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view src/cmds.c @ 4677:8f1ee2d15784
Support full Common Lisp multiple values in C.
lisp/ChangeLog
2009-08-11 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* bytecomp.el :
Update this file to support full C-level multiple values. This
involves:
-- Four new bytecodes, and special compiler functions to compile
multiple-value-call, multiple-value-list-internal, values,
values-list, and, since it now needs to pass back multiple values
and is a special form, throw.
-- There's a new compiler variable, byte-compile-checks-on-load,
which is a list of forms that are evaluated at the very start of a
file, with an error thrown if any of them give nil.
-- The header is now inserted *after* compilation, giving a chance
for the compilation process to influence what those checks
are. There is still a check done before compilation for non-ASCII
characters, to try to turn off dynamic docstrings if appopriate,
in `byte-compile-maybe-reset-coding'.
Space is reserved for checks; comments describing the version of
the byte compiler generating the file are inserted if space
remains for them.
* bytecomp.el (byte-compile-version):
Update this, we're a newer version of the byte compiler.
* byte-optimize.el (byte-optimize-funcall):
Correct a comment.
* bytecomp.el (byte-compile-lapcode):
Discard the arg with byte-multiple-value-call.
* bytecomp.el (byte-compile-checks-and-comments-space):
New variable, describe how many octets to reserve for checks at
the start of byte-compiled files.
* cl-compat.el:
Remove the fake multiple-value implementation. Have the functions
that use it use the real multiple-value implementation instead.
* cl-macs.el (cl-block-wrapper, cl-block-throw):
Revise the byte-compile properties of these symbols to work now
we've made throw into a special form; keep the byte-compile
properties as anonymous lambdas, since we don't have docstrings
for them.
* cl-macs.el (multiple-value-bind, multiple-value-setq)
(multiple-value-list, nth-value):
Update these functions to work with the C support for multiple
values.
* cl-macs.el (values):
Modify the setf handler for this to call
#'multiple-value-list-internal appropriately.
* cl-macs.el (cl-setf-do-store):
If the store form is a cons, treat it specially as wrapping the
store value.
* cl.el (cl-block-wrapper):
Make this an alias of #'and, not #'identity, since it needs to
pass back multiple values.
* cl.el (multiple-value-apply):
We no longer support this, mark it obsolete.
* lisp-mode.el (eval-interactive-verbose):
Remove a useless space in the docstring.
* lisp-mode.el (eval-interactive):
Update this function and its docstring. It now passes back a list,
basically wrapping any eval calls with multiple-value-list. This
allows multiple values to be printed by default in *scratch*.
* lisp-mode.el (prin1-list-as-multiple-values):
New function, printing a list as multiple values in the manner of
Bruno Haible's clisp, separating each entry with " ;\n".
* lisp-mode.el (eval-last-sexp):
Call #'prin1-list-as-multiple-values on the return value of
#'eval-interactive.
* lisp-mode.el (eval-defun):
Call #'prin1-list-as-multiple-values on the return value of
#'eval-interactive.
* mouse.el (mouse-eval-sexp):
Deal with lists corresponding to multiple values from
#'eval-interactive. Call #'cl-prettyprint, which is always
available, instead of sometimes calling #'pprint and sometimes
falling back to prin1.
* obsolete.el (obsolete-throw):
New function, called from eval.c when #'funcall encounters an
attempt to call #'throw (now a special form) as a function. Only
needed for compatibility with 21.4 byte-code.
man/ChangeLog addition:
2009-08-11 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* cl.texi (Organization):
Remove references to the obsolete multiple-value emulating code.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2009-08-11 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* bytecode.c (enum Opcode /* Byte codes */):
Add four new bytecodes, to deal with multiple values.
(POP_WITH_MULTIPLE_VALUES): New macro.
(POP): Modify this macro to ignore multiple values.
(DISCARD_PRESERVING_MULTIPLE_VALUES): New macro.
(DISCARD): Modify this macro to ignore multiple values.
(TOP_WITH_MULTIPLE_VALUES): New macro.
(TOP_ADDRESS): New macro.
