1 /* Lisp functions pertaining to editing.
3 Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1989, 1993-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
7 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
12 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
22 #include <sys/types.h>
32 #ifdef HAVE_SYS_UTSNAME_H
33 #include <sys/utsname.h>
38 /* systime.h includes <sys/time.h> which, on some systems, is required
39 for <sys/resource.h>; thus systime.h must be included before
43 #if defined HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
44 #include <sys/resource.h>
53 #include "intervals.h"
54 #include "character.h"
59 #include "blockinput.h"
61 #define TM_YEAR_BASE 1900
64 extern Lisp_Object
w32_get_internal_run_time (void);
67 static Lisp_Object
format_time_string (char const *, ptrdiff_t, EMACS_TIME
,
69 static int tm_diff (struct tm
*, struct tm
*);
70 static void update_buffer_properties (ptrdiff_t, ptrdiff_t);
72 static Lisp_Object Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions
;
74 /* Symbol for the text property used to mark fields. */
78 /* A special value for Qfield properties. */
80 static Lisp_Object Qboundary
;
82 /* The startup value of the TZ environment variable so it can be
83 restored if the user calls set-time-zone-rule with a nil
84 argument. If null, the TZ environment variable was unset. */
85 static char const *initial_tz
;
87 /* True if the static variable tzvalbuf (defined in
88 set_time_zone_rule) is part of 'environ'. */
89 static bool tzvalbuf_in_environ
;
95 const char *user_name
;
97 struct passwd
*pw
; /* password entry for the current user */
100 /* Set up system_name even when dumping. */
104 /* Don't bother with this on initial start when just dumping out */
107 #endif /* not CANNOT_DUMP */
109 initial_tz
= getenv ("TZ");
110 tzvalbuf_in_environ
= 0;
112 pw
= getpwuid (getuid ());
114 /* We let the real user name default to "root" because that's quite
115 accurate on MSDOG and because it lets Emacs find the init file.
116 (The DVX libraries override the Djgpp libraries here.) */
117 Vuser_real_login_name
= build_string (pw
? pw
->pw_name
: "root");
119 Vuser_real_login_name
= build_string (pw
? pw
->pw_name
: "unknown");
122 /* Get the effective user name, by consulting environment variables,
123 or the effective uid if those are unset. */
124 user_name
= getenv ("LOGNAME");
127 user_name
= getenv ("USERNAME"); /* it's USERNAME on NT */
128 #else /* WINDOWSNT */
129 user_name
= getenv ("USER");
130 #endif /* WINDOWSNT */
133 pw
= getpwuid (geteuid ());
134 user_name
= pw
? pw
->pw_name
: "unknown";
136 Vuser_login_name
= build_string (user_name
);
138 /* If the user name claimed in the environment vars differs from
139 the real uid, use the claimed name to find the full name. */
140 tem
= Fstring_equal (Vuser_login_name
, Vuser_real_login_name
);
142 tem
= Vuser_login_name
;
145 uid_t euid
= geteuid ();
146 tem
= make_fixnum_or_float (euid
);
148 Vuser_full_name
= Fuser_full_name (tem
);
152 Vuser_full_name
= build_string (p
);
153 else if (NILP (Vuser_full_name
))
154 Vuser_full_name
= build_string ("unknown");
156 #ifdef HAVE_SYS_UTSNAME_H
160 Voperating_system_release
= build_string (uts
.release
);
163 Voperating_system_release
= Qnil
;
167 DEFUN ("char-to-string", Fchar_to_string
, Schar_to_string
, 1, 1, 0,
168 doc
: /* Convert arg CHAR to a string containing that character.
169 usage: (char-to-string CHAR) */)
170 (Lisp_Object character
)
173 unsigned char str
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
];
175 CHECK_CHARACTER (character
);
176 c
= XFASTINT (character
);
178 len
= CHAR_STRING (c
, str
);
179 return make_string_from_bytes ((char *) str
, 1, len
);
182 DEFUN ("byte-to-string", Fbyte_to_string
, Sbyte_to_string
, 1, 1, 0,
183 doc
: /* Convert arg BYTE to a unibyte string containing that byte. */)
188 if (XINT (byte
) < 0 || XINT (byte
) > 255)
189 error ("Invalid byte");
191 return make_string_from_bytes ((char *) &b
, 1, 1);
194 DEFUN ("string-to-char", Fstring_to_char
, Sstring_to_char
, 1, 1, 0,
195 doc
: /* Return the first character in STRING. */)
196 (register Lisp_Object string
)
198 register Lisp_Object val
;
199 CHECK_STRING (string
);
202 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (string
))
203 XSETFASTINT (val
, STRING_CHAR (SDATA (string
)));
205 XSETFASTINT (val
, SREF (string
, 0));
208 XSETFASTINT (val
, 0);
212 DEFUN ("point", Fpoint
, Spoint
, 0, 0, 0,
213 doc
: /* Return value of point, as an integer.
214 Beginning of buffer is position (point-min). */)
218 XSETFASTINT (temp
, PT
);
222 DEFUN ("point-marker", Fpoint_marker
, Spoint_marker
, 0, 0, 0,
223 doc
: /* Return value of point, as a marker object. */)
226 return build_marker (current_buffer
, PT
, PT_BYTE
);
229 DEFUN ("goto-char", Fgoto_char
, Sgoto_char
, 1, 1, "NGoto char: ",
230 doc
: /* Set point to POSITION, a number or marker.
231 Beginning of buffer is position (point-min), end is (point-max).
233 The return value is POSITION. */)
234 (register Lisp_Object position
)
238 if (MARKERP (position
)
239 && current_buffer
== XMARKER (position
)->buffer
)
241 pos
= marker_position (position
);
243 SET_PT_BOTH (BEGV
, BEGV_BYTE
);
245 SET_PT_BOTH (ZV
, ZV_BYTE
);
247 SET_PT_BOTH (pos
, marker_byte_position (position
));
252 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position
);
254 pos
= clip_to_bounds (BEGV
, XINT (position
), ZV
);
260 /* Return the start or end position of the region.
261 BEGINNINGP means return the start.
262 If there is no region active, signal an error. */
265 region_limit (bool beginningp
)
269 if (!NILP (Vtransient_mark_mode
)
270 && NILP (Vmark_even_if_inactive
)
271 && NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark_active
)))
272 xsignal0 (Qmark_inactive
);
274 m
= Fmarker_position (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
));
276 error ("The mark is not set now, so there is no region");
278 /* Clip to the current narrowing (bug#11770). */
279 return make_number ((PT
< XFASTINT (m
)) == beginningp
281 : clip_to_bounds (BEGV
, XFASTINT (m
), ZV
));
284 DEFUN ("region-beginning", Fregion_beginning
, Sregion_beginning
, 0, 0, 0,
285 doc
: /* Return the integer value of point or mark, whichever is smaller. */)
288 return region_limit (1);
291 DEFUN ("region-end", Fregion_end
, Sregion_end
, 0, 0, 0,
292 doc
: /* Return the integer value of point or mark, whichever is larger. */)
295 return region_limit (0);
298 DEFUN ("mark-marker", Fmark_marker
, Smark_marker
, 0, 0, 0,
299 doc
: /* Return this buffer's mark, as a marker object.
300 Watch out! Moving this marker changes the mark position.
301 If you set the marker not to point anywhere, the buffer will have no mark. */)
304 return BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
);
308 /* Find all the overlays in the current buffer that touch position POS.
309 Return the number found, and store them in a vector in VEC
313 overlays_around (EMACS_INT pos
, Lisp_Object
*vec
, ptrdiff_t len
)
315 Lisp_Object overlay
, start
, end
;
316 struct Lisp_Overlay
*tail
;
317 ptrdiff_t startpos
, endpos
;
320 for (tail
= current_buffer
->overlays_before
; tail
; tail
= tail
->next
)
322 XSETMISC (overlay
, tail
);
324 end
= OVERLAY_END (overlay
);
325 endpos
= OVERLAY_POSITION (end
);
328 start
= OVERLAY_START (overlay
);
329 startpos
= OVERLAY_POSITION (start
);
334 /* Keep counting overlays even if we can't return them all. */
339 for (tail
= current_buffer
->overlays_after
; tail
; tail
= tail
->next
)
341 XSETMISC (overlay
, tail
);
343 start
= OVERLAY_START (overlay
);
344 startpos
= OVERLAY_POSITION (start
);
347 end
= OVERLAY_END (overlay
);
348 endpos
= OVERLAY_POSITION (end
);
360 /* Return the value of property PROP, in OBJECT at POSITION.
361 It's the value of PROP that a char inserted at POSITION would get.
362 OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer.
363 If OBJECT is a buffer, then overlay properties are considered as well as
365 If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but
366 window-specific overlays are considered only if they are associated
369 get_pos_property (Lisp_Object position
, register Lisp_Object prop
, Lisp_Object object
)
371 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position
);
374 XSETBUFFER (object
, current_buffer
);
375 else if (WINDOWP (object
))
376 object
= XWINDOW (object
)->buffer
;
378 if (!BUFFERP (object
))
379 /* pos-property only makes sense in buffers right now, since strings
380 have no overlays and no notion of insertion for which stickiness
382 return Fget_text_property (position
, prop
, object
);
385 EMACS_INT posn
= XINT (position
);
387 Lisp_Object
*overlay_vec
, tem
;
388 struct buffer
*obuf
= current_buffer
;
391 set_buffer_temp (XBUFFER (object
));
393 /* First try with room for 40 overlays. */
395 overlay_vec
= alloca (noverlays
* sizeof *overlay_vec
);
396 noverlays
= overlays_around (posn
, overlay_vec
, noverlays
);
398 /* If there are more than 40,
399 make enough space for all, and try again. */
402 SAFE_ALLOCA_LISP (overlay_vec
, noverlays
);
403 noverlays
= overlays_around (posn
, overlay_vec
, noverlays
);
405 noverlays
= sort_overlays (overlay_vec
, noverlays
, NULL
);
407 set_buffer_temp (obuf
);
409 /* Now check the overlays in order of decreasing priority. */
410 while (--noverlays
>= 0)
412 Lisp_Object ol
= overlay_vec
[noverlays
];
413 tem
= Foverlay_get (ol
, prop
);
416 /* Check the overlay is indeed active at point. */
417 Lisp_Object start
= OVERLAY_START (ol
), finish
= OVERLAY_END (ol
);
418 if ((OVERLAY_POSITION (start
) == posn
419 && XMARKER (start
)->insertion_type
== 1)
420 || (OVERLAY_POSITION (finish
) == posn
421 && XMARKER (finish
)->insertion_type
== 0))
422 ; /* The overlay will not cover a char inserted at point. */
432 { /* Now check the text properties. */
433 int stickiness
= text_property_stickiness (prop
, position
, object
);
435 return Fget_text_property (position
, prop
, object
);
436 else if (stickiness
< 0
437 && XINT (position
) > BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object
)))
438 return Fget_text_property (make_number (XINT (position
) - 1),
446 /* Find the field surrounding POS in *BEG and *END. If POS is nil,
447 the value of point is used instead. If BEG or END is null,
448 means don't store the beginning or end of the field.
450 BEG_LIMIT and END_LIMIT serve to limit the ranged of the returned
451 results; they do not effect boundary behavior.
453 If MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY is non-nil, then if POS is at the very first
454 position of a field, then the beginning of the previous field is
455 returned instead of the beginning of POS's field (since the end of a
456 field is actually also the beginning of the next input field, this
457 behavior is sometimes useful). Additionally in the MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY
458 non-nil case, if two fields are separated by a field with the special
459 value `boundary', and POS lies within it, then the two separated
460 fields are considered to be adjacent, and POS between them, when
461 finding the beginning and ending of the "merged" field.
463 Either BEG or END may be 0, in which case the corresponding value
467 find_field (Lisp_Object pos
, Lisp_Object merge_at_boundary
,
468 Lisp_Object beg_limit
,
469 ptrdiff_t *beg
, Lisp_Object end_limit
, ptrdiff_t *end
)
471 /* Fields right before and after the point. */
472 Lisp_Object before_field
, after_field
;
473 /* True if POS counts as the start of a field. */
474 bool at_field_start
= 0;
475 /* True if POS counts as the end of a field. */
476 bool at_field_end
= 0;
479 XSETFASTINT (pos
, PT
);
481 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos
);
484 = get_char_property_and_overlay (pos
, Qfield
, Qnil
, NULL
);
486 = (XFASTINT (pos
) > BEGV
487 ? get_char_property_and_overlay (make_number (XINT (pos
) - 1),
489 /* Using nil here would be a more obvious choice, but it would
490 fail when the buffer starts with a non-sticky field. */
493 /* See if we need to handle the case where MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY is nil
494 and POS is at beginning of a field, which can also be interpreted
495 as the end of the previous field. Note that the case where if
496 MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY is non-nil (see function comment) is actually the
497 more natural one; then we avoid treating the beginning of a field
499 if (NILP (merge_at_boundary
))
501 Lisp_Object field
= get_pos_property (pos
, Qfield
, Qnil
);
502 if (!EQ (field
, after_field
))
504 if (!EQ (field
, before_field
))
506 if (NILP (field
) && at_field_start
&& at_field_end
)
507 /* If an inserted char would have a nil field while the surrounding
508 text is non-nil, we're probably not looking at a
509 zero-length field, but instead at a non-nil field that's
510 not intended for editing (such as comint's prompts). */
511 at_field_end
= at_field_start
= 0;
514 /* Note about special `boundary' fields:
516 Consider the case where the point (`.') is between the fields `x' and `y':
520 In this situation, if merge_at_boundary is non-nil, consider the
521 `x' and `y' fields as forming one big merged field, and so the end
522 of the field is the end of `y'.
524 However, if `x' and `y' are separated by a special `boundary' field
525 (a field with a `field' char-property of 'boundary), then ignore
526 this special field when merging adjacent fields. Here's the same
527 situation, but with a `boundary' field between the `x' and `y' fields:
531 Here, if point is at the end of `x', the beginning of `y', or
532 anywhere in-between (within the `boundary' field), merge all
533 three fields and consider the beginning as being the beginning of
534 the `x' field, and the end as being the end of the `y' field. */
539 /* POS is at the edge of a field, and we should consider it as
540 the beginning of the following field. */
541 *beg
= XFASTINT (pos
);
543 /* Find the previous field boundary. */
546 if (!NILP (merge_at_boundary
) && EQ (before_field
, Qboundary
))
547 /* Skip a `boundary' field. */
548 p
= Fprevious_single_char_property_change (p
, Qfield
, Qnil
,
551 p
= Fprevious_single_char_property_change (p
, Qfield
, Qnil
,
553 *beg
= NILP (p
) ? BEGV
: XFASTINT (p
);
560 /* POS is at the edge of a field, and we should consider it as
561 the end of the previous field. */
562 *end
= XFASTINT (pos
);
564 /* Find the next field boundary. */
566 if (!NILP (merge_at_boundary
) && EQ (after_field
, Qboundary
))
567 /* Skip a `boundary' field. */
568 pos
= Fnext_single_char_property_change (pos
, Qfield
, Qnil
,
571 pos
= Fnext_single_char_property_change (pos
, Qfield
, Qnil
,
573 *end
= NILP (pos
) ? ZV
: XFASTINT (pos
);
579 DEFUN ("delete-field", Fdelete_field
, Sdelete_field
, 0, 1, 0,
580 doc
: /* Delete the field surrounding POS.
581 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
582 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS. */)
586 find_field (pos
, Qnil
, Qnil
, &beg
, Qnil
, &end
);
588 del_range (beg
, end
);
592 DEFUN ("field-string", Ffield_string
, Sfield_string
, 0, 1, 0,
593 doc
: /* Return the contents of the field surrounding POS as a string.
594 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
595 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS. */)
599 find_field (pos
, Qnil
, Qnil
, &beg
, Qnil
, &end
);
600 return make_buffer_string (beg
, end
, 1);
603 DEFUN ("field-string-no-properties", Ffield_string_no_properties
, Sfield_string_no_properties
, 0, 1, 0,
604 doc
: /* Return the contents of the field around POS, without text properties.
605 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
606 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS. */)
610 find_field (pos
, Qnil
, Qnil
, &beg
, Qnil
, &end
);
611 return make_buffer_string (beg
, end
, 0);
614 DEFUN ("field-beginning", Ffield_beginning
, Sfield_beginning
, 0, 3, 0,
615 doc
: /* Return the beginning of the field surrounding POS.
616 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
617 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS.
618 If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is non-nil and POS is at the beginning of its
619 field, then the beginning of the *previous* field is returned.
620 If LIMIT is non-nil, it is a buffer position; if the beginning of the field
621 is before LIMIT, then LIMIT will be returned instead. */)
622 (Lisp_Object pos
, Lisp_Object escape_from_edge
, Lisp_Object limit
)
625 find_field (pos
, escape_from_edge
, limit
, &beg
, Qnil
, 0);
626 return make_number (beg
);
629 DEFUN ("field-end", Ffield_end
, Sfield_end
, 0, 3, 0,
630 doc
: /* Return the end of the field surrounding POS.
631 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
632 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS.
633 If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is non-nil and POS is at the end of its field,
634 then the end of the *following* field is returned.
635 If LIMIT is non-nil, it is a buffer position; if the end of the field
636 is after LIMIT, then LIMIT will be returned instead. */)
637 (Lisp_Object pos
, Lisp_Object escape_from_edge
, Lisp_Object limit
)
640 find_field (pos
, escape_from_edge
, Qnil
, 0, limit
, &end
);
641 return make_number (end
);
644 DEFUN ("constrain-to-field", Fconstrain_to_field
, Sconstrain_to_field
, 2, 5, 0,
645 doc
: /* Return the position closest to NEW-POS that is in the same field as OLD-POS.
646 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
648 If NEW-POS is nil, then use the current point instead, and move point
649 to the resulting constrained position, in addition to returning that
652 If OLD-POS is at the boundary of two fields, then the allowable
653 positions for NEW-POS depends on the value of the optional argument
654 ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE: If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is nil, then NEW-POS is
655 constrained to the field that has the same `field' char-property
656 as any new characters inserted at OLD-POS, whereas if ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE
657 is non-nil, NEW-POS is constrained to the union of the two adjacent
658 fields. Additionally, if two fields are separated by another field with
659 the special value `boundary', then any point within this special field is
660 also considered to be `on the boundary'.
662 If the optional argument ONLY-IN-LINE is non-nil and constraining
663 NEW-POS would move it to a different line, NEW-POS is returned
664 unconstrained. This useful for commands that move by line, like
665 \\[next-line] or \\[beginning-of-line], which should generally respect field boundaries
666 only in the case where they can still move to the right line.
668 If the optional argument INHIBIT-CAPTURE-PROPERTY is non-nil, and OLD-POS has
669 a non-nil property of that name, then any field boundaries are ignored.
