1 ;;; mule-cmds.el --- commands for multilingual environment -*-coding: iso-2022-7bit -*-
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1997-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 ;; Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
5 ;; 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011
6 ;; National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
7 ;; Registration Number H14PRO021
9 ;; National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
10 ;; Registration Number H13PRO009
12 ;; Keywords: mule, i18n
14 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
16 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
17 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
18 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
19 ;; (at your option) any later version.
21 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
22 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
23 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
24 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
26 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
27 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
33 (eval-when-compile (require 'cl
)) ; letf
36 (autoload 'widget-value
"wid-edit")
38 (defvar mac-system-coding-system
)
40 ;;; MULE related key bindings and menus.
43 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
44 (define-key map
"f" 'set-buffer-file-coding-system
)
45 (define-key map
"r" 'revert-buffer-with-coding-system
)
46 (define-key map
"F" 'set-file-name-coding-system
)
47 (define-key map
"t" 'set-terminal-coding-system
)
48 (define-key map
"k" 'set-keyboard-coding-system
)
49 (define-key map
"p" 'set-buffer-process-coding-system
)
50 (define-key map
"x" 'set-selection-coding-system
)
51 (define-key map
"X" 'set-next-selection-coding-system
)
52 (define-key map
"\C-\\" 'set-input-method
)
53 (define-key map
"c" 'universal-coding-system-argument
)
54 (define-key map
"l" 'set-language-environment
)
56 "Keymap for Mule (Multilingual environment) specific commands.")
58 ;; Keep "C-x C-m ..." for mule specific commands.
59 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-m" mule-keymap
)
61 (defvar describe-language-environment-map
62 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Describe Language Environment")))
64 [Default] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Default") describe-specified-language-support))
67 (defvar setup-language-environment-map
68 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Set Language Environment")))
70 [Default] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Default") setup-specified-language-environment
))
73 (defvar set-coding-system-map
74 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Set Coding System")))
75 (define-key-after map
[universal-coding-system-argument
]
76 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For Next Command") universal-coding-system-argument
77 :help
,(purecopy "Coding system to be used by next command")))
78 (define-key-after map
[separator-1
] menu-bar-separator
)
79 (define-key-after map
[set-buffer-file-coding-system
]
80 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For Saving This Buffer") set-buffer-file-coding-system
81 :help
,(purecopy "How to encode this buffer when saved")))
82 (define-key-after map
[revert-buffer-with-coding-system
]
83 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For Reverting This File Now")
84 revert-buffer-with-coding-system
85 :enable buffer-file-name
86 :help
,(purecopy "Revisit this file immediately using specified coding system")))
87 (define-key-after map
[set-file-name-coding-system
]
88 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For File Name") set-file-name-coding-system
89 :help
,(purecopy "How to decode/encode file names")))
90 (define-key-after map
[separator-2
] menu-bar-separator
)
92 (define-key-after map
[set-keyboard-coding-system
]
93 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For Keyboard") set-keyboard-coding-system
94 :help
,(purecopy "How to decode keyboard input")))
95 (define-key-after map
[set-terminal-coding-system
]
96 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For Terminal") set-terminal-coding-system
97 :enable
(null (memq initial-window-system
'(x w32 ns
)))
98 :help
,(purecopy "How to encode terminal output")))
99 (define-key-after map
[separator-3
] menu-bar-separator
)
101 (define-key-after map
[set-selection-coding-system
]
102 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For X Selections/Clipboard") set-selection-coding-system
103 :visible
(display-selections-p)
104 :help
,(purecopy "How to en/decode data to/from selection/clipboard")))
105 (define-key-after map
[set-next-selection-coding-system
]
106 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For Next X Selection") set-next-selection-coding-system
107 :visible
(display-selections-p)
108 :help
,(purecopy "How to en/decode next selection/clipboard operation")))
109 (define-key-after map
[set-buffer-process-coding-system
]
110 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "For I/O with Subprocess") set-buffer-process-coding-system
111 :visible
(fboundp 'start-process
)
112 :enable
(get-buffer-process (current-buffer))
113 :help
,(purecopy "How to en/decode I/O from/to subprocess connected to this buffer")))
116 (defvar mule-menu-keymap
117 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Mule (Multilingual Environment)")))
118 (define-key-after map
[set-language-environment
]
119 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Set Language Environment") ,setup-language-environment-map
))
120 (define-key-after map
[separator-mule
] menu-bar-separator
)
122 (define-key-after map
[toggle-input-method
]
123 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Toggle Input Method") toggle-input-method
))
124 (define-key-after map
[set-input-method
]
125 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Select Input Method...") set-input-method
))
126 (define-key-after map
[describe-input-method
]
127 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Describe Input Method") describe-input-method
))
128 (define-key-after map
[separator-input-method
] menu-bar-separator
)
130 (define-key-after map
[set-various-coding-system
]
131 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Set Coding Systems") ,set-coding-system-map
132 :enable
(default-value 'enable-multibyte-characters
)))
133 (define-key-after map
[view-hello-file
]
134 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Show Multi-lingual Text") view-hello-file
135 :enable
(file-readable-p
136 (expand-file-name "HELLO" data-directory
))
137 :help
,(purecopy "Display file which says HELLO in many languages")))
138 (define-key-after map
[separator-coding-system
] menu-bar-separator
)
140 (define-key-after map
[describe-language-environment
]
141 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Describe Language Environment")
142 ,describe-language-environment-map
143 :help
,(purecopy "Show multilingual settings for a specific language")))
144 (define-key-after map
[describe-input-method
]
145 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Describe Input Method...") describe-input-method
146 :help
,(purecopy "Keyboard layout for a specific input method")))
147 (define-key-after map
[describe-coding-system
]
148 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Describe Coding System...") describe-coding-system
))
149 (define-key-after map
[list-character-sets
]
150 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "List Character Sets") list-character-sets
151 :help
,(purecopy "Show table of available character sets")))
152 (define-key-after map
[mule-diag
]
153 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Show All of Mule Status") mule-diag
154 :help
,(purecopy "Display multilingual environment settings")))
156 "Keymap for Mule (Multilingual environment) menu specific commands.")
158 ;; This should be a single character key binding because users use it
159 ;; very frequently while editing multilingual text. Now we can use
160 ;; only two such keys: "\C-\\" and "\C-^", but the latter is not
161 ;; convenient because it requires shifting on most keyboards. An
162 ;; alternative is "\C-\]" which is now bound to `abort-recursive-edit'
163 ;; but it won't be used that frequently.
164 (define-key global-map
"\C-\\" 'toggle-input-method
)
166 ;; This is no good because people often type Shift-SPC
167 ;; meaning to type SPC. -- rms.
168 ;; ;; Here's an alternative key binding for X users (Shift-SPACE).
169 ;; (define-key global-map [?\S- ] 'toggle-input-method)
171 ;;; Mule related hyperlinks.
172 (defconst help-xref-mule-regexp-template
173 (purecopy (concat "\\(\\<\\("
174 "\\(coding system\\)\\|"
175 "\\(input method\\)\\|"
176 "\\(character set\\)\\|"
179 ;; Note starting with word-syntax character:
180 "`\\(\\sw\\(\\sw\\|\\s_\\)+\\)'")))
182 (defun coding-system-change-eol-conversion (coding-system eol-type
)
183 "Return a coding system which differs from CODING-SYSTEM in EOL conversion.
184 The returned coding system converts end-of-line by EOL-TYPE
185 but text as the same way as CODING-SYSTEM.
186 EOL-TYPE should be `unix', `dos', `mac', or nil.
187 If EOL-TYPE is nil, the returned coding system detects
188 how end-of-line is formatted automatically while decoding.
190 EOL-TYPE can be specified by an integer 0, 1, or 2.
191 They means `unix', `dos', and `mac' respectively."
192 (if (symbolp eol-type
)
193 (setq eol-type
(cond ((eq eol-type
'unix
) 0)
194 ((eq eol-type
'dos
) 1)
195 ((eq eol-type
'mac
) 2)
197 ;; We call `coding-system-base' before `coding-system-eol-type',
198 ;; because the coding-system may not be initialized until then.
199 (let* ((base (coding-system-base coding-system
))
200 (orig-eol-type (coding-system-eol-type coding-system
)))
201 (cond ((vectorp orig-eol-type
)
204 (aref orig-eol-type eol-type
)))
207 ((= eol-type orig-eol-type
)
209 ((progn (setq orig-eol-type
(coding-system-eol-type base
))
210 (vectorp orig-eol-type
))
211 (aref orig-eol-type eol-type
)))))
213 (defun coding-system-change-text-conversion (coding-system coding
)
214 "Return a coding system which differs from CODING-SYSTEM in text conversion.
215 The returned coding system converts text by CODING
216 but end-of-line as the same way as CODING-SYSTEM.
217 If CODING is nil, the returned coding system detects
218 how text is formatted automatically while decoding."
219 (let ((eol-type (coding-system-eol-type coding-system
)))
220 (coding-system-change-eol-conversion
221 (if coding coding
'undecided
)
222 (if (numberp eol-type
) (aref [unix dos mac
] eol-type
)))))
224 ;; Canonicalize the coding system name NAME by removing some prefixes
225 ;; and delimiter characters. Support function of
226 ;; coding-system-from-name.
227 (defun canonicalize-coding-system-name (name)
228 (if (string-match "^\\(ms\\|ibm\\|windows-\\)\\([0-9]+\\)$" name
)
229 ;; "ms950", "ibm950", "windows-950" -> "cp950"
230 (concat "cp" (match-string 2 name
))
231 (if (string-match "^iso[-_ ]?[0-9]" name
)
232 ;; "iso-8859-1" -> "8859-1", "iso-2022-jp" ->"2022-jp"
233 (setq name
(substring name
(1- (match-end 0)))))
234 (let ((idx (string-match "[-_ /]" name
)))
235 ;; Delete "-", "_", " ", "/" but do distinguish "16-be" and "16be".
238 (eq (string-match "16-[lb]e$" name
(- idx
2))
240 (setq idx
(string-match "[-_ /]" name
(match-end 0)))
241 (setq name
(concat (substring name
0 idx
) (substring name
(1+ idx
)))
242 idx
(string-match "[-_ /]" name idx
))))
245 (defun coding-system-from-name (name)
246 "Return a coding system whose name matches with NAME (string or symbol)."
248 (if (stringp name
) (setq sym
(intern name
))
249 (setq sym name name
(symbol-name name
)))
250 (if (coding-system-p sym
)
253 (if (string-match "-\\(unix\\|dos\\|mac\\)$" name
)
254 (prog1 (intern (match-string 1 name
))
255 (setq name
(substring name
0 (match-beginning 0)))))))
256 (setq name
(canonicalize-coding-system-name (downcase name
)))
258 (dolist (elt (coding-system-list))
259 (if (string= (canonicalize-coding-system-name (symbol-name elt
))
261 (throw 'tag
(if eol-type
(coding-system-change-eol-conversion
265 (defun toggle-enable-multibyte-characters (&optional arg
)
266 "Change whether this buffer uses multibyte characters.
267 With ARG, use multibyte characters if the ARG is positive.
269 Note that this command does not convert the byte contents of
270 the buffer; it only changes the way those bytes are interpreted.
271 In general, therefore, this command *changes* the sequence of
272 characters that the current buffer contains.
274 We suggest you avoid using this command unless you know what you are
275 doing. If you use it by mistake, and the buffer is now displayed
276 wrong, use this command again to toggle back to the right mode."
279 (if (null arg
) (null enable-multibyte-characters
)
280 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg
) 0))))
281 (set-buffer-multibyte new-flag
))
282 (force-mode-line-update))
284 (defun view-hello-file ()
285 "Display the HELLO file, which lists many languages and characters."
287 ;; We have to decode the file in any environment.
288 (letf ((coding-system-for-read 'iso-2022-7bit
))
289 (view-file (expand-file-name "HELLO" data-directory
))))
291 (defun universal-coding-system-argument (coding-system)
292 "Execute an I/O command using the specified coding system."
294 (let ((default (and buffer-file-coding-system
295 (not (eq (coding-system-type buffer-file-coding-system
)
297 buffer-file-coding-system
)))
298 (list (read-coding-system
300 (format "Coding system for following command (default %s): " default
)
301 "Coding system for following command: ")
303 (let* ((keyseq (read-key-sequence
304 (format "Command to execute with %s:" coding-system
)))
305 (cmd (key-binding keyseq
))
307 ;; read-key-sequence ignores quit, so make an explicit check.
308 ;; Like many places, this assumes quit == C-g, but it need not be.
309 (if (equal last-input-event ?\C-g
)
311 (when (memq cmd
'(universal-argument digit-argument
))
312 (call-interactively cmd
)
314 ;; Process keys bound in `universal-argument-map'.
316 (setq keyseq
(read-key-sequence nil t
)
317 cmd
(key-binding keyseq t
))
318 (not (eq cmd
'universal-argument-other-key
)))
319 (let ((current-prefix-arg prefix-arg
)
320 ;; Have to bind `last-command-event' here so that
321 ;; `digit-argument', for instance, can compute the
323 (last-command-event (aref keyseq
0)))
324 (call-interactively cmd
)))
326 ;; This is the final call to `universal-argument-other-key', which
327 ;; set's the final `prefix-arg.
328 (let ((current-prefix-arg prefix-arg
))
329 (call-interactively cmd
))
331 ;; Read the command to execute with the given prefix arg.
332 (setq prefix prefix-arg
333 keyseq
(read-key-sequence nil t
)
334 cmd
(key-binding keyseq
)))
336 (let ((coding-system-for-read coding-system
)
337 (coding-system-for-write coding-system
)
338 (coding-system-require-warning t
)
339 (current-prefix-arg prefix
))
341 (call-interactively cmd
))))
343 (defun set-default-coding-systems (coding-system)
344 "Set default value of various coding systems to CODING-SYSTEM.
345 This sets the following coding systems:
346 o coding system of a newly created buffer
347 o default coding system for subprocess I/O
348 This also sets the following values:
349 o default value used as `file-name-coding-system' for converting file names
350 if CODING-SYSTEM is ASCII-compatible
351 o default value for the command `set-terminal-coding-system'
352 o default value for the command `set-keyboard-coding-system'
353 if CODING-SYSTEM is ASCII-compatible"
354 (check-coding-system coding-system
)
355 (setq-default buffer-file-coding-system coding-system
)
356 (if (fboundp 'ucs-set-table-for-input
)
357 (dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
358 (or (local-variable-p 'buffer-file-coding-system buffer
)
359 (ucs-set-table-for-input buffer
))))
361 (if (eq system-type
'darwin
)
362 ;; The file-name coding system on Darwin systems is always utf-8.
