Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/coding-system-slots.h @ 5294:bbff29a01820
Add compiler macros and compilation sanity-checks for functions with keywords.
2010-10-25 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Add compiler macros and compilation sanity-checking for various
functions that take keywords.
* byte-optimize.el (side-effect-free-fns): #'symbol-value is
side-effect free and not error free.
* bytecomp.el (byte-compile-normal-call): Check keyword argument
lists for sanity; store information about the positions where
keyword arguments start using the new byte-compile-keyword-start
property.
* cl-macs.el (cl-const-expr-val): Take a new optional argument,
cl-not-constant, defaulting to nil, in this function; return it if
the expression is not constant.
(cl-non-fixnum-number-p): Make this into a separate function, we
want to pass it to #'every.
(eql): Use it.
(define-star-compiler-macros): Use the same code to generate the
member*, assoc* and rassoc* compiler macros; special-case some
code in #'add-to-list in subr.el.
(remove, remq): Add compiler macros for these two functions, in
preparation for #'remove being in C.
(define-foo-if-compiler-macros): Transform (remove-if-not ...) calls to
(remove ... :if-not) at compile time, which will be a real win
once the latter is in C.
(define-substitute-if-compiler-macros)
(define-subst-if-compiler-macros): Similarly for these functions.
(delete-duplicates): Change this compiler macro to use
#'plists-equal; if we don't have information about the type of
SEQUENCE at compile time, don't bother attempting to inline the
call, the function will be in C soon enough.
(equalp): Remove an old commented-out compiler macro for this, if
we want to see it it's in version control.
(subst-char-in-string): Transform this to a call to nsubstitute or
nsubstitute, if that is appropriate.
* cl.el (ldiff): Don't call setf here, this makes for a load-time
dependency problem in cl-macs.el
| author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
|---|---|
| date | Mon, 25 Oct 2010 13:04:04 +0100 |
| parents | 1d74a1d115ee |
| children | 308d34e9f07d |
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/* Definitions of marked slots in coding systems Copyright (C) 1991, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 1995 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Copyright (C) 2000, 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 2, 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; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ /* Synched up with: ????. Split out of file-coding.h. */ /* We define the Lisp_Objects in the coding system structure in a separate file because there are numerous places we want to iterate over them, such as when defining them in the structure, initializing them, or marking them. To use, define MARKED_SLOT before including this file. In the structure definition, you also need to define CODING_SYSTEM_SLOT_DECLARATION. No need to undefine either value; that happens automatically. */ #ifndef MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY #ifdef CODING_SYSTEM_SLOT_DECLARATION #define MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY(slot, size) MARKED_SLOT(slot[size]) #else #define MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY(slot, size) do { \ int mslotidx; \ for (mslotidx = 0; mslotidx < size; mslotidx++) \ { \ MARKED_SLOT (slot[mslotidx]) \ } \ } while (0); #endif #endif /* not MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY */ /* Name and description of this coding system. The description should be suitable for a menu entry. */ MARKED_SLOT (name) MARKED_SLOT (description) /* Mnemonic string displayed in the modeline when this coding system is active for a particular buffer. */ MARKED_SLOT (mnemonic) /* Long documentation on the coding system. */ MARKED_SLOT (documentation) /* Functions to handle additional conversion after reading or before writing. #### This mechanism should be replaced by the ability to simply create new coding system types. */ MARKED_SLOT (post_read_conversion) MARKED_SLOT (pre_write_conversion) /* If this coding system is not of the correct type for text file conversion (i.e. decodes byte->char), we wrap it with appropriate char<->byte converters. This is created dynamically, when it's needed, and cached here. */ MARKED_SLOT (text_file_wrapper) /* ------------------------ junk to handle EOL ------------------------- I had hoped that we could handle this without lots of special-case code, but it appears not to be the case if we want to maintain compatibility with the existing way. However, at least with the way we do things now, we avoid EOL junk in most of the coding system methods themselves, or in the decode/encode functions. The EOL special-case code is limited to coding-system creation and to the convert-eol and undecided coding system types. */ /* If this coding system wants autodetection of the EOL type, then at the appropriate time we wrap this coding system with convert-eol-autodetect. (We do NOT do this at creation time because then we end up with multiple convert-eols wrapped into the final result -- esp. with autodetection using `undecided' -- leading to a big mess.) We cache the wrapped coding system here. */ MARKED_SLOT (auto_eol_wrapper) /* Subsidiary coding systems that specify a particular type of EOL marking, rather than autodetecting it. These will only be non-nil if (eol_type == EOL_AUTODETECT). These are chains. */ MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY (eol, 3) /* If this coding system is a subsidiary, this element points back to its parent. */ MARKED_SLOT (subsidiary_parent) /* At decoding or encoding time, we use the following coding system, if it exists, in place of the coding system object. This is how we handle coding systems with EOL types of CRLF or CR. Formerly, we did the canonicalization at creation time, returning a chain in place of the original coding system; but that interferes with `coding-system-property' and causes other complications. CANONICAL is used when determining the end types of a coding system. canonicalize-after-coding also consults CANONICAL (it has to, because the data in the lstream is based on CANONICAL, not on the original coding system). */ MARKED_SLOT (canonical) MARKED_SLOT (safe_charsets) MARKED_SLOT (safe_chars) #undef MARKED_SLOT #undef MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY #undef CODING_SYSTEM_SLOT_DECLARATION
