view src/lisp-disunion.h @ 5797:a1808d52a34a

If the position of a window's cached point is deleted, use buffer point instead src/ChangeLog addition: 2014-06-17 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * extents.h: * window.c: * window.c (unshow_buffer): * window.c (Fset_window_buffer): Use extents, rather than markers, for the window buffer point cache, so that when the text containing that window buffer point is deleted, the window display code uses the buffer's actual point instead of the position that the marker had been moved to. Fixes Michael Heinrich's problem of http://mid.gmane.org/6zr42uxtf5.fsf@elektra.science-computing.de , introduced by Ben's patch of https://bitbucket.org/xemacs/xemacs/commits/047d37eb70d70f43803 .
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Tue, 17 Jun 2014 20:55:45 +0100
parents 0d05accafc63
children f5dfcf2323bc
line wrap: on
line source

/* Fundamental definitions for XEmacs Lisp interpreter -- non-union objects.
   Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
   Copyright (C) 2001, 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 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: FSF 19.30.  Split out from lisp.h. */
/* This file has diverged greatly from FSF Emacs.  Syncing is no
   longer desirable or possible */

/*
 Format of a non-union-type Lisp Object

             3         2         1         0
       bit  10987654321098765432109876543210
            --------------------------------
            VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVTT

   Integers are treated specially, and look like this:

             3         2         1         0
       bit  10987654321098765432109876543210
            --------------------------------
            VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVT

 For integral Lisp types, i.e. integers and characters, the value
 bits are the Lisp object.  Some people call such Lisp_Objects "immediate".

 The object is obtained by masking off the type bits.
     Bit 1 is used as a value bit by splitting the Lisp integer type
 into two subtypes, Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Even and Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Odd.
 By this trickery we get 31 bits for integers instead of 30.

 For non-integral types, the value bits of a Lisp_Object contain
 a pointer to a structure containing the object.  The pointer is
 obtained by masking off the type and mark bits.

     All pointer-based types are coalesced under a single type called
 Lisp_Type_Record.  The type bits for this type are required by the
 implementation to be 00, just like the least significant bits of
 word-aligned struct pointers on 32-bit hardware.  This requires that
 all structs implementing Lisp_Objects have an alignment of at least 4
 bytes.  Because of this, Lisp_Object pointers don't have to be masked
 and are full-sized.

 There are no mark bits in the Lisp_Object itself (there used to be).

 Integers and characters don't need to be marked.  All other types are
 lrecord-based, which means they get marked by setting the mark bit in
 the struct lrecord_header.

 Here is a brief description of the following macros:

 XTYPE     The type bits of a Lisp_Object
 XPNTRVAL  The value bits of a Lisp_Object storing a pointer
 XCHARVAL  The value bits of a Lisp_Object storing a Ichar
 XREALFIXNUM  The value bits of a Lisp_Object storing an integer, signed
 XUINT     The value bits of a Lisp_Object storing an integer, unsigned
 FIXNUMP      Non-zero if this Lisp_Object is an integer
 Qzero     Lisp Integer 0
 EQ        Non-zero if two Lisp_Objects are identical, not merely equal. */


typedef EMACS_INT Lisp_Object;

#define Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Bit (Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Even & Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Odd)
#define VALMASK (((1UL << VALBITS) - 1UL) << GCTYPEBITS)
#define XTYPE(x) ((enum Lisp_Type) (((EMACS_UINT)(x)) & ~VALMASK))
#define XPNTRVAL(x) (x) /* This depends on Lisp_Type_Record == 0 */
#define XCHARVAL(x) ((x) >> GCBITS)
#define XREALFIXNUM(x) ((x) >> FIXNUM_GCBITS)
#define XUINT(x) ((EMACS_UINT)(x) >> FIXNUM_GCBITS)

#define wrap_pointer_1(ptr) ((Lisp_Object) (ptr))

DECLARE_INLINE_HEADER (
Lisp_Object
make_fixnum_verify (EMACS_INT val)
)
{
  Lisp_Object obj = (Lisp_Object) ((val << FIXNUM_GCBITS) | Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Bit);
  type_checking_assert (XREALFIXNUM (obj) == val);
  return obj;
}

#define make_fixnum(x) ((Lisp_Object) ((((EMACS_INT)(x)) << FIXNUM_GCBITS) | Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Bit))

#define make_char_1(x) ((Lisp_Object) ((((EMACS_UINT)(x)) << GCBITS) | Lisp_Type_Char))

#define FIXNUMP(x) ((EMACS_UINT)(x) & Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Bit)
#define FIXNUM_PLUS(x,y)  ((x)+(y)-Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Bit)
#define FIXNUM_MINUS(x,y) ((x)-(y)+Lisp_Type_Fixnum_Bit)
#define FIXNUM_PLUS1(x)   FIXNUM_PLUS  (x, make_fixnum (1))
#define FIXNUM_MINUS1(x)  FIXNUM_MINUS (x, make_fixnum (1))

#define Qzero make_fixnum (0)
#define Qnull_pointer ((Lisp_Object) 0)
#define EQ(x,y) ((x) == (y))

/* WARNING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

   You can only GET_LISP_FROM_VOID something that had previously been
   STORE_LISP_IN_VOID'd.  If you want to go the other way, use
   STORE_VOID_IN_LISP and GET_VOID_FROM_LISP, or use make_opaque_ptr(). */

/* Convert a Lisp object to a void * pointer, as when it needs to be passed
   to a toolkit callback function */
#define STORE_LISP_IN_VOID(larg) ((void *) (larg))

/* Convert a void * pointer back into a Lisp object, assuming that the
   pointer was generated by STORE_LISP_IN_VOID. */
#define GET_LISP_FROM_VOID(varg) ((Lisp_Object) (varg))

/* Convert a Lisp_Object into something that can't be used as an
   lvalue.  Useful for type-checking. */
#define NON_LVALUE(larg) ((larg) + 0)