Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/objects.el @ 2456:f4e405a9d18d
[xemacs-hg @ 2004-12-27 12:25:14 by michaels]
2004-12-18 Mike Sperber <mike@xemacs.org>
* package-admin.el:
* startup.el: Reflect the changes made in packages.el.
* packages.el:
* loadup.el:
* make-docfile.el:
* package-admin.el:
* startup.el:
* update-elc.el (early-package-hierarchies)
(late-package-hierarchies)
(last-package-hierarchies): Renamed these from `early-packages',
`late-packages' and `last-packages'.
* packages.el: Rewrote package-finding logic to separate the
concepts of "package directories" and "package hierarchies".
Added explanation of these concepts.
* setup-paths.el:
* find-paths.el: Added parameter descriptions to some of the
docstrings.
* packages.el, setup-paths.el: Make terminology more explicit
about "package hierarchies"
* startup.el (emacs-roots, emacs-data-roots)
(user-init-directory-base, user-init-directory)
(user-init-file-base, user-init-file-base-list)
(user-home-init-file-base-list)
(load-home-init-file, load-user-init-file-p)
(startup-find-load-path, startup-setup-paths)
(startup-find-load-path-for-packages): Moved these back from
setup-paths.el where they belong---setup-paths.el now again, as
documented, contains no code that sets global variables. (They
were moved from startup.el to setup-paths.el on 2003-02-28.)
Clarify that in the comment at the top.
* setup-paths.el (paths-find-emacs-roots): Restored
`invocation-directory' 'invocation-name' parameters removed on
2003-02-28; they're useful for debugging.
author | michaels |
---|---|
date | Mon, 27 Dec 2004 12:27:05 +0000 |
parents | abe6d1db359e |
children | e1bc252950d9 |
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line source
;;; objects.el --- Lisp interface to C window-system objects ;; Copyright (C) 1994, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Copyright (C) 1995 Ben Wing ;; Author: Chuck Thompson <cthomp@xemacs.org> ;; Author: Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team ;; Keywords: faces, internal, dumped ;; 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, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Synched up with: Not in FSF. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs. ;;; Code: (defun ws-object-property-1 (function object domain &optional matchspec) (let ((instance (if matchspec (specifier-matching-instance object matchspec domain) (specifier-instance object domain)))) (and instance (funcall function instance)))) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; font specifiers (defun make-font-specifier (spec-list) "Return a new `font' specifier object with the given specification list. SPEC-LIST can be a list of specifications (each of which is a cons of a locale and a list of instantiators), a single instantiator, or a list of instantiators. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers. Valid instantiators for font specifiers are: -- a string naming a font (e.g. under X this might be \"-*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*\" for a 14-point upright medium-weight Courier font) -- a font instance (use that instance directly if the device matches, or use the string that generated it) -- a vector of no elements (only on TTY's; this means to set no font at all, thus using the \"natural\" font of the terminal's text) -- a vector of one element (a face to inherit from) " (make-specifier-and-init 'font spec-list)) (defun font-name (font &optional domain charset) "Return the name of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-name' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-name font domain charset)) (defun font-ascent (font &optional domain charset) "Return the ascent of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-ascent' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-ascent font domain charset)) (defun font-descent (font &optional domain charset) "Return the descent of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-descent' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-descent font domain charset)) (defun font-width (font &optional domain charset) "Return the width of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-width' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-width font domain charset)) (defun font-height (font &optional domain charset) "Return the height of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-height' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-height font domain charset)) (defun font-proportional-p (font &optional domain charset) "Return whether FONT is proportional in the specified DOMAIN, if known. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-proportional-p' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-proportional-p font domain charset)) (defun font-properties (font &optional domain charset) "Return the properties of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-properties' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-properties font domain charset)) (defun font-truename (font &optional domain charset) "Return the truename of the FONT in the specified DOMAIN, if any. FONT should be a font specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `font-instance-truename' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'font-instance-truename font domain charset)) (defun font-instance-height (font-instance) "Return the height in pixels of FONT-INSTANCE. The returned value is the maximum height for all characters in the font,\n\ and is equivalent to the sum of the font instance's ascent and descent." (+ (font-instance-ascent font-instance) (font-instance-descent font-instance))) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; color specifiers (defun make-color-specifier (spec-list) "Return a new `color' specifier object with the given specification list. SPEC-LIST can be a list of specifications (each of which is a cons of a locale and a list of instantiators), a single instantiator, or a list of instantiators. See `make-specifier' for a detailed description of how specifiers work. Valid instantiators for color specifiers are: -- a string naming a color (e.g. under X this might be \"lightseagreen2\" or \"#F534B2\") -- a color instance (use that instance directly if the device matches, or use the string that generated it) -- a vector of no elements (only on TTY's; this means to set no color at all, thus using the \"natural\" color of the terminal's text) -- a vector of one or two elements: a face to inherit from, and optionally a symbol naming which property of that face to inherit, either `foreground' or `background' (if omitted, defaults to the same property that this color specifier is used for; if this specifier is not part of a face, the instantiator would not be valid)." (make-specifier-and-init 'color spec-list)) (defun color-name (color &optional domain) "Return the name of the COLOR in the specified DOMAIN, if any. COLOR should be a color specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `color-instance-name' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'color-instance-name color domain)) (defun color-rgb-components (color &optional domain) "Return the RGB components of the COLOR in the specified DOMAIN, if any. COLOR should be a color specifier object and DOMAIN is normally a window and defaults to the selected window if omitted. This is equivalent to using `specifier-instance' and applying `color-instance-rgb-components' to the result. See `make-specifier' for more information about specifiers." (ws-object-property-1 'color-instance-rgb-components color domain)) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; face-boolean specifiers (defun make-face-boolean-specifier (spec-list) "Return a new `face-boolean' specifier object with the given spec list. SPEC-LIST can be a list of specifications (each of which is a cons of a locale and a list of instantiators), a single instantiator, or a list of instantiators. See `make-specifier' for a detailed description of how specifiers work. Valid instantiators for face-boolean specifiers are -- t or nil -- a vector of two or three elements: a face to inherit from, optionally a symbol naming the property of that face to inherit from (if omitted, defaults to the same property that this face-boolean specifier is used for; if this specifier is not part of a face, the instantiator would not be valid), and optionally a value which, if non-nil, means to invert the sense of the inherited property." (make-specifier-and-init 'color spec-list)) ;;; objects.el ends here.