view src/marker.c @ 872:79c6ff3eef26

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-06-20 21:18:01 by ben] font changes etc.; some 21.4 changes mule/mule-msw-init-late.el: Specify charset->windows-registry conversion. mule/mule-x-init.el: Delete extra mule font additions here. Put them in faces.c. cl-macs.el: Document better. font-lock.el: Move Lisp function regexp to lisp-mode.el. lisp-mode.el: Various indentation fixes: Handle flet functions better. Handle argument lists in defuns and flets. Handle quoted lists, e.g. property lists -- don't indent like function calls. Distinguish between lambdas and other lists. lisp-mode.el: Handle this form. faces.el, font-menu.el, font.el, gtk-faces.el, msw-faces.el, msw-font-menu.el, x-faces.el, x-init.el: Major overhaul of face-handling code: -- Fix lots of bogus code in msw-faces.el, msw-font-menu.el, font-menu.el that was "truenaming" font specs -- i.e. in the process of frobbing a particular field in a general user-specified font spec with wildcarded fields, sticking in particular values for all the remaining wildcarded fields. This bug was rampant everywhere except in x-faces.el (the oldest and only correctly written code). This also means that we need to work with font names at all times and not font instances, because a font instance is essentially a truenamed font. -- Total rewrite of extremely junky code in msw-faces.el. Work with names as well as font instances, and return names; stop truenaming when canonicalizing and frobbing; fix handling of the combined style field, i.e. weight/slant (also fixed in font.el). -- Totally rewrite the frobbing functions in faces.el. This time, we frob all the instantiators rather than just computing a single instance value and working backwards. That way, e.g., `bold' will work for all charsets that have bold available, rather than only for whatever charset was part of the computed font instance (another example of the truename virus). Also fix up code to look at the fallbacks (all of them) when no global value present, so we don't need to put something in the global value. Intelligently handle a request to frob a buffer locale, rather than signalling an error. When frobbing instantiators, try hard to figure out what device type is associated with them, and frob each according to its own proper device type. Correctly handle inheritance vectors given as instantiators. Preserve existing tags when putting back frobbed instantiators. Extract out general specifier-frobbing code into specifier.el. Document everything cleanly. Do lots of other things better, etc. -- Don't duplicatively set a global specification for the default font -- it's already in the fallback and we no longer need a default global specification present. Delete various code in x-faces.el and msw-faces.el that duplicated the lists of fonts in faces.c. -- init-global-faces was not being called at all under MS Windows! Major bogosity. That caused device-specific values to get stuck into all the fonts, making it very hard to change them -- setting global specs caused nothing to happen. -- Correct weight names in font.el. -- Lots more font fixups in objects*.c. Printer.el: Warning fix. specifier.el: Add more args to map-specifier. Add various "heuristic" specifier functions to aid in creation of specifier-munging code such as in faces.el. subr.el: New functions. lwlib.c: Fix warning. config.inc.samp: Clean up, add args to control fastcall (not yet supported! the changes needed are in another ws of mine), profile support, vc6 support, union-type. xemacs.dsp, xemacs.mak: Semi-major overhaul. Fix bug where dump-id was always getting recomputed, forcing a redump even when nothing changed. Add support for fastcall. Support edit-and-continue (on by default) with vc6. Use incremental linking when doing a debug compilation. Add support for profiling. Consolidate the various debug flags. Partial support for "batch-compiling" -- compiling many files on a single invocation of the compiler. Doesn't seem to help that much for me, so it's not finished or enabled by default. Remove HAVE_MSW_C_DIRED, we always do. Correct some sloppy use of directories. s/cygwin32.h: Allow pdump to work under Cygwin (mmap is broken, so need to undefine HAVE_MMAP). s/win32-common.h, s/windowsnt.h: Support for fastcall. Add WIN32_ANY for identifying all Win32 variants (Cygwin, native, MinGW). Both of these are properly used in another ws. alloc.c, balloon-x.c, buffer.c, bytecode.c, callint.c, cm.c, cmdloop.c, cmds.c, console-gtk.c, console-gtk.h, console-msw.c, console-msw.h, console-stream.c, console-stream.h, console-tty.c, console-tty.h, console-x.c, console-x.h, console.c, console.h, device-gtk.c, device-msw.c, device-tty.c, device-x.c, device.c, device.h, devslots.h, dialog-gtk.c, dialog-msw.c, dialog-x.c, dialog.c, dired-msw.c, editfns.c, emacs.c, event-Xt.c, event-gtk.