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1 /* Lisp functions pertaining to editing.
2 Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,89,93,94,95,96,97,98, 1999, 2000, 2001, 02, 2003
3 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
6
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 2, or (at your option)
10 any later version.
11
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.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
19 the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
20 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
21
22
23 #include <config.h>
24 #include <sys/types.h>
25
26 #ifdef VMS
27 #include "vms-pwd.h"
28 #else
29 #include <pwd.h>
30 #endif
31
32 #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
33 #include <unistd.h>
34 #endif
35
36 /* Without this, sprintf on Mac OS Classic will produce wrong
37 result. */
38 #ifdef MAC_OS8
39 #include <stdio.h>
40 #endif
41
42 #include <ctype.h>
43
44 #include "lisp.h"
45 #include "intervals.h"
46 #include "buffer.h"
47 #include "charset.h"
48 #include "coding.h"
49 #include "frame.h"
50 #include "window.h"
51
52 #include "systime.h"
53
54 #ifdef STDC_HEADERS
55 #include <float.h>
56 #define MAX_10_EXP DBL_MAX_10_EXP
57 #else
58 #define MAX_10_EXP 310
59 #endif
60
61 #ifndef NULL
62 #define NULL 0
63 #endif
64
65 #ifndef USE_CRT_DLL
66 extern char **environ;
67 #endif
68
69 extern Lisp_Object make_time P_ ((time_t));
70 extern size_t emacs_strftimeu P_ ((char *, size_t, const char *,
71 const struct tm *, int));
72 static int tm_diff P_ ((struct tm *, struct tm *));
73 static void find_field P_ ((Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, int *, Lisp_Object, int *));
74 static void update_buffer_properties P_ ((int, int));
75 static Lisp_Object region_limit P_ ((int));
76 static int lisp_time_argument P_ ((Lisp_Object, time_t *, int *));
77 static size_t emacs_memftimeu P_ ((char *, size_t, const char *,
78 size_t, const struct tm *, int));
79 static void general_insert_function P_ ((void (*) (const unsigned char *, int),
80 void (*) (Lisp_Object, int, int, int,
81 int, int),
82 int, int, Lisp_Object *));
83 static Lisp_Object subst_char_in_region_unwind P_ ((Lisp_Object));
84 static Lisp_Object subst_char_in_region_unwind_1 P_ ((Lisp_Object));
85 static void transpose_markers P_ ((int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int));
86
87 #ifdef HAVE_INDEX
88 extern char *index P_ ((const char *, int));
89 #endif
90
91 Lisp_Object Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions;
92 Lisp_Object Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions;
93 Lisp_Object Vbuffer_access_fontified_property;
94
95 Lisp_Object Fuser_full_name P_ ((Lisp_Object));
96
97 /* Non-nil means don't stop at field boundary in text motion commands. */
98
99 Lisp_Object Vinhibit_field_text_motion;
100
101 /* Some static data, and a function to initialize it for each run */
102
103 Lisp_Object Vsystem_name;
104 Lisp_Object Vuser_real_login_name; /* login name of current user ID */
105 Lisp_Object Vuser_full_name; /* full name of current user */
106 Lisp_Object Vuser_login_name; /* user name from LOGNAME or USER */
107
108 /* Symbol for the text property used to mark fields. */
109
110 Lisp_Object Qfield;
111
112 /* A special value for Qfield properties. */
113
114 Lisp_Object Qboundary;
115
116
117 void
118 init_editfns ()
119 {
120 char *user_name;
121 register unsigned char *p;
122 struct passwd *pw; /* password entry for the current user */
123 Lisp_Object tem;
124
125 /* Set up system_name even when dumping. */
126 init_system_name ();
127
128 #ifndef CANNOT_DUMP
129 /* Don't bother with this on initial start when just dumping out */
130 if (!initialized)
131 return;
132 #endif /* not CANNOT_DUMP */
133
134 pw = (struct passwd *) getpwuid (getuid ());
135 #ifdef MSDOS
136 /* We let the real user name default to "root" because that's quite
137 accurate on MSDOG and because it lets Emacs find the init file.