363 (setq default-file-name-coding-system
'utf-8
)
364 (if (and (default-value 'enable-multibyte-characters
)
365 (or (not coding-system
)
366 (coding-system-get coding-system
'ascii-compatible-p
)))
367 (setq default-file-name-coding-system coding-system
)))
368 (setq default-terminal-coding-system coding-system
)
369 ;; Prevent default-terminal-coding-system from converting ^M to ^J.
370 (setq default-keyboard-coding-system
371 (coding-system-change-eol-conversion coding-system
'unix
))
372 ;; Preserve eol-type from existing default-process-coding-systems.
373 ;; On non-unix-like systems in particular, these may have been set
374 ;; carefully by the user, or by the startup code, to deal with the
375 ;; users shell appropriately, so should not be altered by changing
376 ;; language environment.
378 (coding-system-change-text-conversion
379 (car default-process-coding-system
) coding-system
))
381 (coding-system-change-text-conversion
382 (cdr default-process-coding-system
) coding-system
)))
383 (setq default-process-coding-system
384 (cons output-coding input-coding
))))
386 (defun prefer-coding-system (coding-system)
387 "Add CODING-SYSTEM at the front of the priority list for automatic detection.
388 This also sets the following coding systems:
389 o coding system of a newly created buffer
390 o default coding system for subprocess I/O
391 This also sets the following values:
392 o default value used as `file-name-coding-system' for converting file names
393 o default value for the command `set-terminal-coding-system'
394 o default value for the command `set-keyboard-coding-system'
396 If CODING-SYSTEM specifies a certain type of EOL conversion, the coding
397 systems set by this function will use that type of EOL conversion.
399 A coding system that requires automatic detection of text+encoding
400 \(e.g. undecided, unix) can't be preferred.
402 To prefer, for instance, utf-8, say the following:
404 \(prefer-coding-system 'utf-8)"
405 (interactive "zPrefer coding system: ")
406 (if (not (and coding-system
(coding-system-p coding-system
)))
407 (error "Invalid coding system `%s'" coding-system
))
408 (if (memq (coding-system-type coding-system
) '(raw-text undecided
))
409 (error "Can't prefer the coding system `%s'" coding-system
))
410 (let ((base (coding-system-base coding-system
))
411 (eol-type (coding-system-eol-type coding-system
)))
412 (set-coding-system-priority base
)
413 (and (called-interactively-p 'interactive
)
414 (or (eq base coding-system
)
415 (message "Highest priority is set to %s (base of %s)"
416 base coding-system
)))
417 ;; If they asked for specific EOL conversion, honor that.
418 (if (memq eol-type
'(0 1 2))
420 (coding-system-change-eol-conversion base eol-type
)))
421 (set-default-coding-systems base
)))
423 (defvar sort-coding-systems-predicate nil
424 "If non-nil, a predicate function to sort coding systems.
426 It is called with two coding systems, and should return t if the first
427 one is \"less\" than the second.
429 The function `sort-coding-systems' use it.")
431 (defun sort-coding-systems (codings)
432 "Sort coding system list CODINGS by a priority of each coding system.
433 Return the sorted list. CODINGS is modified by side effects.
435 If a coding system is most preferred, it has the highest priority.
436 Otherwise, coding systems that correspond to MIME charsets have
437 higher priorities. Among them, a coding system included in the
438 `coding-system' key of the current language environment has higher
439 priority. See also the documentation of `language-info-alist'.
441 If the variable `sort-coding-systems-predicate' (which see) is
442 non-nil, it is used to sort CODINGS instead."
443 (if sort-coding-systems-predicate
444 (sort codings sort-coding-systems-predicate
)
445 (let* ((from-priority (coding-system-priority-list))
446 (most-preferred (car from-priority
))
447 (lang-preferred (get-language-info current-language-environment
451 (let ((base (coding-system-base x
)))
452 ;; We calculate the priority number 0..255 by
453 ;; using the 8 bits PMMLCEII as this:
454 ;; P: 1 if most preferred.
455 ;; MM: greater than 0 if mime-charset.
456 ;; L: 1 if one of the current lang. env.'s codings.
457 ;; C: 1 if one of codings listed in the category list.
458 ;; E: 1 if not XXX-with-esc
459 ;; II: if iso-2022 based, 0..3, else 1.
461 (lsh (if (eq base most-preferred
) 1 0) 7)
463 (let ((mime (coding-system-get base
:mime-charset
)))
464 ;; Prefer coding systems corresponding to a
467 ;; Lower utf-16 priority so that we
468 ;; normally prefer utf-8 to it, and put
469 ;; x-ctext below that.
470 (cond ((string-match-p "utf-16"
473 ((string-match-p "^x-" (symbol-name mime
))
478 (lsh (if (memq base lang-preferred
) 1 0) 4)
479 (lsh (if (memq base from-priority
) 1 0) 3)
480 (lsh (if (string-match-p "-with-esc\\'"
483 (if (eq (coding-system-type base
) 'iso-2022
)
484 (let ((category (coding-system-category base
)))
485 ;; For ISO based coding systems, prefer
486 ;; one that doesn't use designation nor
487 ;; locking/single shifting.
489 ((or (eq category
'coding-category-iso-8-1
)
490 (eq category
'coding-category-iso-8-2
))
492 ((or (eq category
'coding-category-iso-7-tight
)
493 (eq category
'coding-category-iso-7
))
499 (sort codings
(function (lambda (x y
)
500 (> (funcall func x
) (funcall func y
))))))))
502 (defun find-coding-systems-region (from to
)
503 "Return a list of proper coding systems to encode a text between FROM and TO.
505 If FROM is a string, find coding systems in that instead of the buffer.
506 All coding systems in the list can safely encode any multibyte characters
509 If the text contains no multibyte characters, return a list of a single
510 element `undecided'."
511 (let ((codings (find-coding-systems-region-internal from to
)))
513 ;; The text contains only ASCII characters. Any coding
516 ;; We need copy-sequence because sorting will alter the argument.
517 (sort-coding-systems (copy-sequence codings
)))))
519 (defun find-coding-systems-string (string)
520 "Return a list of proper coding systems to encode STRING.
521 All coding systems in the list can safely encode any multibyte characters
524 If STRING contains no multibyte characters, return a list of a single
525 element `undecided'."
526 (find-coding-systems-region string nil
))
528 (defun find-coding-systems-for-charsets (charsets)
529 "Return a list of proper coding systems to encode characters of CHARSETS.
530 CHARSETS is a list of character sets.
532 This only finds coding systems of type `charset', whose
533 `:charset-list' property includes all of CHARSETS (plus `ascii' for
534 ASCII-compatible coding systems). It was used in older versions of
535 Emacs, but is unlikely to be what you really want now."
536 ;; Deal with aliases.
537 (setq charsets
(mapcar (lambda (c)
538 (get-charset-property c
:name
))
540 (cond ((or (null charsets
)
541 (and (= (length charsets
) 1)
542 (eq 'ascii
(car charsets
))))
544 ((or (memq 'eight-bit-control charsets
)
545 (memq 'eight-bit-graphic charsets
))
546 '(raw-text utf-8-emacs
))
549 (dolist (cs (coding-system-list t
))
550 (let ((cs-charsets (and (eq (coding-system-type cs
) 'charset
)
551 (coding-system-charset-list cs
)))
553 (if (coding-system-get cs
:ascii-compatible-p
)
554 (add-to-list 'cs-charsets
'ascii
))
558 (unless (memq (pop charsets
) cs-charsets
)
562 (nreverse codings
)))))
564 (defun find-multibyte-characters (from to
&optional maxcount excludes
)
565 "Find multibyte characters in the region specified by FROM and TO.
566 If FROM is a string, find multibyte characters in the string.
567 The return value is an alist of the following format:
568 ((CHARSET COUNT CHAR ...) ...)
570 CHARSET is a character set,
571 COUNT is a number of characters,
572 CHARs are the characters found from the character set.
573 Optional 3rd arg MAXCOUNT limits how many CHARs are put in the above list.
574 Optional 4th arg EXCLUDES is a list of character sets to be ignored."
578 (if (multibyte-string-p from
)
580 (while (setq idx
(string-match-p "[^\000-\177]" from idx
))
581 (setq char
(aref from idx
)
582 charset
(char-charset char
))
583 (unless (memq charset excludes
)
584 (let ((slot (assq charset chars
)))
586 (if (not (memq char
(nthcdr 2 slot
)))
587 (let ((count (nth 1 slot
)))
588 (setcar (cdr slot
) (1+ count
))
589 (if (or (not maxcount
) (< count maxcount
))
590 (nconc slot
(list char
)))))
591 (setq chars
(cons (list charset
1 char
) chars
)))))
592 (setq idx
(1+ idx
)))))
593 (if enable-multibyte-characters
596 (while (re-search-forward "[^\000-\177]" to t
)
597 (setq char
(preceding-char)
598 charset
(char-charset char
))
599 (unless (memq charset excludes
)
600 (let ((slot (assq charset chars
)))
602 (if (not (member char
(nthcdr 2 slot
)))
603 (let ((count (nth 1 slot
)))
604 (setcar (cdr slot
) (1+ count
))
605 (if (or (not maxcount
) (< count maxcount
))
606 (nconc slot
(list char
)))))
607 (setq chars
(cons (list charset
1 char
) chars
)))))))))
610 (defun search-unencodable-char (coding-system)
611 "Search forward from point for a character that is not encodable.
612 It asks which coding system to check.
613 If such a character is found, set point after that character.
614 Otherwise, don't move point.
616 When called from a program, the value is the position of the unencodable
617 character found, or nil if all characters are encodable."
619 (list (let ((default (or buffer-file-coding-system
'us-ascii
)))
621 (format "Coding-system (default %s): " default
)
623 (let ((pos (unencodable-char-position (point) (point-max) coding-system
)))
626 (message "All following characters are encodable by %s" coding-system
))
629 (defvar last-coding-system-specified nil
630 "Most recent coding system explicitly specified by the user when asked.
631 This variable is set whenever Emacs asks the user which coding system
632 to use in order to write a file. If you set it to nil explicitly,
633 then call `write-region', then afterward this variable will be non-nil
634 only if the user was explicitly asked and specified a coding system.")
636 (defvar select-safe-coding-system-accept-default-p nil
637 "If non-nil, a function to control the behavior of coding system selection.
638 The meaning is the same as the argument ACCEPT-DEFAULT-P of the
639 function `select-safe-coding-system' (which see). This variable
640 overrides that argument.")
642 (defun select-safe-coding-system-interactively (from to codings unsafe
643 &optional rejected default
)
644 "Select interactively a coding system for the region FROM ... TO.
645 FROM can be a string, as in `write-region'.
646 CODINGS is the list of base coding systems known to be safe for this region,
647 typically obtained with `find-coding-systems-region'.
648 UNSAFE is a list of coding systems known to be unsafe for this region.
649 REJECTED is a list of coding systems which were safe but for some reason
650 were not recommended in the particular context.
651 DEFAULT is the coding system to use by default in the query."
652 ;; At first, if some defaults are unsafe, record at most 11
653 ;; problematic characters and their positions for them by turning
656 ;; ((CODING (POS . CHAR) (POS . CHAR) ...) ...)
659 (mapcar #'(lambda (coding)
662 (mapcar #'(lambda (pos)
663 (cons pos
(aref from pos
)))
664 (unencodable-char-position
665 0 (length from
) coding
667 (mapcar #'(lambda (pos)
668 (cons pos
(char-after pos
)))
669 (unencodable-char-position
670 from to coding
11)))))
673 ;; Change each safe coding system to the corresponding
674 ;; mime-charset name if it is also a coding system. Such a name
675 ;; is more friendly to users.
679 (setq mime-charset
(coding-system-get (car l
) :mime-charset
))
680 (if (and mime-charset
(coding-system-p mime-charset
)
681 (coding-system-equal (car l
) mime-charset
))
682 (setcar l mime-charset
))
685 ;; Don't offer variations with locking shift, which you
686 ;; basically never want.
688 (dolist (elt codings
(setq codings
(nreverse l
)))
689 (unless (or (eq 'coding-category-iso-7-else
690 (coding-system-category elt
))
691 (eq 'coding-category-iso-8-else
692 (coding-system-category elt
)))
695 ;; Remove raw-text, emacs-mule and no-conversion unless nothing
696 ;; else is available.
700 (delq 'no-conversion codings
)))
701 '(raw-text emacs-mule no-conversion
)))
703 (let ((window-configuration (current-window-configuration))
704 (bufname (buffer-name))
707 ;; If some defaults are unsafe, make sure the offending
708 ;; buffer is displayed.
709 (when (and unsafe
(not (stringp from
)))
710 (pop-to-buffer bufname
)
711 (goto-char (apply 'min
(mapcar #'(lambda (x) (car (cadr x
)))
713 ;; Then ask users to select one from CODINGS while showing
714 ;; the reason why none of the defaults are not used.
715 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Warning*"
716 (with-current-buffer standard-output
717 (if (and (null rejected
) (null unsafe
))
718 (insert "No default coding systems to try for "
720 (format "string \"%s\"." from
)
721 (format "buffer `%s'." bufname
)))
723 "These default coding systems were tried to encode"
725 (concat " \"" (if (> (length from
) 10)
726 (concat (substring from
0 10) "...\"")
728 (format " text\nin the buffer `%s'" bufname
))
732 (dolist (x (append rejected unsafe
))
733 (princ " ") (princ x
))
735 (fill-region-as-paragraph pos
(point)))
737 (insert "These safely encode the text in the buffer,
738 but are not recommended for encoding text in this context,
739 e.g., for sending an email message.\n ")
741 (princ " ") (princ x
))
744 (insert (if rejected
"The other coding systems"
745 "However, each of them")
746 " encountered characters it couldn't encode:\n")
747 (dolist (coding unsafe
)
748 (insert (format " %s cannot encode these:" (car coding
)))
751 #'(lambda (bufname pos
)
752 (when (buffer-live-p (get-buffer bufname
))
753 (pop-to-buffer bufname
)
756 #'(lambda (bufname pos coding
)
757 (when (buffer-live-p (get-buffer bufname
))
758 (pop-to-buffer bufname
)
762 (search-unencodable-char coding
)
763 (forward-char -
1))))))
764 (dolist (elt (cdr coding
))
767 (insert (if (< i
10) (cdr elt
) "..."))
