Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view man/lispref/dragndrop.texi @ 5089:99f8ebc082d9
Make #'substring an alias of #'subseq; give the latter the byte code.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-03 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* fns.c (Fsubstring): Removed.
* search.c (Freplace_match):
* minibuf.c (Ftry_completion):
* lisp.h:
* keymap.c (ensure_meta_prefix_char_keymapp):
* dired.c (user_name_completion, file_name_completion):
* console-x.c (x_canonicalize_console_connection):
* bytecode.c (Bsubseq):
* bytecode-ops.h (subseq):
Move #'substring to Lisp, as an alias for #'subseq; change all
C Fsubstring() calls to Fsubseq(), change the Bsubstring bytecode
to Bsubseq.
Motivation; not accepting vectors in #'substring is incompatible
with GNU, and Common Lisp prefers #'subseq, it has no #'substring.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-03 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move byte code #o117 to #'subseq, not #'substring.
Make #'substring available as an alias for #'subseq in Lisp.
* bytecomp.el (79, subseq, substring):
* bytecomp.el (byte-compile-subseq): New.
* update-elc.el (update-elc-chop-extension): Use #'subseq, not
#'substring, the latter is not yet available.
* subr.el (substring): New alias, to #'subseq.
man/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-03 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* lispref/tips.texi (Comment Tips):
* lispref/text.texi (Text Properties):
* lispref/strings.texi (Creating Strings):
* lispref/processes.texi (Input to Processes):
* lispref/functions.texi (Argument List):
* lispref/extents.texi (Duplicable Extents):
Move examples that used substring to using subseq; in
strings.texi, do not change the examples, but document that in
this XEmacs, it is an alias for subseq, and that there may be some
incompatibilities if you depend on that.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 03 Mar 2010 18:40:12 +0000 |
parents | bc4f2511bbea |
children |
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@c -*-texinfo-*- @c This is part of the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual. @c Copyright (C) 1998 Oliver Graf <ograf@fga.de> @c Original reference is (c) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @c See the file lispref.texi for copying conditions. @setfilename ../../info/dragndrop.texi @node Drag and Drop, Modes, Scrollbars, Top @chapter Drag and Drop @cindex drag and drop @emph{WARNING}: the Drag'n'Drop API is still under development and the interface may change! The current implementation is considered experimental. Drag'n'drop is a way to transfer information between multiple applications. To do this several GUIs define their own protocols. Examples are CDE, Motif, KDE, MSWindows, GNOME, and many more. To catch all these protocols, XEmacs provides a generic API. One prime idea behind the API is to use a data interface that is transparent for all systems. The author thinks that this is best archived by using URL and MIME data, cause any internet enabled system must support these for email already. XEmacs also already provides powerful interfaces to support these types of data (tm and w3). @menu * Supported Protocols:: Which low-level protocols are supported. * Drop Interface:: How XEmacs handles a drop from another application. * Drag Interface:: Calls to initiate a drag from XEmacs. @end menu @node Supported Protocols @section Supported Protocols The current release of XEmacs only support a small set of Drag'n'drop protocols. Some of these only support limited options available in the API. @menu * CDE dt:: Common Desktop Environment used on suns. * MSWindows OLE:: Mr. Gates way of live. * Loose ends:: The other protocols. @end menu @node CDE dt @subsection CDE dt @cindex CDE dt CDE stands for Common Desktop Environment. It is based on the Motif widget library. It's drag'n'drop protocol is also an abstraction of the Motif protocol (so it might be possible, that XEmacs will also support the Motif protocol soon). CDE has three different types: file, buffer, and text. XEmacs only uses file and buffer drags. The API will disallow full URL drags, only file method URLs are passed through. Buffer drags are always converted to plain text. @node MSWindows OLE @subsection MSWindows OLE @cindex MSWindows OLE Only allows file drags and drops. @node Loose ends @subsection Loose ends The following protocols will be supported soon: Xdnd, Motif, Xde (if I get some specs). In particular Xdnd will be one of the protocols that can benefit from the XEmacs API, cause it also uses MIME types to encode dragged data. @node Drop Interface @section Drop Interface @cindex drop @cindex Drop API For each activated low-level protocol, an internal routine will catch incoming drops and convert them to a dragdrop-drop type misc-user-event. This misc-user-event has its function argument set to @code{dragdrop-drop-dispatch} and the object contains the data of the drop (converted to URL/MIME specific data). This function will search the variable @code{experimental-dragdrop-drop-functions} for a function that can handle the dropped data. To modify the drop behavior, the user can modify the variable @code{experimental-dragdrop-drop-functions}. Each element of this list specifies a possible handler for dropped data. The first one that can handle the data will return @code{t} and exit. Another possibility is to set a extent-property with the same name. Extents are checked prior to the variable. The customization group @code{drag-n-drop} shows all variables of user interest. @node Drag Interface @section Drag Interface @cindex drag @cindex Drag API This describes the drag API (not implemented yet).