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-tty.c, event-unixoid.c, events.c, extents.c, extents.h, faces.c, fileio.c, fns.c, frame-gtk.c, frame-msw.c, frame-tty.c, frame-x.c, frame.c, frame.h, glyphs-eimage.c, glyphs-gtk.c, glyphs-msw.c, glyphs-widget.c, glyphs-x.c, glyphs.c, glyphs.h, gui-gtk.c, gui-msw.c, gui-x.c, gui.c, gutter.c, input-method-xlib.c, intl-encap-win32.c, intl-win32.c, keymap.c, lisp.h, macros.c, menubar-gtk.c, menubar-msw.c, menubar-x.c, menubar.c, menubar.h, minibuf.c, mule-charset.c, nt.c, objects-gtk.c, objects-gtk.h, objects-msw.c, objects-msw.h, objects-tty.c, objects-tty.h, objects-x.c, objects-x.h, objects.c, objects.h, postgresql.c, print.c, process.h, redisplay-gtk.c, redisplay-msw.c, redisplay-output.c, redisplay-tty.c, redisplay-x.c, redisplay.c, redisplay.h, scrollbar-gtk.c, scrollbar-msw.c, scrollbar-x.c, scrollbar.c, select-gtk.c, select-msw.c, select-x.c, select.c, signal.c, sound.c, specifier.c, symbols.c, syntax.c, sysdep.c, syssignal.h, syswindows.h, toolbar-common.c, toolbar-gtk.c, toolbar-msw.c, toolbar-x.c, toolbar.c, unicode.c, window.c, window.h: The following are the major changes made: (1) Separation of various header files into an external and an internal version, similar to the existing separation of process.h and procimpl.h. Eventually this should be done for all Lisp objects. The external version has the same name as currently; the internal adds -impl. The external file has XFOO() macros for objects, but the structure is opaque and defined only in the internal file. It's now reasonable to move all prototypes in lisp.h into the appropriate external file, and this should be done. Currently, separation has been done on extents.h, objects*.h, console.h, device.h, frame.h, and window.h. For c/d/f/w, the most basic properties are available in the external header file, with the macros resolving to functions. In the internal header file, the macros are redefined to directly access the structure. Also, the global MARK_FOO_CHANGED macros have been made into functions so that they can be accessed without needing to include lots of -impl headers -- they are used in almost exclusively in non-time-critical functions, and take up enough time that the function overhead will be negligible. Similarly, the function overhead from making the basic properties mentioned above into functions is negligible, and code that does heavy accessing of c/d/f/w structures inevitably ends up needing the internal header files, anyway. (2) More face changes. -- Major rewrite of objects-msw.c. Now handles wildcard specs properly, rather than "truenaming" (or even worse, signalling an error, which previously happened with some of the fallbacks if you tried to use them in make-font-instance!). -- Split charset matching of fonts into two stages -- one to find a font specifically designed for a particular charset (by examining its registry), the second to find a Unicode font that can support the charset. This needs to proceed as two complete, separate instantiations in order to work properly (otherwise many of the fonts in the HELLO page look wrong). This should also make it easy to support iso10646 (Unicode) fonts under X. -- All default values for fonts are now completely specified in the fallbacks. Stuff from mule-x-init.el has all been moved here, merged with the existing specs, and totally rethought so you get sensible results. (HELLO now looks much better!). -- Generalize the "default X/GTK device" stuff into a per-device-type "default device". -- Add mswindows-{set-}charset-registry. In time, charset<->code-page conversion functions will be removed. -- Wrap protective code around calls to compute device specifier tags, and do this computation before calling the face initialization code because the latter may need these tags to be correctly updated. (3) Other changes. EmacsFrame.c, glyphs-msw.c, eval.c, gui-x.c, intl-encap-win32.c, search.c, signal.c, toolbar-msw.c, unicode.c: Warning fixes. config.h.in: #undefs meant to be frobbed by configure *MUST* go inside of #ifndef WIN32_NO_CONFIGURE, and everything else *MUST* go outside! eval.c: Let detailed backtraces be detailed. specifier.c: Don't override user's print-string-length/print-length settings. glyphs.c: New function image-instance-instantiator. config.h.in, sysdep.c: Changes for fastcall. sysdep.c, nt.c: Fix up a previous botched patch that tried to add support for both EEXIST and EACCES. IF THE BOTCHED PATCH WENT INTO 21.4, THIS FIXUP NEEDS TO GO IN, TOO. search.c: Fix *evil* crash due to incorrect synching of syntax-cache code with 21.1. THIS SHOULD GO INTO 21.4.
author ben
date Thu, 20 Jun 2002 21:19:10 +0000
parents 1e4e42de23d5
children c925bacdda60
line wrap: on
line source

