Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/casefiddle.c @ 5142:f965e31a35f0
reduce lcrecord headers to 2 words, rename printing_unreadable_object
-------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: --------------------
man/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-13 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* internals/internals.texi (Working with Lisp Objects):
* internals/internals.texi (Writing Macros):
* internals/internals.texi (lrecords):
More rewriting to correspond with changes from
*LRECORD* to *LISP_OBJECT*.
modules/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-13 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* postgresql/postgresql.c (print_pgconn):
* postgresql/postgresql.c (print_pgresult):
printing_unreadable_object -> printing_unreadable_object_fmt.
2010-03-13 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* ldap/eldap.c (print_ldap):
printing_unreadable_object -> printing_unreadable_object_fmt.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-13 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* alloc.c (alloc_sized_lrecord_1):
* alloc.c (alloc_sized_lrecord_array):
* alloc.c (old_alloc_sized_lcrecord):
* alloc.c (disksave_object_finalization_1):
* alloc.c (mark_lcrecord_list):
* alloc.c (alloc_managed_lcrecord):
* alloc.c (free_managed_lcrecord):
* alloc.c (tick_lcrecord_stats):
* alloc.c (sweep_lcrecords_1):
* buffer.c (print_buffer):
* buffer.c (DEFVAR_BUFFER_LOCAL_1):
* casetab.c:
* casetab.c (print_case_table):
* console.c (print_console):
* console.c (DEFVAR_CONSOLE_LOCAL_1):
* data.c (print_weak_list):
* data.c (print_weak_box):
* data.c (print_ephemeron):
* data.c (ephemeron_equal):
* database.c (print_database):
* database.c (finalize_database):
* device-msw.c (sync_printer_with_devmode):
* device-msw.c (print_devmode):
* device-msw.c (finalize_devmode):
* device.c:
* device.c (print_device):
* elhash.c:
* elhash.c (print_hash_table):
* eval.c (print_subr):
* eval.c (print_multiple_value):
* event-stream.c (event_stream_resignal_wakeup):
* events.c (clear_event_resource):
* events.c (zero_event):
* events.c (print_event):
* extents.c:
* extents.c (print_extent):
* file-coding.c (print_coding_system):
* font-mgr.c:
* font-mgr.c (Ffc_init):
* frame.c:
* frame.c (print_frame):
* gc.c:
* gc.c (GC_CHECK_NOT_FREE):
* glyphs.c:
* glyphs.c (print_image_instance):
* glyphs.c (print_glyph):
* gui.c (print_gui_item):
* gui.c (copy_gui_item):
* keymap.c (print_keymap):
* keymap.c (MARKED_SLOT):
* lisp.h:
* lisp.h (struct Lisp_String):
* lisp.h (DEFUN):
* lisp.h (DEFUN_NORETURN):
* lrecord.h:
* lrecord.h (NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_UID):
* lrecord.h (struct lrecord_header):
* lrecord.h (set_lheader_implementation):
* lrecord.h (struct old_lcrecord_header):
* lrecord.h (struct free_lcrecord_header):
* marker.c (print_marker):
* mule-charset.c:
* mule-charset.c (print_charset):
* objects.c (print_color_instance):
* objects.c (print_font_instance):
* objects.c (finalize_font_instance):
* print.c (print_cons):
* print.c (printing_unreadable_object_fmt):
* print.c (printing_unreadable_lisp_object):
* print.c (external_object_printer):
* print.c (internal_object_printer):
* print.c (debug_p4):
* print.c (ext_print_begin):
* process.c (print_process):
* rangetab.c (print_range_table):
* rangetab.c (range_table_equal):
* scrollbar.c (free_scrollbar_instance):
* specifier.c (print_specifier):
* specifier.c (finalize_specifier):
* symbols.c (guts_of_unbound_marker):
* symeval.h:
* symeval.h (DEFVAR_SYMVAL_FWD):
* tooltalk.c:
* tooltalk.c (print_tooltalk_message):
* tooltalk.c (print_tooltalk_pattern):
* ui-gtk.c (ffi_object_printer):
* ui-gtk.c (emacs_gtk_object_printer):
* ui-gtk.c (emacs_gtk_boxed_printer):
* window.c (print_window):
* window.c (free_window_mirror):
* window.c (debug_print_window):
* xemacs.def.in.in:
(1) printing_unreadable_object -> printing_unreadable_object_fmt.