774 "mouse-2, RET: jump to this character"
776 'help-args
(list bufname
(car elt
)))
782 "mouse-2, RET: next unencodable character"
784 'help-args
(list bufname
(car elt
)
788 (insert (substitute-command-keys "\
790 Click on a character (or switch to this window by `\\[other-window]'\n\
791 and select the characters by RET) to jump to the place it appears,\n\
792 where `\\[universal-argument] \\[what-cursor-position]' will give information about it.\n"))))
793 (insert (substitute-command-keys "\nSelect \
794 one of the safe coding systems listed below,\n\
795 or cancel the writing with \\[keyboard-quit] and edit the buffer\n\
796 to remove or modify the problematic characters,\n\
797 or specify any other coding system (and risk losing\n\
798 the problematic characters).\n\n"))
802 (princ " ") (princ x
))
804 (fill-region-as-paragraph pos
(point)))))
806 ;; Read a coding system.
809 (format "Select coding system (default %s): " default
)
811 (setq last-coding-system-specified coding-system
))
813 (kill-buffer "*Warning*")
814 (set-window-configuration window-configuration
)
817 (defun select-safe-coding-system (from to
&optional default-coding-system
818 accept-default-p file
)
819 "Ask a user to select a safe coding system from candidates.
820 The candidates of coding systems which can safely encode a text
821 between FROM and TO are shown in a popup window. Among them, the most
822 proper one is suggested as the default.
824 The list of `buffer-file-coding-system' of the current buffer, the
825 default `buffer-file-coding-system', and the most preferred coding
826 system (if it corresponds to a MIME charset) is treated as the
827 default coding system list. Among them, the first one that safely
828 encodes the text is normally selected silently and returned without
829 any user interaction. See also the command `prefer-coding-system'.
831 However, the user is queried if the chosen coding system is
832 inconsistent with what would be selected by `find-auto-coding' from
833 coding cookies &c. if the contents of the region were read from a
834 file. (That could lead to data corruption in a file subsequently
835 re-visited and edited.)
837 Optional 3rd arg DEFAULT-CODING-SYSTEM specifies a coding system or a
838 list of coding systems to be prepended to the default coding system
839 list. However, if DEFAULT-CODING-SYSTEM is a list and the first
840 element is t, the cdr part is used as the default coding system list,
841 i.e. current `buffer-file-coding-system', default `buffer-file-coding-system',
842 and the most preferred coding system are not used.
844 Optional 4th arg ACCEPT-DEFAULT-P, if non-nil, is a function to
845 determine the acceptability of the silently selected coding system.
846 It is called with that coding system, and should return nil if it
847 should not be silently selected and thus user interaction is required.
849 Optional 5th arg FILE is the file name to use for this purpose.
850 That is different from `buffer-file-name' when handling `write-region'
853 The variable `select-safe-coding-system-accept-default-p', if non-nil,
854 overrides ACCEPT-DEFAULT-P.
856 Kludgy feature: if FROM is a string, the string is the target text,
858 (if (not (listp default-coding-system
))
859 (setq default-coding-system
(list default-coding-system
)))
861 (let ((no-other-defaults nil
)
863 (unless (or (stringp from
) find-file-literally
)
864 ;; Find an auto-coding that is specified for the current
865 ;; buffer and file from the region FROM and TO.
870 (setq auto-cs
(find-auto-coding (or file buffer-file-name
"")
873 (if (coding-system-p (car auto-cs
))
874 (setq auto-cs
(car auto-cs
))
878 Invalid coding system `%s' is specified
879 for the current buffer/file by the %s.
880 It is highly recommended to fix it before writing to a file."
882 (if (eq (cdr auto-cs
) :coding
) ":coding tag"
883 (format "variable `%s'" (cdr auto-cs
))))
885 (or (yes-or-no-p "Really proceed with writing? ")
886 (error "Save aborted"))
887 (setq auto-cs nil
))))))
889 (if (eq (car default-coding-system
) t
)
890 (setq no-other-defaults t
891 default-coding-system
(cdr default-coding-system
)))
893 ;; Change elements of the list to (coding . base-coding).
894 (setq default-coding-system
895 (mapcar (function (lambda (x) (cons x
(coding-system-base x
))))
896 default-coding-system
))
898 (if (and auto-cs
(not no-other-defaults
))
899 ;; If the file has a coding cookie, use it regardless of any
901 (let ((base (coding-system-base auto-cs
)))
902 (unless (memq base
'(nil undecided
))
903 (setq default-coding-system
(list (cons auto-cs base
)))
904 (setq no-other-defaults t
))))
906 (unless no-other-defaults
907 ;; If buffer-file-coding-system is not nil nor undecided, append it
909 (if buffer-file-coding-system
910 (let ((base (coding-system-base buffer-file-coding-system
)))
911 (or (eq base
'undecided
)
912 (rassq base default-coding-system
)
913 (setq default-coding-system
914 (append default-coding-system
915 (list (cons buffer-file-coding-system base
)))))))
917 (unless (and buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
918 (cdr buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
))
919 ;; If default buffer-file-coding-system is not nil nor undecided,
920 ;; append it to the defaults.
921 (when (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system
)
922 (let ((base (coding-system-base
923 (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system
))))
924 (or (eq base
'undecided
)
925 (rassq base default-coding-system
)
926 (setq default-coding-system
927 (append default-coding-system
928 (list (cons (default-value
929 'buffer-file-coding-system
)
932 ;; If the most preferred coding system has the property mime-charset,
933 ;; append it to the defaults.
934 (let ((preferred (coding-system-priority-list t
))
936 (and (coding-system-p preferred
)
937 (setq base
(coding-system-base preferred
))
938 (coding-system-get preferred
:mime-charset
)
939 (not (rassq base default-coding-system
))
940 (setq default-coding-system
941 (append default-coding-system
942 (list (cons preferred base
))))))))
944 (if select-safe-coding-system-accept-default-p
945 (setq accept-default-p select-safe-coding-system-accept-default-p
))
947 ;; Decide the eol-type from the top of the default codings,
948 ;; current buffer-file-coding-system, or default buffer-file-coding-system.
949 (if default-coding-system
950 (let ((default-eol-type (coding-system-eol-type
951 (caar default-coding-system
))))
952 (if (and (vectorp default-eol-type
) buffer-file-coding-system
)
953 (setq default-eol-type
(coding-system-eol-type
954 buffer-file-coding-system
)))
955 (if (and (vectorp default-eol-type
)
956 (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system
))
957 (setq default-eol-type
958 (coding-system-eol-type
959 (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system
))))
960 (if (and default-eol-type
(not (vectorp default-eol-type
)))
961 (dolist (elt default-coding-system
)
962 (setcar elt
(coding-system-change-eol-conversion
963 (car elt
) default-eol-type
))))))
965 (let ((codings (find-coding-systems-region from to
))
967 (tick (if (not (stringp from
)) (buffer-chars-modified-tick)))
968 safe rejected unsafe
)
969 (if (eq (car codings
) 'undecided
)
970 ;; Any coding system is ok.
971 (setq coding-system
(caar default-coding-system
))
972 ;; Reverse the list so that elements are accumulated in safe,
973 ;; rejected, and unsafe in the correct order.
974 (setq default-coding-system
(nreverse default-coding-system
))
976 ;; Classify the defaults into safe, rejected, and unsafe.
977 (dolist (elt default-coding-system
)
978 (if (or (eq (car codings
) 'undecided
)
979 (memq (cdr elt
) codings
))
980 (if (and (functionp accept-default-p
)
981 (not (funcall accept-default-p
(cdr elt
))))
982 (push (car elt
) rejected
)
983 (push (car elt
) safe
))
984 (push (car elt
) unsafe
)))
986 (setq coding-system
(car safe
))))
988 ;; If all the defaults failed, ask a user.
989 (when (not coding-system
)
990 (setq coding-system
(select-safe-coding-system-interactively
991 from to codings unsafe rejected
(car codings
))))
993 ;; Check we're not inconsistent with what `coding:' spec &c would
994 ;; give when file is re-read.
995 ;; But don't do this if we explicitly ignored the cookie
996 ;; by using `find-file-literally'.
1000 (memq (coding-system-type coding-system
) '(0 5)))))
1001 ;; Merge coding-system and auto-cs as far as possible.
1002 (if (not coding-system
)
1003 (setq coding-system auto-cs
)
1005 (setq auto-cs coding-system
)
1006 (let ((eol-type-1 (coding-system-eol-type coding-system
))
1007 (eol-type-2 (coding-system-eol-type auto-cs
)))
1008 (if (eq (coding-system-base coding-system
) 'undecided
)
1009 (setq coding-system
(coding-system-change-text-conversion
1010 coding-system auto-cs
))
1011 (if (eq (coding-system-base auto-cs
) 'undecided
)
1012 (setq auto-cs
(coding-system-change-text-conversion
1013 auto-cs coding-system
))))
1014 (if (vectorp eol-type-1
)
1015 (or (vectorp eol-type-2
)
1016 (setq coding-system
(coding-system-change-eol-conversion
1017 coding-system eol-type-2
)))
1018 (if (vectorp eol-type-2
)
1019 (setq auto-cs
(coding-system-change-eol-conversion
1020 auto-cs eol-type-1
)))))))
1023 ;; Don't barf if writing a compressed file, say.
1024 ;; This check perhaps isn't ideal, but is probably
1025 ;; the best thing to do.
1026 (not (auto-coding-alist-lookup (or file buffer-file-name
"")))
1027 (not (coding-system-equal coding-system auto-cs
)))
1028 (unless (yes-or-no-p
1029 (format "Selected encoding %s disagrees with \
1030 %s specified by file contents. Really save (else edit coding cookies \
1031 and try again)? " coding-system auto-cs
))
1032 (error "Save aborted"))))
1033 (when (and tick
(/= tick
(buffer-chars-modified-tick)))
1034 (error "Cancelled because the buffer was modified"))
1037 (setq select-safe-coding-system-function
'select-safe-coding-system
)
1039 (defun select-message-coding-system ()
1040 "Return a coding system to encode the outgoing message of the current buffer.
1041 It at first tries the first coding system found in these variables
1043 (1) local value of `buffer-file-coding-system'
1044 (2) value of `sendmail-coding-system'
1045 (3) value of `default-sendmail-coding-system'
1046 (4) default value of `buffer-file-coding-system'
1047 If the found coding system can't encode the current buffer,
1048 or none of them are bound to a coding system,
1049 it asks the user to select a proper coding system."
1050 (let ((coding (or (and (local-variable-p 'buffer-file-coding-system
)
1051 buffer-file-coding-system
)
1052 sendmail-coding-system
1053 default-sendmail-coding-system
1054 (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system
))))
1055 (if (eq coding
'no-conversion
)
1056 ;; We should never use no-conversion for outgoing mail.
1058 (if (fboundp select-safe-coding-system-function
)
1059 (funcall select-safe-coding-system-function
1060 (point-min) (point-max) coding
1061 (function (lambda (x) (coding-system-get x
:mime-charset
))))
1064 ;;; Language support stuff.
1066 (defvar language-info-alist nil
1067 "Alist of language environment definitions.
1068 Each element looks like:
1069 (LANGUAGE-NAME . ((KEY . INFO) ...))
1070 where LANGUAGE-NAME is a string, the name of the language environment,
1071 KEY is a symbol denoting the kind of information, and
1072 INFO is the data associated with KEY.
1073 Meaningful values for KEY include
1075 documentation value is documentation of what this language environment
1076 is meant for, and how to use it.
1077 charset value is a list of the character sets mainly used
1078 by this language environment.
1079 sample-text value is an expression which is evalled to generate
1080 a line of text written using characters appropriate
1081 for this language environment.
1082 setup-function value is a function to call to switch to this
1083 language environment.
1084 exit-function value is a function to call to leave this
1085 language environment.
1086 coding-system value is a list of coding systems that are good for
1087 saving text written in this language environment.
1088 This list serves as suggestions to the user;
1089 in effect, as a kind of documentation.
1090 coding-priority value is a list of coding systems for this language
1091 environment, in order of decreasing priority.
1092 This is used to set up the coding system priority
1093 list when you switch to this language environment.
1094 nonascii-translation
1095 value is a charset of dimension one to use for
1096 converting a unibyte character to multibyte
1098 input-method value is a default input method for this language
1100 features value is a list of features requested in this
1101 language environment.
1102 ctext-non-standard-encodings
1103 value is a list of non-standard encoding names used
1104 in extended segments of CTEXT. See the variable
1105 `ctext-non-standard-encodings' for more detail.
1107 The following key takes effect only when multibyte characters are
1108 globally disabled, i.e. the default value of `enable-multibyte-characters'
1109 is nil (which is an obsolete and deprecated use):
1111 unibyte-display value is a coding system to encode characters for
1112 the terminal. Characters in the range of 160 to
1113 255 display not as octal escapes, but as non-ASCII
1114 characters in this language environment.")
1116 (defun get-language-info (lang-env key
)
1117 "Return information listed under KEY for language environment LANG-ENV.
1118 KEY is a symbol denoting the kind of information.
1119 For a list of useful values for KEY and their meanings,
1120 see `language-info-alist'."
1121 (if (symbolp lang-env
)
1122 (setq lang-env
(symbol-name lang-env
)))
1123 (let ((lang-slot (assoc-string lang-env language-info-alist t
)))
1125 (cdr (assq key
(cdr lang-slot
))))))
1127 (defun set-language-info (lang-env key info
)
1128 "Modify part of the definition of language environment LANG-ENV.
1129 Specifically, this stores the information INFO under KEY
1130 in the definition of this language environment.
1131 KEY is a symbol denoting the kind of information.
1132 INFO is the value for that information.
1134 For a list of useful values for KEY and their meanings,
1135 see `language-info-alist'."
1136 (if (symbolp lang-env
)
1137 (setq lang-env
(symbol-name lang-env
)))
1138 (set-language-info-internal lang-env key info
)
1139 (if (equal lang-env current-language-environment
)
1140 (cond ((eq key
'coding-priority
)
1141 (set-language-environment-coding-systems lang-env
)
1142 (set-language-environment-charset lang-env
))
1143 ((eq key
'input-method
)
1144 (set-language-environment-input-method lang-env
))
1145 ((eq key
'nonascii-translation
)
1146 (set-language-environment-nonascii-translation lang-env
))
1148 (set-language-environment-charset lang-env
))
1149 ((and (not (default-value 'enable-multibyte-characters
))
1150 (or (eq key
'unibyte-syntax
) (eq key
'unibyte-display
)))
1151 (set-language-environment-unibyte lang-env
)))))
1153 (defun set-language-info-internal (lang-env key info
)
1155 Arguments are the same as `set-language-info'."
1156 (let (lang-slot key-slot
)
1157 (setq lang-slot
(assoc lang-env language-info-alist
))
1158 (if (null lang-slot
) ; If no slot for the language, add it.