(TOP): Modify this macro to ignore multiple values.
(TOP_LVALUE): New macro.
(Bcall): Ignore multiple values where appropriate.
(Breturn): Pass back multiple values.
(Bdup): Preserve multiple values.
Use TOP_LVALUE with most bytecodes that assign anything to
anything.
(Bbind_multiple_value_limits, Bmultiple_value_call,
Bmultiple_value_list_internal, Bthrow): Implement the new
bytecodes.
(Bgotoifnilelsepop, Bgotoifnonnilelsepop, BRgotoifnilelsepop,
BRgotoifnonnilelsepop):
Discard any multiple values.
* callint.c (Fcall_interactively):
Ignore multiple values when calling #'eval, in two places.
* device-x.c (x_IO_error_handler):
* macros.c (pop_kbd_macro_event):
* eval.c (Fsignal):
* eval.c (flagged_a_squirmer):
Call throw_or_bomb_out, not Fthrow, now that the latter is a
special form.
* eval.c:
Make Qthrow, Qobsolete_throw available as symbols.
Provide multiple_value_current_limit, multiple-values-limit (the
latter as specified by Common Lisp.
* eval.c (For):
Ignore multiple values when comparing with Qnil, but pass any
multiple values back for the last arg.
* eval.c (Fand):
Ditto.
* eval.c (Fif):
Ignore multiple values when examining the result of the
condition.
* eval.c (Fcond):
Ignore multiple values when comparing what the clauses give, but
pass them back if a clause gave non-nil.
* eval.c (Fprog2):
Never pass back multiple values.
* eval.c (FletX, Flet):
Ignore multiple when evaluating what exactly symbols should be
bound to.
* eval.c (Fwhile):
Ignore multiple values when evaluating the test.
* eval.c (Fsetq, Fdefvar, Fdefconst):
Ignore multiple values.
* eval.c (Fthrow):
Declare this as a special form; ignore multiple values for TAG,
preserve them for VALUE.
* eval.c (throw_or_bomb_out):
Make this available to other files, now Fthrow is a special form.
* eval.c (Feval):
Ignore multiple values when calling a compiled function, a
non-special-form subr, or a lambda expression.
* eval.c (Ffuncall):
If we attempt to call #'throw (now a special form) as a function,
don't error, call #'obsolete-throw instead.
* eval.c (make_multiple_value, multiple_value_aset)
(multiple_value_aref, print_multiple_value, mark_multiple_value)
(size_multiple_value):
Implement the multiple_value type. Add a long comment describing
our implementation.
* eval.c (bind_multiple_value_limits):
New function, used by the bytecode and by #'multiple-value-call,
#'multiple-value-list-internal.
* eval.c (multiple_value_call):
New function, used by the bytecode and #'multiple-value-call.
* eval.c (Fmultiple_value_call):
New special form.
* eval.c (multiple_value_list_internal):
New function, used by the byte code and
#'multiple-value-list-internal.
* eval.c (Fmultiple_value_list_internal, Fmultiple_value_prog1):
New special forms.
* eval.c (Fvalues, Fvalues_list):
New Lisp functions.
* eval.c (values2):
New function, for C code returning multiple values.
* eval.c (syms_of_eval):
Make our new Lisp functions and symbols available.
* eval.c (multiple-values-limit):
Make this available to Lisp.
* event-msw.c (dde_eval_string):
* event-stream.c (execute_help_form):
* glade.c (connector):
* glyphs-widget.c (glyph_instantiator_to_glyph):
* glyphs.c (evaluate_xpm_color_symbols):
* gui-x.c (wv_set_evalable_slot, button_item_to_widget_value):
* gui.c (gui_item_value, gui_item_display_flush_left):
* lread.c (check_if_suppressed):
* menubar-gtk.c (menu_convert, menu_descriptor_to_widget_1):
* menubar-msw.c (populate_menu_add_item):
* print.c (Fwith_output_to_temp_buffer):
* symbols.c (Fsetq_default):
Ignore multiple values when calling Feval.