(2) printing_unreadable_lcrecord -> printing_unreadable_lisp_object
and fix up so it no longer requires an lcrecord.
These previous changes eliminate most of the remaining places where
the terms `lcrecord' and `lrecord' occurred outside of specialized
code.
(3) Fairly major change: Reduce the number of words in an lcrecord
from 3 to 2. The third word consisted of a uid that duplicated the
lrecord uid, and a single free bit, which was moved into the lrecord
structure. This reduces the size of the `uid' slot from 21 bits to
20 bits. Arguably this isn't enough -- we could easily have more than
1,000,000 or so objects created in a session. The answer is
(a) It doesn't really matter if we overflow the uid field because
it's only used for debugging, to identify an object uniquely
(or pretty much so).
(b) If we cared about it overflowing and wanted to reduce this,
we could make it so that cons, string, float and certain other
frob-block types that never print out the uid simply don't
store a uid in them and don't increment the lrecord_uid_counter.
(4) In conjunction with (3), create new macro NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_UID()
and use it to abstract out the differences between NEWGC and old-GC
in accessing the `uid' value from a "normal Lisp Object pointer".
(5) In events.c, use zero_nonsized_lisp_object() in place of custom-
written equivalent. In font-mgr.c use external_object_printer()
in place of custom-written equivalents.
| author | Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 13 Mar 2010 05:38:08 -0600 |
| parents | 6bc1f3f6cf0d |
| children | 308d34e9f07d |
line wrap: on
line source
/* XEmacs case conversion functions. Copyright (C) 1985, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1997, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 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: FSF 19.34, but substantially rewritten by Martin. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "insdel.h" #include "syntax.h" enum case_action {CASE_UP, CASE_DOWN, CASE_CAPITALIZE, CASE_CAPITALIZE_UP, CASE_CANONICALIZE}; static Lisp_Object casify_object (enum case_action flag, Lisp_Object string_or_char, Lisp_Object buffer) { struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 0); retry: if (CHAR_OR_CHAR_INTP (string_or_char)) { Ichar c; CHECK_CHAR_COERCE_INT (string_or_char); c = XCHAR (string_or_char); if (flag == CASE_DOWN) { c = DOWNCASE (buf, c); } else if (flag == CASE_UP) { c = UPCASE (buf, c); } else { c = CANONCASE (buf, c); } return make_char (c); } if (STRINGP (string_or_char)) { Lisp_Object syntax_table = buf->mirror_syntax_table; Ibyte *storage = alloca_ibytes (XSTRING_LENGTH (string_or_char) * MAX_ICHAR_LEN); Ibyte *newp = storage; Ibyte *oldp = XSTRING_DATA (string_or_char); Ibyte *endp = oldp + XSTRING_LENGTH (string_or_char); int wordp = 0, wordp_prev; while (oldp < endp) { Ichar c = itext_ichar (oldp); switch (flag) { case CASE_UP: c = UPCASE (buf, c); break; case CASE_DOWN: c = DOWNCASE (buf, c); break; case CASE_CANONICALIZE: c = CANONCASE (buf, c); break; case CASE_CAPITALIZE: case CASE_CAPITALIZE_UP: wordp_prev = wordp; wordp = WORD_SYNTAX_P (syntax_table, c); if (!wordp) break; if (wordp_prev) { if (flag == CASE_CAPITALIZE) c = DOWNCASE (buf, c); } else c = UPCASE (buf, c); break; } newp += set_itext_ichar (newp, c); INC_IBYTEPTR (oldp); } return make_string (storage, newp - storage); } string_or_char = wrong_type_argument (Qchar_or_string_p, string_or_char); goto retry; } DEFUN ("upcase", Fupcase, 1, 2, 0, /* Convert STRING-OR-CHAR to upper case and return that. STRING-OR-CHAR may be a character or string. The result has the same type. STRING-OR-CHAR is not altered--the value is a copy. See also `capitalize', `downcase' and `upcase-initials'. Optional second arg BUFFER specifies which buffer's case