1159 (setq lang-slot
(list lang-env
)
1160 language-info-alist
(cons lang-slot language-info-alist
)))
1161 (setq key-slot
(assq key lang-slot
))
1162 (if (null key-slot
) ; If no slot for the key, add it.
1164 (setq key-slot
(list key
))
1165 (setcdr lang-slot
(cons key-slot
(cdr lang-slot
)))))
1166 (setcdr key-slot
(purecopy info
))
1167 ;; Update the custom-type of `current-language-environment'.
1168 (put 'current-language-environment
'custom-type
1169 (cons 'choice
(mapcar
1172 (sort (mapcar 'car language-info-alist
) 'string
<))))))
1174 (defun set-language-info-alist (lang-env alist
&optional parents
)
1175 "Store ALIST as the definition of language environment LANG-ENV.
1176 ALIST is an alist of KEY and INFO values. See the documentation of
1177 `language-info-alist' for the meanings of KEY and INFO.
1179 Optional arg PARENTS is a list of parent menu names; it specifies
1180 where to put this language environment in the
1181 Describe Language Environment and Set Language Environment menus.
1182 For example, (\"European\") means to put this language environment
1183 in the European submenu in each of those two menus."
1184 (cond ((symbolp lang-env
)
1185 (setq lang-env
(symbol-name lang-env
)))
1187 (setq lang-env
(purecopy lang-env
))))
1188 (let ((describe-map describe-language-environment-map
)
1189 (setup-map setup-language-environment-map
))
1192 map parent-symbol parent prompt
)
1194 (if (symbolp (setq parent-symbol
(car l
)))
1195 (setq parent
(symbol-name parent
))
1196 (setq parent parent-symbol parent-symbol
(intern parent
)))
1197 (setq map
(lookup-key describe-map
(vector parent-symbol
)))
1198 ;; This prompt string is for define-prefix-command, so
1199 ;; that the map it creates will be suitable for a menu.
1200 (or map
(setq prompt
(format "%s Environment" parent
)))
1203 (setq map
(intern (format "describe-%s-environment-map"
1204 (downcase parent
))))
1205 (define-prefix-command map nil prompt
)
1206 (define-key-after describe-map
(vector parent-symbol
)
1207 (cons parent map
))))
1208 (setq describe-map
(symbol-value map
))
1209 (setq map
(lookup-key setup-map
(vector parent-symbol
)))
1212 (setq map
(intern (format "setup-%s-environment-map"
1213 (downcase parent
))))
1214 (define-prefix-command map nil prompt
)
1215 (define-key-after setup-map
(vector parent-symbol
)
1216 (cons parent map
))))
1217 (setq setup-map
(symbol-value map
))
1220 ;; Set up menu items for this language env.
1221 (let ((doc (assq 'documentation alist
)))
1223 (define-key-after describe-map
(vector (intern lang-env
))
1224 (cons lang-env
'describe-specified-language-support
))))
1225 (define-key-after setup-map
(vector (intern lang-env
))
1226 (cons lang-env
'setup-specified-language-environment
))
1229 (set-language-info-internal lang-env
(car elt
) (cdr elt
)))
1231 (if (equal lang-env current-language-environment
)
1232 (set-language-environment lang-env
))))
1234 (defun read-language-name (key prompt
&optional default
)
1235 "Read a language environment name which has information for KEY.
1236 If KEY is nil, read any language environment.
1237 Prompt with PROMPT. DEFAULT is the default choice of language environment.
1238 This returns a language environment name as a string."
1239 (let* ((completion-ignore-case t
)
1240 (name (completing-read prompt
1243 (function (lambda (elm) (and (listp elm
) (assq key elm
)))))
1244 t nil nil default
)))
1245 (if (and (> (length name
) 0)
1247 (get-language-info name key
)))
1250 ;;; Multilingual input methods.
1252 "LEIM: Libraries of Emacs Input Methods."
1255 (defconst leim-list-file-name
"leim-list.el"
1256 "Name of LEIM list file.
1257 This file contains a list of libraries of Emacs input methods (LEIM)
1258 in the format of Lisp expression for registering each input method.
1259 Emacs loads this file at startup time.")
1261 (defconst leim-list-header
(format
1262 ";;; %s -- list of LEIM (Library of Emacs Input Method) -*-coding: utf-8;-*-
1264 ;; This file is automatically generated.
1266 ;; This file contains a list of LEIM (Library of Emacs Input Method)
1267 ;; methods in the same directory as this file. Loading this file
1268 ;; registers all the input methods in Emacs.
1270 ;; Each entry has the form:
1271 ;; (register-input-method
1272 ;; INPUT-METHOD LANGUAGE-NAME ACTIVATE-FUNC
1273 ;; TITLE DESCRIPTION
1275 ;; See the function `register-input-method' for the meanings of the arguments.
1277 ;; If this directory is included in `load-path', Emacs automatically
1278 ;; loads this file at startup time.
1281 leim-list-file-name
)
1282 "Header to be inserted in LEIM list file.")
1284 (defconst leim-list-entry-regexp
"^(register-input-method"
1285 "Regexp matching head of each entry in LEIM list file.
1286 See also the variable `leim-list-header'.")
1288 (defvar update-leim-list-functions
1289 '(quail-update-leim-list-file)
1290 "List of functions to call to update LEIM list file.
1291 Each function is called with one arg, LEIM directory name.")
1293 (defun update-leim-list-file (&rest dirs
)
1294 "Update LEIM list file in directories DIRS."
1295 (dolist (function update-leim-list-functions
)
1296 (apply function dirs
)))
1298 (defvar current-input-method nil
1299 "The current input method for multilingual text.
1300 If nil, that means no input method is activated now.")
1301 (make-variable-buffer-local 'current-input-method
)
1302 (put 'current-input-method
'permanent-local t
)
1304 (defvar current-input-method-title nil
1305 "Title string of the current input method shown in mode line.")
1306 (make-variable-buffer-local 'current-input-method-title
)
1307 (put 'current-input-method-title
'permanent-local t
)
1309 (defcustom default-input-method nil
1310 "Default input method for multilingual text (a string).
1311 This is the input method activated automatically by the command
1312 `toggle-input-method' (\\[toggle-input-method])."
1313 :link
'(custom-manual "(emacs)Input Methods")
1315 :type
'(choice (const nil
)
1317 :completions
(apply-partially
1318 #'completion-table-case-fold input-method-alist
)
1319 :prompt-history input-method-history
))
1320 :set-after
'(current-language-environment))
1322 (put 'input-method-function
'permanent-local t
)
1324 (defvar input-method-history nil
1325 "History list of input methods read from the minibuffer.
1327 Maximum length of the history list is determined by the value
1328 of `history-length', which see.")
1329 (make-variable-buffer-local 'input-method-history
)
1330 (put 'input-method-history
'permanent-local t
)
1332 (defvar inactivate-current-input-method-function nil
1333 "Function to call for inactivating the current input method.
1334 Every input method should set this to an appropriate value when activated.
1335 This function is called with no argument.
1337 This function should never change the value of `current-input-method'.
1338 It is set to nil by the function `inactivate-input-method'.")
1339 (make-variable-buffer-local 'inactivate-current-input-method-function
)
1340 (put 'inactivate-current-input-method-function
'permanent-local t
)
1342 (defvar describe-current-input-method-function nil
1343 "Function to call for describing the current input method.
1344 This function is called with no argument.")
1345 (make-variable-buffer-local 'describe-current-input-method-function
)
1346 (put 'describe-current-input-method-function
'permanent-local t
)
1348 (defvar input-method-alist nil
1349 "Alist of input method names vs how to use them.
1350 Each element has the form:
1351 (INPUT-METHOD LANGUAGE-ENV ACTIVATE-FUNC TITLE DESCRIPTION ARGS...)
1352 See the function `register-input-method' for the meanings of the elements.")
1354 (put 'input-method-alist
'risky-local-variable t
)
1356 (defun register-input-method (input-method lang-env
&rest args
)
1357 "Register INPUT-METHOD as an input method for language environment LANG-ENV.
1359 INPUT-METHOD and LANG-ENV are symbols or strings.
1360 ACTIVATE-FUNC is a function to call to activate this method.
1361 TITLE is a string to show in the mode line when this method is active.
1362 DESCRIPTION is a string describing this method and what it is good for.
1363 The ARGS, if any, are passed as arguments to ACTIVATE-FUNC.
1364 All told, the arguments to ACTIVATE-FUNC are INPUT-METHOD and the ARGS.
1366 This function is mainly used in the file \"leim-list.el\" which is
1367 created at Emacs build time, registering all Quail input methods
1368 contained in the Emacs distribution.
1370 In case you want to register a new Quail input method by yourself, be
1371 careful to use the same input method title as given in the third
1372 parameter of `quail-define-package'. (If the values are different, the
1373 string specified in this function takes precedence.)
1375 The commands `describe-input-method' and `list-input-methods' need
1376 these duplicated values to show some information about input methods
1377 without loading the relevant Quail packages.
1378 \n(fn INPUT-METHOD LANG-ENV ACTIVATE-FUNC TITLE DESCRIPTION &rest ARGS)"
1379 (if (symbolp lang-env
)
1380 (setq lang-env
(symbol-name lang-env
))
1381 (setq lang-env
(purecopy lang-env
)))
1382 (if (symbolp input-method
)
1383 (setq input-method
(symbol-name input-method
))
1384 (setq input-method
(purecopy input-method
)))
1385 (setq args
(mapcar 'purecopy args
))
1386 (let ((info (cons lang-env args
))
1387 (slot (assoc input-method input-method-alist
)))
1390 (setq slot
(cons input-method info
))
1391 (setq input-method-alist
(cons slot input-method-alist
)))))
1393 (defun read-input-method-name (prompt &optional default inhibit-null
)
1394 "Read a name of input method from a minibuffer prompting with PROMPT.
1395 If DEFAULT is non-nil, use that as the default,
1396 and substitute it into PROMPT at the first `%s'.
1397 If INHIBIT-NULL is non-nil, null input signals an error.
1399 The return value is a string."
1401 (setq prompt
(format prompt default
)))
1402 (let* ((completion-ignore-case t
)
1403 ;; As it is quite normal to change input method in the
1404 ;; minibuffer, we must enable it even if
1405 ;; enable-recursive-minibuffers is currently nil.
1406 (enable-recursive-minibuffers t
)
1407 ;; This binding is necessary because input-method-history is
1409 (input-method (completing-read prompt input-method-alist
1410 nil t nil
'input-method-history
1412 (if (and input-method
(symbolp input-method
))
1413 (setq input-method
(symbol-name input-method
)))
1414 (if (> (length input-method
) 0)
1417 (error "No valid input method is specified")))))
1419 (defun activate-input-method (input-method)
1420 "Switch to input method INPUT-METHOD for the current buffer.
1421 If some other input method is already active, turn it off first.
1422 If INPUT-METHOD is nil, deactivate any current input method."
1423 (if (and input-method
(symbolp input-method
))
1424 (setq input-method
(symbol-name input-method
)))
1425 (if (and current-input-method
1426 (not (string= current-input-method input-method
)))
1427 (inactivate-input-method))
1428 (unless (or current-input-method
(null input-method
))
1429 (let ((slot (assoc input-method input-method-alist
)))
1431 (error "Can't activate input method `%s'" input-method
))
1432 (setq current-input-method-title nil
)
1433 (let ((func (nth 2 slot
)))
1434 (if (functionp func
)
1435 (apply (nth 2 slot
) input-method
(nthcdr 5 slot
))
1436 (if (and (consp func
) (symbolp (car func
)) (symbolp (cdr func
)))
1438 (require (cdr func
))
1439 (apply (car func
) input-method
(nthcdr 5 slot
)))
1440 (error "Can't activate input method `%s'" input-method
))))
1441 (setq current-input-method input-method
)
1442 (or (stringp current-input-method-title
)
1443 (setq current-input-method-title
(nth 3 slot
)))
1445 (run-hooks 'input-method-activate-hook
)
1446 (force-mode-line-update)))))
1448 (defun inactivate-input-method ()
1449 "Turn off the current input method."
1450 (when current-input-method
1451 (if input-method-history
1452 (unless (string= current-input-method
(car input-method-history
))
1453 (setq input-method-history
1454 (cons current-input-method
1455 (delete current-input-method input-method-history
))))
1456 (setq input-method-history
(list current-input-method
)))
1459 (setq input-method-function nil
1460 current-input-method-title nil
)
1461 (funcall inactivate-current-input-method-function
))
1463 (run-hooks 'input-method-inactivate-hook
)
1464 (setq current-input-method nil
)
1465 (force-mode-line-update)))))
1467 (defun set-input-method (input-method &optional interactive
)
1468 "Select and activate input method INPUT-METHOD for the current buffer.
1469 This also sets the default input method to the one you specify.
1470 If INPUT-METHOD is nil, this function turns off the input method, and
1471 also causes you to be prompted for a name of an input method the next
1472 time you invoke \\[toggle-input-method].
1473 When called interactively, the optional arg INTERACTIVE is non-nil,
1474 which marks the variable `default-input-method' as set for Custom buffers.
1476 To deactivate the input method interactively, use \\[toggle-input-method].
1477 To deactivate it programmatically, use `inactivate-input-method'."
1479 (let* ((default (or (car input-method-history
) default-input-method
)))
1480 (list (read-input-method-name
1481 (if default
"Select input method (default %s): " "Select input method: ")
1484 (activate-input-method input-method
)
1485 (setq default-input-method input-method
)
1487 (customize-mark-as-set 'default-input-method
))
1488 default-input-method
)
1490 (defvar toggle-input-method-active nil
1491 "Non-nil inside `toggle-input-method'.")
1493 (defun toggle-input-method (&optional arg interactive
)
1494 "Enable or disable multilingual text input method for the current buffer.
1495 Only one input method can be enabled at any time in a given buffer.
1497 The normal action is to enable an input method if none was enabled,
1498 and disable the current one otherwise. Which input method to enable
1499 can be determined in various ways--either the one most recently used,
1500 or the one specified by `default-input-method', or as a last resort
1501 by reading the name of an input method in the minibuffer.