671 Field boundaries are not noticed if `inhibit-field-text-motion' is non-nil. */)
672 (Lisp_Object new_pos
, Lisp_Object old_pos
, Lisp_Object escape_from_edge
,
673 Lisp_Object only_in_line
, Lisp_Object inhibit_capture_property
)
675 /* If non-zero, then the original point, before re-positioning. */
676 ptrdiff_t orig_point
= 0;
678 Lisp_Object prev_old
, prev_new
;
681 /* Use the current point, and afterwards, set it. */
684 XSETFASTINT (new_pos
, PT
);
687 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (new_pos
);
688 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (old_pos
);
690 fwd
= (XINT (new_pos
) > XINT (old_pos
));
692 prev_old
= make_number (XINT (old_pos
) - 1);
693 prev_new
= make_number (XINT (new_pos
) - 1);
695 if (NILP (Vinhibit_field_text_motion
)
696 && !EQ (new_pos
, old_pos
)
697 && (!NILP (Fget_char_property (new_pos
, Qfield
, Qnil
))
698 || !NILP (Fget_char_property (old_pos
, Qfield
, Qnil
))
699 /* To recognize field boundaries, we must also look at the
700 previous positions; we could use `get_pos_property'
701 instead, but in itself that would fail inside non-sticky
702 fields (like comint prompts). */
703 || (XFASTINT (new_pos
) > BEGV
704 && !NILP (Fget_char_property (prev_new
, Qfield
, Qnil
)))
705 || (XFASTINT (old_pos
) > BEGV
706 && !NILP (Fget_char_property (prev_old
, Qfield
, Qnil
))))
707 && (NILP (inhibit_capture_property
)
708 /* Field boundaries are again a problem; but now we must
709 decide the case exactly, so we need to call
710 `get_pos_property' as well. */
711 || (NILP (get_pos_property (old_pos
, inhibit_capture_property
, Qnil
))
712 && (XFASTINT (old_pos
) <= BEGV
713 || NILP (Fget_char_property (old_pos
, inhibit_capture_property
, Qnil
))
714 || NILP (Fget_char_property (prev_old
, inhibit_capture_property
, Qnil
))))))
715 /* It is possible that NEW_POS is not within the same field as
716 OLD_POS; try to move NEW_POS so that it is. */
719 Lisp_Object field_bound
;
722 field_bound
= Ffield_end (old_pos
, escape_from_edge
, new_pos
);
724 field_bound
= Ffield_beginning (old_pos
, escape_from_edge
, new_pos
);
726 if (/* See if ESCAPE_FROM_EDGE caused FIELD_BOUND to jump to the
727 other side of NEW_POS, which would mean that NEW_POS is
728 already acceptable, and it's not necessary to constrain it
730 ((XFASTINT (field_bound
) < XFASTINT (new_pos
)) ? fwd
: !fwd
)
731 /* NEW_POS should be constrained, but only if either
732 ONLY_IN_LINE is nil (in which case any constraint is OK),
733 or NEW_POS and FIELD_BOUND are on the same line (in which
734 case the constraint is OK even if ONLY_IN_LINE is non-nil). */
735 && (NILP (only_in_line
)
736 /* This is the ONLY_IN_LINE case, check that NEW_POS and
737 FIELD_BOUND are on the same line by seeing whether
738 there's an intervening newline or not. */
739 || (find_newline (XFASTINT (new_pos
), -1,
740 XFASTINT (field_bound
), -1,
741 fwd
? -1 : 1, &shortage
, NULL
, 1),
743 /* Constrain NEW_POS to FIELD_BOUND. */
744 new_pos
= field_bound
;
746 if (orig_point
&& XFASTINT (new_pos
) != orig_point
)
747 /* The NEW_POS argument was originally nil, so automatically set PT. */
748 SET_PT (XFASTINT (new_pos
));
755 DEFUN ("line-beginning-position",
756 Fline_beginning_position
, Sline_beginning_position
, 0, 1, 0,
757 doc
: /* Return the character position of the first character on the current line.
758 With optional argument N, scan forward N - 1 lines first.
759 If the scan reaches the end of the buffer, return that position.
761 This function ignores text display directionality; it returns the
762 position of the first character in logical order, i.e. the smallest
763 character position on the line.
765 This function constrains the returned position to the current field
766 unless that position would be on a different line than the original,
767 unconstrained result. If N is nil or 1, and a front-sticky field
768 starts at point, the scan stops as soon as it starts. To ignore field
769 boundaries, bind `inhibit-field-text-motion' to t.
771 This function does not move point. */)
774 ptrdiff_t orig
, orig_byte
, end
;
775 ptrdiff_t count
= SPECPDL_INDEX ();
776 specbind (Qinhibit_point_motion_hooks
, Qt
);
785 Fforward_line (make_number (XINT (n
) - 1));
788 SET_PT_BOTH (orig
, orig_byte
);
790 unbind_to (count
, Qnil
);
792 /* Return END constrained to the current input field. */
793 return Fconstrain_to_field (make_number (end
), make_number (orig
),
794 XINT (n
) != 1 ? Qt
: Qnil
,
798 DEFUN ("line-end-position", Fline_end_position
, Sline_end_position
, 0, 1, 0,
799 doc
: /* Return the character position of the last character on the current line.
800 With argument N not nil or 1, move forward N - 1 lines first.
801 If scan reaches end of buffer, return that position.
803 This function ignores text display directionality; it returns the
804 position of the last character in logical order, i.e. the largest
805 character position on the line.
807 This function constrains the returned position to the current field
808 unless that would be on a different line than the original,
809 unconstrained result. If N is nil or 1, and a rear-sticky field ends
810 at point, the scan stops as soon as it starts. To ignore field
811 boundaries bind `inhibit-field-text-motion' to t.
813 This function does not move point. */)
825 clipped_n
= clip_to_bounds (PTRDIFF_MIN
+ 1, XINT (n
), PTRDIFF_MAX
);
826 end_pos
= find_before_next_newline (orig
, 0, clipped_n
- (clipped_n
<= 0),
829 /* Return END_POS constrained to the current input field. */
830 return Fconstrain_to_field (make_number (end_pos
), make_number (orig
),
834 /* Save current buffer state for `save-excursion' special form.
835 We (ab)use Lisp_Misc_Save_Value to allow explicit free and so
836 offload some work from GC. */
839 save_excursion_save (void)
841 return make_save_value
844 /* Do not copy the mark if it points to nowhere. */
845 (XMARKER (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
))->buffer
846 ? Fcopy_marker (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
), Qnil
)
848 /* Selected window if current buffer is shown in it, nil otherwise. */
849 ((XBUFFER (XWINDOW (selected_window
)->buffer
) == current_buffer
)
850 ? selected_window
: Qnil
),
851 BVAR (current_buffer
, mark_active
));
854 /* Restore saved buffer before leaving `save-excursion' special form. */
857 save_excursion_restore (Lisp_Object info
)
859 Lisp_Object tem
, tem1
, omark
, nmark
;
860 struct gcpro gcpro1
, gcpro2
, gcpro3
;
862 tem
= Fmarker_buffer (XSAVE_OBJECT (info
, 0));
863 /* If we're unwinding to top level, saved buffer may be deleted. This
864 means that all of its markers are unchained and so tem is nil. */
868 omark
= nmark
= Qnil
;
869 GCPRO3 (info
, omark
, nmark
);
874 tem
= XSAVE_OBJECT (info
, 0);
876 unchain_marker (XMARKER (tem
));
879 tem
= XSAVE_OBJECT (info
, 1);
880 omark
= Fmarker_position (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
));
882 unchain_marker (XMARKER (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
)));
885 Fset_marker (BVAR (current_buffer
, mark
), tem
, Fcurrent_buffer ());
886 nmark
= Fmarker_position (tem
);
887 unchain_marker (XMARKER (tem
));
891 tem
= XSAVE_OBJECT (info
, 3);
892 tem1
= BVAR (current_buffer
, mark_active
);
893 bset_mark_active (current_buffer
, tem
);
895 /* If mark is active now, and either was not active
896 or was at a different place, run the activate hook. */
899 if (! EQ (omark
, nmark
))
901 tem
= intern ("activate-mark-hook");
902 Frun_hooks (1, &tem
);
905 /* If mark has ceased to be active, run deactivate hook. */
906 else if (! NILP (tem1
))
908 tem
= intern ("deactivate-mark-hook");
909 Frun_hooks (1, &tem
);
912 /* If buffer was visible in a window, and a different window was
913 selected, and the old selected window is still showing this
914 buffer, restore point in that window. */
915 tem
= XSAVE_OBJECT (info
, 2);
917 && !EQ (tem
, selected_window
)
918 && (tem1
= XWINDOW (tem
)->buffer
,
919 (/* Window is live... */
921 /* ...and it shows the current buffer. */
922 && XBUFFER (tem1
) == current_buffer
)))
923 Fset_window_point (tem
, make_number (PT
));
933 DEFUN ("save-excursion", Fsave_excursion
, Ssave_excursion
, 0, UNEVALLED
, 0,
934 doc
: /* Save point, mark, and current buffer; execute BODY; restore those things.
935 Executes BODY just like `progn'.
936 The values of point, mark and the current buffer are restored
937 even in case of abnormal exit (throw or error).
938 The state of activation of the mark is also restored.
940 This construct does not save `deactivate-mark', and therefore
941 functions that change the buffer will still cause deactivation
942 of the mark at the end of the command. To prevent that, bind
943 `deactivate-mark' with `let'.
945 If you only want to save the current buffer but not point nor mark,
946 then just use `save-current-buffer', or even `with-current-buffer'.
948 usage: (save-excursion &rest BODY) */)
951 register Lisp_Object val
;
952 ptrdiff_t count
= SPECPDL_INDEX ();
954 record_unwind_protect (save_excursion_restore
, save_excursion_save ());
957 return unbind_to (count
, val
);
960 DEFUN ("save-current-buffer", Fsave_current_buffer
, Ssave_current_buffer
, 0, UNEVALLED
, 0,
961 doc
: /* Record which buffer is current; execute BODY; make that buffer current.
962 BODY is executed just like `progn'.
963 usage: (save-current-buffer &rest BODY) */)
966 ptrdiff_t count
= SPECPDL_INDEX ();
968 record_unwind_current_buffer ();
969 return unbind_to (count
, Fprogn (args
));
972 DEFUN ("buffer-size", Fbuffer_size
, Sbuffer_size
, 0, 1, 0,
973 doc
: /* Return the number of characters in the current buffer.
974 If BUFFER, return the number of characters in that buffer instead. */)
978 return make_number (Z
- BEG
);
981 CHECK_BUFFER (buffer
);
982 return make_number (BUF_Z (XBUFFER (buffer
))
983 - BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (buffer
)));
987 DEFUN ("point-min", Fpoint_min
, Spoint_min
, 0, 0, 0,
988 doc
: /* Return the minimum permissible value of point in the current buffer.
989 This is 1, unless narrowing (a buffer restriction) is in effect. */)
993 XSETFASTINT (temp
, BEGV
);
997 DEFUN ("point-min-marker", Fpoint_min_marker
, Spoint_min_marker
, 0, 0, 0,
998 doc
: /* Return a marker to the minimum permissible value of point in this buffer.
999 This is the beginning, unless narrowing (a buffer restriction) is in effect. */)
1002 return build_marker (current_buffer
, BEGV
, BEGV_BYTE
);
1005 DEFUN ("point-max", Fpoint_max
, Spoint_max
, 0, 0, 0,
1006 doc
: /* Return the maximum permissible value of point in the current buffer.
1007 This is (1+ (buffer-size)), unless narrowing (a buffer restriction)
1008 is in effect, in which case it is less. */)
1012 XSETFASTINT (temp
, ZV
);
1016 DEFUN ("point-max-marker", Fpoint_max_marker
, Spoint_max_marker
, 0, 0, 0,
1017 doc
: /* Return a marker to the maximum permissible value of point in this buffer.
1018 This is (1+ (buffer-size)), unless narrowing (a buffer restriction)
1019 is in effect, in which case it is less. */)
1022 return build_marker (current_buffer
, ZV
, ZV_BYTE
);
1025 DEFUN ("gap-position", Fgap_position
, Sgap_position
, 0, 0, 0,
1026 doc
: /* Return the position of the gap, in the current buffer.
1027 See also `gap-size'. */)
1031 XSETFASTINT (temp
, GPT
);
1035 DEFUN ("gap-size", Fgap_size
, Sgap_size
, 0, 0, 0,
1036 doc
: /* Return the size of the current buffer's gap.
1037 See also `gap-position'. */)
1041 XSETFASTINT (temp
, GAP_SIZE
);
1045 DEFUN ("position-bytes", Fposition_bytes
, Sposition_bytes
, 1, 1, 0,
1046 doc
: /* Return the byte position for character position POSITION.
1047 If POSITION is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1048 (Lisp_Object position
)
1050 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position
);
1051 if (XINT (position
) < BEG
|| XINT (position
) > Z
)
1053 return make_number (CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (position
)));
1056 DEFUN ("byte-to-position", Fbyte_to_position
, Sbyte_to_position
, 1, 1, 0,
1057 doc
: /* Return the character position for byte position BYTEPOS.
1058 If BYTEPOS is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1059 (Lisp_Object bytepos
)
1061 CHECK_NUMBER (bytepos
);
1062 if (XINT (bytepos
) < BEG_BYTE
|| XINT (bytepos
) > Z_BYTE
)
1064 return make_number (BYTE_TO_CHAR (XINT (bytepos
)));
1067 DEFUN ("following-char", Ffollowing_char
, Sfollowing_char
, 0, 0, 0,
1068 doc
: /* Return the character following point, as a number.
1069 At the end of the buffer or accessible region, return 0. */)
1074 XSETFASTINT (temp
, 0);
1076 XSETFASTINT (temp
, FETCH_CHAR (PT_BYTE
));
1080 DEFUN ("preceding-char", Fprevious_char
, Sprevious_char
, 0, 0, 0,
1081 doc
: /* Return the character preceding point, as a number.
1082 At the beginning of the buffer or accessible region, return 0. */)
1087 XSETFASTINT (temp
, 0);
1088 else if (!NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
1090 ptrdiff_t pos
= PT_BYTE
;
1092 XSETFASTINT (temp
, FETCH_CHAR (pos
));
1095 XSETFASTINT (temp
, FETCH_BYTE (PT_BYTE
- 1));
1099 DEFUN ("bobp", Fbobp
, Sbobp
, 0, 0, 0,
1100 doc
: /* Return t if point is at the beginning of the buffer.
1101 If the buffer is narrowed, this means the beginning of the narrowed part. */)
1109 DEFUN ("eobp", Feobp
, Seobp
, 0, 0, 0,
1110 doc
: /* Return t if point is at the end of the buffer.
1111 If the buffer is narrowed, this means the end of the narrowed part. */)
1119 DEFUN ("bolp", Fbolp
, Sbolp
, 0, 0, 0,
1120 doc
: /* Return t if point is at the beginning of a line. */)
1123 if (PT
== BEGV
|| FETCH_BYTE (PT_BYTE
- 1) == '\n')
1128 DEFUN ("eolp", Feolp
, Seolp
, 0, 0, 0,
1129 doc
: /* Return t if point is at the end of a line.
1130 `End of a line' includes point being at the end of the buffer. */)
1133 if (PT
== ZV
|| FETCH_BYTE (PT_BYTE
) == '\n')
1138 DEFUN ("char-after", Fchar_after
, Schar_after
, 0, 1, 0,
1139 doc
: /* Return character in current buffer at position POS.
1140 POS is an integer or a marker and defaults to point.
1141 If POS is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1144 register ptrdiff_t pos_byte
;
1149 XSETFASTINT (pos
, PT
);
1154 pos_byte
= marker_byte_position (pos
);
1155 if (pos_byte
< BEGV_BYTE
|| pos_byte
>= ZV_BYTE
)
1160 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos
);
1161 if (XINT (pos
) < BEGV
|| XINT (pos
) >= ZV
)
1164 pos_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (pos
));
1167 return make_number (FETCH_CHAR (pos_byte
));
1170 DEFUN ("char-before", Fchar_before
, Schar_before
, 0, 1, 0,
1171 doc
: /* Return character in current buffer preceding position POS.
1172 POS is an integer or a marker and defaults to point.
1173 If POS is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1176 register Lisp_Object val
;
1177 register ptrdiff_t pos_byte
;
1182 XSETFASTINT (pos
, PT
);
1187 pos_byte
= marker_byte_position (pos
);
1189 if (pos_byte
<= BEGV_BYTE
|| pos_byte
> ZV_BYTE
)
1194 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos
);
1196 if (XINT (pos
) <= BEGV
|| XINT (pos
) > ZV
)
1199 pos_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (pos
));
1202 if (!NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
1205 XSETFASTINT (val
, FETCH_CHAR (pos_byte
));
1210 XSETFASTINT (val
, FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte
));
1215 DEFUN ("user-login-name", Fuser_login_name
, Suser_login_name
, 0, 1, 0,
1216 doc
: /* Return the name under which the user logged in, as a string.
1217 This is based on the effective uid, not the real uid.
1218 Also, if the environment variables LOGNAME or USER are set,
1219 that determines the value of this function.
1221 If optional argument UID is an integer or a float, return the login name
1222 of the user with that uid, or nil if there is no such user. */)
1228 /* Set up the user name info if we didn't do it before.
1229 (That can happen if Emacs is dumpable
1230 but you decide to run `temacs -l loadup' and not dump. */
1231 if (INTEGERP (Vuser_login_name
))
1235 return Vuser_login_name
;
1237 CONS_TO_INTEGER (uid
, uid_t
, id
);
1241 return (pw
? build_string (pw
->pw_name
) : Qnil
);
1244 DEFUN ("user-real-login-name", Fuser_real_login_name
, Suser_real_login_name
,
1246 doc
: /* Return the name of the user's real uid, as a string.
1247 This ignores the environment variables LOGNAME and USER, so it differs from
1248 `user-login-name' when running under `su'. */)
1251 /* Set up the user name info if we didn't do it before.
1252 (That can happen if Emacs is dumpable
1253 but you decide to run `temacs -l loadup' and not dump. */
1254 if (INTEGERP (Vuser_login_name
))
1256 return Vuser_real_login_name
;
1259 DEFUN ("user-uid", Fuser_uid
, Suser_uid
, 0, 0, 0,
1260 doc
: /* Return the effective uid of Emacs.
1261 Value is an integer or a float, depending on the value. */)
1264 uid_t euid
= geteuid ();
1265 return make_fixnum_or_float (euid
);
1268 DEFUN ("user-real-uid", Fuser_real_uid
, Suser_real_uid
, 0, 0, 0,
1269 doc
: /* Return the real uid of Emacs.
1270 Value is an integer or a float, depending on the value. */)
1273 uid_t uid
= getuid ();
1274 return make_fixnum_or_float (uid
);
1277 DEFUN ("group-gid", Fgroup_gid
, Sgroup_gid
, 0, 0, 0,
1278 doc
: /* Return the effective gid of Emacs.
1279 Value is an integer or a float, depending on the value. */)
1282 gid_t egid
= getegid ();
1283 return make_fixnum_or_float (egid
);
1286 DEFUN ("group-real-gid", Fgroup_real_gid
, Sgroup_real_gid
, 0, 0, 0,
1287 doc
: /* Return the real gid of Emacs.
1288 Value is an integer or a float, depending on the value. */)
1291 gid_t gid
= getgid ();
1292 return make_fixnum_or_float (gid
);
1295 DEFUN ("user-full-name", Fuser_full_name
, Suser_full_name
, 0, 1, 0,
1296 doc
: /* Return the full name of the user logged in, as a string.
1297 If the full name corresponding to Emacs's userid is not known,
1300 If optional argument UID is an integer or float, return the full name
1301 of the user with that uid, or nil if there is no such user.