/* Markers: examining, setting and killing.
   Copyright (C) 1985, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 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.  */

/* Synched up with: FSF 19.30. */

/* This file has been Mule-ized. */

/* Note that markers are currently kept in an unordered list.
   This means that marker operations may be inefficient if
   there are a bunch of markers in the buffer.  This probably
   won't have a significant impact on redisplay (which uses
   markers), but if it does, it wouldn't be too hard to change
   to an ordered gap array. (Just copy the code from extents.c.)
   */

#include <config.h>
#include "lisp.h"

#include "buffer.h"

static Lisp_Object
mark_marker (Lisp_Object obj)
{
  Lisp_Marker *marker = XMARKER (obj);
  Lisp_Object buf;
  /* DO NOT mark through the marker's chain.
     The buffer's markers chain does not preserve markers from gc;
     Instead, markers are removed from the chain when they are freed
     by gc.
   */
  if (!marker->buffer)
    return (Qnil);

  buf = wrap_buffer (marker->buffer);
  return (buf);
}

static void
print_marker (Lisp_Object obj, Lisp_Object printcharfun, int escapeflag)
{
  Lisp_Marker *marker = XMARKER (obj);

  if (print_readably)
    printing_unreadable_object ("#<marker 0x%lx>", (long) marker);

  write_c_string (printcharfun, GETTEXT ("#<marker "));
  if (!marker->buffer)
    write_c_string (printcharfun, GETTEXT ("in no buffer"));
  else
    {
      write_fmt_string (printcharfun, "at %ld in ",
			(long) marker_position (obj));
      print_internal (marker->buffer->name, printcharfun, 0);
    }
  if (marker->insertion_type)
    write_c_string (printcharfun, " insertion-type=t");
  write_fmt_string (printcharfun, " 0x%lx>", (long) marker);
}

static int
marker_equal (Lisp_Object obj1, Lisp_Object obj2, int depth)
{
  Lisp_Marker *marker1 = XMARKER (obj1);
  Lisp_Marker *marker2 = XMARKER (obj2);

  return ((marker1->buffer == marker2->buffer) &&
	  (marker1->membpos == marker2->membpos ||
	  /* All markers pointing nowhere are equal */
	   !marker1->buffer));
}

static unsigned long
marker_hash (Lisp_Object obj, int depth)
{
  unsigned long hash = (unsigned long) XMARKER (obj)->buffer;
  if (hash)
    hash = HASH2 (hash, XMARKER (obj)->membpos);
  return hash;
}

static const struct lrecord_description marker_description[] = {
  { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (Lisp_Marker, next) },
  { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (Lisp_Marker, prev) },
  { XD_LISP_OBJECT, offsetof (Lisp_Marker, buffer) },
  { XD_END }
};

DEFINE_BASIC_LRECORD_IMPLEMENTATION ("marker", marker,
				     mark_marker, print_marker, 0,
				     marker_equal, marker_hash, marker_description,
				     Lisp_Marker);

/* Operations on markers. */

DEFUN ("marker-buffer", Fmarker_buffer, 1, 1, 0, /*
Return the buffer that MARKER points into, or nil if none.
Return nil if MARKER points into a dead buffer or doesn't point anywhere.
*/
       (marker))
{
  struct buffer *buf;
  CHECK_MARKER (marker);
  /* Return marker's buffer only if it is not dead.  */
  if ((buf = XMARKER (marker)->buffer) && BUFFER_LIVE_P (buf))
    {
      return wrap_buffer (buf);
    }
  return Qnil;
}