* symeval.h:
Add the header declarations necessary for the multiple-values
implementation.
* inline.c:
#include symeval.h, now that it has some inline functions.
* lisp.h:
Update Fthrow's declaration. Make throw_or_bomb_out available to
all files.
* lrecord.h (enum lrecord_type):
Add the multiple_value type here.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 16 Aug 2009 20:55:49 +0100 |
parents | 91950589598c |
children | c096d8051f89 308d34e9f07d |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Simple built-in editing commands. 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: Mule 2.0, FSF 19.30. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "commands.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "extents.h" #include "syntax.h" #include "insdel.h" Lisp_Object Qkill_forward_chars; Lisp_Object Qself_insert_command; Lisp_Object Qno_self_insert; Lisp_Object Vblink_paren_function; /* A possible value for a buffer's overwrite-mode variable. */ Lisp_Object Qoverwrite_mode_binary; /* Non-nil means put this face on the next self-inserting character. */ Lisp_Object Vself_insert_face; /* This is the command that set up Vself_insert_face. */ Lisp_Object Vself_insert_face_command; /* A char-table for characters which may invoke auto-filling. */ Lisp_Object Vauto_fill_chars; DEFUN ("forward-char", Fforward_char, 0, 2, "_p", /* Move point right COUNT characters (left if COUNT is negative). On attempt to pass end of buffer, stop and signal `end-of-buffer'. On attempt to pass beginning of buffer, stop and signal `beginning-of-buffer'. On reaching end of buffer, stop and signal error. The characters that are moved over may be added to the current selection \(i.e. active region) if the Shift key is held down, a motion key is used to invoke this command, and `shifted-motion-keys-select-region' is t; see the documentation for this variable for more details. */ (count, buffer)) { struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); EMACS_INT n; if (NILP (count)) n = 1; else { CHECK_INT (count); n = XINT (count); } /* This used to just set point to point + XINT (count), and then check to see if it was within boundaries. But now that SET_PT can potentially do a lot of stuff (calling entering and exiting hooks, etcetera), that's not a good approach. So we validate the proposed position, then set point. */ { Charbpos new_point = BUF_PT (buf) + n; if (new_point < BUF_BEGV (buf)) { BUF_SET_PT (buf, BUF_BEGV (buf)); Fsignal (Qbeginning_of_buffer, Qnil); return Qnil; } if (new_point > BUF_ZV (buf)) { BUF_SET_PT (buf, BUF_ZV (buf)); Fsignal (Qend_of_buffer, Qnil); return Qnil; } BUF_SET_PT (buf, new_point); } return Qnil; } DEFUN ("backward-char", Fbackward_char, 0, 2, "_p", /* Move point left COUNT characters (right if COUNT is negative). On attempt to pass end of buffer, stop and signal `end-of-buffer'. On attempt to pass beginning of buffer, stop and signal `beginning-of-buffer'. The characters that are moved over may be added to the current selection \(i.e. active region) if the Shift key is held down, a motion key is used to invoke this command, and `shifted-motion-keys-select-region' is t; see the documentation for this variable for more details. */ (count, buffer)) { if (NILP (count)) count = make_int (-1); else { CHECK_INT (count); count = make_int (- XINT (count)); } return Fforward_char (count, buffer); } DEFUN ("forward-line", Fforward_line, 0, 2, "_p", /* Move COUNT lines forward (backward if COUNT is negative). Precisely, if point is on line I, move to the start of line I + COUNT. If there isn't room, go as far as possible (no error). Returns the count of lines left to move. If moving forward, that is COUNT - number of lines moved; if backward, COUNT + number moved. \(Note that if COUNT is negative, the return will be non-positive.) With positive COUNT, a non-empty line at the end