138 (The DVX libraries override the Djgpp libraries here.) */
139 Vuser_real_login_name = build_string (pw ? pw->pw_name : "root");
140 #else
141 Vuser_real_login_name = build_string (pw ? pw->pw_name : "unknown");
142 #endif
143
144 /* Get the effective user name, by consulting environment variables,
145 or the effective uid if those are unset. */
146 user_name = (char *) getenv ("LOGNAME");
147 if (!user_name)
148 #ifdef WINDOWSNT
149 user_name = (char *) getenv ("USERNAME"); /* it's USERNAME on NT */
150 #else /* WINDOWSNT */
151 user_name = (char *) getenv ("USER");
152 #endif /* WINDOWSNT */
153 if (!user_name)
154 {
155 pw = (struct passwd *) getpwuid (geteuid ());
156 user_name = (char *) (pw ? pw->pw_name : "unknown");
157 }
158 Vuser_login_name = build_string (user_name);
159
160 /* If the user name claimed in the environment vars differs from
161 the real uid, use the claimed name to find the full name. */
162 tem = Fstring_equal (Vuser_login_name, Vuser_real_login_name);
163 Vuser_full_name = Fuser_full_name (NILP (tem)? make_number (geteuid())
164 : Vuser_login_name);
165
166 p = (unsigned char *) getenv ("NAME");
167 if (p)
168 Vuser_full_name = build_string (p);
169 else if (NILP (Vuser_full_name))
170 Vuser_full_name = build_string ("unknown");
171 }
172 \f
173 DEFUN ("char-to-string", Fchar_to_string, Schar_to_string, 1, 1, 0,
174 doc: /* Convert arg CHAR to a string containing that character.
175 usage: (char-to-string CHAR) */)
176 (character)
177 Lisp_Object character;
178 {
179 int len;
180 unsigned char str[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH];
181
182 CHECK_NUMBER (character);
183
184 len = (SINGLE_BYTE_CHAR_P (XFASTINT (character))
185 ? (*str = (unsigned char)(XFASTINT (character)), 1)
186 : char_to_string (XFASTINT (character), str));
187 return make_string_from_bytes (str, 1, len);
188 }
189
190 DEFUN ("string-to-char", Fstring_to_char, Sstring_to_char, 1, 1, 0,
191 doc: /* Convert arg STRING to a character, the first character of that string.
192 A multibyte character is handled correctly. */)
193 (string)
194 register Lisp_Object string;
195 {
196 register Lisp_Object val;
197 CHECK_STRING (string);
198 if (SCHARS (string))
199 {
200 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (string))
201 XSETFASTINT (val, STRING_CHAR (SDATA (string), SBYTES (string)));
202 else
203 XSETFASTINT (val, SREF (string, 0));
204 }
205 else
206 XSETFASTINT (val, 0);
207 return val;
208 }
209 \f
210 static Lisp_Object
211 buildmark (charpos, bytepos)
212 int charpos, bytepos;
213 {
214 register Lisp_Object mark;
215 mark = Fmake_marker ();
216 set_marker_both (mark, Qnil, charpos, bytepos);
217 return mark;
218 }
219
220 DEFUN ("point", Fpoint, Spoint, 0, 0, 0,
221 doc: /* Return value of point, as an integer.
222 Beginning of buffer is position (point-min). */)
223 ()
224 {
225 Lisp_Object temp;
226 XSETFASTINT (temp, PT);
227 return temp;
228 }
229
230 DEFUN ("point-marker", Fpoint_marker, Spoint_marker, 0, 0, 0,
231 doc: /* Return value of point, as a marker object. */)
232 ()
233 {
234 return buildmark (PT, PT_BYTE);
235 }
236
237 int
238 clip_to_bounds (lower, num, upper)
239 int lower, num, upper;
240 {
241 if (num < lower)
242 return lower;
243 else if (num > upper)
244 return upper;
245 else
246 return num;
247 }
248
249 DEFUN ("goto-char", Fgoto_char, Sgoto_char, 1, 1, "NGoto char: ",
250 doc: /* Set point to POSITION, a number or marker.
251 Beginning of buffer is position (point-min), end is (point-max).
252 If the position is in the middle of a multibyte form,
253 the actual point is set at the head of the multibyte form
254 except in the case that `enable-multibyte-characters' is nil. */)
255 (position)
256 register Lisp_Object position;
257 {
258 int pos;
259
260 if (MARKERP (position)
261 && current_buffer == XMARKER (position)->buffer)
262 {
263 pos = marker_position (position);
264 if (pos < BEGV)
265 SET_PT_BOTH (BEGV, BEGV_BYTE);
266 else if (pos > ZV)
267 SET_PT_BOTH (ZV, ZV_BYTE);
268 else
269 SET_PT_BOTH (pos, marker_byte_position (position));
270
271 return position;
272 }
273
274 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position);
275
276 pos = clip_to_bounds (BEGV, XINT (position), ZV);
277 SET_PT (pos);
278 return position;
279 }
280
281
282 /* Return the start or end position of the region.