DEFUN ("marker-position", Fmarker_position, 1, 1, 0, /*
Return the position MARKER points at, as a character number.
Return `nil' if marker doesn't point anywhere.
*/
       (marker))
{
  CHECK_MARKER (marker);
  return XMARKER (marker)->buffer ? make_int (marker_position (marker)) : Qnil;
}

#if 0 /* useful debugging function */

static void
check_marker_circularities (struct buffer *buf)
{
  Lisp_Marker *tortoise, *hare;

  tortoise = BUF_MARKERS (buf);
  hare = tortoise;

  if (!tortoise)
    return;

  while (1)
    {
      assert (hare->buffer == buf);
      hare = hare->next;
      if (!hare)
        return;
      assert (hare->buffer == buf);
      hare = hare->next;
      if (!hare)
        return;
      tortoise = tortoise->next;
      assert (tortoise != hare);
    }
}

#endif

static Lisp_Object
set_marker_internal (Lisp_Object marker, Lisp_Object position,
		     Lisp_Object buffer, int restricted_p)
{
  Charbpos charno;
  struct buffer *b;
  Lisp_Marker *m;
  int point_p;

  CHECK_MARKER (marker);

  point_p = POINT_MARKER_P (marker);

  /* If position is nil or a marker that points nowhere,
     make this marker point nowhere.  */
  if (NILP (position) ||
      (MARKERP (position) && !XMARKER (position)->buffer))
    {
      if (point_p)
	invalid_operation ("Can't make point-marker point nowhere",
			   marker);
      if (XMARKER (marker)->buffer)
	unchain_marker (marker);
      return marker;
    }

  CHECK_INT_COERCE_MARKER (position);
  if (NILP (buffer))
    b = current_buffer;
  else
    {
      CHECK_BUFFER (buffer);
      b = XBUFFER (buffer);
      /* If buffer is dead, set marker to point nowhere.  */
      if (!BUFFER_LIVE_P (XBUFFER (buffer)))
	{
	  if (point_p)
	    invalid_operation
	      ("Can't move point-marker in a killed buffer", marker);
	  if (XMARKER (marker)->buffer)
	    unchain_marker (marker);
	  return marker;
	}
    }

  charno = XINT (position);
  m = XMARKER (marker);

  if (restricted_p)
    {
      if (charno < BUF_BEGV (b)) charno = BUF_BEGV (b);
      if (charno > BUF_ZV (b)) charno = BUF_ZV (b);
    }
  else
    {
      if (charno < BUF_BEG (b)) charno = BUF_BEG (b);
      if (charno > BUF_Z (b)) charno = BUF_Z (b);
    }

  if (point_p)
    {
#ifndef moving_point_by_moving_its_marker_is_a_bug
      BUF_SET_PT (b, charno);	/* this will move the marker */
#else  /* It's not a feature, so it must be a bug */
      invalid_operation ("DEBUG: attempt to move point via point-marker",
			 marker);
#endif
    }
  else
    {
      m->membpos = charbpos_to_membpos (b, charno);
    }

  if (m->buffer != b)
    {
      if (point_p)
	invalid_operation ("Can't change buffer of point-marker", marker);
      if (m->buffer != 0)
	unchain_marker (marker);
      m->buffer = b;
      marker_next (m) = BUF_MARKERS (b);
      marker_prev (m) = 0;
      if (BUF_MARKERS (b))
        marker_prev (BUF_MARKERS (b)) = m;
      BUF_MARKERS (b) = m;
    }

  return marker;
}


DEFUN ("set-marker", Fset_marker, 2, 3, 0, /*
Move MARKER to position POSITION in BUFFER.
POSITION can be a marker, an integer or nil.  If POSITION is an
integer, make MARKER point before the POSITIONth character in BUFFER.
If POSITION is nil, makes MARKER point nowhere.  Then it no longer
slows down editing in any buffer.  If POSITION is less than 1, move
MARKER to the beginning of BUFFER.  If POSITION is greater than the
size of BUFFER, move MARKER to the end of BUFFER.
BUFFER defaults to the current buffer.
If this marker was returned by (point-marker t), then changing its
position moves point.  You cannot change its buffer or make it point
nowhere.
The return value is MARKER.
*/
       (marker, position, buffer))
{
  return set_marker_internal (marker, position, buffer, 0);
}


