view src/frameslots.h @ 4604:e0a8715fdb1f

Support new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, #'query-coding-region. lisp/ChangeLog addition: 2009-02-07 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * coding.el (query-coding-clear-highlights): Rename the BUFFER argument to BUFFER-OR-STRING, describe it as possibly being a string in its documentation. (default-query-coding-region): Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document that this function does not support it. Bind case-fold-search to nil, we don't want this to influence what the function thinks is encodable or not. (query-coding-region): Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document what it does; reflect this new argument in the associated compiler macro. (query-coding-string): Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document what it does. Support the HIGHLIGHT argument correctly. * unicode.el (unicode-query-coding-region): Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document what it does, implement this. Document a potential problem. Use #'query-coding-clear-highlights instead of reimplementing it ourselves. Remove some debugging messages. * mule/arabic.el (iso-8859-6): * mule/cyrillic.el (iso-8859-5): * mule/greek.el (iso-8859-7): * mule/hebrew.el (iso-8859-8): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-2): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-3): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-4): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-14): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-15): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-16): * mule/latin.el (iso-8859-9): * mule/latin.el (windows-1252): * mule/mule-coding.el (iso-8859-1): Avoid the assumption that characters not given an explicit mapping in these coding systems map to the ISO 8859-1 characters corresponding to the octets on disk; this makes it much more reasonable to implement the IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument to query-coding-region. * mule/mule-cmds.el (set-language-info): Correct the docstring. * mule/mule-cmds.el (finish-set-language-environment): Treat invalid Unicode sequences produced from invalid-sequence-coding-system and corresponding to control characters the same as control characters in redisplay. * mule/mule-cmds.el: Document that encode-coding-char is available in coding.el * mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-generate-helper): Change to return the both the encode-program generated and the relevant non-ASCII charset; update the docstring to reflect this. * mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-generate-encode-program-and-skip-chars-strings): Rename this function; have it return skip-chars-strings as well as the encode program. Have these skip-chars-strings use ranges for charsets, where possible. * mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-create-decode-encode-tables): Revise this to allow people to specify explicitly characters that should be undefined (= corresponding to keys in unicode-error-default-translation-table), and treating unspecified octets above #x7f as undefined by default. * mule/mule-coding.el (8-bit-fixed-query-coding-region): Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, implement support for it using the 8-bit-fixed-invalid-sequences-skip-chars coding system property; remove some debugging messages. * mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-coding-system): This function is dumped, autoloading it makes no sense. Document what happens when characters above #x7f are not specified, implement this. * mule/vietnamese.el: Correct spelling. tests/ChangeLog addition: 2009-02-07 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * automated/query-coding-tests.el: Add FAILING-CASE arguments to the Assert calls, making #'q-c-debug mostly unnecessary. Remove #'q-c-debug. Add new tests that use the IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument to #'query-coding-region; rework the existing ones to respect it.
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Sat, 07 Feb 2009 17:13:37 +0000
parents 01c57eb70ae9
children 308d34e9f07d
line wrap: on
line source

/* Definitions of marked slots in frames
   Copyright (C) 1988, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
   Copyright (C) 1996, 2002, 2003 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: FSF 19.30.  Split out of frame.h.  */

/* We define the Lisp_Objects in the frame 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 FRAME_SLOT_DECLARATION.  No need to
   undefine either value; that happens automatically.  */

#ifndef MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY
#ifdef FRAME_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 */

  /* device frame belongs to. */
  MARKED_SLOT (device)

  /* Name of this frame: a Lisp string.
     NOT the same as the frame's title, even though FSF bogusly
     confuses the two.  The frame's name is used for resourcing
     and lookup purposes and is something you can count on having
     a specific value, while the frame's title may vary depending
     on the user's choice of `frame-title-format'. */
  MARKED_SLOT (name)

  /* The frame which should receive keystrokes that occur in this
     frame, or nil if they should go to the frame itself.  This is
     usually nil, but if the frame is minibufferless, we can use this
     to redirect keystrokes to a surrogate minibuffer frame when
     needed.

