view src/m/irist.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 ecf1ebac70d8
children
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/* machine description file for Silicon Graphics Iris 2500 Turbos;
   also possibly for non-turbo Irises with system release 2.5.
   Copyright (C) 1985, 1986 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

This file is part of GNU Emacs.

GNU Emacs 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.

GNU Emacs 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 19.31. */

/* The following line tells the configuration script what sort of 
   operating system this machine is likely to run.
   USUAL-OPSYS="note"
NOTE-START
Version 18 said to work; use -opsystem=irist3-5 for system version 2.5
and -opsystem=iris3-6 for system versions 3.6 and up.
NOTE-END */

#if 0
  Message-Id: <8705050653.AA20004@orville.arpa>
  Subject: gnu emacs 18.41 on iris [23].5 machines
  Date: 04 May 87 23:53:11 PDT (Mon)
  From: raible@orville.arpa

  Aside from the SIGIOT, I know of only one bug, a real strange one:
  I wrote a utimes interface, which copies elements from timevals
  to utimbufs. This code is known good.  The problem is that in
  emacs, the utime doesn't seem to take effect (i.e. doesn't change the
  dates at all) unless I call report_file_error *after* the utime returns!

    if (utime (name, &utb) < 0)
      return;
    else
      /* XXX XXX XXX */
      /* For some reason, if this is taken out, then the utime above breaks! */
      /* (i.e. it doesn't set the time. This just makes no sense... */
      /* Eric - May 4, 1987 */
      report_file_error ("Worked just find\n", Qnil);

  Without any sort of debugger that works on emacs (I know... but I don't have
  *time* right now to start with gdb), it was quite time consuming to track
  it down to this.

  But since this code is only used for an optional 4th argument to one command
  (copy-file), it would say that it is non-critical...
#endif /* 0 */

/* Now define a symbol for the cpu type, if your compiler
   does not define it automatically:
   Ones defined so far include vax, m68000, ns16000, pyramid,
   orion, tahoe, APOLLO and many others */

#ifndef m68000
#define m68000
#endif

/* Data type of load average, as read out of kmem.  */

#define LOAD_AVE_TYPE long

/* Convert that into an integer that is 100 for a load average of 1.0  */

#define FSCALE 1.0
#define LOAD_AVE_CVT(x) (int) (((double) (x)) * 100.0 / FSCALE)

/* Define NO_REMAP if memory segmentation makes it not work well
   to change the boundary between the text section and data section
   when Emacs is dumped.  If you define this, the preloaded Lisp
   code will not be sharable; but that's better than failing completely.  */

/* #define NO_REMAP */

/* There is an inconsistency between the sgi assembler, linker which barfs
   on these. */

#define internal_with_output_to_temp_buffer	stupid_long_name1
#define Finsert_abbrev_table_description	stupid_long_name2