1302 If UID is a string, return the full name of the user with that login
1303 name, or nil if there is no such user. */)
1307 register char *p
, *q
;
1311 return Vuser_full_name
;
1312 else if (NUMBERP (uid
))
1315 CONS_TO_INTEGER (uid
, uid_t
, u
);
1320 else if (STRINGP (uid
))
1323 pw
= getpwnam (SSDATA (uid
));
1327 error ("Invalid UID specification");
1333 /* Chop off everything after the first comma. */
1334 q
= strchr (p
, ',');
1335 full
= make_string (p
, q
? q
- p
: strlen (p
));
1337 #ifdef AMPERSAND_FULL_NAME
1339 q
= strchr (p
, '&');
1340 /* Substitute the login name for the &, upcasing the first character. */
1346 login
= Fuser_login_name (make_number (pw
->pw_uid
));
1347 r
= alloca (strlen (p
) + SCHARS (login
) + 1);
1348 memcpy (r
, p
, q
- p
);
1350 strcat (r
, SSDATA (login
));
1351 r
[q
- p
] = upcase ((unsigned char) r
[q
- p
]);
1353 full
= build_string (r
);
1355 #endif /* AMPERSAND_FULL_NAME */
1360 DEFUN ("system-name", Fsystem_name
, Ssystem_name
, 0, 0, 0,
1361 doc
: /* Return the host name of the machine you are running on, as a string. */)
1364 return Vsystem_name
;
1367 DEFUN ("emacs-pid", Femacs_pid
, Semacs_pid
, 0, 0, 0,
1368 doc
: /* Return the process ID of Emacs, as a number. */)
1371 pid_t pid
= getpid ();
1372 return make_fixnum_or_float (pid
);
1378 # define TIME_T_MIN TYPE_MINIMUM (time_t)
1381 # define TIME_T_MAX TYPE_MAXIMUM (time_t)
1384 /* Report that a time value is out of range for Emacs. */
1386 time_overflow (void)
1388 error ("Specified time is not representable");
1391 /* Return the upper part of the time T (everything but the bottom 16 bits). */
1395 time_t hi
= t
>> 16;
1397 /* Check for overflow, helping the compiler for common cases where
1398 no runtime check is needed, and taking care not to convert
1399 negative numbers to unsigned before comparing them. */
1400 if (! ((! TYPE_SIGNED (time_t)
1401 || MOST_NEGATIVE_FIXNUM
<= TIME_T_MIN
>> 16
1402 || MOST_NEGATIVE_FIXNUM
<= hi
)
1403 && (TIME_T_MAX
>> 16 <= MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM
1404 || hi
<= MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM
)))
1410 /* Return the bottom 16 bits of the time T. */
1414 return t
& ((1 << 16) - 1);
1417 DEFUN ("current-time", Fcurrent_time
, Scurrent_time
, 0, 0, 0,
1418 doc
: /* Return the current time, as the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00.
1419 The time is returned as a list of integers (HIGH LOW USEC PSEC).
1420 HIGH has the most significant bits of the seconds, while LOW has the
1421 least significant 16 bits. USEC and PSEC are the microsecond and
1422 picosecond counts. */)
1425 return make_lisp_time (current_emacs_time ());
1428 DEFUN ("get-internal-run-time", Fget_internal_run_time
, Sget_internal_run_time
,
1430 doc
: /* Return the current run time used by Emacs.
1431 The time is returned as a list (HIGH LOW USEC PSEC), using the same
1432 style as (current-time).
1434 On systems that can't determine the run time, `get-internal-run-time'
1435 does the same thing as `current-time'. */)
1438 #ifdef HAVE_GETRUSAGE
1439 struct rusage usage
;
1443 if (getrusage (RUSAGE_SELF
, &usage
) < 0)
1444 /* This shouldn't happen. What action is appropriate? */
1447 /* Sum up user time and system time. */
1448 secs
= usage
.ru_utime
.tv_sec
+ usage
.ru_stime
.tv_sec
;
1449 usecs
= usage
.ru_utime
.tv_usec
+ usage
.ru_stime
.tv_usec
;
1450 if (usecs
>= 1000000)
1455 return make_lisp_time (make_emacs_time (secs
, usecs
* 1000));
1456 #else /* ! HAVE_GETRUSAGE */
1458 return w32_get_internal_run_time ();
1459 #else /* ! WINDOWSNT */
1460 return Fcurrent_time ();
1461 #endif /* WINDOWSNT */
1462 #endif /* HAVE_GETRUSAGE */
1466 /* Make a Lisp list that represents the time T with fraction TAIL. */
1468 make_time_tail (time_t t
, Lisp_Object tail
)
1470 return Fcons (make_number (hi_time (t
)),
1471 Fcons (make_number (lo_time (t
)), tail
));
1474 /* Make a Lisp list that represents the system time T. */
1476 make_time (time_t t
)
1478 return make_time_tail (t
, Qnil
);
1481 /* Make a Lisp list that represents the Emacs time T. T may be an
1482 invalid time, with a slightly negative tv_nsec value such as
1483 UNKNOWN_MODTIME_NSECS; in that case, the Lisp list contains a
1484 correspondingly negative picosecond count. */
1486 make_lisp_time (EMACS_TIME t
)
1488 int ns
= EMACS_NSECS (t
);
1489 return make_time_tail (EMACS_SECS (t
), list2i (ns
/ 1000, ns
% 1000 * 1000));
1492 /* Decode a Lisp list SPECIFIED_TIME that represents a time.
1493 Set *PHIGH, *PLOW, *PUSEC, *PPSEC to its parts; do not check their values.
1494 Return true if successful. */
1496 disassemble_lisp_time (Lisp_Object specified_time
, Lisp_Object
*phigh
,
1497 Lisp_Object
*plow
, Lisp_Object
*pusec
,
1500 if (CONSP (specified_time
))
1502 Lisp_Object low
= XCDR (specified_time
);
1503 Lisp_Object usec
= make_number (0);
1504 Lisp_Object psec
= make_number (0);
1507 Lisp_Object low_tail
= XCDR (low
);
1509 if (CONSP (low_tail
))
1511 usec
= XCAR (low_tail
);
1512 low_tail
= XCDR (low_tail
);
1513 if (CONSP (low_tail
))
1514 psec
= XCAR (low_tail
);
1516 else if (!NILP (low_tail
))
1520 *phigh
= XCAR (specified_time
);
1530 /* From the time components HIGH, LOW, USEC and PSEC taken from a Lisp
1531 list, generate the corresponding time value.
1533 If RESULT is not null, store into *RESULT the converted time;
1534 this can fail if the converted time does not fit into EMACS_TIME.
1535 If *DRESULT is not null, store into *DRESULT the number of
1536 seconds since the start of the POSIX Epoch.
1538 Return true if successful. */
1540 decode_time_components (Lisp_Object high
, Lisp_Object low
, Lisp_Object usec
,
1542 EMACS_TIME
*result
, double *dresult
)
1544 EMACS_INT hi
, lo
, us
, ps
;
1545 if (! (INTEGERP (high
) && INTEGERP (low
)
1546 && INTEGERP (usec
) && INTEGERP (psec
)))
1553 /* Normalize out-of-range lower-order components by carrying
1554 each overflow into the next higher-order component. */
1555 us
+= ps
/ 1000000 - (ps
% 1000000 < 0);
1556 lo
+= us
/ 1000000 - (us
% 1000000 < 0);
1558 ps
= ps
% 1000000 + 1000000 * (ps
% 1000000 < 0);
1559 us
= us
% 1000000 + 1000000 * (us
% 1000000 < 0);
1560 lo
&= (1 << 16) - 1;
1564 if ((TYPE_SIGNED (time_t) ? TIME_T_MIN
>> 16 <= hi
: 0 <= hi
)
1565 && hi
<= TIME_T_MAX
>> 16)
1567 /* Return the greatest representable time that is not greater
1568 than the requested time. */
1570 *result
= make_emacs_time ((sec
<< 16) + lo
, us
* 1000 + ps
/ 1000);
1574 /* Overflow in the highest-order component. */
1580 *dresult
= (us
* 1e6
+ ps
) / 1e12
+ lo
+ hi
* 65536.0;
1585 /* Decode a Lisp list SPECIFIED_TIME that represents a time.
1586 If SPECIFIED_TIME is nil, use the current time.
1588 Round the time down to the nearest EMACS_TIME value.
1589 Return seconds since the Epoch.
1590 Signal an error if unsuccessful. */
1592 lisp_time_argument (Lisp_Object specified_time
)
1595 if (NILP (specified_time
))
1596 t
= current_emacs_time ();
1599 Lisp_Object high
, low
, usec
, psec
;
1600 if (! (disassemble_lisp_time (specified_time
, &high
, &low
, &usec
, &psec
)
1601 && decode_time_components (high
, low
, usec
, psec
, &t
, 0)))
1602 error ("Invalid time specification");
1607 /* Like lisp_time_argument, except decode only the seconds part,
1608 do not allow out-of-range time stamps, do not check the subseconds part,
1609 and always round down. */
1611 lisp_seconds_argument (Lisp_Object specified_time
)
1613 if (NILP (specified_time
))
1617 Lisp_Object high
, low
, usec
, psec
;
1619 if (! (disassemble_lisp_time (specified_time
, &high
, &low
, &usec
, &psec
)
1620 && decode_time_components (high
, low
, make_number (0),
1621 make_number (0), &t
, 0)))
1622 error ("Invalid time specification");
1623 return EMACS_SECS (t
);
1627 DEFUN ("float-time", Ffloat_time
, Sfloat_time
, 0, 1, 0,
1628 doc
: /* Return the current time, as a float number of seconds since the epoch.
1629 If SPECIFIED-TIME is given, it is the time to convert to float
1630 instead of the current time. The argument should have the form
1631 (HIGH LOW) or (HIGH LOW USEC) or (HIGH LOW USEC PSEC). Thus,
1632 you can use times from `current-time' and from `file-attributes'.
1633 SPECIFIED-TIME can also have the form (HIGH . LOW), but this is
1634 considered obsolete.
1636 WARNING: Since the result is floating point, it may not be exact.
1637 If precise time stamps are required, use either `current-time',
1638 or (if you need time as a string) `format-time-string'. */)
1639 (Lisp_Object specified_time
)
1642 if (NILP (specified_time
))
1644 EMACS_TIME now
= current_emacs_time ();
1645 t
= EMACS_SECS (now
) + EMACS_NSECS (now
) / 1e9
;
1649 Lisp_Object high
, low
, usec
, psec
;
1650 if (! (disassemble_lisp_time (specified_time
, &high
, &low
, &usec
, &psec
)
1651 && decode_time_components (high
, low
, usec
, psec
, 0, &t
)))
1652 error ("Invalid time specification");
1654 return make_float (t
);
1657 /* Write information into buffer S of size MAXSIZE, according to the
1658 FORMAT of length FORMAT_LEN, using time information taken from *TP.
1659 Default to Universal Time if UT, local time otherwise.
1660 Use NS as the number of nanoseconds in the %N directive.
1661 Return the number of bytes written, not including the terminating
1662 '\0'. If S is NULL, nothing will be written anywhere; so to
1663 determine how many bytes would be written, use NULL for S and
1664 ((size_t) -1) for MAXSIZE.
1666 This function behaves like nstrftime, except it allows null
1667 bytes in FORMAT and it does not support nanoseconds. */
1669 emacs_nmemftime (char *s
, size_t maxsize
, const char *format
,
1670 size_t format_len
, const struct tm
*tp
, bool ut
, int ns
)
1674 /* Loop through all the null-terminated strings in the format
1675 argument. Normally there's just one null-terminated string, but
1676 there can be arbitrarily many, concatenated together, if the
1677 format contains '\0' bytes. nstrftime stops at the first
1678 '\0' byte so we must invoke it separately for each such string. */
1687 result
= nstrftime (s
, maxsize
, format
, tp
, ut
, ns
);
1691 if (result
== 0 && s
[0] != '\0')
1696 maxsize
-= result
+ 1;
1698 len
= strlen (format
);
1699 if (len
== format_len
)
1703 format_len
-= len
+ 1;
1707 DEFUN ("format-time-string", Fformat_time_string
, Sformat_time_string
, 1, 3, 0,
1708 doc
: /* Use FORMAT-STRING to format the time TIME, or now if omitted.
1709 TIME is specified as (HIGH LOW USEC PSEC), as returned by
1710 `current-time' or `file-attributes'. The obsolete form (HIGH . LOW)
1711 is also still accepted.
1712 The third, optional, argument UNIVERSAL, if non-nil, means describe TIME
1713 as Universal Time; nil means describe TIME in the local time zone.
1714 The value is a copy of FORMAT-STRING, but with certain constructs replaced
1715 by text that describes the specified date and time in TIME:
1717 %Y is the year, %y within the century, %C the century.
1718 %G is the year corresponding to the ISO week, %g within the century.
1719 %m is the numeric month.
1720 %b and %h are the locale's abbreviated month name, %B the full name.
1721 %d is the day of the month, zero-padded, %e is blank-padded.
1722 %u is the numeric day of week from 1 (Monday) to 7, %w from 0 (Sunday) to 6.
1723 %a is the locale's abbreviated name of the day of week, %A the full name.
1724 %U is the week number starting on Sunday, %W starting on Monday,
1725 %V according to ISO 8601.
1726 %j is the day of the year.
1728 %H is the hour on a 24-hour clock, %I is on a 12-hour clock, %k is like %H
1729 only blank-padded, %l is like %I blank-padded.
1730 %p is the locale's equivalent of either AM or PM.
1733 %N is the nanosecond, %6N the microsecond, %3N the millisecond, etc.
1734 %Z is the time zone name, %z is the numeric form.
1735 %s is the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000.
1737 %c is the locale's date and time format.
1738 %x is the locale's "preferred" date format.
1739 %D is like "%m/%d/%y".
1741 %R is like "%H:%M", %T is like "%H:%M:%S", %r is like "%I:%M:%S %p".
1742 %X is the locale's "preferred" time format.
1744 Finally, %n is a newline, %t is a tab, %% is a literal %.
1746 Certain flags and modifiers are available with some format controls.
1747 The flags are `_', `-', `^' and `#'. For certain characters X,
1748 %_X is like %X, but padded with blanks; %-X is like %X,
1749 but without padding. %^X is like %X, but with all textual
1750 characters up-cased; %#X is like %X, but with letter-case of
1751 all textual characters reversed.
1752 %NX (where N stands for an integer) is like %X,
1753 but takes up at least N (a number) positions.
1754 The modifiers are `E' and `O'. For certain characters X,
1755 %EX is a locale's alternative version of %X;
1756 %OX is like %X, but uses the locale's number symbols.
1758 For example, to produce full ISO 8601 format, use "%Y-%m-%dT%T%z".
1760 usage: (format-time-string FORMAT-STRING &optional TIME UNIVERSAL) */)
1761 (Lisp_Object format_string
, Lisp_Object timeval
, Lisp_Object universal
)
1763 EMACS_TIME t
= lisp_time_argument (timeval
);
1766 CHECK_STRING (format_string
);
1767 format_string
= code_convert_string_norecord (format_string
,
1768 Vlocale_coding_system
, 1);
1769 return format_time_string (SSDATA (format_string
), SBYTES (format_string
),
1770 t
, ! NILP (universal
), &tm
);
1774 format_time_string (char const *format
, ptrdiff_t formatlen
,
1775 EMACS_TIME t
, bool ut
, struct tm
*tmp
)
1779 ptrdiff_t size
= sizeof buffer
;
1781 Lisp_Object bufstring
;
1782 int ns
= EMACS_NSECS (t
);
1788 time_t *taddr
= emacs_secs_addr (&t
);
1791 synchronize_system_time_locale ();
1793 tm
= ut
? gmtime (taddr
) : localtime (taddr
);
1802 len
= emacs_nmemftime (buf
, size
, format
, formatlen
, tm
, ut
, ns
);
1803 if ((0 < len
&& len
< size
) || (len
== 0 && buf
[0] == '\0'))
1806 /* Buffer was too small, so make it bigger and try again. */
1807 len
= emacs_nmemftime (NULL
, SIZE_MAX
, format
, formatlen
, tm
, ut
, ns
);
1809 if (STRING_BYTES_BOUND
<= len
)
1812 buf
= SAFE_ALLOCA (size
);
1816 bufstring
= make_unibyte_string (buf
, len
);
1818 return code_convert_string_norecord (bufstring
, Vlocale_coding_system
, 0);
1821 DEFUN ("decode-time", Fdecode_time
, Sdecode_time
, 0, 1, 0,
1822 doc
: /* Decode a time value as (SEC MINUTE HOUR DAY MONTH YEAR DOW DST ZONE).
1823 The optional SPECIFIED-TIME should be a list of (HIGH LOW . IGNORED),
1824 as from `current-time' and `file-attributes', or nil to use the
1825 current time. The obsolete form (HIGH . LOW) is also still accepted.
1826 The list has the following nine members: SEC is an integer between 0
1827 and 60; SEC is 60 for a leap second, which only some operating systems
1828 support. MINUTE is an integer between 0 and 59. HOUR is an integer
1829 between 0 and 23. DAY is an integer between 1 and 31. MONTH is an
1830 integer between 1 and 12. YEAR is an integer indicating the
1831 four-digit year. DOW is the day of week, an integer between 0 and 6,
1832 where 0 is Sunday. DST is t if daylight saving time is in effect,
1833 otherwise nil. ZONE is an integer indicating the number of seconds
1834 east of Greenwich. (Note that Common Lisp has different meanings for
1836 (Lisp_Object specified_time
)
1838 time_t time_spec
= lisp_seconds_argument (specified_time
);
1840 struct tm
*decoded_time
;
1841 Lisp_Object list_args
[9];
1844 decoded_time
= localtime (&time_spec
);
1846 save_tm
= *decoded_time
;
1849 && MOST_NEGATIVE_FIXNUM
- TM_YEAR_BASE
<= save_tm
.tm_year
1850 && save_tm
.tm_year
<= MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM
- TM_YEAR_BASE
))
1852 XSETFASTINT (list_args
[0], save_tm
.tm_sec
);
1853 XSETFASTINT (list_args
[1], save_tm
.tm_min
);
1854 XSETFASTINT (list_args
[2], save_tm
.tm_hour
);
1855 XSETFASTINT (list_args
[3], save_tm
.tm_mday
);
1856 XSETFASTINT (list_args
[4], save_tm
.tm_mon
+ 1);
1857 /* On 64-bit machines an int is narrower than EMACS_INT, thus the
1858 cast below avoids overflow in int arithmetics. */
1859 XSETINT (list_args
[5], TM_YEAR_BASE
+ (EMACS_INT
) save_tm
.tm_year
);
1860 XSETFASTINT (list_args
[6], save_tm
.tm_wday
);
1861 list_args
[7] = save_tm
.tm_isdst
? Qt
: Qnil
;
1864 decoded_time
= gmtime (&time_spec
);
1865 if (decoded_time
== 0)
1866 list_args
[8] = Qnil
;
1868 XSETINT (list_args
[8], tm_diff (&save_tm
, decoded_time
));
1870 return Flist (9, list_args
);
1873 /* Return OBJ - OFFSET, checking that OBJ is a valid fixnum and that
1874 the result is representable as an int. Assume OFFSET is small and
1877 check_tm_member (Lisp_Object obj
, int offset
)
1882 if (! (INT_MIN
+ offset
<= n
&& n
- offset
<= INT_MAX
))
1887 DEFUN ("encode-time", Fencode_time
, Sencode_time
, 6, MANY
, 0,
1888 doc
: /* Convert SECOND, MINUTE, HOUR, DAY, MONTH, YEAR and ZONE to internal time.
1889 This is the reverse operation of `decode-time', which see.
1890 ZONE defaults to the current time zone rule. This can
1891 be a string or t (as from `set-time-zone-rule'), or it can be a list
1892 \(as from `current-time-zone') or an integer (as from `decode-time')
1893 applied without consideration for daylight saving time.
