view TODO.ben-mule-21-5 @ 814:a634e3b7acc8

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-04-14 12:41:59 by ben] latest changes TODO.ben-mule-21-5: Update. make-docfile.c: Add basic support for handling ISO 2022 doc strings -- we parse the basic charset designation sequences so we know whether we're in ASCII and have to pay attention to end quotes and such. Reformat code according to coding standards. abbrev.el: Add `global-abbrev-mode', which turns on or off abbrev-mode in all buffers. Added `defining-abbrev-turns-on-abbrev-mode' -- if non-nil, defining an abbrev through an interactive function will automatically turn on abbrev-mode, either globally or locally depending on the command. This is the "what you'd expect" behavior. indent.el: general function for indenting a balanced expression in a mode-correct way. Works similar to indent-region in that a mode can specify a specific command to do the whole operation; if not, figure out the region using forward-sexp and indent each line using indent-according-to-mode. keydefs.el: Removed. Modify M-C-backslash to do indent-region-or-balanced-expression. Make S-Tab just insert a TAB char, like it's meant to do. make-docfile.el: Now that we're using the call-process-in-lisp, we need to load an extra file win32-native.el because we're running a bare temacs. menubar-items.el: Totally redo the Cmds menu so that most used commands appear directly on the menu and less used commands appear in submenus. The old way may have been very pretty, but rather impractical. process.el: Under Windows, don't ever use old-call-process-internal, even in batch mode. We can do processes in batch mode. subr.el: Someone recoded truncate-string-to-width, saying "the FSF version is too complicated and does lots of hard-to-understand stuff" but the resulting recoded version was *totally* wrong! it misunderstood the basic point of this function, which is work in *columns* not chars. i dumped ours and copied the version from FSF 21.1. Also added truncate-string-with-continuation-dots, since this idiom is used often. config.inc.samp, xemacs.mak: Separate out debug and optimize flags. Remove all vestiges of USE_MINIMAL_TAGBITS, USE_INDEXED_LRECORD_IMPLEMENTATION, and GUNG_HO, since those ifdefs have long been removed. Make error-checking support actually work. Some rearrangement of config.inc.samp to make it more logical. Remove callproc.c and ntproc.c from xemacs.mak, no longer used. Make pdump the default. lisp.h: Add support for strong type-checking of Bytecount, Bytebpos, Charcount, Charbpos, and others, by making them classes, overloading the operators to provide integer-like operation and carefully controlling what operations are allowed. Not currently enabled in C++ builds because there are still a number of compile errors, and it won't really work till we merge in my "8-bit-Mule" workspace, in which I make use of the new types Charxpos, Bytexpos, Memxpos, representing a "position" either in a buffer or a string. (This is especially important in the extent code.) abbrev.c, alloc.c, eval.c, buffer.c, buffer.h, editfns.c, fns.c, text.h: Warning fixes, some of them related to new C++ strict type checking of Bytecount, Charbpos, etc. dired.c: Caught an actual error due to strong type checking -- char len being passed when should be byte len. alloc.c, backtrace.h, bytecode.c, bytecode.h, eval.c, sysdep.c: Further optimize Ffuncall: -- process arg list at compiled-function creation time, converting into an array for extra-quick access at funcall time. -- rewrite funcall_compiled_function to use it, and inline this function. -- change the order of check for magic stuff in SPECBIND_FAST_UNSAFE to be faster. -- move the check for need to garbage collect into the allocation code, so only a single flag needs to be checked in funcall. buffer.c, symbols.c: add debug funs to check on mule optimization info in buffers and strings. eval.c, emacs.c, text.c, regex.c, scrollbar-msw.c, search.c: Fix evil crashes due to eistrings not properly reinitialized under pdump. Redo a bit some of the init routines; convert some complex_vars_of() into simple vars_of(), because they didn't need complex processing. callproc.c, emacs.c, event-stream.c, nt.c, process.c, process.h, sysdep.c, sysdep.h, syssignal.h, syswindows.h, ntproc.c: Delete. Hallelujah, praise the Lord, there is no god but Allah!!! fix so that processes can be invoked in bare temacs -- thereby eliminating any need for callproc.c. (currently only eliminated under NT.) remove all crufty and unnecessary old process code in ntproc.c and elsewhere. move non-callproc-specific stuff (mostly environment) into process.c, so callproc.c can be left out under NT. console-tty.c, doc.c, file-coding.c, file-coding.h, lstream.c, lstream.h: fix doc string handling so it works with Japanese, etc docs. change handling of "character mode" so callers don't have to manually set it (quite error-prone). event-msw.c: spacing fixes. lread.c: eliminate unused crufty vintage-19 "FSF defun hack" code. lrecord.h: improve pdump description docs. buffer.c, ntheap.c, unexnt.c, win32.c, emacs.c: Mule-ize some unexec and startup code. It was pseudo-Mule-ized before by simply always calling the ...A versions of functions, but that won't cut it -- eventually we want to be able to run properly even if XEmacs has been installed in a Japanese directory. (The current problem is the timing of the loading of the Unicode tables; this will eventually be fixed.) Go through and fix various other places where the code was not Mule-clean. Provide a function mswindows_get_module_file_name() to get our own name without resort to PATH_MAX and such. Add a big comment in main() about the problem with Unicode table load timing that I just alluded to. emacs.c: When error-checking is enabled (interpreted as "user is developing XEmacs"), don't ask user to "pause to read messages" when a fatal error has occurred, because it will wedge if we are in an inner modal loop (typically when a menu is popped up) and make us unable to get a useful stack trace in the debugger. text.c: Correct update_entirely_ascii_p_flag to actually work. lisp.h, symsinit.h: declarations for above changes.
author ben
date Sun, 14 Apr 2002 12:43:31 +0000
parents 2b676dc88c66
children
line wrap: on
line source

April 11, 2002:

Priority:

1. Finish checking in current mule ws.
2. Start working on bugs reported by others and noticed by me:
   -- problems cutting and pasting binary data, e.g. from byte-compiler instructions
   -- test suite failures
   -- process i/o problems w.r.t. eol: |uniq (e.g.) leaves ^M's at end of
      line; running "bash" as shell-file-name doesn't work because it doesn't
      like the extra ^M's.