counts as one line successfully moved (for the return value). If BUFFER is nil, the current buffer is assumed. The characters that are moved over may be added to the current selection \(i.e. active region) if the Shift key is held down, a motion key is used to invoke this command, and `shifted-motion-keys-select-region' is t; see the documentation for this variable for more details. */ (count, buffer)) { struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); Charbpos pos2 = BUF_PT (buf); Charbpos pos; EMACS_INT n, shortage, negp; if (NILP (count)) n = 1; else { CHECK_INT (count); n = XINT (count); } negp = n <= 0; pos = scan_buffer (buf, '\n', pos2, 0, n - negp, &shortage, 1); if (shortage > 0 && (negp || (BUF_ZV (buf) > BUF_BEGV (buf) && pos != pos2 && BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, pos - 1) != '\n'))) shortage--; BUF_SET_PT (buf, pos); return make_int (negp ? - shortage : shortage); } DEFUN ("point-at-bol", Fpoint_at_bol, 0, 2, 0, /* Return the character position of the first character on the current line. With argument COUNT not nil or 1, move forward COUNT - 1 lines first. If scan reaches end of buffer, return that position. This function does not move point. */ (count, buffer)) { struct buffer *b = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); REGISTER int orig, end; buffer = wrap_buffer (b); if (NILP (count)) count = make_int (0); else { CHECK_INT (count); count = make_int (XINT (count) - 1); } orig = BUF_PT (b); Fforward_line (count, buffer); end = BUF_PT (b); BUF_SET_PT (b, orig); return make_int (end); } DEFUN ("beginning-of-line", Fbeginning_of_line, 0, 2, "_p", /* Move point to beginning of current line. With argument COUNT not nil or 1, move forward COUNT - 1 lines first. If scan reaches end of buffer, stop there without error. If BUFFER is nil, the current buffer is assumed. The characters that are moved over may be added to the current selection \(i.e. active region) if the Shift key is held down, a motion key is used to invoke this command, and `shifted-motion-keys-select-region' is t; see the documentation for this variable for more details. */ (count, buffer)) { struct buffer *b = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); BUF_SET_PT (b, XINT (Fpoint_at_bol (count, buffer))); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("point-at-eol", Fpoint_at_eol, 0, 2, 0, /* Return the character position of the last character on the current line. With argument COUNT not nil or 1, move forward COUNT - 1 lines first. If scan reaches end of buffer, return that position. This function does not move point. */ (count, buffer)) { struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); EMACS_INT n; if (NILP (count)) n = 1; else { CHECK_INT (count); n = XINT (count); } return make_int (find_before_next_newline (buf, BUF_PT (buf), 0, n - (n <= 0))); } DEFUN ("end-of-line", Fend_of_line, 0, 2, "_p", /* Move point to end of current line. With argument COUNT not nil or 1, move forward COUNT - 1 lines first. If scan reaches end of buffer, stop there without error. If BUFFER is nil, the current buffer is assumed. The characters that are moved over may be added to the current selection \(i.e. active region) if the Shift key is held down, a motion key is used to invoke this command, and `shifted-motion-keys-select-region' is t; see the documentation for this variable for more details. */ (count, buffer)) { struct buffer *b = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); BUF_SET_PT (b, XINT (Fpoint_at_eol (count, buffer))); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("delete-char", Fdelete_char, 0, 2, "*p\nP", /* Delete the following COUNT characters (previous, with negative COUNT). Optional second arg KILLP non-nil means kill instead (save in kill ring). Interactively, COUNT is the prefix arg, and KILLP is set if COUNT was explicitly