tables to use, and defaults to the current buffer. */ (string_or_char, buffer)) { return casify_object (CASE_UP, string_or_char, buffer); } DEFUN ("downcase", Fdowncase, 1, 2, 0, /* Convert STRING-OR-CHAR to lower case and return that. STRING-OR-CHAR may be a character or string. The result has the same type. STRING-OR-CHAR is not altered--the value is a copy. Optional second arg BUFFER specifies which buffer's case tables to use, and defaults to the current buffer. */ (string_or_char, buffer)) { return casify_object (CASE_DOWN, string_or_char, buffer); } DEFUN ("canoncase", Fcanoncase, 1, 2, 0, /* Convert STRING-OR-CHAR to its canonical lowercase form and return that. STRING-OR-CHAR may be a character or string. The result has the same type. STRING-OR-CHAR is not altered--the value is a copy. Optional second arg BUFFER specifies which buffer's case tables to use, and defaults to the current buffer. For any N characters that are equivalent in case-insensitive searching, their canonical lowercase character will be the same. */ (string_or_char, buffer)) { return casify_object (CASE_CANONICALIZE, string_or_char, buffer); } DEFUN ("capitalize", Fcapitalize, 1, 2, 0, /* Convert STRING-OR-CHAR to capitalized form and return that. This means that each word's first character is upper case and the rest is lower case. STRING-OR-CHAR may be a character or string. The result has the same type. STRING-OR-CHAR is not altered--the value is a copy. Optional second arg BUFFER specifies which buffer's case tables to use, and defaults to the current buffer. */ (string_or_char, buffer)) { return casify_object (CASE_CAPITALIZE, string_or_char, buffer); } /* Like Fcapitalize but change only the initial characters. */ DEFUN ("upcase-initials", Fupcase_initials, 1, 2, 0, /* Convert the initial of each word in STRING-OR-CHAR to upper case. Do not change the other letters of each word. STRING-OR-CHAR may be a character or string. The result has the same type. STRING-OR-CHAR is not altered--the value is a copy. Optional second arg BUFFER specifies which buffer's case tables to use, and defaults to the current buffer. */ (string_or_char, buffer)) { return casify_object (CASE_CAPITALIZE_UP, string_or_char, buffer); } /* flag is CASE_UP, CASE_DOWN or CASE_CAPITALIZE or CASE_CAPITALIZE_UP. START and END specify range of buffer to operate on. */ static void casify_region_internal (enum case_action flag, Lisp_Object start, Lisp_Object end, struct buffer *buf) { /* This function can GC */ Charbpos pos, s, e; Lisp_Object syntax_table = buf->mirror_syntax_table; int mccount; int wordp = 0, wordp_prev; if (EQ (start, end)) /* Not modifying because nothing marked */ return; get_buffer_range_char (buf, start, end, &s, &e, 0); mccount = begin_multiple_change (buf, s, e); record_change (buf, s, e - s); for (pos = s; pos < e; pos++) { Ichar oldc = BUF_FETCH_CHAR (buf, pos); Ichar c = oldc; switch (flag) { case CASE_UP: c = UPCASE (buf, oldc); break; case CASE_DOWN: c = DOWNCASE (buf, oldc); break; case CASE_CAPITALIZE: case CASE_CAPITALIZE_UP: /* !!#### need to revalidate the start and end pointers in case the buffer was changed */ wordp_prev = wordp; wordp = WORD_SYNTAX_P (syntax_table, c); if (!wordp) continue; if (wordp_prev) { if (flag == CASE_CAPITALIZE) c = DOWNCASE (buf, c); } else c = UPCASE (buf, c); break; } if (oldc == c) continue; buffer_replace_char (buf, pos, c, 1, (pos == s)); BUF_MODIFF (buf)++; } end_multiple_change (buf, mccount); } static Lisp_Object casify_region (enum case_action flag, Lisp_Object start, Lisp_Object end, Lisp_Object buffer) { casify_region_internal (flag, start, end, decode_buffer (buffer, 1)); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("upcase-region", Fupcase_region, 2, 3, "r", /* Convert the region to upper case. In programs, wants two arguments. These arguments