1503 With a prefix argument ARG, read an input method name with the minibuffer
1504 and enable that one. The default is the most recent input method specified
1505 \(not including the currently active input method, if any).
1507 When called interactively, the optional argument INTERACTIVE is non-nil,
1508 which marks the variable `default-input-method' as set for Custom buffers."
1510 (interactive "P\np")
1511 (if toggle-input-method-active
1512 (error "Recursive use of `toggle-input-method'"))
1513 (if (and current-input-method
(not arg
))
1514 (inactivate-input-method)
1515 (let ((toggle-input-method-active t
)
1516 (default (or (car input-method-history
) default-input-method
)))
1517 (if (and arg default
(equal current-input-method default
)
1518 (> (length input-method-history
) 1))
1519 (setq default
(nth 1 input-method-history
)))
1520 (activate-input-method
1521 (if (or arg
(not default
))
1523 (read-input-method-name
1524 (if default
"Input method (default %s): " "Input method: " )
1527 (unless default-input-method
1529 (setq default-input-method current-input-method
)
1531 (customize-mark-as-set 'default-input-method
)))))))
1533 (autoload 'help-buffer
"help-mode")
1535 (defun describe-input-method (input-method)
1536 "Describe input method INPUT-METHOD."
1538 (list (read-input-method-name
1539 "Describe input method (default current choice): ")))
1540 (if (and input-method
(symbolp input-method
))
1541 (setq input-method
(symbol-name input-method
)))
1542 (help-setup-xref (list #'describe-input-method
1543 (or input-method current-input-method
))
1544 (called-interactively-p 'interactive
))
1546 (if (null input-method
)
1547 (describe-current-input-method)
1548 (let ((current current-input-method
))
1552 (activate-input-method input-method
)
1553 (describe-current-input-method))
1554 (activate-input-method current
))
1556 (activate-input-method current
)
1557 (help-setup-xref (list #'describe-input-method input-method
)
1558 (called-interactively-p 'interactive
))
1559 (with-output-to-temp-buffer (help-buffer)
1560 (let ((elt (assoc input-method input-method-alist
)))
1562 "Input method: %s (`%s' in mode line) for %s\n %s\n"
1563 input-method
(nth 3 elt
) (nth 1 elt
) (nth 4 elt
))))))))))
1565 (defun describe-current-input-method ()
1566 "Describe the input method currently in use.
1567 This is a subroutine for `describe-input-method'."
1568 (if current-input-method
1569 (if (and (symbolp describe-current-input-method-function
)
1570 (fboundp describe-current-input-method-function
))
1571 (funcall describe-current-input-method-function
)
1572 (message "No way to describe the current input method `%s'"
1573 current-input-method
)
1575 (error "No input method is activated now")))
1577 (defun read-multilingual-string (prompt &optional initial-input input-method
)
1578 "Read a multilingual string from minibuffer, prompting with string PROMPT.
1579 The input method selected last time is activated in minibuffer.
1580 If optional second argument INITIAL-INPUT is non-nil, insert it in the
1581 minibuffer initially.
1582 Optional 3rd argument INPUT-METHOD specifies the input method to be activated
1583 instead of the one selected last time. It is a symbol or a string."
1586 current-input-method
1587 default-input-method
1588 (read-input-method-name "Input method: " nil t
)))
1589 (if (and input-method
(symbolp input-method
))
1590 (setq input-method
(symbol-name input-method
)))
1591 (let ((prev-input-method current-input-method
))
1594 (activate-input-method input-method
)
1595 (read-string prompt initial-input nil nil t
))
1596 (activate-input-method prev-input-method
))))
1598 ;; Variables to control behavior of input methods. All input methods
1599 ;; should react to these variables.
1601 (defcustom input-method-verbose-flag
'default
1602 "A flag to control extra guidance given by input methods.
1603 The value should be nil, t, `complex-only', or `default'.
1605 The extra guidance is done by showing list of available keys in echo
1606 area. When you use the input method in the minibuffer, the guidance
1607 is shown at the bottom short window (split from the existing window).
1609 If the value is t, extra guidance is always given, if the value is
1610 nil, extra guidance is always suppressed.
1612 If the value is `complex-only', only complex input methods such as
1613 `chinese-py' and `japanese' give extra guidance.
1615 If the value is `default', complex input methods always give extra
1616 guidance, but simple input methods give it only when you are not in
1619 See also the variable `input-method-highlight-flag'."
1620 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Always" t
) (const :tag
"Never" nil
)
1621 (const complex-only
) (const default
))
1624 (defcustom input-method-highlight-flag t
1625 "If this flag is non-nil, input methods highlight partially-entered text.
1626 For instance, while you are in the middle of a Quail input method sequence,
1627 the text inserted so far is temporarily underlined.
1628 The underlining goes away when you finish or abort the input method sequence.
1629 See also the variable `input-method-verbose-flag'."
1633 (defcustom input-method-activate-hook nil
1634 "Normal hook run just after an input method is activated.
1636 The variable `current-input-method' keeps the input method name
1641 (defcustom input-method-inactivate-hook nil
1642 "Normal hook run just after an input method is inactivated.
1644 The variable `current-input-method' still keeps the input method name
1649 (defcustom input-method-after-insert-chunk-hook nil
1650 "Normal hook run just after an input method insert some chunk of text."
1654 (defvar input-method-exit-on-first-char nil
1655 "This flag controls when an input method returns.
1656 Usually, the input method does not return while there's a possibility
1657 that it may find a different translation if a user types another key.
1658 But, if this flag is non-nil, the input method returns as soon as the
1659 current key sequence gets long enough to have some valid translation.")
1661 (defcustom input-method-use-echo-area nil
1662 "This flag controls how an input method shows an intermediate key sequence.
1663 Usually, the input method inserts the intermediate key sequence,
1664 or candidate translations corresponding to the sequence,
1665 at point in the current buffer.
1666 But, if this flag is non-nil, it displays them in echo area instead."
1670 (defvar input-method-exit-on-invalid-key nil
1671 "This flag controls the behavior of an input method on invalid key input.
1672 Usually, when a user types a key which doesn't start any character
1673 handled by the input method, the key is handled by turning off the
1674 input method temporarily. After that key, the input method is re-enabled.
1675 But, if this flag is non-nil, the input method is never back on.")
1678 (defcustom set-language-environment-hook nil
1679 "Normal hook run after some language environment is set.
1681 When you set some hook function here, that effect usually should not
1682 be inherited to another language environment. So, you had better set
1683 another function in `exit-language-environment-hook' (which see) to
1688 (defcustom exit-language-environment-hook nil
1689 "Normal hook run after exiting from some language environment.
1690 When this hook is run, the variable `current-language-environment'
1691 is still bound to the language environment being exited.
1693 This hook is mainly used for canceling the effect of
1694 `set-language-environment-hook' (which see)."
1698 (put 'setup-specified-language-environment
'apropos-inhibit t
)
1700 (defun setup-specified-language-environment ()
1701 "Switch to a specified language environment."
1703 (let (language-name)
1704 (if (and (symbolp last-command-event
)
1705 (or (not (eq last-command-event
'Default
))
1706 (setq last-command-event
'English
))
1707 (setq language-name
(symbol-name last-command-event
)))
1709 (set-language-environment language-name
)
1710 (customize-mark-as-set 'current-language-environment
))
1711 (error "Bogus calling sequence"))))
1713 (defcustom current-language-environment
"English"
1714 "The last language environment specified with `set-language-environment'.
1715 This variable should be set only with \\[customize], which is equivalent
1716 to using the function `set-language-environment'."
1717 :link
'(custom-manual "(emacs)Language Environments")
1718 :set
(lambda (symbol value
) (set-language-environment value
))
1720 (or (car-safe (assoc-string
1721 (if (symbolp current-language-environment
)
1722 (symbol-name current-language-environment
)
1723 current-language-environment
)
1724 language-info-alist t
))
1726 ;; custom type will be updated with `set-language-info'.
1727 :type
(if language-info-alist
1728 (cons 'choice
(mapcar
1731 (sort (mapcar 'car language-info-alist
) 'string
<)))
1733 :initialize
'custom-initialize-default
1736 (defun reset-language-environment ()
1737 "Reset multilingual environment of Emacs to the default status.
1739 The default status is as follows:
1741 The default value of `buffer-file-coding-system' is nil.
1742 The default coding system for process I/O is nil.
1743 The default value for the command `set-terminal-coding-system' is nil.
1744 The default value for the command `set-keyboard-coding-system' is nil.
1746 The order of priorities of coding systems are as follows:
1755 ;; This function formerly set default-enable-multibyte-characters to t,
1756 ;; but that is incorrect. It should not alter the unibyte/multibyte choice.
1758 (set-coding-system-priority
1767 (set-default-coding-systems nil
)
1768 (setq default-sendmail-coding-system
'iso-latin-1
)
1769 ;; On Darwin systems, this should be utf-8, but when this file is loaded
1770 ;; utf-8 is not yet defined, so we set it in set-locale-environment instead.
1771 (setq default-file-name-coding-system
'iso-latin-1
)
1772 ;; Preserve eol-type from existing default-process-coding-systems.
1773 ;; On non-unix-like systems in particular, these may have been set
1774 ;; carefully by the user, or by the startup code, to deal with the
1775 ;; users shell appropriately, so should not be altered by changing
1776 ;; language environment.
1777 (let ((output-coding
1778 ;; When bootstrapping, coding-systems are not defined yet, so
1779 ;; we need to catch the error from check-coding-system.
1781 (coding-system-change-text-conversion
1782 (car default-process-coding-system
) 'undecided
)
1783 (coding-system-error 'undecided
)))
1786 (coding-system-change-text-conversion
1787 (cdr default-process-coding-system
) 'iso-latin-1
)
1788 (coding-system-error 'iso-latin-1
))))
1789 (setq default-process-coding-system
1790 (cons output-coding input-coding
)))
1792 ;; Put the highest priority to the charset iso-8859-1 to prefer the
1793 ;; registry iso8859-1 over iso8859-2 in font selection. It also
1794 ;; makes unibyte-display-via-language-environment to use iso-8859-1
1795 ;; as the unibyte charset.
1796 (set-charset-priority 'iso-8859-1
)
1798 ;; Don't alter the terminal and keyboard coding systems here.
1799 ;; The terminal still supports the same coding system
1800 ;; that it supported a minute ago.
1801 ;; (set-terminal-coding-system-internal nil)
1802 ;; (set-keyboard-coding-system-internal nil)
1804 ;; Back in Emacs-20, it was necessary to provide some fallback implicit
1805 ;; conversion, because almost no packages handled coding-system issues.
1806 ;; Nowadays it'd just paper over bugs.
1807 ;; (set-unibyte-charset 'iso-8859-1)
1810 (reset-language-environment)
1812 (defun set-display-table-and-terminal-coding-system (language-name &optional coding-system display
)
1813 "Set up the display table and terminal coding system for LANGUAGE-NAME."
1814 (let ((coding (get-language-info language-name
'unibyte-display
)))
1816 (or (not coding-system
)
1817 (coding-system-equal coding coding-system
)))
1818 (standard-display-european-internal)
1819 ;; The following 2 lines undo the 8-bit display that we set up
1820 ;; in standard-display-european-internal, which see. This is in
1821 ;; case the user has used standard-display-european earlier in
1823 (when standard-display-table
1825 (aset standard-display-table
(+ i
128) nil
))))
1826 (set-terminal-coding-system (or coding-system coding
) display
)))
1828 (defun set-language-environment (language-name)
1829 "Set up multi-lingual environment for using LANGUAGE-NAME.
1830 This sets the coding system priority and the default input method
1831 and sometimes other things. LANGUAGE-NAME should be a string
1832 which is the name of a language environment. For example, \"Latin-1\"
1833 specifies the character set for the major languages of Western Europe."
1834 (interactive (list (read-language-name
1836 "Set language environment (default English): ")))
1838 (if (symbolp language-name
)
1839 (setq language-name
(symbol-name language-name
)))
1840 (setq language-name
"English"))
1841 (let ((slot (assoc-string language-name language-info-alist t
)))
1843 (error "Language environment not defined: %S" language-name
))
1844 (setq language-name
(car slot
)))
1845 (if current-language-environment
1846 (let ((func (get-language-info current-language-environment
1848 (run-hooks 'exit-language-environment-hook
)
1849 (if (functionp func
) (funcall func
))))
1851 (reset-language-environment)
1852 ;; The features might set up coding systems.
1853 (let ((required-features (get-language-info language-name
'features
)))
1854 (while required-features
1855 (require (car required-features
))
1856 (setq required-features
(cdr required-features
))))
1858 (setq current-language-environment language-name
)
1860 (set-language-environment-coding-systems language-name
)
1861 (set-language-environment-input-method language-name
)
1862 (set-language-environment-nonascii-translation language-name
)
1863 (set-language-environment-charset language-name
)
1864 ;; Unibyte setups if necessary.
1865 (unless (default-value 'enable-multibyte-characters
)
1866 (set-language-environment-unibyte language-name
))
1868 (let ((func (get-language-info language-name
'setup-function
)))
1869 (if (functionp func
)
1872 (setq current-iso639-language
1873 (or (get-language-info language-name
'iso639-language
)
1874 current-iso639-language
))
1876 (run-hooks 'set-language-environment-hook
)
1877 (force-mode-line-update t
))
1879 (define-widget 'charset
'symbol
1882 :completions
(apply-partially #'completion-table-with-predicate
1883 (apply-partially #'completion-table-case-fold
1887 :validate
(lambda (widget)
1888 (unless (charsetp (widget-value widget
))
1889 (widget-put widget
:error
(format "Invalid charset: %S"
1890 (widget-value widget
)))
1892 :prompt-history
'charset-history
)
1894 (defcustom language-info-custom-alist nil
1895 "Customizations of language environment parameters.
1896 Value is an alist with elements like those of `language-info-alist'.
1897 These are used to set values in `language-info-alist' which replace
1898 the defaults. A typical use is replacing the default input method for
1899 the environment. Use \\[describe-language-environment] to find the environment's settings.
1901 This option is intended for use at startup. Removing items doesn't
1902 remove them from the language info until you next restart Emacs.
1904 Setting this variable directly does not take effect.
1905 See `set-language-info-alist' for use in programs."
1909 (custom-set-default s v
)
1910 ;; Can't do this before language environments are set up.