specified. */ (count, killp)) { /* This function can GC */ Charbpos pos; struct buffer *buf = current_buffer; EMACS_INT n; if (NILP (count)) n = 1; else { CHECK_INT (count); n = XINT (count); } pos = BUF_PT (buf) + n; if (NILP (killp)) { if (n < 0) { if (pos < BUF_BEGV (buf)) signal_error (Qbeginning_of_buffer, 0, Qunbound); else buffer_delete_range (buf, pos, BUF_PT (buf), 0); } else { if (pos > BUF_ZV (buf)) signal_error (Qend_of_buffer, 0, Qunbound); else buffer_delete_range (buf, BUF_PT (buf), pos, 0); } } else { call1 (Qkill_forward_chars, count); } return Qnil; } DEFUN ("delete-backward-char", Fdelete_backward_char, 0, 2, "*p\nP", /* Delete the previous COUNT characters (following, with negative COUNT). Optional second arg KILLP non-nil means kill instead (save in kill ring). Interactively, COUNT is the prefix arg, and KILLP is set if COUNT was explicitly specified. */ (count, killp)) { /* This function can GC */ EMACS_INT n; if (NILP (count)) n = 1; else { CHECK_INT (count); n = XINT (count); } return Fdelete_char (make_int (- n), killp); } static void internal_self_insert (Ichar ch, int noautofill); DEFUN ("self-insert-command", Fself_insert_command, 1, 1, "*p", /* Insert the character you type. Whichever character you type to run this command is inserted. If a prefix arg COUNT is specified, the character is inserted COUNT times. */ (count)) { /* This function can GC */ Ichar ch; Lisp_Object c; EMACS_INT n; CHECK_NATNUM (count); n = XINT (count); if (CHAR_OR_CHAR_INTP (Vlast_command_char)) c = Vlast_command_char; else c = Fevent_to_character (Vlast_command_event, Qnil, Qnil, Qnil); if (NILP (c)) invalid_operation ( "Last typed key has no character equivalent (that we know of)", Fcopy_event (Vlast_command_event, Qnil)); CHECK_CHAR_COERCE_INT (c); ch = XCHAR (c); while (n--) internal_self_insert (ch, (n != 0)); return Qnil; } /* Insert character C1. If NOAUTOFILL is nonzero, don't do autofill even if it is enabled. FSF: If this insertion is suitable for direct output (completely simple), return 0. A value of 1 indicates this *might* not have been simple. A value of 2 means this did things that call for an undo boundary. */ static void internal_self_insert (Ichar c1, int noautofill) { /* This function can GC */ /* int hairy = 0; -- unused */ REGISTER enum syntaxcode synt; REGISTER Ichar c2; Lisp_Object overwrite; Lisp_Object syntax_table; struct buffer *buf = current_buffer; int tab_width; overwrite = buf->overwrite_mode; syntax_table = buf->mirror_syntax_table; #if 0 /* No, this is very bad, it makes undo *always* undo a character at a time instead of grouping consecutive self-inserts together. Nasty nasty. */ if (!NILP (Vbefore_change_functions) || !NILP (Vafter_change_functions) || !NILP (Vbefore_change_function) || !NILP (Vafter_change_function)) hairy = 1; #endif if (!NILP (overwrite) && BUF_PT (buf) < BUF_ZV (buf) && (EQ (overwrite, Qoverwrite_mode_binary) || (c1 != '\n' && BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, BUF_PT (buf)) != '\n')) && (EQ (overwrite, Qoverwrite_mode_binary) || BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, BUF_PT (buf)) != '\t' || ((tab_width = XINT (buf->tab_width), tab_width <= 0) || tab_width > 20 || !((current_column (buf) + 1) % tab_width)))) { buffer_delete_range (buf, BUF_PT (buf), BUF_PT (buf) + 1, 0); /* hairy = 2; */ } if (!NILP (buf->abbrev_mode) && !WORD_SYNTAX_P (syntax_table, c1) && NILP (buf->read_only) && BUF_PT (buf) > BUF_BEGV (buf)) { c2 = BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, BUF_PT (buf) - 1); if (WORD_SYNTAX_P (syntax_table, c2)) { #if 1 Fexpand_abbrev (); #else /* FSFmacs */ Lisp_Object sym = Fexpand_abbrev (); /* I think this is too bogus to add. The function should have a way of examining the character to be inserted, so it can decide whether to insert it or not. We should design it better than that. */ /* Here