1895 You can pass more than 7 arguments; then the first six arguments
1896 are used as SECOND through YEAR, and the *last* argument is used as ZONE.
1897 The intervening arguments are ignored.
1898 This feature lets (apply 'encode-time (decode-time ...)) work.
1900 Out-of-range values for SECOND, MINUTE, HOUR, DAY, or MONTH are allowed;
1901 for example, a DAY of 0 means the day preceding the given month.
1902 Year numbers less than 100 are treated just like other year numbers.
1903 If you want them to stand for years in this century, you must do that yourself.
1905 Years before 1970 are not guaranteed to work. On some systems,
1906 year values as low as 1901 do work.
1908 usage: (encode-time SECOND MINUTE HOUR DAY MONTH YEAR &optional ZONE) */)
1909 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
1913 Lisp_Object zone
= (nargs
> 6 ? args
[nargs
- 1] : Qnil
);
1915 tm
.tm_sec
= check_tm_member (args
[0], 0);
1916 tm
.tm_min
= check_tm_member (args
[1], 0);
1917 tm
.tm_hour
= check_tm_member (args
[2], 0);
1918 tm
.tm_mday
= check_tm_member (args
[3], 0);
1919 tm
.tm_mon
= check_tm_member (args
[4], 1);
1920 tm
.tm_year
= check_tm_member (args
[5], TM_YEAR_BASE
);
1928 value
= mktime (&tm
);
1933 static char const tzbuf_format
[] = "XXX%s%"pI
"d:%02d:%02d";
1934 char tzbuf
[sizeof tzbuf_format
+ INT_STRLEN_BOUND (EMACS_INT
)];
1936 const char *tzstring
;
1941 else if (STRINGP (zone
))
1942 tzstring
= SSDATA (zone
);
1943 else if (INTEGERP (zone
))
1945 EMACS_INT abszone
= eabs (XINT (zone
));
1946 EMACS_INT zone_hr
= abszone
/ (60*60);
1947 int zone_min
= (abszone
/60) % 60;
1948 int zone_sec
= abszone
% 60;
1949 sprintf (tzbuf
, tzbuf_format
, "-" + (XINT (zone
) < 0),
1950 zone_hr
, zone_min
, zone_sec
);
1954 error ("Invalid time zone specification");
1956 old_tzstring
= getenv ("TZ");
1959 char *buf
= SAFE_ALLOCA (strlen (old_tzstring
) + 1);
1960 old_tzstring
= strcpy (buf
, old_tzstring
);
1965 /* Set TZ before calling mktime; merely adjusting mktime's returned
1966 value doesn't suffice, since that would mishandle leap seconds. */
1967 set_time_zone_rule (tzstring
);
1969 value
= mktime (&tm
);
1971 set_time_zone_rule (old_tzstring
);
1972 #ifdef LOCALTIME_CACHE
1979 if (value
== (time_t) -1)
1982 return make_time (value
);
1985 DEFUN ("current-time-string", Fcurrent_time_string
, Scurrent_time_string
, 0, 1, 0,
1986 doc
: /* Return the current local time, as a human-readable string.
1987 Programs can use this function to decode a time,
1988 since the number of columns in each field is fixed
1989 if the year is in the range 1000-9999.
1990 The format is `Sun Sep 16 01:03:52 1973'.
1991 However, see also the functions `decode-time' and `format-time-string'
1992 which provide a much more powerful and general facility.
1994 If SPECIFIED-TIME is given, it is a time to format instead of the
1995 current time. The argument should have the form (HIGH LOW . IGNORED).
1996 Thus, you can use times obtained from `current-time' and from
1997 `file-attributes'. SPECIFIED-TIME can also have the form (HIGH . LOW),
1998 but this is considered obsolete. */)
1999 (Lisp_Object specified_time
)
2001 time_t value
= lisp_seconds_argument (specified_time
);
2003 char buf
[sizeof "Mon Apr 30 12:49:17 " + INT_STRLEN_BOUND (int) + 1];
2004 int len
IF_LINT (= 0);
2006 /* Convert to a string in ctime format, except without the trailing
2007 newline, and without the 4-digit year limit. Don't use asctime
2008 or ctime, as they might dump core if the year is outside the
2009 range -999 .. 9999. */
2011 tm
= localtime (&value
);
2014 static char const wday_name
[][4] =
2015 { "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat" };
2016 static char const mon_name
[][4] =
2017 { "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun",
2018 "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec" };
2019 printmax_t year_base
= TM_YEAR_BASE
;
2021 len
= sprintf (buf
, "%s %s%3d %02d:%02d:%02d %"pMd
,
2022 wday_name
[tm
->tm_wday
], mon_name
[tm
->tm_mon
], tm
->tm_mday
,
2023 tm
->tm_hour
, tm
->tm_min
, tm
->tm_sec
,
2024 tm
->tm_year
+ year_base
);
2030 return make_unibyte_string (buf
, len
);
2033 /* Yield A - B, measured in seconds.
2034 This function is copied from the GNU C Library. */
2036 tm_diff (struct tm
*a
, struct tm
*b
)
2038 /* Compute intervening leap days correctly even if year is negative.
2039 Take care to avoid int overflow in leap day calculations,
2040 but it's OK to assume that A and B are close to each other. */
2041 int a4
= (a
->tm_year
>> 2) + (TM_YEAR_BASE
>> 2) - ! (a
->tm_year
& 3);
2042 int b4
= (b
->tm_year
>> 2) + (TM_YEAR_BASE
>> 2) - ! (b
->tm_year
& 3);
2043 int a100
= a4
/ 25 - (a4
% 25 < 0);
2044 int b100
= b4
/ 25 - (b4
% 25 < 0);
2045 int a400
= a100
>> 2;
2046 int b400
= b100
>> 2;
2047 int intervening_leap_days
= (a4
- b4
) - (a100
- b100
) + (a400
- b400
);
2048 int years
= a
->tm_year
- b
->tm_year
;
2049 int days
= (365 * years
+ intervening_leap_days
2050 + (a
->tm_yday
- b
->tm_yday
));
2051 return (60 * (60 * (24 * days
+ (a
->tm_hour
- b
->tm_hour
))
2052 + (a
->tm_min
- b
->tm_min
))
2053 + (a
->tm_sec
- b
->tm_sec
));
2056 DEFUN ("current-time-zone", Fcurrent_time_zone
, Scurrent_time_zone
, 0, 1, 0,
2057 doc
: /* Return the offset and name for the local time zone.
2058 This returns a list of the form (OFFSET NAME).
2059 OFFSET is an integer number of seconds ahead of UTC (east of Greenwich).
2060 A negative value means west of Greenwich.
2061 NAME is a string giving the name of the time zone.
2062 If SPECIFIED-TIME is given, the time zone offset is determined from it
2063 instead of using the current time. The argument should have the form
2064 (HIGH LOW . IGNORED). Thus, you can use times obtained from
2065 `current-time' and from `file-attributes'. SPECIFIED-TIME can also
2066 have the form (HIGH . LOW), but this is considered obsolete.
2068 Some operating systems cannot provide all this information to Emacs;
2069 in this case, `current-time-zone' returns a list containing nil for
2070 the data it can't find. */)
2071 (Lisp_Object specified_time
)
2077 Lisp_Object zone_offset
, zone_name
;
2080 value
= make_emacs_time (lisp_seconds_argument (specified_time
), 0);
2081 zone_name
= format_time_string ("%Z", sizeof "%Z" - 1, value
, 0, &localtm
);
2083 t
= gmtime (emacs_secs_addr (&value
));
2085 offset
= tm_diff (&localtm
, t
);
2090 zone_offset
= make_number (offset
);
2091 if (SCHARS (zone_name
) == 0)
2093 /* No local time zone name is available; use "+-NNNN" instead. */
2094 int m
= offset
/ 60;
2095 int am
= offset
< 0 ? - m
: m
;
2096 char buf
[sizeof "+00" + INT_STRLEN_BOUND (int)];
2097 zone_name
= make_formatted_string (buf
, "%c%02d%02d",
2098 (offset
< 0 ? '-' : '+'),
2103 return list2 (zone_offset
, zone_name
);
2106 DEFUN ("set-time-zone-rule", Fset_time_zone_rule
, Sset_time_zone_rule
, 1, 1, 0,
2107 doc
: /* Set the local time zone using TZ, a string specifying a time zone rule.
2108 If TZ is nil, use implementation-defined default time zone information.
2109 If TZ is t, use Universal Time.
2111 Instead of calling this function, you typically want (setenv "TZ" TZ).
2112 That changes both the environment of the Emacs process and the
2113 variable `process-environment', whereas `set-time-zone-rule' affects
2114 only the former. */)
2117 const char *tzstring
;
2119 if (! (NILP (tz
) || EQ (tz
, Qt
)))
2123 tzstring
= initial_tz
;
2124 else if (EQ (tz
, Qt
))
2127 tzstring
= SSDATA (tz
);
2130 set_time_zone_rule (tzstring
);
2136 /* Set the local time zone rule to TZSTRING.
2138 This function is not thread-safe, partly because putenv, unsetenv
2139 and tzset are not, and partly because of the static storage it
2140 updates. Other threads that invoke localtime etc. may be adversely
2141 affected while this function is executing. */
2144 set_time_zone_rule (const char *tzstring
)
2146 /* A buffer holding a string of the form "TZ=value", intended
2147 to be part of the environment. */
2148 static char *tzvalbuf
;
2149 static ptrdiff_t tzvalbufsize
;
2151 int tzeqlen
= sizeof "TZ=" - 1;
2153 #ifdef LOCALTIME_CACHE
2154 /* These two values are known to load tz files in buggy implementations,
2155 i.e., Solaris 1 executables running under either Solaris 1 or Solaris 2.
2156 Their values shouldn't matter in non-buggy implementations.
2157 We don't use string literals for these strings,
2158 since if a string in the environment is in readonly
2159 storage, it runs afoul of bugs in SVR4 and Solaris 2.3.
2160 See Sun bugs 1113095 and 1114114, ``Timezone routines
2161 improperly modify environment''. */
2163 static char set_time_zone_rule_tz
[][sizeof "TZ=GMT+0"]
2164 = { "TZ=GMT+0", "TZ=GMT+1" };
2166 /* In SunOS 4.1.3_U1 and 4.1.4, if TZ has a value like
2167 "US/Pacific" that loads a tz file, then changes to a value like
2168 "XXX0" that does not load a tz file, and then changes back to
2169 its original value, the last change is (incorrectly) ignored.
2170 Also, if TZ changes twice in succession to values that do
2171 not load a tz file, tzset can dump core (see Sun bug#1225179).
2172 The following code works around these bugs. */
2176 /* Temporarily set TZ to a value that loads a tz file
2177 and that differs from tzstring. */
2178 bool eq0
= strcmp (tzstring
, set_time_zone_rule_tz
[0] + tzeqlen
) == 0;
2179 xputenv (set_time_zone_rule_tz
[eq0
]);
2183 /* The implied tzstring is unknown, so temporarily set TZ to
2184 two different values that each load a tz file. */
2185 xputenv (set_time_zone_rule_tz
[0]);
2187 xputenv (set_time_zone_rule_tz
[1]);
2190 tzvalbuf_in_environ
= 0;
2196 tzvalbuf_in_environ
= 0;
2200 ptrdiff_t tzstringlen
= strlen (tzstring
);
2202 if (tzvalbufsize
<= tzeqlen
+ tzstringlen
)
2205 tzvalbuf_in_environ
= 0;
2206 tzvalbuf
= xpalloc (tzvalbuf
, &tzvalbufsize
,
2207 tzeqlen
+ tzstringlen
- tzvalbufsize
+ 1, -1, 1);
2208 memcpy (tzvalbuf
, "TZ=", tzeqlen
);
2211 strcpy (tzvalbuf
+ tzeqlen
, tzstring
);
2213 if (!tzvalbuf_in_environ
)
2216 tzvalbuf_in_environ
= 1;
2220 #ifdef LOCALTIME_CACHE
2225 /* Insert NARGS Lisp objects in the array ARGS by calling INSERT_FUNC
2226 (if a type of object is Lisp_Int) or INSERT_FROM_STRING_FUNC (if a
2227 type of object is Lisp_String). INHERIT is passed to
2228 INSERT_FROM_STRING_FUNC as the last argument. */
2231 general_insert_function (void (*insert_func
)
2232 (const char *, ptrdiff_t),
2233 void (*insert_from_string_func
)
2234 (Lisp_Object
, ptrdiff_t, ptrdiff_t,
2235 ptrdiff_t, ptrdiff_t, bool),
2236 bool inherit
, ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
2241 for (argnum
= 0; argnum
< nargs
; argnum
++)
2244 if (CHARACTERP (val
))
2246 int c
= XFASTINT (val
);
2247 unsigned char str
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
];
2250 if (!NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
2251 len
= CHAR_STRING (c
, str
);
2254 str
[0] = ASCII_CHAR_P (c
) ? c
: multibyte_char_to_unibyte (c
);
2257 (*insert_func
) ((char *) str
, len
);
2259 else if (STRINGP (val
))
2261 (*insert_from_string_func
) (val
, 0, 0,
2267 wrong_type_argument (Qchar_or_string_p
, val
);
2272 insert1 (Lisp_Object arg
)
2278 /* Callers passing one argument to Finsert need not gcpro the
2279 argument "array", since the only element of the array will
2280 not be used after calling insert or insert_from_string, so
2281 we don't care if it gets trashed. */
2283 DEFUN ("insert", Finsert
, Sinsert
, 0, MANY
, 0,
2284 doc
: /* Insert the arguments, either strings or characters, at point.
2285 Point and before-insertion markers move forward to end up
2286 after the inserted text.
2287 Any other markers at the point of insertion remain before the text.
2289 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2290 to multibyte for insertion (see `string-make-multibyte').
2291 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2292 to unibyte for insertion (see `string-make-unibyte').
2294 When operating on binary data, it may be necessary to preserve the
2295 original bytes of a unibyte string when inserting it into a multibyte
2296 buffer; to accomplish this, apply `string-as-multibyte' to the string
2297 and insert the result.
2299 usage: (insert &rest ARGS) */)
2300 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
2302 general_insert_function (insert
, insert_from_string
, 0, nargs
, args
);
2306 DEFUN ("insert-and-inherit", Finsert_and_inherit
, Sinsert_and_inherit
,
2308 doc
: /* Insert the arguments at point, inheriting properties from adjoining text.
2309 Point and before-insertion markers move forward to end up
2310 after the inserted text.
2311 Any other markers at the point of insertion remain before the text.
2313 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2314 to multibyte for insertion (see `unibyte-char-to-multibyte').
2315 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2316 to unibyte for insertion.
2318 usage: (insert-and-inherit &rest ARGS) */)
2319 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
2321 general_insert_function (insert_and_inherit
, insert_from_string
, 1,
2326 DEFUN ("insert-before-markers", Finsert_before_markers
, Sinsert_before_markers
, 0, MANY
, 0,
2327 doc
: /* Insert strings or characters at point, relocating markers after the text.
2328 Point and markers move forward to end up after the inserted text.
2330 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2331 to multibyte for insertion (see `unibyte-char-to-multibyte').
2332 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2333 to unibyte for insertion.
2335 usage: (insert-before-markers &rest ARGS) */)
2336 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
2338 general_insert_function (insert_before_markers
,
2339 insert_from_string_before_markers
, 0,
2344 DEFUN ("insert-before-markers-and-inherit", Finsert_and_inherit_before_markers
,
2345 Sinsert_and_inherit_before_markers
, 0, MANY
, 0,
2346 doc
: /* Insert text at point, relocating markers and inheriting properties.
2347 Point and markers move forward to end up after the inserted text.
2349 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2350 to multibyte for insertion (see `unibyte-char-to-multibyte').
2351 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2352 to unibyte for insertion.
2354 usage: (insert-before-markers-and-inherit &rest ARGS) */)
2355 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
2357 general_insert_function (insert_before_markers_and_inherit
,
2358 insert_from_string_before_markers
, 1,
2363 DEFUN ("insert-char", Finsert_char
, Sinsert_char
, 1, 3,
2364 "(list (read-char-by-name \"Insert character (Unicode name or hex): \")\
2365 (prefix-numeric-value current-prefix-arg)\
2367 doc
: /* Insert COUNT copies of CHARACTER.
2368 Interactively, prompt for CHARACTER. You can specify CHARACTER in one
2371 - As its Unicode character name, e.g. \"LATIN SMALL LETTER A\".
2372 Completion is available; if you type a substring of the name
2373 preceded by an asterisk `*', Emacs shows all names which include
2374 that substring, not necessarily at the beginning of the name.
2376 - As a hexadecimal code point, e.g. 263A. Note that code points in
2377 Emacs are equivalent to Unicode up to 10FFFF (which is the limit of
2378 the Unicode code space).
2380 - As a code point with a radix specified with #, e.g. #o21430
2381 (octal), #x2318 (hex), or #10r8984 (decimal).
2383 If called interactively, COUNT is given by the prefix argument. If
2384 omitted or nil, it defaults to 1.
2386 Inserting the character(s) relocates point and before-insertion
2387 markers in the same ways as the function `insert'.
2389 The optional third argument INHERIT, if non-nil, says to inherit text
2390 properties from adjoining text, if those properties are sticky. If
2391 called interactively, INHERIT is t. */)
2392 (Lisp_Object character
, Lisp_Object count
, Lisp_Object inherit
)
2395 register ptrdiff_t n
;
2397 unsigned char str
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
];
2400 CHECK_CHARACTER (character
);
2402 XSETFASTINT (count
, 1);
2403 CHECK_NUMBER (count
);
2404 c
= XFASTINT (character
);
2406 if (!NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
2407 len
= CHAR_STRING (c
, str
);
2409 str
[0] = c
, len
= 1;
2410 if (XINT (count
) <= 0)
2412 if (BUF_BYTES_MAX
/ len
< XINT (count
))
2414 n
= XINT (count
) * len
;
2415 stringlen
= min (n
, sizeof string
- sizeof string
% len
);
2416 for (i
= 0; i
< stringlen
; i
++)
2417 string
[i
] = str
[i
% len
];
2418 while (n
> stringlen
)
2421 if (!NILP (inherit
))
2422 insert_and_inherit (string
, stringlen
);
2424 insert (string
, stringlen
);
2427 if (!NILP (inherit
))
2428 insert_and_inherit (string
, n
);
2434 DEFUN ("insert-byte", Finsert_byte
, Sinsert_byte
, 2, 3, 0,
2435 doc
: /* Insert COUNT (second arg) copies of BYTE (first arg).
2436 Both arguments are required.
2437 BYTE is a number of the range 0..255.
2439 If BYTE is 128..255 and the current buffer is multibyte, the
2440 corresponding eight-bit character is inserted.
2442 Point, and before-insertion markers, are relocated as in the function `insert'.
2443 The optional third arg INHERIT, if non-nil, says to inherit text properties
2444 from adjoining text, if those properties are sticky. */)
2445 (Lisp_Object byte
, Lisp_Object count
, Lisp_Object inherit
)
2447 CHECK_NUMBER (byte
);
2448 if (XINT (byte
) < 0 || XINT (byte
) > 255)
2449 args_out_of_range_3 (byte
, make_number (0), make_number (255));
2450 if (XINT (byte
) >= 128
2451 && ! NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
2452 XSETFASTINT (byte
, BYTE8_TO_CHAR (XINT (byte
)));
2453 return Finsert_char (byte
, count
, inherit
);
2457 /* Making strings from buffer contents. */
2459 /* Return a Lisp_String containing the text of the current buffer from
2460 START to END. If text properties are in use and the current buffer
2461 has properties in the range specified, the resulting string will also
2462 have them, if PROPS is true.