1912 ;; modify language-info-alist
1914 (set-language-info-alist (car elt
) (cdr elt
)))
1915 ;; re-set the environment in case its parameters changed
1916 (set-language-environment current-language-environment
)))
1918 :key-type
(string :tag
"Language environment"
1920 (apply-partially #'completion-table-case-fold
1921 language-info-alist
))
1923 (alist :key-type symbol
1924 :options
((documentation string
)
1925 (charset (repeat charset
))
1926 (sample-text string
)
1927 (setup-function function
)
1928 (exit-function function
)
1929 (coding-system (repeat coding-system
))
1930 (coding-priority (repeat coding-system
))
1931 (nonascii-translation charset
)
1935 (apply-partially #'completion-table-case-fold
1937 :prompt-history input-method-history
))
1938 (features (repeat symbol
))
1939 (unibyte-display coding-system
)))))
1941 (declare-function x-server-vendor
"xfns.c" (&optional terminal
))
1942 (declare-function x-server-version
"xfns.c" (&optional terminal
))
1944 (defun standard-display-european-internal ()
1945 ;; Actually set up direct output of non-ASCII characters.
1946 (standard-display-8bit (if (eq window-system
'pc
) 128 160) 255)
1947 ;; Unibyte Emacs on MS-DOS wants to display all 8-bit characters with
1948 ;; the native font, and codes 160 and 146 stand for something very
1950 (or (and (eq window-system
'pc
) (not (default-value
1951 'enable-multibyte-characters
)))
1953 ;; Most X fonts used to do the wrong thing for latin-1 code 160.
1954 (unless (and (eq window-system
'x
)
1955 ;; XFree86 4 has fixed the fonts.
1956 (string= "The XFree86 Project, Inc" (x-server-vendor))
1957 (> (aref (number-to-string (nth 2 (x-server-version))) 0)
1959 ;; Make non-line-break space display as a plain space.
1960 (aset standard-display-table
(unibyte-char-to-multibyte 160) [32]))
1961 ;; Most Windows programs send out apostrophes as \222. Most X fonts
1962 ;; don't contain a character at that position. Map it to the ASCII
1963 ;; apostrophe. [This is actually RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK,
1964 ;; U+2019, normally from the windows-1252 character set. XFree 4
1965 ;; fonts probably have the appropriate glyph at this position,
1966 ;; so they could use standard-display-8bit. It's better to use a
1967 ;; proper windows-1252 coding system. --fx]
1968 (aset standard-display-table (unibyte-char-to-multibyte 146) [39]))))
1970 (defun set-language-environment-coding-systems (language-name)
1971 "Do various coding system setups for language environment LANGUAGE-NAME."
1972 (let* ((priority (get-language-info language-name 'coding-priority))
1973 (default-coding (car priority))
1974 ;; If the default buffer-file-coding-system is nil, don't use
1975 ;; coding-system-eol-type, because it treats nil as
1976 ;; `no-conversion'. The default buffer-file-coding-system is set
1977 ;; to nil by reset-language-environment, and in that case we
1978 ;; want to have here the native EOL type for each platform.
1979 ;; FIXME: there should be a common code that runs both on
1980 ;; startup and here to set the default EOL type correctly.
1981 ;; Right now, DOS/Windows platforms set this on dos-w32.el,
1982 ;; which works only as long as the order of loading files at
1983 ;; dump time and calling functions at startup is not modified
1984 ;; significantly, i.e. as long as this function is called
1985 ;; _after_ the default buffer-file-coding-system was set by
1988 (coding-system-eol-type
1989 (or (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system)
1990 (if (memq system-type '(windows-nt ms-dos)) 'dos 'unix)))))
1992 (set-default-coding-systems
1993 (if (memq eol-type '(0 1 2 unix dos mac))
1994 (coding-system-change-eol-conversion default-coding eol-type)
1996 (setq default-sendmail-coding-system default-coding)
1997 (apply 'set-coding-system-priority priority))))
1999 (defun set-language-environment-input-method (language-name)
2000 "Do various input method setups for language environment LANGUAGE-NAME."
2001 (let ((input-method (get-language-info language-name 'input-method)))
2003 (setq default-input-method input-method)
2004 (if input-method-history
2005 (setq input-method-history
2007 (delete input-method input-method-history)))))))
2009 (defun set-language-environment-nonascii-translation (language-name)
2010 "Do unibyte/multibyte translation setup for language environment LANGUAGE-NAME."
2011 ;; Note: For DOS, we assumed that the charset cpXXX is already
2013 (let ((nonascii (get-language-info language-name 'nonascii-translation)))
2014 (if (eq window-system 'pc)
2015 (setq nonascii (intern (format "cp%d" dos-codepage))))
2016 (or (and (charsetp nonascii)
2017 (get-charset-property nonascii :ascii-compatible-p))
2018 (setq nonascii 'iso-8859-1))
2019 ;; Back in Emacs-20, it was necessary to provide some fallback implicit
2020 ;; conversion, because almost no packages handled coding-system issues.
2021 ;; Nowadays it'd just paper over bugs.
2022 ;; (set-unibyte-charset nonascii)
2025 (defun set-language-environment-charset (language-name)
2026 "Do various charset setups for language environment LANGUAGE-NAME."
2027 ;; Put higher priorities to such charsets that are supported by the
2028 ;; coding systems of higher priorities in this environment.
2029 (let ((charsets (get-language-info language-name 'charset)))
2030 (dolist (coding (get-language-info language-name 'coding-priority))
2031 (let ((list (coding-system-charset-list coding)))
2033 (setq charsets (append charsets list)))))
2035 (apply 'set-charset-priority charsets))))
2037 (defun set-language-environment-unibyte (language-name)
2038 "Do various unibyte-mode setups for language environment LANGUAGE-NAME."
2039 (set-display-table-and-terminal-coding-system language-name))
2041 (defun princ-list (&rest args)
2042 "Print all arguments with `princ', then print \"\\n\"."
2045 (make-obsolete 'princ-list "use mapc and princ instead" "23.3")
2047 (put 'describe-specified-language-support 'apropos-inhibit t)
2049 ;; Print language-specific information such as input methods,
2050 ;; charsets, and coding systems. This function is intended to be
2051 ;; called from the menu:
2052 ;; [menu-bar mule describe-language-environment LANGUAGE]
2053 ;; and should not run it by `M-x describe-current-input-method-function'.
2054 (defun describe-specified-language-support ()
2055 "Describe how Emacs supports the specified language environment."
2057 (let (language-name)
2058 (if (not (and (symbolp last-command-event)
2059 (or (not (eq last-command-event 'Default))
2060 (setq last-command-event 'English))
2061 (setq language-name (symbol-name last-command-event))))
2062 (error "This command should only be called from the menu bar"))
2063 (describe-language-environment language-name)))
2065 (defun describe-language-environment (language-name)
2066 "Describe how Emacs supports language environment LANGUAGE-NAME."
2068 (list (read-language-name
2070 "Describe language environment (default current choice): ")))
2071 (if (null language-name)
2072 (setq language-name current-language-environment))
2073 (if (or (null language-name)
2074 (null (get-language-info language-name 'documentation)))
2075 (error "No documentation for the specified language"))
2076 (if (symbolp language-name)
2077 (setq language-name (symbol-name language-name)))
2078 (dolist (feature (get-language-info language-name 'features))
2080 (let ((doc (get-language-info language-name 'documentation)))
2081 (help-setup-xref (list #'describe-language-environment language-name)
2082 (called-interactively-p 'interactive))
2083 (with-output-to-temp-buffer (help-buffer)
2084 (with-current-buffer standard-output
2085 (insert language-name " language environment\n\n")
2087 (insert doc "\n\n"))
2089 (let ((str (eval (get-language-info language-name 'sample-text))))
2091 (insert "Sample text:\n "
2092 (replace-regexp-in-string "\n" "\n " str)
2095 (let ((input-method (get-language-info language-name 'input-method))
2096 (l (copy-sequence input-method-alist))
2098 (when (and input-method
2099 (setq input-method (assoc input-method l)))
2100 (insert "Input methods (default " (car input-method) ")\n")
2101 (setq l (cons input-method (delete input-method l))
2104 (when (or (eq input-method elt)
2105 (eq t (compare-strings language-name nil nil
2106 (nth 1 elt) nil nil t)))
2108 (insert "Input methods:\n")
2110 (insert " " (car elt))
2111 (search-backward (car elt))
2112 (help-xref-button 0 'help-input-method (car elt))
2113 (goto-char (point-max))
2115 (if (stringp (nth 3 elt)) (nth 3 elt) (car (nth 3 elt)))
2116 "\" in mode line)\n")))
2119 (insert "Character sets:\n")
2120 (let ((l (get-language-info language-name 'charset)))
2122 (insert " nothing specific to " language-name "\n")
2124 (insert " " (symbol-name (car l)))
2125 (search-backward (symbol-name (car l)))
2126 (help-xref-button 0 'help-character-set (car l))
2127 (goto-char (point-max))
2128 (insert ": " (charset-description (car l)) "\n")
2131 (insert "Coding systems:\n")
2132 (let ((l (get-language-info language-name 'coding-system)))
2134 (insert " nothing specific to " language-name "\n")
2136 (insert " " (symbol-name (car l)))
2137 (search-backward (symbol-name (car l)))
2138 (help-xref-button 0 'help-coding-system (car l))
2139 (goto-char (point-max))
2141 (coding-system-mnemonic (car l))
2142 "' in mode line):\n\t"
2143 (coding-system-doc-string (car l))
2145 (let ((aliases (coding-system-aliases (car l))))
2147 (insert "\t(alias:")
2149 (insert " " (symbol-name (car aliases)))
2150 (setq aliases (cdr aliases)))
2152 (setq l (cdr l)))))))))
2156 (defvar locale-translation-file-name nil
2157 "File name for the system's file of locale-name aliases, or nil if none.")
2159 ;; The following definitions might as well be marked as constants and
2160 ;; purecopied, since they're normally used on startup, and probably
2161 ;; should reflect the facilities of the base Emacs.
2162 (defconst locale-language-names
2165 ;; Locale names of the form LANGUAGE[_TERRITORY][.CODESET][@MODIFIER]
2166 ;; as specified in the Single Unix Spec, Version 2.
2167 ;; LANGUAGE is a language code taken from ISO 639:1988 (E/F)
2168 ;; with additions from ISO 639/RA Newsletter No.1/1989;
2169 ;; see Internet RFC 2165 (1997-06) and
2170 ;; http://www.evertype.com/standards/iso639/iso639-en.html
2171 ;; TERRITORY is a country code taken from ISO 3166
2172 ;; http://www.din.de/gremien/nas/nabd/iso3166ma/codlstp1/en_listp1.html.
2173 ;; CODESET and MODIFIER are implementation-dependent.
2175 ;; jasonr comments: MS Windows uses three letter codes for
2176 ;; languages instead of the two letter ISO codes that POSIX
2177 ;; uses. In most cases the first two letters are the same, so
2178 ;; most of the regexps in locale-language-names work. Japanese
2179 ;; and Chinese are exceptions, which are listed in the
2180 ;; non-standard section at the bottom of locale-language-names.
2182 ("aa_DJ" . "Latin-1") ; Afar
2185 ("af" . "Latin-1") ; Afrikaans
2186 ("am" "Ethiopic" utf-8) ; Amharic
2187 ("an" . "Latin-9") ; Aragonese
2191 ("az" . "UTF-8") ; Azerbaijani
2193 ("be" "Belarusian" cp1251) ; Belarusian [Byelorussian until early 1990s]
2194 ("bg" "Bulgarian" cp1251) ; Bulgarian
2197 ("bn" . "UTF-8") ; Bengali, Bangla
2199 ("br" . "Latin-1") ; Breton
2200 ("bs" . "Latin-2") ; Bosnian
2201 ("byn" . "UTF-8") ; Bilin; Blin
2202 ("ca" . "Latin-1") ; Catalan
2204 ("cs" "Czech" iso-8859-2)
2205 ("cy" "Welsh" iso-8859-14)
2206 ("da" . "Latin-1") ; Danish
2207 ("de" "German" iso-8859-1)
2210 ("el" "Greek" iso-8859-7)
2211 ;; Users who specify "en" explicitly typically want Latin-1, not ASCII.
