Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/x-init.el @ 5556:a142ad1a9140
Use dlsym() in preference to NSLookupSymbolInModule() on Darwin, if available.
ChangeLog addition:
2011-08-24 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* configure.ac:
On OS X, if dlopen() is available in dlfcn.h, use it in preference
to dyld; the latter API is deprecated.
Move DLSYM_NEEDS_UNDERSCORE together with HAVE_DLYD, it's not
needed if the dlsym() and dlopen() APIs are being used.
Define REALPATH_CORRECTS_CASE, DEFAULT_FILE_SYSTEM_IGNORE_CASE in
this file, don't define them in terms of HAVE_DYLD in
src/config.h.in.
* configure: Regenerate.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2011-08-24 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* config.h.in:
Move REALPATH_CORRECTS_CASE, DEFAULT_FILE_SYSTEM_IGNORE_CASE to
../configure.ac rather than implementing them in terms of
HAVE_DYLD here.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 24 Aug 2011 23:41:29 +0100 |
parents | 3d1f8f0e690f |
children | 1d1f385c9149 |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; x-init.el --- initialization code for X windows ;; Copyright (C) 1990, 1993, 1994, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Copyright (C) 1995 Board of Trustees, University of Illinois. ;; Copyright (C) 1995, 1996 Ben Wing. ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team ;; Keywords: terminals, 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. ;;; Synched up with: Not synched. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs (when X support is compiled in). ;;; Code: (globally-declare-fboundp '(x-keysym-on-keyboard-p x-server-vendor x-init-specifier-from-resources init-mule-x-win)) (globally-declare-boundp '(x-initial-argv-list x-app-defaults-directory)) ;; If you want to change this variable, this is the place you must do it. ;; Do not set it to a string containing periods. X doesn't like that. ;(setq x-emacs-application-class "Emacs") (defgroup x nil "The X Window system." :group 'environment) ;; OpenWindows-like "find" processing. These functions are really Sunisms, ;; but we put them here instead of in x-win-sun.el in case someone wants ;; to use them when not running on a Sun console (presumably after binding ;; them to different keys, or putting them on menus.) (defvar ow-find-last-string nil) (defvar ow-find-last-clipboard nil) (defun ow-find (&optional backward-p) "Search forward the next occurrence of the text of the selection." (interactive) (let ((sel (ignore-errors (get-selection))) (clip (ignore-errors (get-clipboard))) text) (setq text (cond (sel) ((not (equal clip ow-find-last-clipboard)) (setq ow-find-last-clipboard clip)) (ow-find-last-string) (t (error "No selection available")))) (setq ow-find-last-string text) (cond (backward-p (search-backward text) (set-mark (+ (point) (length text)))) (t (search-forward text) (set-mark (- (point) (length text))))) (zmacs-activate-region))) (defun ow-find-backward () "Search backward for the previous occurrence of the text of the selection." (interactive) (ow-find t)) (eval-when-compile (load "x-win-sun" nil t) (load "x-win-xfree86" nil t)) (defun x-initialize-keyboard (device) "Perform X-Server-specific initializations. Don't call this." ;; This is some heuristic junk that tries to guess whether this is ;; a Sun keyboard. ;; ;; One way of implementing this (which would require C support) would ;; be to examine the X keymap itself and see if the layout looks even ;; remotely like a Sun - check for the Find key on a particular ;; keycode, for example. It'd be nice to have a table of this to ;; recognize various keyboards; see also xkeycaps. ;; ;; Note that we cannot use most vendor-provided proprietary keyboard ;; APIs to identify the keyboard - those only work on the console. ;; xkeycaps has the same problem when running `remotely'. (let ((vendor (x-server-vendor device))) (cond ((or (string-match "Sun Microsystems" vendor) ;; MIT losingly fails to tell us what hardware the X server ;; is managing, so assume all MIT displays are Suns... HA HA! (string-equal "MIT X Consortium" vendor) (string-equal "X Consortium" vendor)) ;; Ok, we think this could be a Sun keyboard. Run the Sun code. (x-win-init-sun device)) ((string-match #r"XFree86\|Cygwin/X\|The X\.Org Foundation" vendor) ;; Those XFree86 people do some weird keysym stuff, too. (x-win-init-xfree86 device))))) ;; Moved from x-toolbar.el, since InfoDock doesn't dump x-toolbar.el. (defun x-init-toolbar-from-resources (locale) (loop for (specifier . resname) in `(( ,top-toolbar-height . "topToolBarHeight") (,bottom-toolbar-height . "bottomToolBarHeight") ( ,left-toolbar-width . "leftToolBarWidth") ( ,right-toolbar-width . "rightToolBarWidth") ( ,top-toolbar-border-width . "topToolBarBorderWidth") (,bottom-toolbar-border-width . "bottomToolBarBorderWidth") ( ,left-toolbar-border-width . "leftToolBarBorderWidth") ( ,right-toolbar-border-width . "rightToolBarBorderWidth")) do (x-init-specifier-from-resources specifier 'natnum locale (cons resname (upcase-initials resname))))) (defvar make-device-early-x-entry-point-called-p nil "Whether `make-device-early-x-entry-point' has been called, at least once. Much of the X11-specific Lisp init code should only be called the first time an X11 device is created; this variable allows for that.") (defvar make-device-late-x-entry-point-called-p nil "Whether `make-device-late-x-entry-point' has been called, at least once. Much of the X11-specific Lisp init code should only be called the first time an X11 device is created; this variable allows for that.") (defun make-device-early-x-entry-point () "Entry point to set up the Lisp environment for X device creation." (unless make-device-early-x-entry-point-called-p (setq initial-frame-plist (and initial-frame-unmapped-p '(initially-unmapped t)) ;; Save the argv value. x-initial-argv-list (cons (car command-line-args) command-line-args-left) ;; Locate the app-defaults directory x-app-defaults-directory (or x-app-defaults-directory (locate-data-directory "app-defaults")) make-device-early-x-entry-point-called-p t))) (defun make-device-late-x-entry-point (device) "Entry point to do any Lisp-level X device-specific initialization." ;; General code, called on every X device created: (x-initialize-keyboard device) ;; And the following code is to be called once, the first time an X11 ;; device is created: (unless make-device-late-x-entry-point-called-p (setq command-line-args-left (cdr x-initial-argv-list)) ;; Motif-ish bindings (define-key global-map '(shift insert) 'yank-clipboard-selection) (define-key global-map '(control insert) 'copy-primary-selection) ;; These are Sun-isms. (define-key global-map 'copy 'copy-primary-selection) (define-key global-map 'paste 'yank-clipboard-selection) (define-key global-map 'cut 'kill-primary-selection) (setq make-device-late-x-entry-point-called-p t))) (defun make-frame-on-display (display &optional props) "Create a frame on the X display named DISPLAY. DISPLAY should be a standard display string such as \"unix:0\", or nil for the display specified on the command line or in the DISPLAY environment variable. PROPS should be a plist of properties, as in the call to `make-frame'. This function opens a connection to the display or reuses an existing connection. This function is a trivial wrapper around `make-frame-on-device'." (interactive "sMake frame on display: ") (if (equal display "") (setq display nil)) (make-frame-on-device 'x display props)) ;;; x-init.el ends here