2464 We don't want to use plain old make_string here, because it calls
2465 make_uninit_string, which can cause the buffer arena to be
2466 compacted. make_string has no way of knowing that the data has
2467 been moved, and thus copies the wrong data into the string. This
2468 doesn't effect most of the other users of make_string, so it should
2469 be left as is. But we should use this function when conjuring
2470 buffer substrings. */
2473 make_buffer_string (ptrdiff_t start
, ptrdiff_t end
, bool props
)
2475 ptrdiff_t start_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (start
);
2476 ptrdiff_t end_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (end
);
2478 return make_buffer_string_both (start
, start_byte
, end
, end_byte
, props
);
2481 /* Return a Lisp_String containing the text of the current buffer from
2482 START / START_BYTE to END / END_BYTE.
2484 If text properties are in use and the current buffer
2485 has properties in the range specified, the resulting string will also
2486 have them, if PROPS is true.
2488 We don't want to use plain old make_string here, because it calls
2489 make_uninit_string, which can cause the buffer arena to be
2490 compacted. make_string has no way of knowing that the data has
2491 been moved, and thus copies the wrong data into the string. This
2492 doesn't effect most of the other users of make_string, so it should
2493 be left as is. But we should use this function when conjuring
2494 buffer substrings. */
2497 make_buffer_string_both (ptrdiff_t start
, ptrdiff_t start_byte
,
2498 ptrdiff_t end
, ptrdiff_t end_byte
, bool props
)
2500 Lisp_Object result
, tem
, tem1
;
2502 if (start
< GPT
&& GPT
< end
)
2503 move_gap_both (start
, start_byte
);
2505 if (! NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
2506 result
= make_uninit_multibyte_string (end
- start
, end_byte
- start_byte
);
2508 result
= make_uninit_string (end
- start
);
2509 memcpy (SDATA (result
), BYTE_POS_ADDR (start_byte
), end_byte
- start_byte
);
2511 /* If desired, update and copy the text properties. */
2514 update_buffer_properties (start
, end
);
2516 tem
= Fnext_property_change (make_number (start
), Qnil
, make_number (end
));
2517 tem1
= Ftext_properties_at (make_number (start
), Qnil
);
2519 if (XINT (tem
) != end
|| !NILP (tem1
))
2520 copy_intervals_to_string (result
, current_buffer
, start
,
2527 /* Call Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions for the range START ... END
2528 in the current buffer, if necessary. */
2531 update_buffer_properties (ptrdiff_t start
, ptrdiff_t end
)
2533 /* If this buffer has some access functions,
2534 call them, specifying the range of the buffer being accessed. */
2535 if (!NILP (Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions
))
2537 Lisp_Object args
[3];
2540 args
[0] = Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions
;
2541 XSETINT (args
[1], start
);
2542 XSETINT (args
[2], end
);
2544 /* But don't call them if we can tell that the work
2545 has already been done. */
2546 if (!NILP (Vbuffer_access_fontified_property
))
2548 tem
= Ftext_property_any (args
[1], args
[2],
2549 Vbuffer_access_fontified_property
,
2552 Frun_hook_with_args (3, args
);
2555 Frun_hook_with_args (3, args
);
2559 DEFUN ("buffer-substring", Fbuffer_substring
, Sbuffer_substring
, 2, 2, 0,
2560 doc
: /* Return the contents of part of the current buffer as a string.
2561 The two arguments START and END are character positions;
2562 they can be in either order.
2563 The string returned is multibyte if the buffer is multibyte.
2565 This function copies the text properties of that part of the buffer
2566 into the result string; if you don't want the text properties,
2567 use `buffer-substring-no-properties' instead. */)
2568 (Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
)
2570 register ptrdiff_t b
, e
;
2572 validate_region (&start
, &end
);
2576 return make_buffer_string (b
, e
, 1);
2579 DEFUN ("buffer-substring-no-properties", Fbuffer_substring_no_properties
,
2580 Sbuffer_substring_no_properties
, 2, 2, 0,
2581 doc
: /* Return the characters of part of the buffer, without the text properties.
2582 The two arguments START and END are character positions;
2583 they can be in either order. */)
2584 (Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
)
2586 register ptrdiff_t b
, e
;
2588 validate_region (&start
, &end
);
2592 return make_buffer_string (b
, e
, 0);
2595 DEFUN ("buffer-string", Fbuffer_string
, Sbuffer_string
, 0, 0, 0,
2596 doc
: /* Return the contents of the current buffer as a string.
2597 If narrowing is in effect, this function returns only the visible part
2601 return make_buffer_string_both (BEGV
, BEGV_BYTE
, ZV
, ZV_BYTE
, 1);
2604 DEFUN ("insert-buffer-substring", Finsert_buffer_substring
, Sinsert_buffer_substring
,
2606 doc
: /* Insert before point a substring of the contents of BUFFER.
2607 BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name.
2608 Arguments START and END are character positions specifying the substring.
2609 They default to the values of (point-min) and (point-max) in BUFFER. */)
2610 (Lisp_Object buffer
, Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
)
2612 register EMACS_INT b
, e
, temp
;
2613 register struct buffer
*bp
, *obuf
;
2616 buf
= Fget_buffer (buffer
);
2620 if (!BUFFER_LIVE_P (bp
))
2621 error ("Selecting deleted buffer");
2627 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start
);
2634 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end
);
2639 temp
= b
, b
= e
, e
= temp
;
2641 if (!(BUF_BEGV (bp
) <= b
&& e
<= BUF_ZV (bp
)))
2642 args_out_of_range (start
, end
);
2644 obuf
= current_buffer
;
2645 set_buffer_internal_1 (bp
);
2646 update_buffer_properties (b
, e
);
2647 set_buffer_internal_1 (obuf
);
2649 insert_from_buffer (bp
, b
, e
- b
, 0);
2653 DEFUN ("compare-buffer-substrings", Fcompare_buffer_substrings
, Scompare_buffer_substrings
,
2655 doc
: /* Compare two substrings of two buffers; return result as number.
2656 Return -N if first string is less after N-1 chars, +N if first string is
2657 greater after N-1 chars, or 0 if strings match. Each substring is
2658 represented as three arguments: BUFFER, START and END. That makes six
2659 args in all, three for each substring.
2661 The value of `case-fold-search' in the current buffer
2662 determines whether case is significant or ignored. */)
2663 (Lisp_Object buffer1
, Lisp_Object start1
, Lisp_Object end1
, Lisp_Object buffer2
, Lisp_Object start2
, Lisp_Object end2
)
2665 register EMACS_INT begp1
, endp1
, begp2
, endp2
, temp
;
2666 register struct buffer
*bp1
, *bp2
;
2667 register Lisp_Object trt
2668 = (!NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, case_fold_search
))
2669 ? BVAR (current_buffer
, case_canon_table
) : Qnil
);
2670 ptrdiff_t chars
= 0;
2671 ptrdiff_t i1
, i2
, i1_byte
, i2_byte
;
2673 /* Find the first buffer and its substring. */
2676 bp1
= current_buffer
;
2680 buf1
= Fget_buffer (buffer1
);
2683 bp1
= XBUFFER (buf1
);
2684 if (!BUFFER_LIVE_P (bp1
))
2685 error ("Selecting deleted buffer");
2689 begp1
= BUF_BEGV (bp1
);
2692 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start1
);
2693 begp1
= XINT (start1
);
2696 endp1
= BUF_ZV (bp1
);
2699 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end1
);
2700 endp1
= XINT (end1
);
2704 temp
= begp1
, begp1
= endp1
, endp1
= temp
;
2706 if (!(BUF_BEGV (bp1
) <= begp1
2708 && endp1
<= BUF_ZV (bp1
)))
2709 args_out_of_range (start1
, end1
);
2711 /* Likewise for second substring. */
2714 bp2
= current_buffer
;
2718 buf2
= Fget_buffer (buffer2
);
2721 bp2
= XBUFFER (buf2
);
2722 if (!BUFFER_LIVE_P (bp2
))
2723 error ("Selecting deleted buffer");
2727 begp2
= BUF_BEGV (bp2
);
2730 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start2
);
2731 begp2
= XINT (start2
);
2734 endp2
= BUF_ZV (bp2
);
2737 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end2
);
2738 endp2
= XINT (end2
);
2742 temp
= begp2
, begp2
= endp2
, endp2
= temp
;
2744 if (!(BUF_BEGV (bp2
) <= begp2
2746 && endp2
<= BUF_ZV (bp2
)))
2747 args_out_of_range (start2
, end2
);
2751 i1_byte
= buf_charpos_to_bytepos (bp1
, i1
);
2752 i2_byte
= buf_charpos_to_bytepos (bp2
, i2
);
2754 while (i1
< endp1
&& i2
< endp2
)
2756 /* When we find a mismatch, we must compare the
2757 characters, not just the bytes. */
2762 if (! NILP (BVAR (bp1
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
2764 c1
= BUF_FETCH_MULTIBYTE_CHAR (bp1
, i1_byte
);
2765 BUF_INC_POS (bp1
, i1_byte
);
2770 c1
= BUF_FETCH_BYTE (bp1
, i1
);
2771 MAKE_CHAR_MULTIBYTE (c1
);
2775 if (! NILP (BVAR (bp2
, enable_multibyte_characters
)))
2777 c2
= BUF_FETCH_MULTIBYTE_CHAR (bp2
, i2_byte
);
2778 BUF_INC_POS (bp2
, i2_byte
);
2783 c2
= BUF_FETCH_BYTE (bp2
, i2
);
2784 MAKE_CHAR_MULTIBYTE (c2
);
2790 c1
= char_table_translate (trt
, c1
);
2791 c2
= char_table_translate (trt
, c2
);
2794 return make_number (- 1 - chars
);
2796 return make_number (chars
+ 1);
2801 /* The strings match as far as they go.
2802 If one is shorter, that one is less. */
2803 if (chars
< endp1
- begp1
)
2804 return make_number (chars
+ 1);
2805 else if (chars
< endp2
- begp2
)
2806 return make_number (- chars
- 1);
2808 /* Same length too => they are equal. */
2809 return make_number (0);
2813 subst_char_in_region_unwind (Lisp_Object arg
)
2815 bset_undo_list (current_buffer
, arg
);
2820 subst_char_in_region_unwind_1 (Lisp_Object arg
)
2822 bset_filename (current_buffer
, arg
);
2826 DEFUN ("subst-char-in-region", Fsubst_char_in_region
,
2827 Ssubst_char_in_region
, 4, 5, 0,
2828 doc
: /* From START to END, replace FROMCHAR with TOCHAR each time it occurs.
2829 If optional arg NOUNDO is non-nil, don't record this change for undo
2830 and don't mark the buffer as really changed.
2831 Both characters must have the same length of multi-byte form. */)
2832 (Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
, Lisp_Object fromchar
, Lisp_Object tochar
, Lisp_Object noundo
)
2834 register ptrdiff_t pos
, pos_byte
, stop
, i
, len
, end_byte
;
2835 /* Keep track of the first change in the buffer:
2836 if 0 we haven't found it yet.
2837 if < 0 we've found it and we've run the before-change-function.
2838 if > 0 we've actually performed it and the value is its position. */
2839 ptrdiff_t changed
= 0;
2840 unsigned char fromstr
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
], tostr
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
];
2842 ptrdiff_t count
= SPECPDL_INDEX ();
2843 #define COMBINING_NO 0
2844 #define COMBINING_BEFORE 1
2845 #define COMBINING_AFTER 2
2846 #define COMBINING_BOTH (COMBINING_BEFORE | COMBINING_AFTER)
2847 int maybe_byte_combining
= COMBINING_NO
;
2848 ptrdiff_t last_changed
= 0;
2850 = !NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
));
2855 validate_region (&start
, &end
);
2856 CHECK_CHARACTER (fromchar
);
2857 CHECK_CHARACTER (tochar
);
2858 fromc
= XFASTINT (fromchar
);
2859 toc
= XFASTINT (tochar
);
2863 len
= CHAR_STRING (fromc
, fromstr
);
2864 if (CHAR_STRING (toc
, tostr
) != len
)
2865 error ("Characters in `subst-char-in-region' have different byte-lengths");
2866 if (!ASCII_BYTE_P (*tostr
))
2868 /* If *TOSTR is in the range 0x80..0x9F and TOCHAR is not a
2869 complete multibyte character, it may be combined with the
2870 after bytes. If it is in the range 0xA0..0xFF, it may be
2871 combined with the before and after bytes. */
2872 if (!CHAR_HEAD_P (*tostr
))
2873 maybe_byte_combining
= COMBINING_BOTH
;
2874 else if (BYTES_BY_CHAR_HEAD (*tostr
) > len
)
2875 maybe_byte_combining
= COMBINING_AFTER
;
2886 pos_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (pos
);
2887 stop
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (end
));
2890 /* If we don't want undo, turn off putting stuff on the list.
2891 That's faster than getting rid of things,
2892 and it prevents even the entry for a first change.
2893 Also inhibit locking the file. */
2894 if (!changed
&& !NILP (noundo
))
2896 record_unwind_protect (subst_char_in_region_unwind
,
2897 BVAR (current_buffer
, undo_list
));
2898 bset_undo_list (current_buffer
, Qt
);
2899 /* Don't do file-locking. */
2900 record_unwind_protect (subst_char_in_region_unwind_1
,
2901 BVAR (current_buffer
, filename
));
2902 bset_filename (current_buffer
, Qnil
);
2905 if (pos_byte
< GPT_BYTE
)
2906 stop
= min (stop
, GPT_BYTE
);
2909 ptrdiff_t pos_byte_next
= pos_byte
;
2911 if (pos_byte
>= stop
)
2913 if (pos_byte
>= end_byte
) break;
2916 p
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (pos_byte
);
2918 INC_POS (pos_byte_next
);
2921 if (pos_byte_next
- pos_byte
== len
2922 && p
[0] == fromstr
[0]
2924 || (p
[1] == fromstr
[1]
2925 && (len
== 2 || (p
[2] == fromstr
[2]
2926 && (len
== 3 || p
[3] == fromstr
[3]))))))
2929 /* We've already seen this and run the before-change-function;
2930 this time we only need to record the actual position. */
2935 modify_region_1 (pos
, XINT (end
), false);
2937 if (! NILP (noundo
))
2939 if (MODIFF
- 1 == SAVE_MODIFF
)
2941 if (MODIFF
- 1 == BUF_AUTOSAVE_MODIFF (current_buffer
))
2942 BUF_AUTOSAVE_MODIFF (current_buffer
)++;
2945 /* The before-change-function may have moved the gap
2946 or even modified the buffer so we should start over. */
2950 /* Take care of the case where the new character
2951 combines with neighboring bytes. */
2952 if (maybe_byte_combining
2953 && (maybe_byte_combining
== COMBINING_AFTER
2954 ? (pos_byte_next
< Z_BYTE
2955 && ! CHAR_HEAD_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte_next
)))
2956 : ((pos_byte_next
< Z_BYTE
2957 && ! CHAR_HEAD_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte_next
)))
2958 || (pos_byte
> BEG_BYTE
2959 && ! ASCII_BYTE_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte
- 1))))))
2961 Lisp_Object tem
, string
;
2963 struct gcpro gcpro1
;
2965 tem
= BVAR (current_buffer
, undo_list
);
2968 /* Make a multibyte string containing this single character. */
2969 string
= make_multibyte_string ((char *) tostr
, 1, len
);
2970 /* replace_range is less efficient, because it moves the gap,
2971 but it handles combining correctly. */
2972 replace_range (pos
, pos
+ 1, string
,
2974 pos_byte_next
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (pos
);
2975 if (pos_byte_next
> pos_byte
)
2976 /* Before combining happened. We should not increment
2977 POS. So, to cancel the later increment of POS,
2981 INC_POS (pos_byte_next
);
2983 if (! NILP (noundo
))
2984 bset_undo_list (current_buffer
, tem
);
2991 record_change (pos
, 1);
2992 for (i
= 0; i
< len
; i
++) *p
++ = tostr
[i
];
2994 last_changed
= pos
+ 1;
2996 pos_byte
= pos_byte_next
;
3002 signal_after_change (changed
,
3003 last_changed
- changed
, last_changed
- changed
);
3004 update_compositions (changed
, last_changed
, CHECK_ALL
);
3007 unbind_to (count
, Qnil
);
3012 static Lisp_Object
check_translation (ptrdiff_t, ptrdiff_t, ptrdiff_t,
3015 /* Helper function for Ftranslate_region_internal.
3017 Check if a character sequence at POS (POS_BYTE) matches an element
3018 of VAL. VAL is a list (([FROM-CHAR ...] . TO) ...). If a matching
3019 element is found, return it. Otherwise return Qnil. */
3022 check_translation (ptrdiff_t pos
, ptrdiff_t pos_byte
, ptrdiff_t end
,
3025 int buf_size
= 16, buf_used
= 0;
3026 int *buf
= alloca (sizeof (int) * buf_size
);
3028 for (; CONSP (val
); val
= XCDR (val
))
3037 if (! VECTORP (elt
))
3040 if (len
<= end
- pos
)
3042 for (i
= 0; i
< len
; i
++)
3046 unsigned char *p
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (pos_byte
);
3049 if (buf_used
== buf_size
)
3054 newbuf
= alloca (sizeof (int) * buf_size
);
3055 memcpy (newbuf
, buf
, sizeof (int) * buf_used
);
3058 buf
[buf_used
++] = STRING_CHAR_AND_LENGTH (p
, len1
);
3061 if (XINT (AREF (elt
, i
)) != buf
[i
])
3072 DEFUN ("translate-region-internal", Ftranslate_region_internal
,
3073 Stranslate_region_internal
, 3, 3, 0,
3074 doc
: /* Internal use only.
3075 From START to END, translate characters according to TABLE.
3076 TABLE is a string or a char-table; the Nth character in it is the
3077 mapping for the character with code N.
3078 It returns the number of characters changed. */)
3079 (Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
, register Lisp_Object table
)
3081 register unsigned char *tt
; /* Trans table. */
3082 register int nc
; /* New character. */
3083 int cnt
; /* Number of changes made. */
3084 ptrdiff_t size
; /* Size of translate table. */
3085 ptrdiff_t pos
, pos_byte
, end_pos
;
3086 bool multibyte
= !NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
));
3087 bool string_multibyte
IF_LINT (= 0);
3089 validate_region (&start
, &end
);
3090 if (CHAR_TABLE_P (table
))
3092 if (! EQ (XCHAR_TABLE (table
)->purpose
, Qtranslation_table
))
3093 error ("Not a translation table");
3099 CHECK_STRING (table
);
3101 if (! multibyte
&& (SCHARS (table
) < SBYTES (table
)))
3102 table
= string_make_unibyte (table
);
3103 string_multibyte
= SCHARS (table
) < SBYTES (table
);
3104 size
= SBYTES (table
);
3109 pos_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (pos
);
3110 end_pos
= XINT (end
);
3111 modify_region_1 (pos
, end_pos
, false);
3114 for (; pos
< end_pos
; )
3116 register unsigned char *p
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (pos_byte
);
3117 unsigned char *str
, buf
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
];
3123 oc
= STRING_CHAR_AND_LENGTH (p
, len
);
3130 /* Reload as signal_after_change in last iteration may GC. */
3132 if (string_multibyte
)
3134 str
= tt
+ string_char_to_byte (table
, oc
);
3135 nc
= STRING_CHAR_AND_LENGTH (str
, str_len
);
3140 if (! ASCII_BYTE_P (nc
) && multibyte
)
3142 str_len
= BYTE8_STRING (nc
, buf
);
3155 val
= CHAR_TABLE_REF (table
, oc
);
3156 if (CHARACTERP (val
))
3158 nc
= XFASTINT (val
);
3159 str_len
= CHAR_STRING (nc
, buf
);
3162 else if (VECTORP (val
) || (CONSP (val
)))
3164 /* VAL is [TO_CHAR ...] or (([FROM-CHAR ...] . TO) ...)