specify the starting and ending character numbers of the region to operate on. When used as a command, the text between point and the mark is operated on. See also `capitalize-region'. Optional third arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (start, end, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ return casify_region (CASE_UP, start, end, buffer); } DEFUN ("downcase-region", Fdowncase_region, 2, 3, "r", /* Convert the region to lower case. In programs, wants two arguments. These arguments specify the starting and ending character numbers of the region to operate on. When used as a command, the text between point and the mark is operated on. Optional third arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (start, end, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ return casify_region (CASE_DOWN, start, end, buffer); } DEFUN ("capitalize-region", Fcapitalize_region, 2, 3, "r", /* Convert the region to capitalized form. Capitalized form means each word's first character is upper case and the rest of it is lower case. In programs, give two arguments, the starting and ending character positions to operate on. Optional third arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (start, end, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ return casify_region (CASE_CAPITALIZE, start, end, buffer); } /* Like Fcapitalize_region but change only the initials. */ DEFUN ("upcase-initials-region", Fupcase_initials_region, 2, 3, "r", /* Upcase the initial of each word in the region. Subsequent letters of each word are not changed. In programs, give two arguments, the starting and ending character positions to operate on. Optional third arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (start, end, buffer)) { return casify_region (CASE_CAPITALIZE_UP, start, end, buffer); } static Lisp_Object casify_word (enum case_action flag, Lisp_Object arg, Lisp_Object buffer) { Charbpos farend; struct buffer *buf = decode_buffer (buffer, 1); CHECK_INT (arg); farend = scan_words (buf, BUF_PT (buf), XINT (arg)); if (!farend) farend = XINT (arg) > 0 ? BUF_ZV (buf) : BUF_BEGV (buf); casify_region_internal (flag, make_int (BUF_PT (buf)), make_int (farend), buf); BUF_SET_PT (buf, max (BUF_PT (buf), farend)); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("upcase-word", Fupcase_word, 1, 2, "p", /* Convert following word (or COUNT words) to upper case, moving over. With negative argument, convert previous words but do not move. See also `capitalize-word'. Optional second arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (count, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ return casify_word (CASE_UP, count, buffer); } DEFUN ("downcase-word", Fdowncase_word, 1, 2, "p", /* Convert following word (or COUNT words) to lower case, moving over. With negative argument, convert previous words but do not move. Optional second arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (count, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ return casify_word (CASE_DOWN, count, buffer); } DEFUN ("capitalize-word", Fcapitalize_word, 1, 2, "p", /* Capitalize the following word (or COUNT words), moving over. This gives the word(s) a first character in upper case and the rest lower case. With negative argument, capitalize previous words but do not move. Optional second arg BUFFER defaults to the current buffer. */ (count, buffer)) { /* This function can GC */ return casify_word (CASE_CAPITALIZE, count, buffer); } void syms_of_casefiddle (void) { DEFSUBR (Fupcase); DEFSUBR (Fdowncase); DEFSUBR (Fcanoncase); DEFSUBR (Fcapitalize); DEFSUBR (Fupcase_initials); DEFSUBR (Fupcase_region); DEFSUBR (Fdowncase_region); DEFSUBR (Fcapitalize_region); DEFSUBR (Fupcase_initials_region); DEFSUBR (Fupcase_word); DEFSUBR (Fdowncase_word); DEFSUBR (Fcapitalize_word); }