     Note that a value of nil is different than having the field point
     to the frame itself.  Whenever the Fselect_frame function is used
     to shift from one frame to the other, any redirections to the
     original frame are shifted to the newly selected frame; if
     focus_frame is nil, Fselect_frame will leave it alone.  */
  MARKED_SLOT (focus_frame)

  /* This frame's root window.  Every frame has one.
     If the frame has only a minibuffer window, this is it.
     Otherwise, if the frame has a minibuffer window, this is its sibling.  */
  MARKED_SLOT (root_window)

  /* This frame's selected window.
     Each frame has its own window hierarchy
     and one of the windows in it is selected within the frame.
     The selected window of the selected frame is Emacs's selected window.  */
  MARKED_SLOT (selected_window)

  /* This frame's minibuffer window.
     Most frames have their own minibuffer windows,
     but only the selected frame's minibuffer window
     can actually appear to exist.  */
  MARKED_SLOT (minibuffer_window)

  /* The most recently selected nonminibuf window.
     This is used by things like the toolbar code, which doesn't
     want the toolbar to change when moving to the minibuffer.
     This will only be a minibuf window if we are a minibuf-only
     frame. */
  MARKED_SLOT (last_nonminibuf_window)

  /* This frame's root window mirror.  This structure exactly mirrors
     the frame's window structure but contains only pointers to the
     display structures. */
  MARKED_SLOT (root_mirror)

  /* frame property list */
  MARKED_SLOT (plist)

  /* buffer_alist at last redisplay. */
  MARKED_SLOT (old_buffer_alist)

  /* A copy of the global Vbuffer_list, to maintain a per-frame buffer
     ordering.  The Vbuffer_list variable and the buffer_list slot of each
     frame contain exactly the same data, just in different orders.  */
  MARKED_SLOT (buffer_alist)

  /* Predicate for selecting buffers for other-buffer.  */
  MARKED_SLOT (buffer_predicate)

  /* The current mouse pointer for the frame.  This is set by calling
     `set-frame-pointer'. */
  MARKED_SLOT (pointer)

  /* The current icon for the frame. */
  MARKED_SLOT (icon)

  /* specifier values cached in the struct frame: */

#ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS
  MARKED_SLOT (menubar_visible_p)
#endif

#ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS
  /* Width and height of the scrollbars. */
  MARKED_SLOT (scrollbar_width)
  MARKED_SLOT (scrollbar_height)
  /* Whether the scrollbars are visible */
  MARKED_SLOT (horizontal_scrollbar_visible_p)
  MARKED_SLOT (vertical_scrollbar_visible_p)
  /* Scrollbars location */
  MARKED_SLOT (scrollbar_on_left_p)
  MARKED_SLOT (scrollbar_on_top_p)
#endif

#ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS
  /* The following three don't really need to be cached except
     that we need to know when they've changed. */
  MARKED_SLOT (default_toolbar_width)
  MARKED_SLOT (default_toolbar_height)
  MARKED_SLOT (default_toolbar_visible_p)
  MARKED_SLOT (default_toolbar_border_width)
  MARKED_SLOT (toolbar_shadow_thickness)

  /* List of toolbar buttons of current toolbars */
  MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY (toolbar_buttons, 4)
  /* Size of the toolbars.  The frame-local toolbar space is
     subtracted before the windows are arranged.  Window and buffer
     local toolbars overlay their windows. */
  MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY (toolbar_size, 4)
  /* Visibility of the toolbars.  This acts as a valve for toolbar_size. */
  MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY (toolbar_visible_p, 4)
  /* Thickness of the border around the toolbar. */
  MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY (toolbar_border_width, 4)
#endif

/* Cache of subwindow instances for this frame */
  MARKED_SLOT (subwindow_instance_cache)

  /* Possible frame-local default for outside margin widths. */
  MARKED_SLOT (left_margin_width)
  MARKED_SLOT (right_margin_width)

#undef MARKED_SLOT
#undef MARKED_SLOT_ARRAY
#undef FRAME_SLOT_DECLARATION