283 BEGINNINGP non-zero means return the start.
284 If there is no region active, signal an error. */
285
286 static Lisp_Object
287 region_limit (beginningp)
288 int beginningp;
289 {
290 extern Lisp_Object Vmark_even_if_inactive; /* Defined in callint.c. */
291 Lisp_Object m;
292
293 if (!NILP (Vtransient_mark_mode)
294 && NILP (Vmark_even_if_inactive)
295 && NILP (current_buffer->mark_active))
296 Fsignal (Qmark_inactive, Qnil);
297
298 m = Fmarker_position (current_buffer->mark);
299 if (NILP (m))
300 error ("The mark is not set now, so there is no region");
301
302 if ((PT < XFASTINT (m)) == (beginningp != 0))
303 m = make_number (PT);
304 return m;
305 }
306
307 DEFUN ("region-beginning", Fregion_beginning, Sregion_beginning, 0, 0, 0,
308 doc: /* Return position of beginning of region, as an integer. */)
309 ()
310 {
311 return region_limit (1);
312 }
313
314 DEFUN ("region-end", Fregion_end, Sregion_end, 0, 0, 0,
315 doc: /* Return position of end of region, as an integer. */)
316 ()
317 {
318 return region_limit (0);
319 }
320
321 DEFUN ("mark-marker", Fmark_marker, Smark_marker, 0, 0, 0,
322 doc: /* Return this buffer's mark, as a marker object.
323 Watch out! Moving this marker changes the mark position.
324 If you set the marker not to point anywhere, the buffer will have no mark. */)
325 ()
326 {
327 return current_buffer->mark;
328 }
329
330 \f
331 /* Find all the overlays in the current buffer that touch position POS.
332 Return the number found, and store them in a vector in VEC
333 of length LEN. */
334
335 static int
336 overlays_around (pos, vec, len)
337 int pos;
338 Lisp_Object *vec;
339 int len;
340 {
341 Lisp_Object overlay, start, end;
342 struct Lisp_Overlay *tail;
343 int startpos, endpos;
344 int idx = 0;
345
346 for (tail = current_buffer->overlays_before; tail; tail = tail->next)
347 {
348 XSETMISC (overlay, tail);
349
350 end = OVERLAY_END (overlay);
351 endpos = OVERLAY_POSITION (end);
352 if (endpos < pos)
353 break;
354 start = OVERLAY_START (overlay);
355 startpos = OVERLAY_POSITION (start);
356 if (startpos <= pos)
357 {
358 if (idx < len)
359 vec[idx] = overlay;
360 /* Keep counting overlays even if we can't return them all. */
361 idx++;
362 }
363 }
364
365 for (tail = current_buffer->overlays_after; tail; tail = tail->next)
366 {
367 XSETMISC (overlay, tail);
368
369 start = OVERLAY_START (overlay);
370 startpos = OVERLAY_POSITION (start);
371 if (pos < startpos)
372 break;
373 end = OVERLAY_END (overlay);
374 endpos = OVERLAY_POSITION (end);
375 if (pos <= endpos)
376 {
377 if (idx < len)
378 vec[idx] = overlay;
379 idx++;
380 }
381 }
382
383 return idx;
384 }
385
386 /* Return the value of property PROP, in OBJECT at POSITION.
387 It's the value of PROP that a char inserted at POSITION would get.
388 OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer.
389 If OBJECT is a buffer, then overlay properties are considered as well as
390 text properties.
