3 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
6 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
7 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
8 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
9 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
10 ;;;; files for more information.
12 (in-package "SB!IMPL")
14 (sb!xc
:deftype attribute-table
()
15 '(simple-array (unsigned-byte 8) (#.base-char-code-limit
)))
17 ;;; constants for readtable character attributes. These are all as in
20 ;;; FIXME: wait a minute. Firstly, I doubt they're in the manual.
21 ;;; Secondly, the numerical order of these constants is coupled with
22 ;;; code in CHAR-CLASS{,2,3} in the reader implementation, so beware
23 ;;; when changing them.
24 (def!constant
+char-attr-whitespace
+ 0)
25 (def!constant
+char-attr-terminating-macro
+ 1)
26 (def!constant
+char-attr-single-escape
+ 2)
27 (def!constant
+char-attr-multiple-escape
+ 3)
28 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent
+ 4)
29 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-dot
+ 5)
30 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-expt
+ 6)
31 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-slash
+ 7)
32 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-digit
+ 8)
33 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-sign
+ 9)
34 ;;; the following two are not static but depend on *READ-BASE*.
35 ;;; DECIMAL-DIGIT is for characters being digits in base 10 but not in
36 ;;; base *READ-BASE* (which is therefore perforce smaller than 10);
37 ;;; DIGIT-OR-EXPT is for characters being both exponent markers and
38 ;;; digits in base *READ-BASE* (which is therefore perforce larger
39 ;;; than 10). -- CSR, 2004-03-16
40 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-decimal-digit
+ 10)
41 (def!constant
+char-attr-constituent-digit-or-expt
+ 11)
43 (def!constant
+char-attr-package-delimiter
+ 12)
44 (def!constant
+char-attr-invalid
+ 13)
45 (def!constant
+char-attr-delimiter
+ 14) ; (a fake for READ-UNQUALIFIED-TOKEN)
47 (sb!xc
:defstruct
(readtable (:conc-name nil
)
48 (:predicate readtablep
)
49 ;; ANSI requires a CL:COPY-READTABLE to do
50 ;; a deep copy, so the DEFSTRUCT-generated
51 ;; default is not suitable.
54 "A READTABLE is a data structure that maps characters into syntax
55 types for the Common Lisp expression reader."
56 ;; The CHARACTER-ATTRIBUTE-TABLE is a vector of CHAR-CODE-LIMIT
57 ;; integers for describing the character type. Conceptually, there
58 ;; are 4 distinct "primary" character attributes:
59 ;; +CHAR-ATTR-WHITESPACE+, +CHAR-ATTR-TERMINATING-MACRO+,
60 ;; +CHAR-ATTR-ESCAPE+, and +CHAR-ATTR-CONSTITUENT+. Non-terminating
61 ;; macros (such as the symbol reader) have the attribute
62 ;; +CHAR-ATTR-CONSTITUENT+.
64 ;; In order to make READ-TOKEN fast, all this information is stored
65 ;; in the character attribute table by having different varieties of
67 (character-attribute-array
68 (make-array base-char-code-limit
69 :element-type
'(unsigned-byte 8)
70 :initial-element
+char-attr-constituent
+)
71 :type attribute-table
)
72 (character-attribute-hash-table (make-hash-table) :type hash-table
)
73 ;; The CHARACTER-MACRO-TABLE is a vector of CHAR-CODE-LIMIT
74 ;; functions. One of these functions called with appropriate
75 ;; arguments whenever any non-WHITESPACE character is encountered
76 ;; inside READ-PRESERVING-WHITESPACE. These functions are used to
77 ;; implement user-defined read-macros, system read-macros, and the
78 ;; number-symbol reader.
79 (character-macro-array
80 (make-array base-char-code-limit
:initial-element
#'undefined-macro-char
)
81 :type
(simple-vector #.base-char-code-limit
))
82 (character-macro-hash-table (make-hash-table) :type hash-table
)
83 ;; an alist from dispatch characters to vectors of CHAR-CODE-LIMIT
84 ;; functions, for use in defining dispatching macros (like #-macro)
85 (dispatch-tables () :type list
)
86 (readtable-case :upcase
:type
(member :upcase
:downcase
:preserve
:invert
)))