Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/objects.el @ 4792:95b04754ea8c
Make #'equalp more compatible with CL; add a compiler macro, test & doc it.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2009-11-08 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* cl-extra.el (cl-string-vector-equalp)
(cl-bit-vector-vector-equalp, cl-vector-array-equalp)
(cl-hash-table-contents-equalp): New functions, to implement
equalp treating arrays with identical contents as equivalent, as
specified by Common Lisp.
(equalp): Revise this function to implement array equivalence,
and the hash-table equalp behaviour specified by CL.
* cl-macs.el (equalp): Add a compiler macro for this function,
used when one of the arguments is constant, and as such, its type
is known at compile time.
man/ChangeLog addition:
2009-11-08 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* lispref/objects.texi (Equality Predicates):
Document #'equalp here, as well as #'equal and #'eq.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2009-12-31 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/lisp-tests.el:
Test much of the functionality of equalp; add a pointer to Paul
Dietz' ANSI test suite for this function, converted to Emacs
Lisp. Not including the tests themselves in XEmacs because who
owns the copyright on the files is unclear and the GCL people
didn't respond to my queries.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 31 Dec 2009 15:09:41 +0000 |
parents | 6e9bd19ec103 |
children | 5502045ec510 |
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;;; objects.el --- Lisp interface to C window-system objects ;; Copyright (C) 1994, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Copyright (C) 1995 Ben Wing ;; Author: Chuck Thompson <cthomp@xemacs.org> ;; Author: Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team ;; Keywords: faces, internal, dumped ;; 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, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Synched up with: Not in FSF. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs. ;;; Code: (defun ws-object-property-1 (function object domain &optional matchspec) (let ((instance (if matchspec (specifier-matching-instance object matchspec domain) (specifier-instance object domain)))) (and instance (funcall function instance)))) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; font specifiers (defun make-font-specifier (spec-list) "Return a new `font' specifier object with the given specification list. SPEC-LIST can be a list of specifications (each of which is a cons of a locale and a list of instantiators), a single instantiator, or a list of instantiators. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers. Valid instantiators for font specifiers are: -- a string naming a font; syntax is platform dependent. Some examples for a 14-point upright medium-weight Courier font: X11 (and GTK1): \"-*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*\" Xft (and GTK2): \"Courier-14\" MS-Windows: \"Courier:14:Western\" -- a font instance (use that instance directly if the device matches, or use the string that generated it) -- a vector of no elements (only on TTY's; this means to set no font at all, thus using the \"natural\" font of the terminal's text) -- a vector of one element (a face to inherit from) " (make-specifier-and-init 'font spec-list)) (defun font-name (font &optional domain charset) "Return the name of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-name' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-name font domain charset)) (defun font-ascent (font &optional domain charset) "Return the ascent of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-ascent' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-ascent font domain charset)) (defun font-descent (font &optional domain charset) "Return the descent of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-descent' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-descent font domain charset)) (defun font-width (font &optional domain charset) "Return the width of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-width' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-width font domain charset)) (defun font-height (font &optional domain charset) "Return the height of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-height' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-height font domain charset)) (defun font-proportional-p (font &optional domain charset) "Return whether FONT is proportional in the specified DOMAIN, if known. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-proportional-p' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-proportional-p font domain charset)) (defun font-properties (font &optional domain charset) "Return the properties of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-properties' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-properties font domain charset)) (defun font-truename (font &optional domain charset) "Return the truename of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-truename' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-truename font domain charset)) (defun font-instance-height (font-instance) "Return the height in pixels of FONT-INSTANCE. The returned value is the maximum height for all characters in the font,\n\ and is equivalent to the sum of the font instance's ascent and descent." (+ (font-instance-ascent font-instance) (font-instance-descent font-instance))) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; color specifiers (defun make-color-specifier (spec-list) "Return a new `color' specifier object with the given specification list. SPEC-LIST can be a list of specifications (each of which is a cons of a locale and a list of instantiators), a single instantiator, or a list of instantiators. See `make-specifier' for a detailed description of how specifiers work. Valid instantiators for color specifiers are: -- a string naming a color (e.g. under X this might be \"lightseagreen2\" or \"#F534B2\") -- a color instance (use that instance directly if the device matches, or use the string that generated it) -- a vector of no elements (only on TTY's; this means to set no color at all, thus using the \"natural\" color of the terminal's text) -- a vector of one or two elements: a face to inherit from, and optionally a symbol naming which property of that face to inherit, either `foreground' or `background' (if omitted, defaults to the same property that this color specifier is used for; if this specifier is not part of a face, the instantiator would not be valid)." (make-specifier-and-init 'color spec-list)) (defun color-name (color &optional domain) "Return the name of the COLOR in the specified DOMAIN, if any. COLOR should be a color specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `color-instance-name' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'color-instance-name color domain)) (defun color-rgb-components (color &optional domain) "Return the RGB components of the COLOR in the specified DOMAIN, if any. COLOR should be a color specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `color-instance-rgb-components' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'color-instance-rgb-components color domain)) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; face-boolean specifiers (defun make-face-boolean-specifier (spec-list) "Return a new `face-boolean' specifier object with the given spec list. SPEC-LIST can be a list of specifications (each of which is a cons of a locale and a list of instantiators), a single instantiator, or a list of instantiators. See `make-specifier' for a detailed description of how specifiers work. Valid instantiators for face-boolean specifiers are -- t or nil -- a vector of one, two or three elements: a face to inherit from, optionally a symbol naming the property of that face to inherit from (if omitted, defaults to the same property that this face-boolean specifier is used for; if this specifier is not part of a face, the instantiator would not be valid), and optionally a value which, if non-nil, means to invert the sense of the inherited property." (make-specifier-and-init 'face-boolean spec-list)) ;;; objects.el ends here.