391 If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but
392 window-specific overlays are considered only if they are associated
393 with OBJECT. */
394 Lisp_Object
395 get_pos_property (position, prop, object)
396 Lisp_Object position, object;
397 register Lisp_Object prop;
398 {
399 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position);
400
401 if (NILP (object))
402 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
403 else if (WINDOWP (object))
404 object = XWINDOW (object)->buffer;
405
406 if (!BUFFERP (object))
407 /* pos-property only makes sense in buffers right now, since strings
408 have no overlays and no notion of insertion for which stickiness
409 could be obeyed. */
410 return Fget_text_property (position, prop, object);
411 else
412 {
413 int posn = XINT (position);
414 int noverlays;
415 Lisp_Object *overlay_vec, tem;
416 struct buffer *obuf = current_buffer;
417
418 set_buffer_temp (XBUFFER (object));
419
420 /* First try with room for 40 overlays. */
421 noverlays = 40;
422 overlay_vec = (Lisp_Object *) alloca (noverlays * sizeof (Lisp_Object));
423 noverlays = overlays_around (posn, overlay_vec, noverlays);
424
425 /* If there are more than 40,
426 make enough space for all, and try again. */
427 if (noverlays > 40)
428 {
429 overlay_vec = (Lisp_Object *) alloca (noverlays * sizeof (Lisp_Object));
430 noverlays = overlays_around (posn, overlay_vec, noverlays);
431 }
432 noverlays = sort_overlays (overlay_vec, noverlays, NULL);
433
434 set_buffer_temp (obuf);
435
436 /* Now check the overlays in order of decreasing priority. */
437 while (--noverlays >= 0)
438 {
439 Lisp_Object ol = overlay_vec[noverlays];
440 tem = Foverlay_get (ol, prop);
441 if (!NILP (tem))
442 {
443 /* Check the overlay is indeed active at point. */
444 Lisp_Object start = OVERLAY_START (ol), finish = OVERLAY_END (ol);
445 if ((OVERLAY_POSITION (start) == posn
446 && XMARKER (start)->insertion_type == 1)
447 || (OVERLAY_POSITION (finish) == posn
448 && XMARKER (finish)->insertion_type == 0))
449 ; /* The overlay will not cover a char inserted at point. */
450 else
451 {
452 return tem;
453 }
454 }
455 }
456
457 { /* Now check the text-properties. */
458 int stickiness = text_property_stickiness (prop, position, object);
459 if (stickiness > 0)
460 return Fget_text_property (position, prop, object);
461 else if (stickiness < 0
462 && XINT (position) > BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object)))
463 return Fget_text_property (make_number (XINT (position) - 1),
464 prop, object);
465 else
466 return Qnil;
467 }
468 }
469 }
470
471 /* Find the field surrounding POS in *BEG and *END. If POS is nil,
472 the value of point is used instead. If BEG or END null,
473 means don't store the beginning or end of the field.
474
475 BEG_LIMIT and END_LIMIT serve to limit the ranged of the returned
476 results; they do not effect boundary behavior.
477
478 If MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY is nonzero, then if POS is at the very first
479 position of a field, then the beginning of the previous field is
480 returned instead of the beginning of POS's field (since the end of a
481 field is actually also the beginning of the next input field, this
482 behavior is sometimes useful). Additionally in the MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY
483 true case, if two fields are separated by a field with the special
484 value `boundary', and POS lies within it, then the two separated
485 fields are considered to be adjacent, and POS between them, when
486 finding the beginning and ending of the "merged" field.
487
488 Either BEG or END may be 0, in which case the corresponding value
489 is not stored. */
490
491 static void
492 find_field (pos, merge_at_boundary, beg_limit, beg, end_limit, end)
493 Lisp_Object pos;
494 Lisp_Object merge_at_boundary;
495 Lisp_Object beg_limit, end_limit;
496 int *beg, *end;
497 {
498 /* Fields right before and after the point. */
499 Lisp_Object before_field, after_field;
500 /* 1 if POS counts as the start of a field. */
501 int at_field_start = 0;
502 /* 1 if POS counts as the end of a field. */
503 int at_field_end = 0;
504
505 if (NILP (pos))
506 XSETFASTINT (pos, PT);
507 else
508 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos);
509
510 after_field
511 = get_char_property_and_overlay (pos, Qfield, Qnil, NULL);
512 before_field
513 = (XFASTINT (pos) > BEGV
514 ? get_char_property_and_overlay (make_number (XINT (pos) - 1),
515 Qfield, Qnil, NULL)
516 : Qnil);
517
518 /* See if we need to handle the case where MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY is nil
519 and POS is at beginning of a field, which can also be interpreted
520 as the end of the previous field. Note that the case where if
521 MERGE_AT_BOUNDARY is non-nil (see function comment) is actually the
522 more natural one; then we avoid treating the beginning of a field
523 specially. */
524 if (NILP (merge_at_boundary))
525 {
526 Lisp_Object field = get_pos_property (pos, Qfield, Qnil);
527 if (!EQ (field, after_field))
528 at_field_end = 1;
529 if (!EQ (field, before_field))
530 at_field_start = 1;
531 if (NILP (field) && at_field_start && at_field_end)
532 /* If an inserted char would have a nil field while the surrounding
533 text is non-nil, we're probably not looking at a
534 zero-length field, but instead at a non-nil field that's
535 not intended for editing (such as comint's prompts). */
536 at_field_end = at_field_start = 0;
537 }
538
539 /* Note about special `boundary' fields:
540
541 Consider the case where the point (`.') is between the fields `x' and `y':
542
543 xxxx.yyyy
544
545 In this situation, if merge_at_boundary is true, we consider the
546 `x' and `y' fields as forming one big merged field, and so the end
547 of the field is the end of `y'.
