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view man/lispref/edebug.texi @ 5882:bbe4146603db
Reduce regexp usage, now CL-oriented non-regexp code available, core Lisp
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2015-04-01 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
When calling #'string-match with a REGEXP without regular
expression special characters, call #'search, #'mismatch, #'find,
etc. instead, making our code less likely to side-effect other
functions' match data and a little faster.
* apropos.el (apropos-command):
* apropos.el (apropos):
Call (position ?\n ...) rather than (string-match "\n" ...) here.
* buff-menu.el:
* buff-menu.el (buffers-menu-omit-invisible-buffers):
Don't fire up the regexp engine just to check if a string starts
with a space.
* buff-menu.el (select-buffers-tab-buffers-by-mode):
Don't fire up the regexp engine just to compare mode basenames.
* buff-menu.el (format-buffers-tab-line):
* buff-menu.el (build-buffers-tab-internal): Moved to being a
label within the following.
* buff-menu.el (buffers-tab-items): Use the label.
* bytecomp.el (byte-compile-log-1):
Don't fire up the regexp engine just to look for a newline.
* cus-edit.el (get):
Ditto.
* cus-edit.el (custom-variable-value-create):
Ditto, but for a colon.
* descr-text.el (describe-text-sexp):
Ditto.
* descr-text.el (describe-char-unicode-data):
Use #'split-string-by-char given that we're just looking for a
semicolon.
* descr-text.el (describe-char):
Don't fire up the regexp engine just to look for a newline.
* disass.el (disassemble-internal):
Ditto.
* files.el (file-name-sans-extension):
Implement this using #'position.
* files.el (file-name-extension):
Correct this function's docstring, implement it in terms of
#'position.
* files.el (insert-directory):
Don't fire up the regexp engine to split a string by space; don't
reverse the list of switches, this is actually a longstand bug as
far as I can see.
* gnuserv.el (gnuserv-process-filter):
Use #'position here, instead of consing inside #'split-string
needlessly.
* gtk-file-dialog.el (gtk-file-dialog-update-dropdown):
Use #'split-string-by-char here, don't fire up #'split-string for
directory-sep-char.
* gtk-font-menu.el (hack-font-truename):
Implement this more cheaply in terms of #'find,
#'split-string-by-char, #'equal, rather than #'string-match,
#'split-string, #'string-equal.
* hyper-apropos.el (hyper-apropos-grok-functions):
* hyper-apropos.el (hyper-apropos-grok-variables):
Look for a newline using #'position rather than #'string-match in
these functions.
* info.el (Info-insert-dir):
* info.el (Info-insert-file-contents):
* info.el (Info-follow-reference):
* info.el (Info-extract-menu-node-name):
* info.el (Info-menu):
Look for fixed strings using #'position or #'search as appropriate
in this file.
* ldap.el (ldap-decode-string):
* ldap.el (ldap-encode-string):
#'encode-coding-string, #'decode-coding-string are always
available, don't check if they're fboundp.
* ldap.el (ldap-decode-address):
* ldap.el (ldap-encode-address):
Use #'split-string-by-char in these functions.
* lisp-mnt.el (lm-creation-date):
* lisp-mnt.el (lm-last-modified-date):
Don't fire up the regexp engine just to look for spaces in this file.
* menubar-items.el (default-menubar):
Use (not (mismatch ...)) rather than #'string-match here, for
simple regexp.
Use (search "beta" ...) rather than (string-match "beta" ...)
* menubar-items.el (sort-buffers-menu-alphabetically):
* menubar-items.el (sort-buffers-menu-by-mode-then-alphabetically):
* menubar-items.el (group-buffers-menu-by-mode-then-alphabetically):
Don't fire up the regexp engine to check if a string starts with
a space or an asterisk.
Use the more fine-grained results of #'compare-strings; compare
case-insensitively for the buffer menu.
* menubar-items.el (list-all-buffers):
* menubar-items.el (tutorials-menu-filter):
Use #'equal rather than #'string-equal, which, in this context,
has the drawback of not having a bytecode, and no redeeming
features.
* minibuf.el:
* minibuf.el (un-substitute-in-file-name):
Use #'count, rather than counting the occurences of $ using the
regexp engine.
* minibuf.el (read-file-name-internal-1):
Don't fire up the regexp engine to search for ?=.
* mouse.el (mouse-eval-sexp):
Check for newline with #'find.
* msw-font-menu.el (mswindows-reset-device-font-menus):
Split a string by newline with #'split-string-by-char.