/* This version of Fset_marker won't let the position
   be outside the visible part.  */
Lisp_Object
set_marker_restricted (Lisp_Object marker, Lisp_Object position,
		       Lisp_Object buffer)
{
  return set_marker_internal (marker, position, buffer, 1);
}


/* This is called during garbage collection,
   so we must be careful to ignore and preserve mark bits,
   including those in chain fields of markers.  */

void
unchain_marker (Lisp_Object m)
{
  Lisp_Marker *marker = XMARKER (m);
  struct buffer *b = marker->buffer;

  if (b == 0)
    return;

#ifdef ERROR_CHECK_STRUCTURES
  assert (BUFFER_LIVE_P (b));
#endif

  if (marker_next (marker))
    marker_prev (marker_next (marker)) = marker_prev (marker);
  if (marker_prev (marker))
    marker_next (marker_prev (marker)) = marker_next (marker);
  else
    BUF_MARKERS (b) = marker_next (marker);

#ifdef ERROR_CHECK_STRUCTURES
  assert (marker != XMARKER (b->point_marker));
#endif

  marker->buffer = 0;
}

Bytebpos
byte_marker_position (Lisp_Object marker)
{
  Lisp_Marker *m = XMARKER (marker);
  struct buffer *buf = m->buffer;
  Bytebpos pos;

  if (!buf)
    invalid_argument ("Marker does not point anywhere", Qunbound);

  /* FSF claims that marker indices could end up denormalized, i.e.
     in the gap.  This is way bogus if it ever happens, and means
     something fucked up elsewhere.  Since I've overhauled all this
     shit, I don't think this can happen.  In any case, the following
     macro has an assert() in it that will catch these denormalized
     positions. */
  pos = membpos_to_bytebpos (buf, m->membpos);

  return pos;
}

Charbpos
marker_position (Lisp_Object marker)
{
  struct buffer *buf = XMARKER (marker)->buffer;

  if (!buf)
    invalid_argument ("Marker does not point anywhere", Qunbound);

  return bytebpos_to_charbpos (buf, byte_marker_position (marker));
}

void
set_byte_marker_position (Lisp_Object marker, Bytebpos pos)
{
  Lisp_Marker *m = XMARKER (marker);
  struct buffer *buf = m->buffer;

  if (!buf)
    invalid_argument ("Marker does not point anywhere", Qunbound);

  m->membpos = bytebpos_to_membpos (buf, pos);
}

void
set_marker_position (Lisp_Object marker, Charbpos pos)
{
  struct buffer *buf = XMARKER (marker)->buffer;

  if (!buf)
    invalid_argument ("Marker does not point anywhere", Qunbound);

  set_byte_marker_position (marker, charbpos_to_bytebpos (buf, pos));
}

static Lisp_Object
copy_marker_1 (Lisp_Object marker, Lisp_Object type, int noseeum)
{
  REGISTER Lisp_Object new;

  while (1)
    {
      if (INTP (marker) || MARKERP (marker))
	{
	  if (noseeum)
	    new = noseeum_make_marker ();
	  else
	    new = Fmake_marker ();
	  Fset_marker (new, marker,
		       (MARKERP (marker) ? Fmarker_buffer (marker) : Qnil));
	  XMARKER (new)->insertion_type = !NILP (type);
	  return new;
	}
      else
	marker = wrong_type_argument (Qinteger_or_marker_p, marker);
    }

  RETURN_NOT_REACHED (Qnil) /* not reached */
}

DEFUN ("copy-marker", Fcopy_marker, 1, 2, 0, /*
Return a new marker pointing at the same place as MARKER-OR-INTEGER.
If MARKER-OR-INTEGER is an integer, return a new marker pointing
at that position in the current buffer.
Optional argument MARKER-TYPE specifies the insertion type of the new
marker; see `marker-insertion-type'.
*/
       (marker_or_integer, marker_type))
{
  return copy_marker_1 (marker_or_integer, marker_type, 0);
}

Lisp_Object
noseeum_copy_marker (Lisp_Object marker, Lisp_Object marker_type)
{
  return copy_marker_1 (marker, marker_type, 1);
}