3165 where TO is TO-CHAR or [TO-CHAR ...]. */
3170 if (nc
!= oc
&& nc
>= 0)
3172 /* Simple one char to one char translation. */
3177 /* This is less efficient, because it moves the gap,
3178 but it should handle multibyte characters correctly. */
3179 string
= make_multibyte_string ((char *) str
, 1, str_len
);
3180 replace_range (pos
, pos
+ 1, string
, 1, 0, 1);
3185 record_change (pos
, 1);
3186 while (str_len
-- > 0)
3188 signal_after_change (pos
, 1, 1);
3189 update_compositions (pos
, pos
+ 1, CHECK_BORDER
);
3199 val
= check_translation (pos
, pos_byte
, end_pos
, val
);
3206 /* VAL is ([FROM-CHAR ...] . TO). */
3207 len
= ASIZE (XCAR (val
));
3215 string
= Fconcat (1, &val
);
3219 string
= Fmake_string (make_number (1), val
);
3221 replace_range (pos
, pos
+ len
, string
, 1, 0, 1);
3222 pos_byte
+= SBYTES (string
);
3223 pos
+= SCHARS (string
);
3224 cnt
+= SCHARS (string
);
3225 end_pos
+= SCHARS (string
) - len
;
3233 return make_number (cnt
);
3236 DEFUN ("delete-region", Fdelete_region
, Sdelete_region
, 2, 2, "r",
3237 doc
: /* Delete the text between START and END.
3238 If called interactively, delete the region between point and mark.
3239 This command deletes buffer text without modifying the kill ring. */)
3240 (Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
)
3242 validate_region (&start
, &end
);
3243 del_range (XINT (start
), XINT (end
));
3247 DEFUN ("delete-and-extract-region", Fdelete_and_extract_region
,
3248 Sdelete_and_extract_region
, 2, 2, 0,
3249 doc
: /* Delete the text between START and END and return it. */)
3250 (Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
)
3252 validate_region (&start
, &end
);
3253 if (XINT (start
) == XINT (end
))
3254 return empty_unibyte_string
;
3255 return del_range_1 (XINT (start
), XINT (end
), 1, 1);
3258 DEFUN ("widen", Fwiden
, Swiden
, 0, 0, "",
3259 doc
: /* Remove restrictions (narrowing) from current buffer.
3260 This allows the buffer's full text to be seen and edited. */)
3263 if (BEG
!= BEGV
|| Z
!= ZV
)
3264 current_buffer
->clip_changed
= 1;
3266 BEGV_BYTE
= BEG_BYTE
;
3267 SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH (current_buffer
, Z
, Z_BYTE
);
3268 /* Changing the buffer bounds invalidates any recorded current column. */
3269 invalidate_current_column ();
3273 DEFUN ("narrow-to-region", Fnarrow_to_region
, Snarrow_to_region
, 2, 2, "r",
3274 doc
: /* Restrict editing in this buffer to the current region.
3275 The rest of the text becomes temporarily invisible and untouchable
3276 but is not deleted; if you save the buffer in a file, the invisible
3277 text is included in the file. \\[widen] makes all visible again.
3278 See also `save-restriction'.
3280 When calling from a program, pass two arguments; positions (integers
3281 or markers) bounding the text that should remain visible. */)
3282 (register Lisp_Object start
, Lisp_Object end
)
3284 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start
);
3285 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end
);
3287 if (XINT (start
) > XINT (end
))
3290 tem
= start
; start
= end
; end
= tem
;
3293 if (!(BEG
<= XINT (start
) && XINT (start
) <= XINT (end
) && XINT (end
) <= Z
))
3294 args_out_of_range (start
, end
);
3296 if (BEGV
!= XFASTINT (start
) || ZV
!= XFASTINT (end
))
3297 current_buffer
->clip_changed
= 1;
3299 SET_BUF_BEGV (current_buffer
, XFASTINT (start
));
3300 SET_BUF_ZV (current_buffer
, XFASTINT (end
));
3301 if (PT
< XFASTINT (start
))
3302 SET_PT (XFASTINT (start
));
3303 if (PT
> XFASTINT (end
))
3304 SET_PT (XFASTINT (end
));
3305 /* Changing the buffer bounds invalidates any recorded current column. */
3306 invalidate_current_column ();
3311 save_restriction_save (void)
3313 if (BEGV
== BEG
&& ZV
== Z
)
3314 /* The common case that the buffer isn't narrowed.
3315 We return just the buffer object, which save_restriction_restore
3316 recognizes as meaning `no restriction'. */
3317 return Fcurrent_buffer ();
3319 /* We have to save a restriction, so return a pair of markers, one
3320 for the beginning and one for the end. */
3322 Lisp_Object beg
, end
;
3324 beg
= build_marker (current_buffer
, BEGV
, BEGV_BYTE
);
3325 end
= build_marker (current_buffer
, ZV
, ZV_BYTE
);
3327 /* END must move forward if text is inserted at its exact location. */
3328 XMARKER (end
)->insertion_type
= 1;
3330 return Fcons (beg
, end
);
3335 save_restriction_restore (Lisp_Object data
)
3337 struct buffer
*cur
= NULL
;
3338 struct buffer
*buf
= (CONSP (data
)
3339 ? XMARKER (XCAR (data
))->buffer
3342 if (buf
&& buf
!= current_buffer
&& !NILP (BVAR (buf
, pt_marker
)))
3343 { /* If `buf' uses markers to keep track of PT, BEGV, and ZV (as
3344 is the case if it is or has an indirect buffer), then make
3345 sure it is current before we update BEGV, so
3346 set_buffer_internal takes care of managing those markers. */
3347 cur
= current_buffer
;
3348 set_buffer_internal (buf
);
3352 /* A pair of marks bounding a saved restriction. */
3354 struct Lisp_Marker
*beg
= XMARKER (XCAR (data
));
3355 struct Lisp_Marker
*end
= XMARKER (XCDR (data
));
3356 eassert (buf
== end
->buffer
);
3358 if (buf
/* Verify marker still points to a buffer. */
3359 && (beg
->charpos
!= BUF_BEGV (buf
) || end
->charpos
!= BUF_ZV (buf
)))
3360 /* The restriction has changed from the saved one, so restore
3361 the saved restriction. */
3363 ptrdiff_t pt
= BUF_PT (buf
);
3365 SET_BUF_BEGV_BOTH (buf
, beg
->charpos
, beg
->bytepos
);
3366 SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH (buf
, end
->charpos
, end
->bytepos
);
3368 if (pt
< beg
->charpos
|| pt
> end
->charpos
)
3369 /* The point is outside the new visible range, move it inside. */
3370 SET_BUF_PT_BOTH (buf
,
3371 clip_to_bounds (beg
->charpos
, pt
, end
->charpos
),
3372 clip_to_bounds (beg
->bytepos
, BUF_PT_BYTE (buf
),
3375 buf
->clip_changed
= 1; /* Remember that the narrowing changed. */
3377 /* These aren't needed anymore, so don't wait for GC. */
3378 free_marker (XCAR (data
));
3379 free_marker (XCDR (data
));
3380 free_cons (XCONS (data
));
3383 /* A buffer, which means that there was no old restriction. */
3385 if (buf
/* Verify marker still points to a buffer. */
3386 && (BUF_BEGV (buf
) != BUF_BEG (buf
) || BUF_ZV (buf
) != BUF_Z (buf
)))
3387 /* The buffer has been narrowed, get rid of the narrowing. */
3389 SET_BUF_BEGV_BOTH (buf
, BUF_BEG (buf
), BUF_BEG_BYTE (buf
));
3390 SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH (buf
, BUF_Z (buf
), BUF_Z_BYTE (buf
));
3392 buf
->clip_changed
= 1; /* Remember that the narrowing changed. */
3396 /* Changing the buffer bounds invalidates any recorded current column. */
3397 invalidate_current_column ();
3400 set_buffer_internal (cur
);
3405 DEFUN ("save-restriction", Fsave_restriction
, Ssave_restriction
, 0, UNEVALLED
, 0,
3406 doc
: /* Execute BODY, saving and restoring current buffer's restrictions.
3407 The buffer's restrictions make parts of the beginning and end invisible.
3408 \(They are set up with `narrow-to-region' and eliminated with `widen'.)
3409 This special form, `save-restriction', saves the current buffer's restrictions
3410 when it is entered, and restores them when it is exited.
3411 So any `narrow-to-region' within BODY lasts only until the end of the form.
3412 The old restrictions settings are restored
3413 even in case of abnormal exit (throw or error).
3415 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY.
3417 Note: if you are using both `save-excursion' and `save-restriction',
3418 use `save-excursion' outermost:
3419 (save-excursion (save-restriction ...))
3421 usage: (save-restriction &rest BODY) */)
3424 register Lisp_Object val
;
3425 ptrdiff_t count
= SPECPDL_INDEX ();
3427 record_unwind_protect (save_restriction_restore
, save_restriction_save ());
3428 val
= Fprogn (body
);
3429 return unbind_to (count
, val
);
3432 DEFUN ("message", Fmessage
, Smessage
, 1, MANY
, 0,
3433 doc
: /* Display a message at the bottom of the screen.
3434 The message also goes into the `*Messages*' buffer, if `message-log-max'
3435 is non-nil. (In keyboard macros, that's all it does.)
3438 The first argument is a format control string, and the rest are data
3439 to be formatted under control of the string. See `format' for details.
3441 Note: Use (message "%s" VALUE) to print the value of expressions and
3442 variables to avoid accidentally interpreting `%' as format specifiers.
3444 If the first argument is nil or the empty string, the function clears
3445 any existing message; this lets the minibuffer contents show. See
3446 also `current-message'.
3448 usage: (message FORMAT-STRING &rest ARGS) */)
3449 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
3452 || (STRINGP (args
[0])
3453 && SBYTES (args
[0]) == 0))
3460 register Lisp_Object val
;
3461 val
= Fformat (nargs
, args
);
3467 DEFUN ("message-box", Fmessage_box
, Smessage_box
, 1, MANY
, 0,
3468 doc
: /* Display a message, in a dialog box if possible.
3469 If a dialog box is not available, use the echo area.
3470 The first argument is a format control string, and the rest are data
3471 to be formatted under control of the string. See `format' for details.
3473 If the first argument is nil or the empty string, clear any existing
3474 message; let the minibuffer contents show.
3476 usage: (message-box FORMAT-STRING &rest ARGS) */)
3477 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
3486 Lisp_Object val
= Fformat (nargs
, args
);
3488 /* The MS-DOS frames support popup menus even though they are
3489 not FRAME_WINDOW_P. */
3490 if (FRAME_WINDOW_P (XFRAME (selected_frame
))
3491 || FRAME_MSDOS_P (XFRAME (selected_frame
)))
3493 Lisp_Object pane
, menu
;
3494 struct gcpro gcpro1
;
3495 pane
= Fcons (Fcons (build_string ("OK"), Qt
), Qnil
);
3497 menu
= Fcons (val
, pane
);
3498 Fx_popup_dialog (Qt
, menu
, Qt
);
3502 #endif /* HAVE_MENUS */
3508 DEFUN ("message-or-box", Fmessage_or_box
, Smessage_or_box
, 1, MANY
, 0,
3509 doc
: /* Display a message in a dialog box or in the echo area.
3510 If this command was invoked with the mouse, use a dialog box if
3511 `use-dialog-box' is non-nil.
3512 Otherwise, use the echo area.
3513 The first argument is a format control string, and the rest are data
3514 to be formatted under control of the string. See `format' for details.
3516 If the first argument is nil or the empty string, clear any existing
3517 message; let the minibuffer contents show.
3519 usage: (message-or-box FORMAT-STRING &rest ARGS) */)
3520 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
3523 if ((NILP (last_nonmenu_event
) || CONSP (last_nonmenu_event
))
3525 return Fmessage_box (nargs
, args
);
3527 return Fmessage (nargs
, args
);
3530 DEFUN ("current-message", Fcurrent_message
, Scurrent_message
, 0, 0, 0,
3531 doc
: /* Return the string currently displayed in the echo area, or nil if none. */)
3534 return current_message ();
3538 DEFUN ("propertize", Fpropertize
, Spropertize
, 1, MANY
, 0,
3539 doc
: /* Return a copy of STRING with text properties added.
3540 First argument is the string to copy.
3541 Remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs for text
3542 properties to add to the result.
3543 usage: (propertize STRING &rest PROPERTIES) */)
3544 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
3546 Lisp_Object properties
, string
;
3547 struct gcpro gcpro1
, gcpro2
;
3550 /* Number of args must be odd. */
3551 if ((nargs
& 1) == 0)
3552 error ("Wrong number of arguments");
3554 properties
= string
= Qnil
;
3555 GCPRO2 (properties
, string
);
3557 /* First argument must be a string. */
3558 CHECK_STRING (args
[0]);
3559 string
= Fcopy_sequence (args
[0]);
3561 for (i
= 1; i
< nargs
; i
+= 2)
3562 properties
= Fcons (args
[i
], Fcons (args
[i
+ 1], properties
));
3564 Fadd_text_properties (make_number (0),
3565 make_number (SCHARS (string
)),
3566 properties
, string
);
3567 RETURN_UNGCPRO (string
);
3570 DEFUN ("format", Fformat
, Sformat
, 1, MANY
, 0,
3571 doc
: /* Format a string out of a format-string and arguments.
3572 The first argument is a format control string.
3573 The other arguments are substituted into it to make the result, a string.
3575 The format control string may contain %-sequences meaning to substitute
3576 the next available argument:
3578 %s means print a string argument. Actually, prints any object, with `princ'.
3579 %d means print as number in decimal (%o octal, %x hex).
3580 %X is like %x, but uses upper case.
3581 %e means print a number in exponential notation.
3582 %f means print a number in decimal-point notation.
3583 %g means print a number in exponential notation
3584 or decimal-point notation, whichever uses fewer characters.
3585 %c means print a number as a single character.
3586 %S means print any object as an s-expression (using `prin1').
3588 The argument used for %d, %o, %x, %e, %f, %g or %c must be a number.
3589 Use %% to put a single % into the output.
3591 A %-sequence may contain optional flag, width, and precision
3592 specifiers, as follows:
3594 %<flags><width><precision>character
3596 where flags is [+ #-0]+, width is [0-9]+, and precision is .[0-9]+
3598 The + flag character inserts a + before any positive number, while a
3599 space inserts a space before any positive number; these flags only
3600 affect %d, %e, %f, and %g sequences, and the + flag takes precedence.
3601 The - and 0 flags affect the width specifier, as described below.
3603 The # flag means to use an alternate display form for %o, %x, %X, %e,
3604 %f, and %g sequences: for %o, it ensures that the result begins with
3605 \"0\"; for %x and %X, it prefixes the result with \"0x\" or \"0X\";
3606 for %e, %f, and %g, it causes a decimal point to be included even if
3607 the precision is zero.
3609 The width specifier supplies a lower limit for the length of the
3610 printed representation. The padding, if any, normally goes on the
3611 left, but it goes on the right if the - flag is present. The padding
3612 character is normally a space, but it is 0 if the 0 flag is present.
3613 The 0 flag is ignored if the - flag is present, or the format sequence
3614 is something other than %d, %e, %f, and %g.
3616 For %e, %f, and %g sequences, the number after the "." in the
3617 precision specifier says how many decimal places to show; if zero, the
3618 decimal point itself is omitted. For %s and %S, the precision
3619 specifier truncates the string to the given width.
3621 usage: (format STRING &rest OBJECTS) */)
3622 (ptrdiff_t nargs
, Lisp_Object
*args
)
3624 ptrdiff_t n
; /* The number of the next arg to substitute */
3625 char initial_buffer
[4000];
3626 char *buf
= initial_buffer
;
3627 ptrdiff_t bufsize
= sizeof initial_buffer
;
3628 ptrdiff_t max_bufsize
= STRING_BYTES_BOUND
+ 1;
3630 Lisp_Object buf_save_value
IF_LINT (= {0});
3631 char *format
, *end
, *format_start
;
3632 ptrdiff_t formatlen
, nchars
;
3633 /* True if the format is multibyte. */
3634 bool multibyte_format
= 0;
3635 /* True if the output should be a multibyte string,
3636 which is true if any of the inputs is one. */
3638 /* When we make a multibyte string, we must pay attention to the
3639 byte combining problem, i.e., a byte may be combined with a
3640 multibyte character of the previous string. This flag tells if we
3641 must consider such a situation or not. */
3642 bool maybe_combine_byte
;
3644 bool arg_intervals
= 0;
3647 /* discarded[I] is 1 if byte I of the format
3648 string was not copied into the output.
3649 It is 2 if byte I was not the first byte of its character. */
3652 /* Each element records, for one argument,
3653 the start and end bytepos in the output string,
3654 whether the argument has been converted to string (e.g., due to "%S"),
3655 and whether the argument is a string with intervals.
3656 info[0] is unused. Unused elements have -1 for start. */
3659 ptrdiff_t start
, end
;
3660 unsigned converted_to_string
: 1;
3661 unsigned intervals
: 1;
3664 /* It should not be necessary to GCPRO ARGS, because
3665 the caller in the interpreter should take care of that. */
3667 CHECK_STRING (args
[0]);
3668 format_start
= SSDATA (args
[0]);
3669 formatlen
= SBYTES (args
[0]);
3671 /* Allocate the info and discarded tables. */
3674 if ((SIZE_MAX
- formatlen
) / sizeof (struct info
) <= nargs
)
3675 memory_full (SIZE_MAX
);
3676 info
= SAFE_ALLOCA ((nargs
+ 1) * sizeof *info
+ formatlen
);
3677 discarded
= (char *) &info
[nargs
+ 1];
3678 for (i
= 0; i
< nargs
+ 1; i
++)
3681 info
[i
].intervals
= info
[i
].converted_to_string
= 0;
3683 memset (discarded
, 0, formatlen
);
3686 /* Try to determine whether the result should be multibyte.
3687 This is not always right; sometimes the result needs to be multibyte
3688 because of an object that we will pass through prin1,
3689 and in that case, we won't know it here. */
3690 multibyte_format
= STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[0]);
3691 multibyte
= multibyte_format
;
3692 for (n
= 1; !multibyte
&& n
< nargs
; n
++)
3693 if (STRINGP (args
[n
]) && STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[n
]))
3696 /* If we start out planning a unibyte result,
3697 then discover it has to be multibyte, we jump back to retry. */
3704 /* Scan the format and store result in BUF. */
3705 format
= format_start
;
3706 end
= format
+ formatlen
;
3707 maybe_combine_byte
= 0;
3709 while (format
!= end
)
3711 /* The values of N and FORMAT when the loop body is entered. */
3713 char *format0
= format
;
3715 /* Bytes needed to represent the output of this conversion. */
3716 ptrdiff_t convbytes
;
3720 /* General format specifications look like
3722 '%' [flags] [field-width] [precision] format
3727 field-width ::= [0-9]+
3728 precision ::= '.' [0-9]*
3730 If a field-width is specified, it specifies to which width
3731 the output should be padded with blanks, if the output
3732 string is shorter than field-width.