* mule/japanese.el:
* mule/japanese.el ("Japanese"):
Use #'search rather than #'string-match; canoncase before
comparing; fix a bug I had introduced where I had been making case
insensitive comparisons where the case mattered.
* mule/korea-util.el (default-korean-keyboard):
Look for ?3 using #'find, not #'string-march.
* mule/korea-util.el (quail-hangul-switch-hanja):
Search for a fixed string using #'search.
* mule/mule-cmds.el (set-locale-for-language-environment):
#'position, #'substitute rather than #'string-match,
#'replace-in-string.
* newcomment.el (comment-make-extra-lines):
Use #'search rather than #'string-match for a simple string.
* package-get.el (package-get-remote-filename):
Use #'position when looking for ?@
* process.el (setenv):
* process.el (read-envvar-name):
Use #'position when looking for ?=.
* replace.el (map-query-replace-regexp):
Use #'split-string-by-char instead of using an inline
implementation of it.
* select.el (select-convert-from-cf-text):
* select.el (select-convert-from-cf-unicodetext):
Use #'position rather than #'string-match in these functions.
* setup-paths.el (paths-emacs-data-root-p):
Use #'search when looking for simple string.
* sound.el (load-sound-file):
Use #'split-string-by-char rather than an inline reimplementation
of same.
* startup.el (splash-screen-window-body):
* startup.el (splash-screen-tty-body):
Search for simple strings using #'search.
* version.el (emacs-version):
Ditto.
* x-font-menu.el (hack-font-truename):
Implement this more cheaply in terms of #'find,
#'split-string-by-char, #'equal, rather than #'string-match,
#'split-string, #'string-equal.
* x-font-menu.el (x-reset-device-font-menus-core):
Use #'split-string-by-char here.
* x-init.el (x-initialize-keyboard):
Search for a simple string using #'search.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 01 Apr 2015 14:28:20 +0100 |
parents | 576fb035e263 |
children |
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\input texinfo @comment -*-texinfo-*- @comment %**start of header @setfilename ../info/edebug.info @settitle Edebug User Manual @comment %**end of header @comment ================================================================ @comment This file has the same style as the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual. @comment Run tex using version of `texinfo.tex' that comes with the elisp @comment manual. Also, run `makeinfo' rather than `texinfo-format-buffer'. @comment ================================================================ @comment smallbook @comment tex @comment \overfullrule=0pt @comment end tex @comment @comment Combine indices. @syncodeindex fn cp @syncodeindex vr cp @syncodeindex ky cp @syncodeindex pg cp @syncodeindex tp cp @comment texinfo-format-buffer no longer ignores synindex. @comment @ifinfo This file documents Edebug This is edition 1.6 of the Edebug User Manual for edebug Version 3.4, Copyright (C) 1991,1992,1993,1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. @ignore Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual). @end ignore Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Foundation. @end ifinfo @comment @comment @setchapternewpage odd @titlepage @title Edebug User Manual @subtitle A Source Level Debugger for XEmacs Lisp @subtitle Edition 1.6, February 1994 @author by Daniel LaLiberte, liberte@@cs.uiuc.edu @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll Copyright @copyright{} 1991,1992,1993,1994 Daniel LaLiberte @sp 2 This is edition 1.6 of the @cite{Edebug User Manual} for edebug Version 3.4, February 1994 @sp 2 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by this author. @end titlepage @page @node Top, Edebug, (dir), (dir) @chapter Edebug User Manual Edebug is a source-level debugger for XEmacs Lisp programs. @menu * Edebug:: Edebug * Bugs and Todo List:: Bugs and Todo List * Index:: Index @end menu @c from included file: @c @node Edebug, Bugs and Todo List, Top, Top @c @section Edebug @include edebug-inc.texi @node Bugs and Todo List, Index, Edebug, Top @section Bugs and Todo List A debugger should be as bug free as possible, and I strive to achieve perfection. But Edebug is fairly complex and I don't understand all of it any more, so bugs happen. Please report anything suspicious to save someone else the trouble of finding the same bug. Email to liberte@@cs.uiuc.edu. There is also a mailing list for Edebug beta testers: edebug-request@@cs.uiuc.edu. @cindex bugs in Edebug If you want to run Edebug on Edebug itself, often it is easiest to first copy a reliable version of @file{edebug.el} into another file, say @file{fdebug.el}, and replace all strings @samp{edebug} with @samp{fdebug}, then evaluate the fdebug buffer and run Fdebug on the buggy Edebug. The following is a list of things I might do in the future, but often I do other things not on the list as I discover the need for them. Send me your suggestions and priorities. @itemize @bullet @item Bug: I've noticed that the point of some buffers is reset to the point of some other buffer, but I haven't been able to repeat it so perhaps it is fixed. @item There may be a bug in the trace buffer display. It should display as much as it can of the bottom