort if they are invalid. Return value is an instance, which is returned immediately to the caller, or Qunbound to continue instantiation lookup chain. If this function is not present, INSTANTIATOR is used as the specifier instance. This is the usual case for "simple" specifiers, like integer and boolean. */ Lisp_Object (*instantiate_method) (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object matchspec, Lisp_Object domain, Lisp_Object instantiator, Lisp_Object depth); /* Going-to-add method: Called when an instantiator is about to be added to a specifier. This function can specify that different instantiators should be used instead by returning an inst-list (possibly containing zero elements). If the instantiator is fine as-is, return Qt. The instantiator has been copied with copy-tree, so feel free to reuse parts of it to create a new instantiator. The tag-set, however, is not copied and is not canonicalized (that will be done on the result of this function). */ Lisp_Object (*going_to_add_method) (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object locale, Lisp_Object tag_set, Lisp_Object instantiator); /* After-change method: Called when the SPECIFIER has just been changed in LOCALE. The method is called upon: * Removing and adding specs to/from the specifier; * Changing the specifier fallback. #### The method may have called more than once per each specifier change. #### Do not still know if this can safely eval. */ void (*after_change_method) (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object locale); /* Specifier extra data: Specifier objects can have extra data, specific to the type of specifier, stored at the end of the object. To have this, a specifier declares a structure of type `struct TYPE_specifier' containing the data and uses INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE_WITH_DATA instead of INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE. Then, a pointer to the `struct TYPE_specifier' can be obtained from a specifier object using SPECIFIER_TYPE_DATA. */ /* Pdump description of the extra data; required, and must be named TYPE_specifier_description. Initialized when INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE_WITH_DATA is called. */ const struct lrecord_description *extra_description; /* Size of extra data structure; initialized when INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE_WITH_DATA is called. */ int extra_data_size; }; struct Lisp_Specifier { struct lcrecord_header header; struct specifier_methods *methods; /* we keep a chained list of all current specifiers, for GC cleanup purposes. Do NOT mark through this, or specifiers will never be GC'd. */ Lisp_Object next_specifier; /* This is a straight list of instantiators. */ Lisp_Object global_specs; /* These are all assoc lists where the key is the type of object the list represents (buffer, window, etc.) and the associated list is the actual list of instantiators. */ Lisp_Object device_specs; Lisp_Object frame_specs; /* window_specs is actually a key-assoc weak list. See specifier.c for an explanation of why (it boils down to the fact that dead windows can become live again through window configurations). */ Lisp_Object window_specs; Lisp_Object buffer_specs; struct specifier_caching *caching; /* This can be either nil, for a plain, non-magic specifier object, t for the normal part of the magic specifier, or #<specifier> for the ghost part of the magic specifier, a pointer to its parent object */ Lisp_Object magic_parent; /* Fallback value. For magic specifiers, it is a pointer to the ghost. */ Lisp_Object fallback; /* type-specific extra data attached to a specifier */ max_align_t data[1]; }; typedef struct Lisp_Specifier Lisp_Specifier; DECLARE_LRECORD (specifier, Lisp_Specifier); #define XSPECIFIER(x) XRECORD (x, specifier, Lisp_Specifier) #define wrap_specifier(p) wrap_record (p, specifier) #define SPECIFIERP(x) RECORDP (x, specifier) #define CHECK_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, specifier) #define CONCHECK_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, specifier) /***** Calling a specifier method *****/ #define RAW_SPECMETH(sp, m) ((sp)->methods->m##_method) #define HAS_SPECMETH_P(sp, m) (!!RAW_SPECMETH (sp, m)) #define SPECMETH(sp, m, args) (((sp)->methods->m##_method) args) /* Call a void-returning specifier method, if it exists. */ #define MAYBE_SPECMETH(sp, m, args) do { \ Lisp_Specifier *maybe_specmeth_sp = (sp); \ if (HAS_SPECMETH_P (maybe_specmeth_sp, m)) \ SPECMETH (maybe_specmeth_sp, m, args); \ } while (0) /***** Defining new specifier types *****/ #define specifier_data_offset offsetof (Lisp_Specifier, data) extern const struct lrecord_description specifier_empty_extra_description[]; #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPES #define DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type) \ extern struct specifier_methods * type##_specifier_methods; \ DECLARE_INLINE_HEADER ( \ struct type##_specifier * \ error_check_##type##_specifier_data (Lisp_Specifier *sp) \ ) \ { \ if (SPECIFIERP (sp->magic_parent)) \ { \ assert (SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (sp, type)); \ sp = XSPECIFIER (sp->magic_parent); \ } \ else \ assert (NILP (sp->magic_parent) || EQ (sp->magic_parent, Qt)); \ assert (SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (sp, type)); \ return (struct type##_specifier *) sp->data; \ } \ DECLARE_INLINE_HEADER ( \ Lisp_Specifier * \ error_check_##type##_specifier_type (Lisp_Object obj) \ ) \ { \ Lisp_Specifier *sp = XSPECIFIER (obj); \ assert (SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (sp, type)); \ return sp; \ } \ DECLARE_NOTHING #else #define DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type) \ extern struct specifier_methods * type##_specifier_methods #endif /* ERROR_CHECK_TYPES */ #define DEFINE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type) \ struct specifier_methods * type##_specifier_methods #define INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type, obj_name, pred_sym) do { \ type##_specifier_methods = xnew_and_zero (struct specifier_methods); \ type##_specifier_methods->name = obj_name; \ type##_specifier_methods->extra_description = \ specifier_empty_extra_description; \ defsymbol_nodump (&type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol, pred_sym); \ add_entry_to_specifier_type_list (Q##type, type##_specifier_methods); \ dump_add_root_struct_ptr (&type##_specifier_methods, \ &specifier_methods_description); \ } while (0) #define REINITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type) do { \ staticpro_nodump (&type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol); \ } while (0) #define INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE_WITH_DATA(type, obj_name, pred_sym) \ do { \ INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (type, obj_name, pred_sym); \ type##_specifier_methods->extra_data_size = \ sizeof (struct type##_specifier); \ type##_specifier_methods->extra_description = \ type##_specifier_description; \ } while (0) /* Declare that specifier-type TYPE has method METH; used in initialization routines */ #define SPECIFIER_HAS_METHOD(type, meth) \ (type##_specifier_methods->meth##_method = type##_##meth) /***** Macros for accessing specifier types *****/ #define SPECIFIER_TYPE_P(sp, type) \ ((sp)->methods == type##_specifier_methods) /* Any of the two of the magic spec */ #define MAGIC_SPECIFIER_P(sp) (!NILP((sp)->magic_parent)) /* Normal part of the magic specifier */ #define BODILY_SPECIFIER_P(sp) EQ ((sp)->magic_parent, Qt) /* Ghost part of the magic specifier */ #define GHOST_SPECIFIER_P(sp) SPECIFIERP((sp)->magic_parent) #define GHOST_SPECIFIER(sp) XSPECIFIER ((sp)->fallback) #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPES # define SPECIFIER_TYPE_DATA(sp, type) \ error_check_##type##_specifier_data (sp) #else # define SPECIFIER_TYPE_DATA(sp, type) \ ((struct type##_specifier *) \ (GHOST_SPECIFIER_P(sp) \ ? XSPECIFIER((sp)->magic_parent)->data \ : (sp)->data)) #endif #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPES # define XSPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) \ error_check_##type##_specifier_type (x) #else # define XSPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) XSPECIFIER (x) #endif /* ERROR_CHECK_TYPES */ #define SPECIFIER_TYPEP(x, type) \ (SPECIFIERP (x) && SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (XSPECIFIER (x), type)) #define CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) do { \ CHECK_SPECIFIER (x); \ if (!SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (XSPECIFIER (x), type)) \ dead_wrong_type_argument \ (type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol, x); \ } while (0) #define CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) do { \ CONCHECK_SPECIFIER (x); \ if (!(SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, type))) \ x = wrong_type_argument \ (type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol, x); \ } while (0) /***** Miscellaneous structures *****/ enum spec_locale_type { LOCALE_GLOBAL, LOCALE_DEVICE, LOCALE_FRAME, LOCALE_WINDOW, LOCALE_BUFFER }; enum spec_add_meth { SPEC_PREPEND, SPEC_APPEND, SPEC_REMOVE_TAG_SET_PREPEND, SPEC_REMOVE_TAG_SET_APPEND, SPEC_REMOVE_LOCALE, SPEC_REMOVE_LOCALE_TYPE, SPEC_REMOVE_ALL }; struct specifier_caching { int offset_into_struct_window; void (*value_changed_in_window) (Lisp_Object specifier, struct window *w, Lisp_Object oldval); int offset_into_struct_frame; void (*value_changed_in_frame) (Lisp_Object specifier, struct frame *f, Lisp_Object oldval); int always_recompute; }; /* #### get image instances out of domains! */ /* #### I think the following should abort() rather than return nil when an invalid domain is given; much more likely we'll catch design errors early. --ben */ /* This turns out to be used heavily so we make it a macro to make it inline. Also, the