3734 If precision is specified, it specifies the number of
3735 digits to print after the '.' for floats, or the max.
3736 number of chars to print from a string. */
3738 bool minus_flag
= 0;
3740 bool space_flag
= 0;
3741 bool sharp_flag
= 0;
3743 ptrdiff_t field_width
;
3744 bool precision_given
;
3745 uintmax_t precision
= UINTMAX_MAX
;
3753 case '-': minus_flag
= 1; continue;
3754 case '+': plus_flag
= 1; continue;
3755 case ' ': space_flag
= 1; continue;
3756 case '#': sharp_flag
= 1; continue;
3757 case '0': zero_flag
= 1; continue;
3762 /* Ignore flags when sprintf ignores them. */
3763 space_flag
&= ~ plus_flag
;
3764 zero_flag
&= ~ minus_flag
;
3767 uintmax_t w
= strtoumax (format
, &num_end
, 10);
3768 if (max_bufsize
<= w
)
3772 precision_given
= *num_end
== '.';
3773 if (precision_given
)
3774 precision
= strtoumax (num_end
+ 1, &num_end
, 10);
3778 error ("Format string ends in middle of format specifier");
3780 memset (&discarded
[format0
- format_start
], 1, format
- format0
);
3781 conversion
= *format
;
3782 if (conversion
== '%')
3784 discarded
[format
- format_start
] = 1;
3789 error ("Not enough arguments for format string");
3791 /* For 'S', prin1 the argument, and then treat like 's'.
3792 For 's', princ any argument that is not a string or
3793 symbol. But don't do this conversion twice, which might
3794 happen after retrying. */
3795 if ((conversion
== 'S'
3796 || (conversion
== 's'
3797 && ! STRINGP (args
[n
]) && ! SYMBOLP (args
[n
]))))
3799 if (! info
[n
].converted_to_string
)
3801 Lisp_Object noescape
= conversion
== 'S' ? Qnil
: Qt
;
3802 args
[n
] = Fprin1_to_string (args
[n
], noescape
);
3803 info
[n
].converted_to_string
= 1;
3804 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[n
]) && ! multibyte
)
3812 else if (conversion
== 'c')
3814 if (FLOATP (args
[n
]))
3816 double d
= XFLOAT_DATA (args
[n
]);
3817 args
[n
] = make_number (FIXNUM_OVERFLOW_P (d
) ? -1 : d
);
3820 if (INTEGERP (args
[n
]) && ! ASCII_CHAR_P (XINT (args
[n
])))
3827 args
[n
] = Fchar_to_string (args
[n
]);
3828 info
[n
].converted_to_string
= 1;
3831 if (info
[n
].converted_to_string
)
3836 if (SYMBOLP (args
[n
]))
3838 args
[n
] = SYMBOL_NAME (args
[n
]);
3839 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[n
]) && ! multibyte
)
3846 if (conversion
== 's')
3848 /* handle case (precision[n] >= 0) */
3850 ptrdiff_t width
, padding
, nbytes
;
3851 ptrdiff_t nchars_string
;
3853 ptrdiff_t prec
= -1;
3854 if (precision_given
&& precision
<= TYPE_MAXIMUM (ptrdiff_t))
3857 /* lisp_string_width ignores a precision of 0, but GNU
3858 libc functions print 0 characters when the precision
3859 is 0. Imitate libc behavior here. Changing
3860 lisp_string_width is the right thing, and will be
3861 done, but meanwhile we work with it. */
3864 width
= nchars_string
= nbytes
= 0;
3868 width
= lisp_string_width (args
[n
], prec
, &nch
, &nby
);
3871 nchars_string
= SCHARS (args
[n
]);
3872 nbytes
= SBYTES (args
[n
]);
3876 nchars_string
= nch
;
3882 if (convbytes
&& multibyte
&& ! STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[n
]))
3883 convbytes
= count_size_as_multibyte (SDATA (args
[n
]), nbytes
);
3885 padding
= width
< field_width
? field_width
- width
: 0;
3887 if (max_bufsize
- padding
<= convbytes
)
3889 convbytes
+= padding
;
3890 if (convbytes
<= buf
+ bufsize
- p
)
3894 memset (p
, ' ', padding
);
3901 && !ASCII_BYTE_P (*((unsigned char *) p
- 1))
3902 && STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[n
])
3903 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (SREF (args
[n
], 0)))
3904 maybe_combine_byte
= 1;
3906 p
+= copy_text (SDATA (args
[n
]), (unsigned char *) p
,
3908 STRING_MULTIBYTE (args
[n
]), multibyte
);
3910 info
[n
].start
= nchars
;
3911 nchars
+= nchars_string
;
3912 info
[n
].end
= nchars
;
3916 memset (p
, ' ', padding
);
3921 /* If this argument has text properties, record where
3922 in the result string it appears. */
3923 if (string_intervals (args
[n
]))
3924 info
[n
].intervals
= arg_intervals
= 1;
3929 else if (! (conversion
== 'c' || conversion
== 'd'
3930 || conversion
== 'e' || conversion
== 'f'
3931 || conversion
== 'g' || conversion
== 'i'
3932 || conversion
== 'o' || conversion
== 'x'
3933 || conversion
== 'X'))
3934 error ("Invalid format operation %%%c",
3935 STRING_CHAR ((unsigned char *) format
- 1));
3936 else if (! (INTEGERP (args
[n
]) || FLOATP (args
[n
])))
3937 error ("Format specifier doesn't match argument type");
3942 /* Maximum precision for a %f conversion such that the
3943 trailing output digit might be nonzero. Any precision
3944 larger than this will not yield useful information. */
3945 USEFUL_PRECISION_MAX
=
3947 * (FLT_RADIX
== 2 || FLT_RADIX
== 10 ? 1
3948 : FLT_RADIX
== 16 ? 4
3951 /* Maximum number of bytes generated by any format, if
3952 precision is no more than USEFUL_PRECISION_MAX.
3953 On all practical hosts, %f is the worst case. */
3955 sizeof "-." + (DBL_MAX_10_EXP
+ 1) + USEFUL_PRECISION_MAX
,
3957 /* Length of pM (that is, of pMd without the
3959 pMlen
= sizeof pMd
- 2
3961 verify (0 < USEFUL_PRECISION_MAX
);
3964 ptrdiff_t padding
, sprintf_bytes
;
3965 uintmax_t excess_precision
, numwidth
;
3966 uintmax_t leading_zeros
= 0, trailing_zeros
= 0;
3968 char sprintf_buf
[SPRINTF_BUFSIZE
];
3970 /* Copy of conversion specification, modified somewhat.
3971 At most three flags F can be specified at once. */
3972 char convspec
[sizeof "%FFF.*d" + pMlen
];
3974 /* Avoid undefined behavior in underlying sprintf. */
3975 if (conversion
== 'd' || conversion
== 'i')
3978 /* Create the copy of the conversion specification, with
3979 any width and precision removed, with ".*" inserted,
3980 and with pM inserted for integer formats. */
3984 *f
= '-'; f
+= minus_flag
;
3985 *f
= '+'; f
+= plus_flag
;
3986 *f
= ' '; f
+= space_flag
;
3987 *f
= '#'; f
+= sharp_flag
;
3988 *f
= '0'; f
+= zero_flag
;
3991 if (conversion
== 'd' || conversion
== 'i'
3992 || conversion
== 'o' || conversion
== 'x'
3993 || conversion
== 'X')
3995 memcpy (f
, pMd
, pMlen
);
3997 zero_flag
&= ~ precision_given
;
4004 if (precision_given
)
4005 prec
= min (precision
, USEFUL_PRECISION_MAX
);
4007 /* Use sprintf to format this number into sprintf_buf. Omit
4008 padding and excess precision, though, because sprintf limits
4009 output length to INT_MAX.
4011 There are four types of conversion: double, unsigned
4012 char (passed as int), wide signed int, and wide
4013 unsigned int. Treat them separately because the
4014 sprintf ABI is sensitive to which type is passed. Be
4015 careful about integer overflow, NaNs, infinities, and
4016 conversions; for example, the min and max macros are
4017 not suitable here. */
4018 if (conversion
== 'e' || conversion
== 'f' || conversion
== 'g')
4020 double x
= (INTEGERP (args
[n
])
4022 : XFLOAT_DATA (args
[n
]));
4023 sprintf_bytes
= sprintf (sprintf_buf
, convspec
, prec
, x
);
4025 else if (conversion
== 'c')
4027 /* Don't use sprintf here, as it might mishandle prec. */
4028 sprintf_buf
[0] = XINT (args
[n
]);
4029 sprintf_bytes
= prec
!= 0;
4031 else if (conversion
== 'd')
4033 /* For float, maybe we should use "%1.0f"
4034 instead so it also works for values outside
4035 the integer range. */
4037 if (INTEGERP (args
[n
]))
4041 double d
= XFLOAT_DATA (args
[n
]);
4044 x
= TYPE_MINIMUM (printmax_t
);
4050 x
= TYPE_MAXIMUM (printmax_t
);
4055 sprintf_bytes
= sprintf (sprintf_buf
, convspec
, prec
, x
);
4059 /* Don't sign-extend for octal or hex printing. */
4061 if (INTEGERP (args
[n
]))
4062 x
= XUINT (args
[n
]);
4065 double d
= XFLOAT_DATA (args
[n
]);
4070 x
= TYPE_MAXIMUM (uprintmax_t
);
4075 sprintf_bytes
= sprintf (sprintf_buf
, convspec
, prec
, x
);
4078 /* Now the length of the formatted item is known, except it omits
4079 padding and excess precision. Deal with excess precision
4080 first. This happens only when the format specifies
4081 ridiculously large precision. */
4082 excess_precision
= precision
- prec
;
4083 if (excess_precision
)
4085 if (conversion
== 'e' || conversion
== 'f'
4086 || conversion
== 'g')
4088 if ((conversion
== 'g' && ! sharp_flag
)
4089 || ! ('0' <= sprintf_buf
[sprintf_bytes
- 1]
4090 && sprintf_buf
[sprintf_bytes
- 1] <= '9'))
4091 excess_precision
= 0;
4094 if (conversion
== 'g')
4096 char *dot
= strchr (sprintf_buf
, '.');
4098 excess_precision
= 0;
4101 trailing_zeros
= excess_precision
;
4104 leading_zeros
= excess_precision
;
4107 /* Compute the total bytes needed for this item, including
4108 excess precision and padding. */
4109 numwidth
= sprintf_bytes
+ excess_precision
;
4110 padding
= numwidth
< field_width
? field_width
- numwidth
: 0;
4111 if (max_bufsize
- sprintf_bytes
<= excess_precision
4112 || max_bufsize
- padding
<= numwidth
)
4114 convbytes
= numwidth
+ padding
;
4116 if (convbytes
<= buf
+ bufsize
- p
)
4118 /* Copy the formatted item from sprintf_buf into buf,
4119 inserting padding and excess-precision zeros. */
4121 char *src
= sprintf_buf
;
4123 int exponent_bytes
= 0;
4124 bool signedp
= src0
== '-' || src0
== '+' || src0
== ' ';
4125 int significand_bytes
;
4127 && ((src
[signedp
] >= '0' && src
[signedp
] <= '9')
4128 || (src
[signedp
] >= 'a' && src
[signedp
] <= 'f')
4129 || (src
[signedp
] >= 'A' && src
[signedp
] <= 'F')))
4131 leading_zeros
+= padding
;
4135 if (excess_precision
4136 && (conversion
== 'e' || conversion
== 'g'))
4138 char *e
= strchr (src
, 'e');
4140 exponent_bytes
= src
+ sprintf_bytes
- e
;
4145 memset (p
, ' ', padding
);
4153 memset (p
, '0', leading_zeros
);
4155 significand_bytes
= sprintf_bytes
- signedp
- exponent_bytes
;
4156 memcpy (p
, src
, significand_bytes
);
4157 p
+= significand_bytes
;
4158 src
+= significand_bytes
;
4159 memset (p
, '0', trailing_zeros
);
4160 p
+= trailing_zeros
;
4161 memcpy (p
, src
, exponent_bytes
);
4162 p
+= exponent_bytes
;
4164 info
[n
].start
= nchars
;
4165 nchars
+= leading_zeros
+ sprintf_bytes
+ trailing_zeros
;
4166 info
[n
].end
= nchars
;
4170 memset (p
, ' ', padding
);
4182 /* Copy a single character from format to buf. */
4185 unsigned char str
[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH
];
4187 if (multibyte_format
)
4189 /* Copy a whole multibyte character. */
4191 && !ASCII_BYTE_P (*((unsigned char *) p
- 1))
4192 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (*format
))
4193 maybe_combine_byte
= 1;
4197 while (! CHAR_HEAD_P (*format
));
4199 convbytes
= format
- src
;
4200 memset (&discarded
[src
+ 1 - format_start
], 2, convbytes
- 1);
4204 unsigned char uc
= *format
++;
4205 if (! multibyte
|| ASCII_BYTE_P (uc
))
4209 int c
= BYTE8_TO_CHAR (uc
);
4210 convbytes
= CHAR_STRING (c
, str
);
4215 if (convbytes
<= buf
+ bufsize
- p
)
4217 memcpy (p
, src
, convbytes
);
4224 /* There wasn't enough room to store this conversion or single
4225 character. CONVBYTES says how much room is needed. Allocate
4226 enough room (and then some) and do it again. */
4228 ptrdiff_t used
= p
- buf
;
4230 if (max_bufsize
- used
< convbytes
)
4232 bufsize
= used
+ convbytes
;
4233 bufsize
= bufsize
< max_bufsize
/ 2 ? bufsize
* 2 : max_bufsize
;
4235 if (buf
== initial_buffer
)
4237 buf
= xmalloc (bufsize
);
4239 buf_save_value
= make_save_pointer (buf
);
4240 record_unwind_protect (safe_alloca_unwind
, buf_save_value
);
4241 memcpy (buf
, initial_buffer
, used
);
4244 XSAVE_POINTER (buf_save_value
, 0) = buf
= xrealloc (buf
, bufsize
);
4253 if (bufsize
< p
- buf
)
4256 if (maybe_combine_byte
)
4257 nchars
= multibyte_chars_in_text ((unsigned char *) buf
, p
- buf
);
4258 val
= make_specified_string (buf
, nchars
, p
- buf
, multibyte
);
4260 /* If we allocated BUF with malloc, free it too. */
4263 /* If the format string has text properties, or any of the string
4264 arguments has text properties, set up text properties of the
4267 if (string_intervals (args
[0]) || arg_intervals
)
4269 Lisp_Object len
, new_len
, props
;
4270 struct gcpro gcpro1
;
4272 /* Add text properties from the format string. */
4273 len
= make_number (SCHARS (args
[0]));
4274 props
= text_property_list (args
[0], make_number (0), len
, Qnil
);
4279 ptrdiff_t bytepos
= 0, position
= 0, translated
= 0;
4283 /* Adjust the bounds of each text property
4284 to the proper start and end in the output string. */
4286 /* Put the positions in PROPS in increasing order, so that
4287 we can do (effectively) one scan through the position
4288 space of the format string. */
4289 props
= Fnreverse (props
);
4291 /* BYTEPOS is the byte position in the format string,
4292 POSITION is the untranslated char position in it,
4293 TRANSLATED is the translated char position in BUF,
4294 and ARGN is the number of the next arg we will come to. */
4295 for (list
= props
; CONSP (list
); list
= XCDR (list
))
4302 /* First adjust the property start position. */
4303 pos
= XINT (XCAR (item
));
4305 /* Advance BYTEPOS, POSITION, TRANSLATED and ARGN
4306 up to this position. */
4307 for (; position
< pos
; bytepos
++)
4309 if (! discarded
[bytepos
])
4310 position
++, translated
++;
4311 else if (discarded
[bytepos
] == 1)
4314 if (translated
== info
[argn
].start
)
4316 translated
+= info
[argn
].end
- info
[argn
].start
;
4322 XSETCAR (item
, make_number (translated
));
4324 /* Likewise adjust the property end position. */
4325 pos
= XINT (XCAR (XCDR (item
)));
4327 for (; position
< pos
; bytepos
++)
4329 if (! discarded
[bytepos
])
4330 position
++, translated
++;
4331 else if (discarded
[bytepos
] == 1)
4334 if (translated
== info
[argn
].start
)
4336 translated
+= info
[argn
].end
- info
[argn
].start
;
4342 XSETCAR (XCDR (item
), make_number (translated
));
4345 add_text_properties_from_list (val
, props
, make_number (0));
4348 /* Add text properties from arguments. */
4350 for (n
= 1; n
< nargs
; ++n
)
4351 if (info
[n
].intervals
)
4353 len
= make_number (SCHARS (args
[n
]));
4354 new_len
= make_number (info
[n
].end
- info
[n
].start
);
4355 props
= text_property_list (args
[n
], make_number (0), len
, Qnil
);
4356 props
= extend_property_ranges (props
, new_len
);
4357 /* If successive arguments have properties, be sure that
4358 the value of `composition' property be the copy. */
4359 if (n
> 1 && info
[n
- 1].end
)
4360 make_composition_value_copy (props
);
4361 add_text_properties_from_list (val
, props
,
4362 make_number (info
[n
].start
));
4372 format2 (const char *string1
, Lisp_Object arg0
, Lisp_Object arg1
)
4374 Lisp_Object args
[3];
4375 args
[0] = build_string (string1
);
4378 return Fformat (3, args
);
4381 DEFUN ("char-equal", Fchar_equal
, Schar_equal
, 2, 2, 0,
4382 doc
: /* Return t if two characters match, optionally ignoring case.
4383 Both arguments must be characters (i.e. integers).
4384 Case is ignored if `case-fold-search' is non-nil in the current buffer. */)
4385 (register Lisp_Object c1
, Lisp_Object c2
)
4388 /* Check they're chars, not just integers, otherwise we could get array
4389 bounds violations in downcase. */
4390 CHECK_CHARACTER (c1
);
4391 CHECK_CHARACTER (c2
);
4393 if (XINT (c1
) == XINT (c2
))
4395 if (NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, case_fold_search
)))
4399 if (NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
))
4400 && ! ASCII_CHAR_P (i1
))
4402 MAKE_CHAR_MULTIBYTE (i1
);
4405 if (NILP (BVAR (current_buffer
, enable_multibyte_characters
))
4406 && ! ASCII_CHAR_P (i2
))
4408 MAKE_CHAR_MULTIBYTE (i2
);
4410 return (downcase (i1
) == downcase (i2
) ? Qt
: Qnil
);
4413 /* Transpose the markers in two regions of the current buffer, and
4414 adjust the ones between them if necessary (i.e.: if the regions
4417 START1, END1 are the character positions of the first region.
4418 START1_BYTE, END1_BYTE are the byte positions.
4419 START2, END2 are the character positions of the second region.
4420 START2_BYTE, END2_BYTE are the byte positions.
4422 Traverses the entire marker list of the buffer to do so, adding an
4423 appropriate amount to some, subtracting from some, and leaving the
4424 rest untouched. Most of this is copied from adjust_markers in insdel.c.