DEFUN ("marker-insertion-type", Fmarker_insertion_type, 1, 1, 0, /*
Return insertion type of MARKER: t if it stays after inserted text.
nil means the marker stays before text inserted there.
*/
       (marker))
{
  CHECK_MARKER (marker);
  return XMARKER (marker)->insertion_type ? Qt : Qnil;
}

DEFUN ("set-marker-insertion-type", Fset_marker_insertion_type, 2, 2, 0, /*
Set the insertion-type of MARKER to TYPE.
If TYPE is t, it means the marker advances when you insert text at it.
If TYPE is nil, it means the marker stays behind when you insert text at it.
*/
       (marker, type))
{
  CHECK_MARKER (marker);

  XMARKER (marker)->insertion_type = ! NILP (type);
  return type;
}

/* #### What is the possible use of this?  It looks quite useless to
   me, because there is no way to find *which* markers are positioned
   at POSITION.  Additional bogosity bonus: (buffer-has-markers-at
   (point)) will always return t because of the `point-marker'.  The
   same goes for the position of mark.  Bletch!

   Someone should discuss this with Stallman, but I don't have the
   stomach.  In fact, this function sucks so badly that I'm disabling
   it by default (although I've debugged it).  If you want to use it,
   use extents instead.  --hniksic */
#if 0
DEFUN ("buffer-has-markers-at", Fbuffer_has_markers_at, 1, 1, 0, /*
Return t if there are markers pointing at POSITION in the current buffer.
*/
       (position))
{
  Lisp_Marker *marker;
  Membpos pos;

  /* A small optimization trick: convert POS to membpos now, rather
     than converting every marker's memory index to charbpos.  */
  pos = bytebpos_to_membpos (current_buffer,
			  get_buffer_pos_byte (current_buffer, position,
					       GB_COERCE_RANGE));

  for (marker = BUF_MARKERS (current_buffer);
       marker;
       marker = marker_next (marker))
    {
      /* We use marker->membpos, so we don't have to go through the
         unwieldy operation of creating a Lisp_Object for
         marker_position() every time around.  */
      if (marker->membpos == pos)
	return Qt;
    }

  return Qnil;
}
#endif /* 0 */

#ifdef MEMORY_USAGE_STATS

int
compute_buffer_marker_usage (struct buffer *b, struct overhead_stats *ovstats)
{
  Lisp_Marker *m;
  int total = 0;
  int overhead;

  for (m = BUF_MARKERS (b); m; m = m->next)
    total += sizeof (Lisp_Marker);
  ovstats->was_requested += total;
  overhead = fixed_type_block_overhead (total);
  /* #### claiming this is all malloc overhead is not really right,
     but it has to go somewhere. */
  ovstats->malloc_overhead += overhead;
  return total + overhead;
}

#endif /* MEMORY_USAGE_STATS */


void
syms_of_marker (void)
{
  INIT_LRECORD_IMPLEMENTATION (marker);

  DEFSUBR (Fmarker_position);
  DEFSUBR (Fmarker_buffer);
  DEFSUBR (Fset_marker);
  DEFSUBR (Fcopy_marker);
  DEFSUBR (Fmarker_insertion_type);
  DEFSUBR (Fset_marker_insertion_type);
#if 0 /* FSFmacs crock */
  DEFSUBR (Fbuffer_has_markers_at);
#endif
}

void
init_buffer_markers (struct buffer *b)
{
  Lisp_Object buf = wrap_buffer (b);

  b->mark = Fmake_marker ();
  BUF_MARKERS (b) = 0;
  b->point_marker = Fmake_marker ();
  Fset_marker (b->point_marker,
	       /* For indirect buffers, point is already set.  */
	       b->base_buffer ? make_int (BUF_PT (b)) : make_int (1),
	       buf);
}

void
uninit_buffer_markers (struct buffer *b)
{
  /* Unchain all markers of this buffer
     and leave them pointing nowhere.  */
  REGISTER Lisp_Marker *m, *next;
  for (m = BUF_MARKERS (b); m; m = next)
    {
      m->buffer = 0;
      next = marker_next (m);
      marker_next (m) = 0;
      marker_prev (m) = 0;
    }
  BUF_MARKERS (b) = 0;
}