2212 ;; That's actually what the GNU locales define, modulo things like
2214 ("en_IN" "English" utf-8) ; glibc uses utf-8 for English in India
2215 ("en" "English" iso-8859-1) ; English
2216 ("eo" . "Esperanto") ; Esperanto
2217 ("es" "Spanish" iso-8859-1)
2218 ("et" . "Latin-1") ; Estonian
2219 ("eu" . "Latin-1") ; Basque
2220 ("fa" . "UTF-8") ; Persian
2221 ("fi" . "Latin-1") ; Finnish
2222 ("fj" . "Latin-1") ; Fiji
2223 ("fo" . "Latin-1") ; Faroese
2224 ("fr" "French" iso-8859-1) ; French
2225 ("fy" . "Latin-1") ; Frisian
2226 ("ga" . "Latin-1") ; Irish Gaelic (new orthography)
2227 ("gd" . "Latin-9") ; Scots Gaelic
2228 ("gez" "Ethiopic" utf-8) ; Geez
2229 ("gl" . "Latin-1") ; Gallegan; Galician
2231 ("gu" . "UTF-8") ; Gujarati
2232 ("gv" . "Latin-1") ; Manx Gaelic
2234 ("he" "Hebrew" iso-8859-8)
2235 ("hi" "Devanagari" utf-8) ; Hindi
2236 ("hr" "Croatian" iso-8859-2) ; Croatian
2237 ("hu" . "Latin-2") ; Hungarian
2240 ("id" . "Latin-1") ; Indonesian
2243 ("is" . "Latin-1") ; Icelandic
2244 ("it" "Italian" iso-8859-1) ; Italian
2246 ("iw" "Hebrew" iso-8859-8)
2247 ("ja" "Japanese" euc-jp)
2249 ("ka" "Georgian" georgian-ps) ; Georgian
2251 ("kl" . "Latin-1") ; Greenlandic
2253 ("kn" "Kannada" utf-8)
2254 ("ko" "Korean" euc-kr)
2257 ("kw" . "Latin-1") ; Cornish
2259 ("la" . "Latin-1") ; Latin
2260 ("lb" . "Latin-1") ; Luxemburgish
2261 ("lg" . "Laint-6") ; Ganda
2263 ("lo" "Lao" utf-8) ; Laothian
2264 ("lt" "Lithuanian" iso-8859-13)
2265 ("lv" . "Latvian") ; Latvian, Lettish
2267 ("mi" . "Latin-7") ; Maori
2268 ("mk" "Cyrillic-ISO" iso-8859-5) ; Macedonian
2269 ("ml" "Malayalam" utf-8)
2270 ("mn" . "UTF-8") ; Mongolian
2272 ("mr" "Devanagari" utf-8) ; Marathi
2273 ("ms" . "Latin-1") ; Malay
2274 ("mt" . "Latin-3") ; Maltese
2277 ("nb" . "Latin-1") ; Norwegian
2278 ("ne" "Devanagari" utf-8) ; Nepali
2279 ("nl" "Dutch" iso-8859-1)
2280 ("no" . "Latin-1") ; Norwegian
2281 ("oc" . "Latin-1") ; Occitan
2282 ("om_ET" . "UTF-8") ; (Afan) Oromo
2283 ("om" . "Latin-1") ; (Afan) Oromo
2285 ("pa" . "UTF-8") ; Punjabi
2286 ("pl" . "Latin-2") ; Polish
2288 ("pt" . "Latin-1") ; Portuguese
2290 ("rm" . "Latin-1") ; Rhaeto-Romanic
2292 ("ro" "Romanian" iso-8859-2)
2293 ("ru_RU" "Russian" iso-8859-5)
2294 ("ru_UA" "Russian" koi8-u)
2296 ("sa" . "Devanagari") ; Sanskrit
2298 ("se" . "UTF-8") ; Northern Sami
2300 ("sh" . "Latin-2") ; Serbo-Croatian
2302 ("sid" . "UTF-8") ; Sidamo
2303 ("sk" "Slovak" iso-8859-2)
2304 ("sl" "Slovenian" iso-8859-2)
2307 ("so_ET" "UTF-8") ; Somali
2308 ("so" "Latin-1") ; Somali
2309 ("sq" . "Latin-1") ; Albanian
2310 ("sr" . "Latin-2") ; Serbian (Latin alphabet)
2312 ("st" . "Latin-1") ; Sesotho
2314 ("sv" "Swedish" iso-8859-1) ; Swedish
2315 ("sw" . "Latin-1") ; Swahili
2316 ("ta" "Tamil" utf-8)
2317 ("te" . "UTF-8") ; Telugu
2318 ("tg" "Tajik" koi8-t)
2319 ("th" "Thai" tis-620)
2320 ("ti" "Ethiopic" utf-8) ; Tigrinya
2321 ("tig_ER" . "UTF-8") ; Tigre
2323 ("tl" . "Latin-1") ; Tagalog
2326 ("tr" "Turkish" iso-8859-9)
2328 ("tt" . "UTF-8") ; Tatar
2331 ("uk" "Ukrainian" koi8-u)
2332 ("ur" . "UTF-8") ; Urdu
2333 ("uz_UZ@cyrillic" . "UTF-8"); Uzbek
2334 ("uz" . "Latin-1") ; Uzbek
2335 ("vi" "Vietnamese" utf-8)
2337 ("wa" . "Latin-1") ; Walloon
2339 ("xh" . "Latin-1") ; Xhosa
2340 ("yi" . "Windows-1255") ; Yiddish
2343 ("zh_HK" . "Chinese-Big5")
2344 ; zh_HK/BIG5-HKSCS \
2345 ("zh_TW" . "Chinese-Big5")
2346 ("zh_CN.GB2312" "Chinese-GB")
2347 ("zh_CN.GBK" "Chinese-GBK")
2348 ("zh_CN.GB18030" "Chinese-GB18030")
2349 ("zh_CN.UTF-8" . "Chinese-GBK")
2350 ("zh_CN" . "Chinese-GB")
2351 ("zh" . "Chinese-GB")
2352 ("zu" . "Latin-1") ; Zulu
2354 ;; ISO standard locales
2356 ("posix$" . "ASCII")
2358 ;; The "IPA" Emacs language environment does not correspond
2359 ;; to any ISO 639 code, so let it stand for itself.
2362 ;; Nonstandard or obsolete language codes
2363 ("cz" . "Czech") ; e.g. Solaris 2.6
2364 ("ee" . "Latin-4") ; Estonian, e.g. X11R6.4
2365 ("iw" . "Hebrew") ; e.g. X11R6.4
2366 ("sp" . "Cyrillic-ISO") ; Serbian (Cyrillic alphabet), e.g. X11R6.4
2367 ("su" . "Latin-1") ; Finnish, e.g. Solaris 2.6
2368 ("jp" . "Japanese") ; e.g. MS Windows
2369 ("chs" . "Chinese-GBK") ; MS Windows Chinese Simplified
2370 ("cht" . "Chinese-BIG5") ; MS Windows Chinese Traditional
2371 ("gbz" . "UTF-8") ; MS Windows Dari Persian
2372 ("div" . "UTF-8") ; MS Windows Divehi (Maldives)
2373 ("wee" . "Latin-2") ; MS Windows Lower Sorbian
2374 ("wen" . "Latin-2") ; MS Windows Upper Sorbian
2376 "Alist of locale regexps vs the corresponding languages and coding systems.
2377 Each element has this form:
2378 \(LOCALE-REGEXP LANG-ENV CODING-SYSTEM)
2379 The first element whose LOCALE-REGEXP matches the start of a
2380 downcased locale specifies the LANG-ENV \(language environment)
2381 and CODING-SYSTEM corresponding to that locale. If there is no
2382 appropriate language environment, the element may have this form:
2383 \(LOCALE-REGEXP . LANG-ENV)
2384 In this case, LANG-ENV is one of generic language environments for an
2385 specific encoding such as \"Latin-1\" and \"UTF-8\".")
2387 (defconst locale-charset-language-names
2389 '((".*8859[-_]?1\\>" . "Latin-1")
2390 (".*8859[-_]?2\\>" . "Latin-2")
2391 (".*8859[-_]?3\\>" . "Latin-3")
2392 (".*8859[-_]?4\\>" . "Latin-4")
2393 (".*8859[-_]?9\\>" . "Latin-5")
2394 (".*8859[-_]?14\\>" . "Latin-8")
2395 (".*8859[-_]?15\\>" . "Latin-9")
2396 (".*utf\\(?:-?8\\)?\\>" . "UTF-8")
2397 ;; utf-8@euro exists, so put this last. (@euro really specifies
2398 ;; the currency, rather than the charset.)
2399 (".*@euro\\>" . "Latin-9")))
2400 "List of pairs of locale regexps and charset language names.
2401 The first element whose locale regexp matches the start of a downcased locale
2402 specifies the language name whose charset corresponds to that locale.
2403 This language name is used if the locale is not listed in
2404 `locale-language-names'.")
2406 (defconst locale-preferred-coding-systems
2408 '((".*8859[-_]?1\\>" . iso-8859-1)
2409 (".*8859[-_]?2\\>" . iso-8859-2)
2410 (".*8859[-_]?3\\>" . iso-8859-3)
2411 (".*8859[-_]?4\\>" . iso-8859-4)
2412 (".*8859[-_]?9\\>" . iso-8859-9)
2413 (".*8859[-_]?14\\>" . iso-8859-14)
2414 (".*8859[-_]?15\\>" . iso-8859-15)
2415 (".*utf\\(?:-?8\\)?" . utf-8)
2416 ;; utf-8@euro exists, so put this after utf-8. (@euro really
2417 ;; specifies the currency, rather than the charset.)
2418 (".*@euro" . iso-8859-15)
2419 ("koi8-?r" . koi8-r)
2420 ("koi8-?u" . koi8-u)
2422 ("big5[-_]?hkscs" . big5-hkscs)
2424 ("euc-?tw" . euc-tw)
2425 ("euc-?cn" . euc-cn)
2428 ("gb18030" . gb18030)
2429 ("ja.*[._]euc" . japanese-iso-8bit)
2430 ("ja.*[._]jis7" . iso-2022-jp)
2431 ("ja.*[._]pck" . japanese-shift-jis)
2432 ("ja.*[._]sjis" . japanese-shift-jis)
2433 ("jpn" . japanese-shift-jis) ; MS-Windows uses this.
2435 "List of pairs of locale regexps and preferred coding systems.
2436 The first element whose locale regexp matches the start of a downcased locale
2437 specifies the coding system to prefer when using that locale.
2438 This coding system is used if the locale specifies a specific charset.")
2440 (defun locale-name-match (key alist)
2441 "Search for KEY in ALIST, which should be a list of regexp-value pairs.
2442 Return the value corresponding to the first regexp that matches the
2443 start of KEY, or nil if there is no match."
2445 (while (and alist (not element))
2446 (if (string-match-p (concat "\\`\\(?:" (car (car alist)) "\\)") key)
2447 (setq element (car alist)))
2448 (setq alist (cdr alist)))
2451 (defun locale-charset-match-p (charset1 charset2)
2452 "Whether charset names (strings) CHARSET1 and CHARSET2 are equivalent.
2453 Matching is done ignoring case and any hyphens and underscores in the
2454 names. E.g. `ISO_8859-1' and `iso88591' both match `iso-8859-1'."
2455 (setq charset1 (replace-regexp-in-string "[-_]" "" charset1))
2456 (setq charset2 (replace-regexp-in-string "[-_]" "" charset2))
2457 (eq t (compare-strings charset1 nil nil charset2 nil nil t)))
2459 (defvar locale-charset-alist nil
2460 "Coding system alist keyed on locale-style charset name.
2461 Used by `locale-charset-to-coding-system'.")
2463 (defun locale-charset-to-coding-system (charset)
2464 "Find coding system corresponding to CHARSET.
2465 CHARSET is any sort of non-Emacs charset name, such as might be used
2466 in a locale codeset, or elsewhere. It is matched to a coding system
2467 first by case-insensitive lookup in `locale-charset-alist'. Then
2468 matches are looked for in the coding system list, treating case and
2469 the characters `-' and `_' as insignificant. The coding system base
2470 is returned. Thus, for instance, if charset \"ISO8859-2\",
2471 `iso-latin-2' is returned."
2472 (or (car (assoc-string charset locale-charset-alist t))
2473 (let ((cs coding-system-alist)
2475 (while (and (not c) cs)
2476 (if (locale-charset-match-p charset (caar cs))
2477 (setq c (intern (caar cs)))
2479 (if c (coding-system-base c)))))
2481 ;; Fixme: This ought to deal with the territory part of the locale
2482 ;; too, for setting things such as calendar holidays, ps-print paper
2483 ;; size, spelling dictionary.
2485 (defun locale-translate (locale)
2486 "Expand LOCALE according to `locale-translation-file-name', if possible.
2487 For example, translate \"swedish\" into \"sv_SE.ISO8859-1\"."
2488 (if locale-translation-file-name
2490 (set-buffer-multibyte nil)
2491 (insert-file-contents locale-translation-file-name)
2492 (if (re-search-forward
2493 (concat "^" (regexp-quote locale) ":?[ \t]+") nil t)
2494 (buffer-substring (point) (line-end-position))
2498 (defun set-locale-environment (&optional locale-name frame)
2499 "Set up multi-lingual environment for using LOCALE-NAME.
2500 This sets the language environment, the coding system priority,
2501 the default input method and sometimes other things.
2503 LOCALE-NAME should be a string which is the name of a locale supported
2504 by the system. Often it is of the form xx_XX.CODE, where xx is a
2505 language, XX is a country, and CODE specifies a character set and
2506 coding system. For example, the locale name \"ja_JP.EUC\" might name
2507 a locale for Japanese in Japan using the `japanese-iso-8bit'
2508 coding-system. The name may also have a modifier suffix, e.g. `@euro'
2511 If LOCALE-NAME is nil, its value is taken from the environment
2512 variables LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE and LANG (the first one that is set).
2514 The locale names supported by your system can typically be found in a
2515 directory named `/usr/share/locale' or `/usr/lib/locale'. LOCALE-NAME
2516 will be translated according to the table specified by
2517 `locale-translation-file-name'.
2519 If FRAME is non-nil, only set the keyboard coding system and the
2520 terminal coding system for the terminal of that frame, and don't
2521 touch session-global parameters like the language environment.
2523 See also `locale-charset-language-names', `locale-language-names',
2524 `locale-preferred-coding-systems' and `locale-coding-system'."
2525 (interactive "sSet environment for locale: ")
2527 ;; Do this at runtime for the sake of binaries possibly transported
2528 ;; to a system without X.
2529 (setq locale-translation-file-name
2531 '("/usr/share/X11/locale/locale.alias" ; e.g. X11R7
2532 "/usr/lib/X11/locale/locale.alias" ; e.g. X11R6.4
2533 "/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale/locale.alias" ; XFree86, e.g. RedHat 4.2
2534 "/usr/openwin/lib/locale/locale.alias" ; e.g. Solaris 2.6
2536 ;; The following name appears after the X-related names above,
2537 ;; since the X-related names are what X actually uses.
2538 "/usr/share/locale/locale.alias" ; GNU/Linux sans X
2540 (while (and files (not (file-exists-p (car files))))
2541 (setq files (cdr files)))
2544 (let ((locale locale-name))
2547 ;; Use the first of these three environment variables
2548 ;; that has a nonempty value.
2549 (let ((vars '("LC_ALL" "LC_CTYPE" "LANG")))
2551 (= 0 (length locale))) ; nil or empty string
2552 (setq locale (getenv (pop vars) frame)))))
2555 (setq locale (locale-translate locale))
2557 ;; Leave the system locales alone if the caller did not specify
2558 ;; an explicit locale name, as their defaults are set from
2559 ;; LC_MESSAGES and LC_TIME, not LC_CTYPE, and the user might not
2560 ;; want to set them to the same value as LC_CTYPE.
2562 (setq system-messages-locale locale)
2563 (setq system-time-locale locale))
2565 (if (string-match "^[a-z][a-z]" locale)
2566 (setq current-iso639-language (intern (match-string 0 locale)))))
2569 (or system-messages-locale
2570 (let ((msglocale (getenv "LC_MESSAGES" frame)))
2571 (if (zerop (length msglocale))
2573 (locale-translate msglocale)))))
2576 (setq locale (downcase locale))
2578 (let ((language-name
2579 (locale-name-match locale locale-language-names))
2580 (charset-language-name
2581 (locale-name-match locale locale-charset-language-names))
2582 (default-eol-type (coding-system-eol-type
2583 (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system)))
2585 (or (locale-name-match locale locale-preferred-coding-systems)
2587 (if (string-match "\\.\\([^@]+\\)" locale)
2588 (locale-charset-to-coding-system
2589 (match-string 1 locale)))))))
2591 (if (consp language-name)
2592 ;; locale-language-names specify both lang-env and coding.
