view src/insdel.h @ 934:c925bacdda60

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-07-29 09:21:12 by michaels] 2002-07-17 Marcus Crestani <crestani@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de> Markus Kaltenbach <makalten@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de> Mike Sperber <mike@xemacs.org> configure flag to turn these changes on: --use-kkcc First we added a dumpable flag to lrecord_implementation. It shows, if the object is dumpable and should be processed by the dumper. * lrecord.h (struct lrecord_implementation): added dumpable flag (MAKE_LRECORD_IMPLEMENTATION): fitted the different makro definitions to the new lrecord_implementation and their calls. Then we changed mark_object, that it no longer needs a mark method for those types that have pdump descritions. * alloc.c: (mark_object): If the object has a description, the new mark algorithm is called, and the object is marked according to its description. Otherwise it uses the mark method like before. These procedures mark objects according to their descriptions. They are modeled on the corresponding pdumper procedures. (mark_with_description): (get_indirect_count): (structure_size): (mark_struct_contents): These procedures still call mark_object, this is needed while there are Lisp_Objects without descriptions left. We added pdump descriptions for many Lisp_Objects: * extents.c: extent_auxiliary_description * database.c: database_description * gui.c: gui_item_description * scrollbar.c: scrollbar_instance_description * toolbar.c: toolbar_button_description * event-stream.c: command_builder_description * mule-charset.c: charset_description * device-msw.c: devmode_description * dialog-msw.c: mswindows_dialog_id_description * eldap.c: ldap_description * postgresql.c: pgconn_description pgresult_description * tooltalk.c: tooltalk_message_description tooltalk_pattern_description * ui-gtk.c: emacs_ffi_description emacs_gtk_object_description * events.c: * events.h: * event-stream.c: * event-Xt.c: * event-gtk.c: * event-tty.c: To write a pdump description for Lisp_Event, we converted every struct in the union event to a Lisp_Object. So we created nine new Lisp_Objects: Lisp_Key_Data, Lisp_Button_Data, Lisp_Motion_Data, Lisp_Process_Data, Lisp_Timeout_Data, Lisp_Eval_Data, Lisp_Misc_User_Data, Lisp_Magic_Data, Lisp_Magic_Eval_Data. We also wrote makro selectors and mutators for the fields of the new designed Lisp_Event and added everywhere these new abstractions. We implemented XD_UNION support in (mark_with_description), so we can describe exspecially console/device specific data with XD_UNION. To describe with XD_UNION, we added a field to these objects, which holds the variant type of the object. This field is initialized in the appendant constructor. The variant is an integer, it has also to be described in an description, if XD_UNION is used. XD_UNION is used in following descriptions: * console.c: console_description (get_console_variant): returns the variant (create_console): added variant initialization * console.h (console_variant): the different console types * console-impl.h (struct console): added enum console_variant contype * device.c: device_description (Fmake_device): added variant initialization * device-impl.h (struct device): added enum console_variant devtype * objects.c: image_instance_description font_instance_description (Fmake_color_instance): added variant initialization (Fmake_font_instance): added variant initialization * objects-impl.h (struct Lisp_Color_Instance): added color_instance_type * objects-impl.h (struct Lisp_Font_Instance): added font_instance_type * process.c: process_description (make_process_internal): added variant initialization * process.h (process_variant): the different process types
author michaels
date Mon, 29 Jul 2002 09:21:25 +0000
parents 804517e16990
children 304aebb79cd3
line wrap: on
line source

/* Buffer insertion/deletion and gap motion for XEmacs.
   Copyright (C) 1985-1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

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: Not in FSF. */

/* Mostly rewritten by Ben Wing. */

#ifndef INCLUDED_insdel_h_
#define INCLUDED_insdel_h_

/************************************************************************/
/*                        changing a buffer's text                      */
/************************************************************************/

int begin_multiple_change (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos start, Charbpos end);
void end_multiple_change (struct buffer *buf, int count);

/* flags for functions below */

#define INSDEL_BEFORE_MARKERS 1
#define INSDEL_NO_LOCKING 2

Charcount buffer_insert_string_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos,
				  const Ibyte *nonreloc, Lisp_Object reloc,
				  Bytecount offset, Bytecount length,
				  int flags);
Charcount buffer_insert_raw_string_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos,
				      const Ibyte *nonreloc,
				      Bytecount length, int flags);
Charcount buffer_insert_lisp_string_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos,
				       Lisp_Object str, int flags);
Charcount buffer_insert_c_string_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos,
				    const char *s, int flags);
Charcount buffer_insert_emacs_char_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos,
				      Ichar ch, int flags);
Charcount buffer_insert_c_char_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos, char c,
				  int flags);
Charcount buffer_insert_from_buffer_1 (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos pos,
				       struct buffer *buf2, Charbpos pos2,
				       Charcount length, int flags);