majority of the time the object will turn out to be a window so we move it from being checked last to being checked first. */ #define DOMAIN_DEVICE(obj) \ (WINDOWP (obj) ? WINDOW_DEVICE (XWINDOW (obj)) \ : (FRAMEP (obj) ? FRAME_DEVICE (XFRAME (obj)) \ : (DEVICEP (obj) ? obj \ : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_device (obj) \ : Qnil)))) #define DOMAIN_FRAME(obj) \ (WINDOWP (obj) ? WINDOW_FRAME (XWINDOW (obj)) \ : (FRAMEP (obj) ? obj \ : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_frame (obj) \ : Qnil))) #define DOMAIN_WINDOW(obj) \ (WINDOWP (obj) ? obj \ : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_window (obj) \ : Qnil)) #define DOMAIN_LIVE_P(obj) \ (WINDOWP (obj) ? WINDOW_LIVE_P (XWINDOW (obj)) \ : (FRAMEP (obj) ? FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (obj)) \ : (DEVICEP (obj) ? DEVICE_LIVE_P (XDEVICE (obj)) \ : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_live_p (obj) \ : 0)))) #define DOMAIN_XDEVICE(obj) \ (XDEVICE (DOMAIN_DEVICE (obj))) #define DOMAIN_XFRAME(obj) \ (XFRAME (DOMAIN_FRAME (obj))) #define DOMAIN_XWINDOW(obj) \ (XWINDOW (DOMAIN_WINDOW (obj))) EXFUN (Fcopy_specifier, 6); EXFUN (Fmake_specifier, 1); EXFUN (Fset_specifier_dirty_flag, 1); EXFUN (Fspecifier_instance, 4); EXFUN (Fvalid_specifier_locale_p, 1); extern Lisp_Object Qfallback, Qnatnum; Lisp_Object make_magic_specifier (Lisp_Object type); Lisp_Object decode_locale_list (Lisp_Object locale); extern enum spec_add_meth decode_how_to_add_specification (Lisp_Object how_to_add); Lisp_Object decode_specifier_tag_set (Lisp_Object tag_set); Lisp_Object decode_domain (Lisp_Object domain); void add_entry_to_specifier_type_list (Lisp_Object symbol, struct specifier_methods *meths); void set_specifier_caching (Lisp_Object specifier, int struct_window_offset, void (*value_changed_in_window) (Lisp_Object specifier, struct window *w, Lisp_Object oldval), int struct_frame_offset, void (*value_changed_in_frame) (Lisp_Object specifier, struct frame *f, Lisp_Object oldval), int always_recompute); void set_specifier_fallback (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object fallback); void recompute_all_cached_specifiers_in_window (struct window *w); void recompute_all_cached_specifiers_in_frame (struct frame *f); /* Counterparts of Fadd_spec_to_specifier and Fremove_specifier, which operate directly on ghost objects given a magic specifier. */ void add_spec_to_ghost_specifier (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object instantiator, Lisp_Object locale, Lisp_Object tag_set, Lisp_Object how_to_add); void remove_ghost_specifier (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object locale, Lisp_Object tag_set, Lisp_Object exact_p); int unlock_ghost_specifiers_protected (void); void cleanup_specifiers (void); void prune_specifiers (void); void setup_device_initial_specifier_tags (struct device *d); void kill_specifier_buffer_locals (Lisp_Object buffer); DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (generic); #define XGENERIC_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, generic) #define GENERIC_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, generic) #define CHECK_GENERIC_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, generic) #define CONCHECK_GENERIC_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, generic) DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (integer); #define XINTEGER_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, integer) #define INTEGER_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, integer) #define CHECK_INTEGER_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, integer) #define CONCHECK_INTEGER_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, integer) DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (natnum); #define XNATNUM_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, natnum) #define NATNUM_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, natnum) #define CHECK_NATNUM_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, natnum) #define CONCHECK_NATNUM_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, natnum) DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (boolean); #define XBOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, boolean) #define BOOLEAN_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, boolean) #define CHECK_BOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, boolean) #define CONCHECK_BOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, boolean) DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (display_table); #define XDISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, display_table) #define DISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, display_table) #define CHECK_DISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, display_table) #define CONCHECK_DISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, display_table) #endif /* INCLUDED_specifier_h_ */