FSFmacs remembers MODIFF, compares it after Fexpand_abbrev() finishes, and updates HAIRY. */ /* NOTE: we cannot simply check for Vlast_abbrev, because Fexpand_abbrev() can bail out before setting it to anything meaningful, leaving us stuck with an old value. Thus Fexpand_abbrev() was extended to return the actual abbrev symbol. */ if (!NILP (sym) && !NILP (symbol_function (XSYMBOL (sym))) && SYMBOLP (symbol_function (XSYMBOL (sym)))) { Lisp_Object prop = Fget (symbol_function (XSYMBOL (sym)), Qno_self_insert, Qnil); if (!NILP (prop)) return; } #endif /* FSFmacs */ } } if ((CHAR_TABLEP (Vauto_fill_chars) ? !NILP (get_char_table (c1, Vauto_fill_chars)) : (c1 == ' ' || c1 == '\n')) && !noautofill && !NILP (buf->auto_fill_function)) { buffer_insert_emacs_char (buf, c1); if (c1 == '\n') /* After inserting a newline, move to previous line and fill */ /* that. Must have the newline in place already so filling and */ /* justification, if any, know where the end is going to be. */ BUF_SET_PT (buf, BUF_PT (buf) - 1); call0 (buf->auto_fill_function); if (c1 == '\n') BUF_SET_PT (buf, BUF_PT (buf) + 1); /* hairy = 2; */ } else buffer_insert_emacs_char (buf, c1); /* If previous command specified a face to use, use it. */ if (!NILP (Vself_insert_face) && EQ (Vlast_command, Vself_insert_face_command)) { Lisp_Object before = make_int (BUF_PT (buf) - 1); Lisp_Object after = make_int (BUF_PT (buf)); Fput_text_property (before, after, Qface, Vself_insert_face, Qnil); Fput_text_property (before, after, Qstart_open, Qt, Qnil); Fput_text_property (before, after, Qend_open, Qnil, Qnil); /* #### FSFmacs properties are normally closed ("sticky") on the end but not the beginning. It's the opposite for us. */ Vself_insert_face = Qnil; } synt = SYNTAX (syntax_table, c1); if ((synt == Sclose || synt == Smath) && !NILP (Vblink_paren_function) && INTERACTIVE && !noautofill) { call0 (Vblink_paren_function); /* hairy = 2; */ } /* return hairy; */ } /* (this comes from Mule but is a generally good idea) */ DEFUN ("self-insert-internal", Fself_insert_internal, 1, 1, 0, /* Invoke `self-insert-command' as if CHARACTER is entered from keyboard. */ (character)) { /* This function can GC */ CHECK_CHAR_COERCE_INT (character); internal_self_insert (XCHAR (character), 0); return Qnil; } /* module initialization */ void syms_of_cmds (void) { DEFSYMBOL (Qkill_forward_chars); DEFSYMBOL (Qself_insert_command); DEFSYMBOL (Qoverwrite_mode_binary); DEFSYMBOL (Qno_self_insert); DEFSUBR (Fforward_char); DEFSUBR (Fbackward_char); DEFSUBR (Fforward_line); DEFSUBR (Fbeginning_of_line); DEFSUBR (Fend_of_line); DEFSUBR (Fpoint_at_bol); DEFSUBR (Fpoint_at_eol); DEFSUBR (Fdelete_char); DEFSUBR (Fdelete_backward_char); DEFSUBR (Fself_insert_command); DEFSUBR (Fself_insert_internal); } void vars_of_cmds (void) { DEFVAR_LISP ("self-insert-face", &Vself_insert_face /* If non-nil, set the face of the next self-inserting character to this. See also `self-insert-face-command'. */ ); Vself_insert_face = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("self-insert-face-command", &Vself_insert_face_command /* This is the command that set up `self-insert-face'. If `last-command' does not equal this value, we ignore `self-insert-face'. */ ); Vself_insert_face_command = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("blink-paren-function", &Vblink_paren_function /* Function called, if non-nil, whenever a close parenthesis is inserted. More precisely, a char with closeparen syntax is self-inserted. */ ); Vblink_paren_function = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("auto-fill-chars", &Vauto_fill_chars /* A char-table for characters which invoke auto-filling. Such characters have value t in this table. */); Vauto_fill_chars = Fmake_char_table (Qgeneric); XCHAR_TABLE (Vauto_fill_chars)->ascii[' '] = Qt; XCHAR_TABLE (Vauto_fill_chars)->ascii['\n'] = Qt; }