March 20, 2002:

bugs:

-- TTY-mode problem.  When you start up in TTY mode, XEmacs goes through
   the loadup process and appears to be working -- you see the startup
   screen pulsing through the different screens, and it appears to be
   listening (hitting a key stops the screen motion), but it's frozen --
   the screen won't get off the startup, key commands don't cause anything
   to happen. STATUS: In progress.

-- Memory ballooning in some cases.  Not yet understood.

-- other test suite failures?

-- need to review the handling of sounds.  seems that not everything is
   documented, not everything is consistently used where it's supposed to,
   some sounds are ugly, etc.  add sounds to `completer' as well.

-- redo with-trapping-errors so that the backtrace is stored away and only
   outputted when an error actually occurs (i.e. in the condition-case
   handler).  test. (use ding of various sorts as a helpful way of checking
   out what's going on.)

-- problems with process input: |uniq (for example) leaves ^M's at end of
   line.

-- carefully review looking up of fonts by charset, esp. wrt the last
   element of a font spec.

-- add package support to ignore certain files -- *-util.el for languages.

-- review use of escape-quoted in auto_save_1() vs. the buffer's own coding
   system.

-- figure out how to get the total amount of data memory (i.e. everything
   but the code, or even including the code if can't distinguish) used by
   the process on each different OS, and use it in a new algorithm for
   triggering GC: trigger only when a certain % of the data size has been
   consed up; in addition, have a minimum.

fixed bugs???

-- Occasional crash when freeing display structures.  The problem seems to
   be this: A window has a "display line dynarr"; each display line has a
   "display block dynarr".  Sometimes this display block dynarr is getting
   freed twice.  It appears from looking at the code that sometimes a
   display line from somewhere in the dynarr gets added to the end -- hence
   two pointers to the same display block dynarr.  need to review this
   code.

August 29, 2001.

This is the most current list of priorities in `ben-mule-21-5'.
Updated often.

high-priority:

[input]

-- support for WM_IME_CHAR.  IME input can work under -nuni if we use
   WM_IME_CHAR.  probably we should always be using this, instead of
   snarfing input using WM_COMPOSITION.  i'll check this out.
-- Russian C-x problem.  see above.

[clean-up]

-- make sure it compiles and runs under non-mule.  remember that some
   code needs the unicode support, or at least a simple version of it.
-- make sure it compiles and runs under pdump.  see below.
-- make sure it compiles and runs under cygwin.  see below.
-- clean up mswindows-multibyte, TSTR_TO_C_STRING.  expand dfc
   optimizations to work across chain.
-- eliminate last vestiges of codepage<->charset conversion and similar stuff.

[other]

-- test the "file-coding is binary only on Unix, no-Mule" stuff.
-- test that things work correctly in -nuni if the system environment
   is set to e.g. japanese -- i should get japanese menus, japanese
   file names, etc.  same for russian, hebrew ...
-- cut and paste.  see below.
-- misc issues with handling lang environments.  see also August 25,
   "finally: working on the C-x in ...".
   -- when switching lang env, needs to set keyboard layout.
   -- user var to control whether, when moving into text of a
      particular language, we set the appropriate keyboard layout.  we
      would need to have a lisp api for retrieving and setting the
      keyboard layout, set text properties to indicate the layout of
      text, and have a way of dealing with text with no property on
      it. (e.g. saved text has no text properties on it.) basically,
      we need to get a keyboard layout from a charset; getting a
      language would do.  Perhaps we need a table that maps charsets
      to language environments.
   -- test that the lang env is properly set at startup.  test that
      switching the lang env properly sets the C locale (call
      setlocale(), set LANG, etc.) -- a spawned subprogram should have
      the new locale in its environment.
-- look through everything below and see if anything is missed in this
   priority list, and if so add it.  create a separate file for the
   priority list, so it can be updated as appropriate.


mid-priority:

-- clean up the chain coding system.  its list should specify decode
   order, not encode; i now think this way is more logical.  it should
   check the endpoints to make sure they make sense.  it should also
   allow for the specification of "reverse-direction coding systems":
   use the specified coding system, but invert the sense of decode and
   encode.

-- along with that, places that take an arbitrary coding system and
   expect the ends to be anything specific need to check this, and add
   the appropriate conversions from byte->char or char->byte.

-- get some support for arabic, thai, vietnamese, japanese jisx 0212:
   at least get the unicode information in place and make sure we have
   things tied together so that we can display them.  worry about r2l
   some other time.

-- check the handling of C-c.  can XEmacs itself be interrupted with C-c?
   is that impossible now that we are a window, not a console, app?  at
   least we should work something out with `i', so that if it receives a
   C-c or C-break, it interrupts XEmacs, too.  check out how process groups
   work and if they apply only to console apps.  also redo the way that
   XEmacs sends C-c to other apps.  the business of injecting code should
   be last resort.  we should try C-c first, and if that doesn't work, then
   the next time we try to interrupt the same process, use the injection
   method.