of the buffer, but I think it scrolls off sometimes. There is a bug in window updating when there is both a trace buffer and an evaluation list - the source buffer doesn't get displayed. @item Killing and reinserting an instrumented definition or parts of it leaves marks in the buffer which may confuse Edebug later. @item Design problem: The position of definitions with complex names (e.g. defmethod) cannot be remembered properly, but nor can the names of such definitions be determined from calls of them. @item After some errors, with @code{edebug-on-error} non-@code{nil}, continuing execution succeeds, returning @code{nil}. @item There are some interesting problems with defining or executing keyboard macros across the Edebug activation boundary. @item There are no other known bugs, so if you find any, please let me know. There is nothing worse than a buggy debugger! @item I need to rethink locally binding @code{debug-on-error}, @code{debug-on-quit}, and keyboard macro state variables. Should we allow the global values to be changed by the user? @item "(" in the first column of doc strings messes up edebug reading. But no more than normal. @item There could be a command to return a value from the debugger - particularly useful for errors. @item Let me know if you find any side effects that could be avoided or at least documented in the manual. Also @pxref{The Outside Context}. @item @cindex selective display Make edebug work with selective display - don't stop in hidden lines. @item Debug just one or selected subexpressions of a definition - the rest is evalled normally. @item Should @code{overlay-arrow-position} and @code{-string} be buffer local? It would be better if they could be window-local. @item Use copy of @code{current-local-map} instead of @code{emacs-lisp-mode-map} (but only copy the first time after lower level command - to save time). @item Better integration with standard debug. @item Use @code{inhibit-quit} while edebugging? @item Crawl mode would @code{sit-for} 0 or 1 in the outside window configuration between each edebug step. Maybe it should be a separate option that applies to trace as well. @item Customizable @code{sit-for} time. Less than a second would be nice. @item Generalize step, trace, Trace-fast to one command with argument for @code{sit-for} time. Generalize go, continue, Continue-fast to another command with argument @item Counting conditions - stop after n iterations. You can do it manually now with conditional breakpoints. @item Performance monitoring - summarize trace data. @item Preserve breakpoints across instrumenting. You can now install calls to @code{edebug} in your code. @item After stepping into code not previously instrumented (with @code{edebug-step-in}), maybe restore to non-instrumented code after entered. @item Optionally replace expressions with results in a separate buffer from the source code. This idea is based on discussions with Carl Witty regarding his stepper debugger. Also, unparse code into its own buffer if source code is not available, or if user wishes to use replace-with-results mode. @item Preserve previous bindings of local variables, and allow user to jump back to previous frames, particularly binding frames (i.e. @code{let}, @code{condition-case}, function and macro calls) to view values at that frame. What about buffer local variables? It would be simpler to have access to the Lisp stack. Variables display, like the evaluation list but automatically display all local variables and values. @item Investigate minimal instrumentation that doesn't call edebug functions but instead sets edebug index and result variables. Stepping is done through standard debugger features such as setting @code{debug-on-next-call}. Breakpoints are done by modifying code as well as calling @code{backtrace-debug} for active frames. @item Edebugging of uninstrumented code. Similar to above minimal instrumentation but find out where we are at each edebug call by looking in a map from each list form in the code to its position. Problem is symbols are not unique. @item Investigate hiding debugger internal stack frames. This is both to simplify the standard debugger (which currently must be byte compiled to work) and to better support the integration of edebug and the standard debugger. @item Fix Emacs' lack of stack checking. The current workaround of incrementing @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} and @code{max-specpdl-size} is unsafe. @item Although variables can't be tracked everywhere, watchpoints would be nice for variables that edebug can monitor. That is, when the value of a specific variable changes, edebug would stop. This can be done now with the @code{edebug-global-break-condition}, though it is awkward. @item How about a command to add the previous sexp (?) to the eval-list? @item Highlight all instrumented code, breakpoints, and subexpressions about to be evaluated or just evaluated. This should be done in a way that works with Epoch, XEmacs, and Emacs 19. @end itemize @page @node Index, , Bugs and Todo List, Top @section Index @printindex cp @comment To prevent the Concept Index's last page from being numbered "i". @page @contents @bye