/* Macros for insertion functions that insert at point after markers.
   All of these can GC. */

#define buffer_insert_string(buf, nonreloc, reloc, offset, length) \
  buffer_insert_string_1 (buf, -1, nonreloc, reloc, offset, length, 0)
#define buffer_insert_raw_string(buf, string, length) \
  buffer_insert_raw_string_1 (buf, -1, string, length, 0)
#define buffer_insert_c_string(buf, s) \
  buffer_insert_c_string_1 (buf, -1, s, 0)
#define buffer_insert_lisp_string(buf, str) \
  buffer_insert_lisp_string_1 (buf, -1, str, 0)
#define buffer_insert_c_char(buf, c) \
  buffer_insert_c_char_1 (buf, -1, c, 0)
#define buffer_insert_emacs_char(buf, ch) \
  buffer_insert_emacs_char_1 (buf, -1, ch, 0)
#define buffer_insert_from_buffer(buf, b, index, length) \
  buffer_insert_from_buffer_1 (buf, -1, b, index, length, 0)

void buffer_delete_range (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos from, Charbpos to,
			  int flags);
void buffer_replace_char (struct buffer *b, Charbpos pos, Ichar ch,
			  int not_real_change, int force_lock_check);


/************************************************************************/
/*                        tracking buffer changes                       */
/************************************************************************/

/* Split into two parts.  One part goes with a buffer's text (possibly
   shared), the other with the buffer itself. */

struct buffer_text_change_data
{
  /* multiple change stuff */
  int in_multiple_change;
  Charbpos mc_begin, mc_orig_end, mc_new_end;
  int mc_begin_signaled;
};

struct each_buffer_change_data
{
  Charcount begin_unchanged, end_unchanged;
  /* redisplay needs to know if a newline was deleted so its
     incremental-redisplay algorithm will fail */
  int newline_was_deleted;
  Charcount begin_extent_unchanged, end_extent_unchanged;
};

/* Number of characters at the beginning and end of the buffer that
   have not changed since the last call to buffer_reset_changes().
   If no changes have occurred since then, both values will be -1.

   "Changed" means that the text has changed. */

#define BUF_BEGIN_UNCHANGED(buf) ((buf)->changes->begin_unchanged)
#define BUF_END_UNCHANGED(buf) ((buf)->changes->end_unchanged)

/* Number of characters at the beginning and end of the buffer that
   have not had a covering extent change since the last call to
   buffer_reset_changes ().  If no changes have occurred since then,
   both values will be -1.

   "Changed" means that the extents covering the text have changed. */

#define BUF_EXTENT_BEGIN_UNCHANGED(buf) \
  ((buf)->changes->begin_extent_unchanged)
#define BUF_EXTENT_END_UNCHANGED(buf) \
  ((buf)->changes->end_extent_unchanged)

#define BUF_NEWLINE_WAS_DELETED(buf) \
  ((buf)->changes->newline_was_deleted)

void buffer_extent_signal_changed_region (struct buffer *buf,
					  Charbpos start,
					  Charbpos end);
void buffer_reset_changes (struct buffer *buf);



/************************************************************************/
/*                        other related functions                       */
/************************************************************************/

Membpos do_marker_adjustment (Membpos mpos, Membpos from,
			     Membpos to, Bytecount amount);

void fixup_internal_substring (const Ibyte *nonreloc,
			       Lisp_Object reloc,
			       Bytecount offset, Bytecount *len);

/* In font-lock.c */
void font_lock_maybe_update_syntactic_caches (struct buffer *buf,
					      Charbpos start,
					      Charbpos orig_end,
					      Charbpos new_end);
void font_lock_buffer_was_killed (struct buffer *buf);

void barf_if_buffer_read_only (struct buffer *buf, Charbpos from,
			       Charbpos to);

void init_buffer_text (struct buffer *b);
void uninit_buffer_text (struct buffer *b);

#endif /* INCLUDED_insdel_h_ */