2593 ;; But, what specified in locale-preferred-coding-systems
2594 ;; has higher priority.
2595 (setq coding-system (or coding-system
2596 (nth 1 language-name))
2597 language-name (car language-name))
2598 ;; Otherwise, if locale is not listed in locale-language-names,
2599 ;; use what listed in locale-charset-language-names.
2600 (if (not language-name)
2601 (setq language-name charset-language-name)))
2603 ;; If a specific EOL conversion was specified in the default
2604 ;; buffer-file-coding-system, preserve it in the coding system
2605 ;; we will be using from now on.
2606 (if (and (memq default-eol-type '(0 1 2 unix dos mac))
2608 (coding-system-p coding-system))
2609 (setq coding-system (coding-system-change-eol-conversion
2610 coding-system default-eol-type)))
2614 ;; Set up for this character set. This is now the right way
2615 ;; to do it for both unibyte and multibyte modes.
2617 (set-language-environment language-name))
2619 ;; If the default enable-multibyte-characters is nil,
2620 ;; we are using single-byte characters,
2621 ;; so the display table and terminal coding system are irrelevant.
2622 (when (default-value 'enable-multibyte-characters)
2623 (set-display-table-and-terminal-coding-system
2624 language-name coding-system frame))
2626 ;; Set the `keyboard-coding-system' if appropriate (tty
2627 ;; only). At least X and MS Windows can generate
2628 ;; multilingual input.
2629 ;; XXX This was disabled unless `window-system', but that
2630 ;; leads to buggy behavior when a tty frame is opened
2631 ;; later. Setting the keyboard coding system has no adverse
2632 ;; effect on X, so let's do it anyway. -- Lorentey
2633 (let ((kcs (or coding-system
2634 (car (get-language-info language-name
2636 (if kcs (set-keyboard-coding-system kcs frame)))
2639 (setq locale-coding-system
2640 (car (get-language-info language-name 'coding-priority)))))
2642 (when (and (not frame)
2644 (not (coding-system-equal coding-system
2645 locale-coding-system)))
2646 (prefer-coding-system coding-system)
2647 ;; Fixme: perhaps prefer-coding-system should set this too.
2648 ;; But it's not the time to do such a fundamental change.
2649 (setq default-sendmail-coding-system coding-system)
2650 (setq locale-coding-system coding-system))))
2652 ;; On Windows, override locale-coding-system,
2653 ;; default-file-name-coding-system, keyboard-coding-system,
2654 ;; terminal-coding-system with system codepage.
2655 (when (boundp 'w32-ansi-code-page)
2656 (let ((code-page-coding (intern (format "cp%d" w32-ansi-code-page))))
2657 (when (coding-system-p code-page-coding)
2658 (unless frame (setq locale-coding-system code-page-coding))
2659 (set-keyboard-coding-system code-page-coding frame)
2660 (set-terminal-coding-system code-page-coding frame)
2661 ;; Set default-file-name-coding-system last, so that Emacs
2662 ;; doesn't try to use cpNNNN when it defines keyboard and
2663 ;; terminal encoding. That's because the above two lines
2664 ;; will want to load code-pages.el, where cpNNNN are
2665 ;; defined; if default-file-name-coding-system were set to
2666 ;; cpNNNN while these two lines run, Emacs will want to use
2667 ;; it for encoding the file name it wants to load. And that
2668 ;; will fail, since cpNNNN is not yet usable until
2669 ;; code-pages.el finishes loading.
2670 (setq default-file-name-coding-system code-page-coding))))
2672 (when (eq system-type 'darwin)
2673 ;; On Darwin, file names are always encoded in utf-8, no matter
2675 (setq default-file-name-coding-system 'utf-8)
2676 ;; Mac OS X's Terminal.app by default uses utf-8 regardless of
2678 (when (and (null window-system)
2679 (equal (getenv "TERM_PROGRAM" frame) "Apple_Terminal"))
2680 (set-terminal-coding-system 'utf-8)
2681 (set-keyboard-coding-system 'utf-8)))
2683 ;; Default to A4 paper if we're not in a C, POSIX or US locale.
2684 ;; (See comments in Flocale_info.)
2686 (let ((locale locale)
2687 (paper (locale-info 'paper)))
2689 ;; This will always be null at the time of writing.
2691 ((equal paper '(216 279))
2692 (setq ps-paper-type 'letter))
2693 ((equal paper '(210 297))
2694 (setq ps-paper-type 'a4)))
2695 (let ((vars '("LC_ALL" "LC_PAPER" "LANG")))
2696 (while (and vars (= 0 (length locale)))
2697 (setq locale (getenv (pop vars) frame))))
2699 ;; As of glibc 2.2.5, these are the only US Letter locales,
2700 ;; and the rest are A4.
2702 (or (locale-name-match locale '(("c$" . letter)
2707 ("enu$" . letter) ; Windows
2714 ;;; Character property
2716 (put 'char-code-property-table 'char-table-extra-slots 5)
2718 (defun define-char-code-property (name table &optional docstring)
2719 "Define NAME as a character code property given by TABLE.
2720 TABLE is a char-table of purpose `char-code-property-table' with
2723 2nd: Function to call to get a property value of a character.
2724 It is called with three arguments CHAR, VAL, and TABLE, where
2725 CHAR is a character, VAL is the value of (aref TABLE CHAR).
2726 3rd: Function to call to put a property value of a character.
2727 It is called with the same arguments as above.
2728 4th: Function to call to get a description string of a property value.
2729 It is called with one argument VALUE, a property value.
2730 5th: Data used by the above functions.
2732 TABLE may be a name of file to load to build a char-table. The
2733 file should contain a call of `define-char-code-property' with a
2734 char-table of the above format as the argument TABLE.
2736 TABLE may also be nil, in which case no property value is pre-assigned.
2738 Optional 3rd argument DOCSTRING is a documentation string of the property.
2740 See also the documentation of `get-char-code-property' and
2741 `put-char-code-property'."
2743 (error "Not a symbol: %s" name))
2744 (if (char-table-p table)
2745 (or (and (eq (char-table-subtype table) 'char-code-property-table)
2746 (eq (char-table-extra-slot table 0) name))
2747 (error "Invalid char-table: %s" table))
2749 (error "Not a char-table nor a file name: %s" table)))
2750 (if (stringp table) (setq table (purecopy table)))
2751 (let ((slot (assq name char-code-property-alist)))
2754 (setq char-code-property-alist
2755 (cons (cons name table) char-code-property-alist))))
2756 (put name 'char-code-property-documentation (purecopy docstring)))
2758 (defvar char-code-property-table
2759 (make-char-table 'char-code-property-table)
2760 "Char-table containing a property list of each character code.
2761 This table is used for properties not listed in `char-code-property-alist'.
2762 See also the documentation of `get-char-code-property' and
2763 `put-char-code-property'.")
2765 (defun get-char-code-property (char propname)
2766 "Return the value of CHAR's PROPNAME property."
2767 (let ((table (unicode-property-table-internal propname)))
2769 (let ((func (char-table-extra-slot table 1)))
2770 (if (functionp func)
2771 (funcall func char (aref table char) table)
2772 (get-unicode-property-internal table char)))
2773 (plist-get (aref char-code-property-table char) propname))))
2775 (defun put-char-code-property (char propname value)
2776 "Store CHAR's PROPNAME property with VALUE.
2777 It can be retrieved with `(get-char-code-property CHAR PROPNAME)'."
2778 (let ((table (unicode-property-table-internal propname)))
2780 (let ((func (char-table-extra-slot table 2)))
2781 (if (functionp func)
2782 (funcall func char value table)
2783 (put-unicode-property-internal table char value)))
2784 (let* ((plist (aref char-code-property-table char))
2785 (x (plist-put plist propname value)))
2787 (aset char-code-property-table char x))))
2790 (defun char-code-property-description (prop value)
2791 "Return a description string of character property PROP's value VALUE.
2792 If there's no description string for VALUE, return nil."
2793 (let ((table (unicode-property-table-internal prop)))
2795 (let ((func (char-table-extra-slot table 3)))
2796 (if (functionp func)
2797 (funcall func value))))))
2800 ;; Pretty description of encoded string
2802 ;; Alist of ISO 2022 control code vs the corresponding mnemonic string.
2803 (defconst iso-2022-control-alist
2811 (defun encoded-string-description (str coding-system)
2812 "Return a pretty description of STR that is encoded by CODING-SYSTEM."
2813 (setq str (string-as-unibyte str))
2815 (if (and coding-system (eq (coding-system-type coding-system) 'iso-2022))
2816 ;; Try to get a pretty description for ISO 2022 escape sequences.
2817 (function (lambda (x) (or (cdr (assq x iso-2022-control-alist))
2818 (format "#x%02X" x))))
2819 (function (lambda (x) (format "#x%02X" x))))
2822 (defun encode-coding-char (char coding-system &optional charset)
2823 "Encode CHAR by CODING-SYSTEM and return the resulting string.
2824 If CODING-SYSTEM can't safely encode CHAR, return nil.
2825 The 3rd optional argument CHARSET, if non-nil, is a charset preferred
2827 (let* ((str1 (string-as-multibyte (string char)))
2828 (str2 (string-as-multibyte (string char char)))
2829 (found (find-coding-systems-string str1))
2831 (if (and (consp found)
2832 (eq (car found) 'undecided))
2834 (when (memq (coding-system-base coding-system) found)
2835 ;; We must find the encoded string of CHAR. But, just encoding
2836 ;; CHAR will put extra control sequences (usually to designate
2837 ;; ASCII charset) at the tail if type of CODING is ISO 2022.
2838 ;; To exclude such tailing bytes, we at first encode one-char
2839 ;; string and two-char string, then check how many bytes at the
2840 ;; tail of both encoded strings are the same.
2843 (put-text-property 0 1 'charset charset str1)
2844 (put-text-property 0 2 'charset charset str2))
2845 (setq enc1 (encode-coding-string str1 coding-system)
2847 enc2 (encode-coding-string str2 coding-system)
2849 (while (and (> i1 0) (= (aref enc1 (1- i1)) (aref enc2 (1- i2))))
2850 (setq i1 (1- i1) i2 (1- i2)))
2852 ;; Now (substring enc1 i1) and (substring enc2 i2) are the same,
2853 ;; and they are the extra control sequences at the tail to
2855 (substring enc2 0 i2)))))
2857 ;; Backwards compatibility. These might be better with :init-value t,
2858 ;; but that breaks loadup.
2859 (define-minor-mode unify-8859-on-encoding-mode
2863 (define-minor-mode unify-8859-on-decoding-mode
2868 (defvar nonascii-insert-offset 0)
2869 (make-obsolete-variable 'nonascii-insert-offset "do not use it." "23.1")
2870 (defvar nonascii-translation-table nil)
2871 (make-obsolete-variable 'nonascii-translation-table "do not use it." "23.1")
2873 (defvar ucs-names nil
2874 "Alist of cached (CHAR-NAME . CHAR-CODE) pairs.")
2877 "Return alist of (CHAR-NAME . CHAR-CODE) pairs cached in `ucs-names'."
2881 ;; (#x3400 . #x4DBF) CJK Ideographs Extension A
2883 ;; (#x4E00 . #x9FFF) CJK Unified Ideographs
2885 ;; (#xD800 . #xFAFF) Surrogate/Private
2888 '((#x10000 . #x134FF)
2889 ;; (#x13500 . #x167FF) unused
2891 ;; (#x16A40 . #x1AFFF) unused
2893 ;; (#x1B100 . #x1CFFF) unused
2895 ;; (#x20000 . #xDFFFF) CJK Ideograph Extension A, B, etc, unused
2896 (#xE0000 . #xE01FF)))
2897 (gc-cons-threshold 10000000)
2899 (dolist (range bmp-ranges)
2903 (if (setq name (get-char-code-property c 'name))
2904 (push (cons name c) names))
2905 (if (setq name (get-char-code-property c 'old-name))
2906 (push (cons name c) names))
2908 (dolist (range upper-ranges)
2912 (if (setq name (get-char-code-property c 'name))
2913 (push (cons name c) names))
2915 (setq ucs-names names))))
2917 (defvar ucs-completions (lazy-completion-table ucs-completions ucs-names)
2918 "Lazy completion table for completing on Unicode character names.")
2919 (put 'ucs-completions 'risky-local-variable t)
2921 (defun read-char-by-name (prompt)
2922 "Read a character by its Unicode name or hex number string.
2923 Display PROMPT and read a string that represents a character by its
2924 Unicode property `name' or `old-name'.
2926 This function returns the character as a number.
2928 You can type a few of the first letters of the Unicode name and
2929 use completion. If you type a substring of the Unicode name
2930 preceded by an asterisk `*' and use completion, it will show all
2931 the characters whose names include that substring, not necessarily
2932 at the beginning of the name.
2934 This function also accepts a hexadecimal number of Unicode code
2935 point or a number in hash notation, e.g. #o21430 for octal,
2936 #x2318 for hex, or #10r8984 for decimal."
2937 (let* ((completion-ignore-case t)
2938 (input (completing-read prompt ucs-completions)))
2940 ((string-match-p "^[0-9a-fA-F]+$" input)
2941 (string-to-number input 16))
2942 ((string-match-p "^#" input)
2945 (cdr (assoc-string input (ucs-names) t))))))
2947 (defun ucs-insert (character &optional count inherit)
2948 "Insert COUNT copies of CHARACTER of the given Unicode code point.
2949 Interactively, prompts for a Unicode character name or a hex number
2950 using `read-char-by-name'.
2952 You can type a few of the first letters of the Unicode name and
2953 use completion. If you type a substring of the Unicode name
2954 preceded by an asterisk `*' and use completion, it will show all
2955 the characters whose names include that substring, not necessarily
2956 at the beginning of the name.
2958 The optional third arg INHERIT (non-nil when called interactively),
2959 says to inherit text properties from adjoining text, if those
2960 properties are sticky."
2962 (list (read-char-by-name "Unicode (name or hex): ")
2963 (prefix-numeric-value current-prefix-arg)
2965 (unless count (setq count 1))
2966 (if (stringp character)
2967 (setq character (string-to-number character 16)))
2969 ((not (integerp character))
2970 (error "Not a Unicode character code: %S" character))
2971 ((or (< character 0) (> character #x10FFFF))
2972 (error "Not a Unicode character code: 0x%X" character)))
2974 (dotimes (i count) (insert-and-inherit character))
2975 (dotimes (i count) (insert character))))
2977 (define-key ctl-x-map "8\r" 'ucs-insert)
2979 ;;; mule-cmds.el ends here