4426 It's the caller's job to ensure that START1 <= END1 <= START2 <= END2. */
4429 transpose_markers (ptrdiff_t start1
, ptrdiff_t end1
,
4430 ptrdiff_t start2
, ptrdiff_t end2
,
4431 ptrdiff_t start1_byte
, ptrdiff_t end1_byte
,
4432 ptrdiff_t start2_byte
, ptrdiff_t end2_byte
)
4434 register ptrdiff_t amt1
, amt1_byte
, amt2
, amt2_byte
, diff
, diff_byte
, mpos
;
4435 register struct Lisp_Marker
*marker
;
4437 /* Update point as if it were a marker. */
4441 TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH (PT
+ (end2
- end1
),
4442 PT_BYTE
+ (end2_byte
- end1_byte
));
4443 else if (PT
< start2
)
4444 TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH (PT
+ (end2
- start2
) - (end1
- start1
),
4445 (PT_BYTE
+ (end2_byte
- start2_byte
)
4446 - (end1_byte
- start1_byte
)));
4448 TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH (PT
- (start2
- start1
),
4449 PT_BYTE
- (start2_byte
- start1_byte
));
4451 /* We used to adjust the endpoints here to account for the gap, but that
4452 isn't good enough. Even if we assume the caller has tried to move the
4453 gap out of our way, it might still be at start1 exactly, for example;
4454 and that places it `inside' the interval, for our purposes. The amount
4455 of adjustment is nontrivial if there's a `denormalized' marker whose
4456 position is between GPT and GPT + GAP_SIZE, so it's simpler to leave
4457 the dirty work to Fmarker_position, below. */
4459 /* The difference between the region's lengths */
4460 diff
= (end2
- start2
) - (end1
- start1
);
4461 diff_byte
= (end2_byte
- start2_byte
) - (end1_byte
- start1_byte
);
4463 /* For shifting each marker in a region by the length of the other
4464 region plus the distance between the regions. */
4465 amt1
= (end2
- start2
) + (start2
- end1
);
4466 amt2
= (end1
- start1
) + (start2
- end1
);
4467 amt1_byte
= (end2_byte
- start2_byte
) + (start2_byte
- end1_byte
);
4468 amt2_byte
= (end1_byte
- start1_byte
) + (start2_byte
- end1_byte
);
4470 for (marker
= BUF_MARKERS (current_buffer
); marker
; marker
= marker
->next
)
4472 mpos
= marker
->bytepos
;
4473 if (mpos
>= start1_byte
&& mpos
< end2_byte
)
4475 if (mpos
< end1_byte
)
4477 else if (mpos
< start2_byte
)
4481 marker
->bytepos
= mpos
;
4483 mpos
= marker
->charpos
;
4484 if (mpos
>= start1
&& mpos
< end2
)
4488 else if (mpos
< start2
)
4493 marker
->charpos
= mpos
;
4497 DEFUN ("transpose-regions", Ftranspose_regions
, Stranspose_regions
, 4, 5, 0,
4498 doc
: /* Transpose region STARTR1 to ENDR1 with STARTR2 to ENDR2.
4499 The regions should not be overlapping, because the size of the buffer is
4500 never changed in a transposition.
4502 Optional fifth arg LEAVE-MARKERS, if non-nil, means don't update
4503 any markers that happen to be located in the regions.
4505 Transposing beyond buffer boundaries is an error. */)
4506 (Lisp_Object startr1
, Lisp_Object endr1
, Lisp_Object startr2
, Lisp_Object endr2
, Lisp_Object leave_markers
)
4508 register ptrdiff_t start1
, end1
, start2
, end2
;
4509 ptrdiff_t start1_byte
, start2_byte
, len1_byte
, len2_byte
, end2_byte
;
4510 ptrdiff_t gap
, len1
, len_mid
, len2
;
4511 unsigned char *start1_addr
, *start2_addr
, *temp
;
4513 INTERVAL cur_intv
, tmp_interval1
, tmp_interval_mid
, tmp_interval2
, tmp_interval3
;
4516 XSETBUFFER (buf
, current_buffer
);
4517 cur_intv
= buffer_intervals (current_buffer
);
4519 validate_region (&startr1
, &endr1
);
4520 validate_region (&startr2
, &endr2
);
4522 start1
= XFASTINT (startr1
);
4523 end1
= XFASTINT (endr1
);
4524 start2
= XFASTINT (startr2
);
4525 end2
= XFASTINT (endr2
);
4528 /* Swap the regions if they're reversed. */
4531 register ptrdiff_t glumph
= start1
;
4539 len1
= end1
- start1
;
4540 len2
= end2
- start2
;
4543 error ("Transposed regions overlap");
4544 /* Nothing to change for adjacent regions with one being empty */
4545 else if ((start1
== end1
|| start2
== end2
) && end1
== start2
)
4548 /* The possibilities are:
4549 1. Adjacent (contiguous) regions, or separate but equal regions
4550 (no, really equal, in this case!), or
4551 2. Separate regions of unequal size.
4553 The worst case is usually No. 2. It means that (aside from
4554 potential need for getting the gap out of the way), there also
4555 needs to be a shifting of the text between the two regions. So
4556 if they are spread far apart, we are that much slower... sigh. */
4558 /* It must be pointed out that the really studly thing to do would
4559 be not to move the gap at all, but to leave it in place and work
4560 around it if necessary. This would be extremely efficient,
4561 especially considering that people are likely to do
4562 transpositions near where they are working interactively, which
4563 is exactly where the gap would be found. However, such code
4564 would be much harder to write and to read. So, if you are
4565 reading this comment and are feeling squirrely, by all means have
4566 a go! I just didn't feel like doing it, so I will simply move
4567 the gap the minimum distance to get it out of the way, and then
4568 deal with an unbroken array. */
4570 start1_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (start1
);
4571 end2_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (end2
);
4573 /* Make sure the gap won't interfere, by moving it out of the text
4574 we will operate on. */
4575 if (start1
< gap
&& gap
< end2
)
4577 if (gap
- start1
< end2
- gap
)
4578 move_gap_both (start1
, start1_byte
);
4580 move_gap_both (end2
, end2_byte
);
4583 start2_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (start2
);
4584 len1_byte
= CHAR_TO_BYTE (end1
) - start1_byte
;
4585 len2_byte
= end2_byte
- start2_byte
;
4587 #ifdef BYTE_COMBINING_DEBUG
4590 if (count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
),
4591 len2_byte
, start1
, start1_byte
)
4592 || count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
),
4593 len1_byte
, end2
, start2_byte
+ len2_byte
)
4594 || count_combining_after (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
),
4595 len1_byte
, end2
, start2_byte
+ len2_byte
))
4600 if (count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
),
4601 len2_byte
, start1
, start1_byte
)
4602 || count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
),
4603 len1_byte
, start2
, start2_byte
)
4604 || count_combining_after (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
),
4605 len2_byte
, end1
, start1_byte
+ len1_byte
)
4606 || count_combining_after (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
),
4607 len1_byte
, end2
, start2_byte
+ len2_byte
))
4612 /* Hmmm... how about checking to see if the gap is large
4613 enough to use as the temporary storage? That would avoid an
4614 allocation... interesting. Later, don't fool with it now. */
4616 /* Working without memmove, for portability (sigh), so must be
4617 careful of overlapping subsections of the array... */
4619 if (end1
== start2
) /* adjacent regions */
4621 modify_region_1 (start1
, end2
, false);
4622 record_change (start1
, len1
+ len2
);
4624 tmp_interval1
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start1
, len1
);
4625 tmp_interval2
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start2
, len2
);
4626 /* Don't use Fset_text_properties: that can cause GC, which can
4627 clobber objects stored in the tmp_intervals. */
4628 tmp_interval3
= validate_interval_range (buf
, &startr1
, &endr2
, 0);
4630 set_text_properties_1 (startr1
, endr2
, Qnil
, buf
, tmp_interval3
);
4632 /* First region smaller than second. */
4633 if (len1_byte
< len2_byte
)
4637 temp
= SAFE_ALLOCA (len2_byte
);
4639 /* Don't precompute these addresses. We have to compute them
4640 at the last minute, because the relocating allocator might
4641 have moved the buffer around during the xmalloc. */
4642 start1_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
);
4643 start2_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
);
4645 memcpy (temp
, start2_addr
, len2_byte
);
4646 memcpy (start1_addr
+ len2_byte
, start1_addr
, len1_byte
);
4647 memcpy (start1_addr
, temp
, len2_byte
);
4651 /* First region not smaller than second. */
4655 temp
= SAFE_ALLOCA (len1_byte
);
4656 start1_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
);
4657 start2_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
);
4658 memcpy (temp
, start1_addr
, len1_byte
);
4659 memcpy (start1_addr
, start2_addr
, len2_byte
);
4660 memcpy (start1_addr
+ len2_byte
, temp
, len1_byte
);
4663 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1
, start1
+ len2
,
4664 len1
, current_buffer
, 0);
4665 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2
, start1
,
4666 len2
, current_buffer
, 0);
4667 update_compositions (start1
, start1
+ len2
, CHECK_BORDER
);
4668 update_compositions (start1
+ len2
, end2
, CHECK_TAIL
);
4670 /* Non-adjacent regions, because end1 != start2, bleagh... */
4673 len_mid
= start2_byte
- (start1_byte
+ len1_byte
);
4675 if (len1_byte
== len2_byte
)
4676 /* Regions are same size, though, how nice. */
4680 modify_region_1 (start1
, end1
, false);
4681 modify_region_1 (start2
, end2
, false);
4682 record_change (start1
, len1
);
4683 record_change (start2
, len2
);
4684 tmp_interval1
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start1
, len1
);
4685 tmp_interval2
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start2
, len2
);
4687 tmp_interval3
= validate_interval_range (buf
, &startr1
, &endr1
, 0);
4689 set_text_properties_1 (startr1
, endr1
, Qnil
, buf
, tmp_interval3
);
4691 tmp_interval3
= validate_interval_range (buf
, &startr2
, &endr2
, 0);
4693 set_text_properties_1 (startr2
, endr2
, Qnil
, buf
, tmp_interval3
);
4695 temp
= SAFE_ALLOCA (len1_byte
);
4696 start1_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
);
4697 start2_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
);
4698 memcpy (temp
, start1_addr
, len1_byte
);
4699 memcpy (start1_addr
, start2_addr
, len2_byte
);
4700 memcpy (start2_addr
, temp
, len1_byte
);
4703 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1
, start2
,
4704 len1
, current_buffer
, 0);
4705 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2
, start1
,
4706 len2
, current_buffer
, 0);
4709 else if (len1_byte
< len2_byte
) /* Second region larger than first */
4710 /* Non-adjacent & unequal size, area between must also be shifted. */
4714 modify_region_1 (start1
, end2
, false);
4715 record_change (start1
, (end2
- start1
));
4716 tmp_interval1
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start1
, len1
);
4717 tmp_interval_mid
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, end1
, len_mid
);
4718 tmp_interval2
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start2
, len2
);
4720 tmp_interval3
= validate_interval_range (buf
, &startr1
, &endr2
, 0);
4722 set_text_properties_1 (startr1
, endr2
, Qnil
, buf
, tmp_interval3
);
4724 /* holds region 2 */
4725 temp
= SAFE_ALLOCA (len2_byte
);
4726 start1_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
);
4727 start2_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
);
4728 memcpy (temp
, start2_addr
, len2_byte
);
4729 memcpy (start1_addr
+ len_mid
+ len2_byte
, start1_addr
, len1_byte
);
4730 memmove (start1_addr
+ len2_byte
, start1_addr
+ len1_byte
, len_mid
);
4731 memcpy (start1_addr
, temp
, len2_byte
);
4734 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1
, end2
- len1
,
4735 len1
, current_buffer
, 0);
4736 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval_mid
, start1
+ len2
,
4737 len_mid
, current_buffer
, 0);
4738 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2
, start1
,
4739 len2
, current_buffer
, 0);
4742 /* Second region smaller than first. */
4746 record_change (start1
, (end2
- start1
));
4747 modify_region_1 (start1
, end2
, false);
4749 tmp_interval1
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start1
, len1
);
4750 tmp_interval_mid
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, end1
, len_mid
);
4751 tmp_interval2
= copy_intervals (cur_intv
, start2
, len2
);
4753 tmp_interval3
= validate_interval_range (buf
, &startr1
, &endr2
, 0);
4755 set_text_properties_1 (startr1
, endr2
, Qnil
, buf
, tmp_interval3
);
4757 /* holds region 1 */
4758 temp
= SAFE_ALLOCA (len1_byte
);
4759 start1_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte
);
4760 start2_addr
= BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte
);
4761 memcpy (temp
, start1_addr
, len1_byte
);
4762 memcpy (start1_addr
, start2_addr
, len2_byte
);
4763 memcpy (start1_addr
+ len2_byte
, start1_addr
+ len1_byte
, len_mid
);
4764 memcpy (start1_addr
+ len2_byte
+ len_mid
, temp
, len1_byte
);
4767 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1
, end2
- len1
,
4768 len1
, current_buffer
, 0);
4769 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval_mid
, start1
+ len2
,
4770 len_mid
, current_buffer
, 0);
4771 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2
, start1
,
4772 len2
, current_buffer
, 0);
4775 update_compositions (start1
, start1
+ len2
, CHECK_BORDER
);
4776 update_compositions (end2
- len1
, end2
, CHECK_BORDER
);
4779 /* When doing multiple transpositions, it might be nice
4780 to optimize this. Perhaps the markers in any one buffer
4781 should be organized in some sorted data tree. */
4782 if (NILP (leave_markers
))
4784 transpose_markers (start1
, end1
, start2
, end2
,
4785 start1_byte
, start1_byte
+ len1_byte
,
4786 start2_byte
, start2_byte
+ len2_byte
);
4787 fix_start_end_in_overlays (start1
, end2
);
4790 signal_after_change (start1
, end2
- start1
, end2
- start1
);
4796 syms_of_editfns (void)
4798 DEFSYM (Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions
, "buffer-access-fontify-functions");
4800 DEFVAR_LISP ("inhibit-field-text-motion", Vinhibit_field_text_motion
,
4801 doc
: /* Non-nil means text motion commands don't notice fields. */);
4802 Vinhibit_field_text_motion
= Qnil
;
4804 DEFVAR_LISP ("buffer-access-fontify-functions",
4805 Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions
,
4806 doc
: /* List of functions called by `buffer-substring' to fontify if necessary.
4807 Each function is called with two arguments which specify the range
4808 of the buffer being accessed. */);
4809 Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions
= Qnil
;
4813 obuf
= Fcurrent_buffer ();
4814 /* Do this here, because init_buffer_once is too early--it won't work. */
4815 Fset_buffer (Vprin1_to_string_buffer
);
4816 /* Make sure buffer-access-fontify-functions is nil in this buffer. */
4817 Fset (Fmake_local_variable (intern_c_string ("buffer-access-fontify-functions")),
4822 DEFVAR_LISP ("buffer-access-fontified-property",
4823 Vbuffer_access_fontified_property
,
4824 doc
: /* Property which (if non-nil) indicates text has been fontified.
4825 `buffer-substring' need not call the `buffer-access-fontify-functions'
4826 functions if all the text being accessed has this property. */);
4827 Vbuffer_access_fontified_property
= Qnil
;
4829 DEFVAR_LISP ("system-name", Vsystem_name
,
4830 doc
: /* The host name of the machine Emacs is running on. */);
4832 DEFVAR_LISP ("user-full-name", Vuser_full_name
,
4833 doc
: /* The full name of the user logged in. */);
4835 DEFVAR_LISP ("user-login-name", Vuser_login_name
,
4836 doc
: /* The user's name, taken from environment variables if possible. */);
4838 DEFVAR_LISP ("user-real-login-name", Vuser_real_login_name
,
4839 doc
: /* The user's name, based upon the real uid only. */);
4841 DEFVAR_LISP ("operating-system-release", Voperating_system_release
,
4842 doc
: /* The release of the operating system Emacs is running on. */);
4844 defsubr (&Spropertize
);
4845 defsubr (&Schar_equal
);
4846 defsubr (&Sgoto_char
);
4847 defsubr (&Sstring_to_char
);
4848 defsubr (&Schar_to_string
);
4849 defsubr (&Sbyte_to_string
);
4850 defsubr (&Sbuffer_substring
);
4851 defsubr (&Sbuffer_substring_no_properties
);
4852 defsubr (&Sbuffer_string
);
4854 defsubr (&Spoint_marker
);
4855 defsubr (&Smark_marker
);
4857 defsubr (&Sregion_beginning
);
4858 defsubr (&Sregion_end
);
4860 DEFSYM (Qfield
, "field");
4861 DEFSYM (Qboundary
, "boundary");
4862 defsubr (&Sfield_beginning
);
4863 defsubr (&Sfield_end
);
4864 defsubr (&Sfield_string
);
4865 defsubr (&Sfield_string_no_properties
);
4866 defsubr (&Sdelete_field
);
4867 defsubr (&Sconstrain_to_field
);
4869 defsubr (&Sline_beginning_position
);
4870 defsubr (&Sline_end_position
);
4872 defsubr (&Ssave_excursion
);
4873 defsubr (&Ssave_current_buffer
);
4875 defsubr (&Sbuffer_size
);
4876 defsubr (&Spoint_max
);
4877 defsubr (&Spoint_min
);
4878 defsubr (&Spoint_min_marker
);
4879 defsubr (&Spoint_max_marker
);
4880 defsubr (&Sgap_position
);
4881 defsubr (&Sgap_size
);
4882 defsubr (&Sposition_bytes
);
4883 defsubr (&Sbyte_to_position
);
4889 defsubr (&Sfollowing_char
);
4890 defsubr (&Sprevious_char
);
4891 defsubr (&Schar_after
);
4892 defsubr (&Schar_before
);
4894 defsubr (&Sinsert_before_markers
);
4895 defsubr (&Sinsert_and_inherit
);
4896 defsubr (&Sinsert_and_inherit_before_markers
);
4897 defsubr (&Sinsert_char
);
4898 defsubr (&Sinsert_byte
);
4900 defsubr (&Suser_login_name
);
4901 defsubr (&Suser_real_login_name
);
4902 defsubr (&Suser_uid
);
4903 defsubr (&Suser_real_uid
);
4904 defsubr (&Sgroup_gid
);
4905 defsubr (&Sgroup_real_gid
);
4906 defsubr (&Suser_full_name
);
4907 defsubr (&Semacs_pid
);
4908 defsubr (&Scurrent_time
);
4909 defsubr (&Sget_internal_run_time
);
4910 defsubr (&Sformat_time_string
);
4911 defsubr (&Sfloat_time
);
4912 defsubr (&Sdecode_time
);
4913 defsubr (&Sencode_time
);
4914 defsubr (&Scurrent_time_string
);
4915 defsubr (&Scurrent_time_zone
);
4916 defsubr (&Sset_time_zone_rule
);
4917 defsubr (&Ssystem_name
);
4918 defsubr (&Smessage
);
4919 defsubr (&Smessage_box
);
4920 defsubr (&Smessage_or_box
);
4921 defsubr (&Scurrent_message
);
4924 defsubr (&Sinsert_buffer_substring
);
4925 defsubr (&Scompare_buffer_substrings
);
4926 defsubr (&Ssubst_char_in_region
);
4927 defsubr (&Stranslate_region_internal
);
4928 defsubr (&Sdelete_region
);
4929 defsubr (&Sdelete_and_extract_region
);
4931 defsubr (&Snarrow_to_region
);
4932 defsubr (&Ssave_restriction
);
4933 defsubr (&Stranspose_regions
);