548
549 However, if `x' and `y' are separated by a special `boundary' field
550 (a field with a `field' char-property of 'boundary), then we ignore
551 this special field when merging adjacent fields. Here's the same
552 situation, but with a `boundary' field between the `x' and `y' fields:
553
554 xxx.BBBByyyy
555
556 Here, if point is at the end of `x', the beginning of `y', or
557 anywhere in-between (within the `boundary' field), we merge all
558 three fields and consider the beginning as being the beginning of
559 the `x' field, and the end as being the end of the `y' field. */
560
561 if (beg)
562 {
563 if (at_field_start)
564 /* POS is at the edge of a field, and we should consider it as
565 the beginning of the following field. */
566 *beg = XFASTINT (pos);
567 else
568 /* Find the previous field boundary. */
569 {
570 Lisp_Object p = pos;
571 if (!NILP (merge_at_boundary) && EQ (before_field, Qboundary))
572 /* Skip a `boundary' field. */
573 p = Fprevious_single_char_property_change (p, Qfield, Qnil,
574 beg_limit);
575
576 p = Fprevious_single_char_property_change (p, Qfield, Qnil,
577 beg_limit);
578 *beg = NILP (p) ? BEGV : XFASTINT (p);
579 }
580 }
581
582 if (end)
583 {
584 if (at_field_end)
585 /* POS is at the edge of a field, and we should consider it as
586 the end of the previous field. */
587 *end = XFASTINT (pos);
588 else
589 /* Find the next field boundary. */
590 {
591 if (!NILP (merge_at_boundary) && EQ (after_field, Qboundary))
592 /* Skip a `boundary' field. */
593 pos = Fnext_single_char_property_change (pos, Qfield, Qnil,
594 end_limit);
595
596 pos = Fnext_single_char_property_change (pos, Qfield, Qnil,
597 end_limit);
598 *end = NILP (pos) ? ZV : XFASTINT (pos);
599 }
600 }
601 }
602
603 \f
604 DEFUN ("delete-field", Fdelete_field, Sdelete_field, 0, 1, 0,
605 doc: /* Delete the field surrounding POS.
606 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
607 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS. */)
608 (pos)
609 Lisp_Object pos;
610 {
611 int beg, end;
612 find_field (pos, Qnil, Qnil, &beg, Qnil, &end);
613 if (beg != end)
614 del_range (beg, end);
615 return Qnil;
616 }
617
618 DEFUN ("field-string", Ffield_string, Sfield_string, 0, 1, 0,
619 doc: /* Return the contents of the field surrounding POS as a string.
620 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
621 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS. */)
622 (pos)
623 Lisp_Object pos;
624 {
625 int beg, end;
626 find_field (pos, Qnil, Qnil, &beg, Qnil, &end);
627 return make_buffer_string (beg, end, 1);
628 }
629
630 DEFUN ("field-string-no-properties", Ffield_string_no_properties, Sfield_string_no_properties, 0, 1, 0,
631 doc: /* Return the contents of the field around POS, without text-properties.
632 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
633 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS. */)
634 (pos)
635 Lisp_Object pos;
636 {
637 int beg, end;
638 find_field (pos, Qnil, Qnil, &beg, Qnil, &end);
639 return make_buffer_string (beg, end, 0);
640 }
641
642 DEFUN ("field-beginning", Ffield_beginning, Sfield_beginning, 0, 3, 0,
643 doc: /* Return the beginning of the field surrounding POS.
644 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
645 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS.
646 If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is non-nil and POS is at the beginning of its
647 field, then the beginning of the *previous* field is returned.
648 If LIMIT is non-nil, it is a buffer position; if the beginning of the field
649 is before LIMIT, then LIMIT will be returned instead. */)
650 (pos, escape_from_edge, limit)
651 Lisp_Object pos, escape_from_edge, limit;
652 {
653 int beg;
654 find_field (pos, escape_from_edge, limit, &beg, Qnil, 0);
655 return make_number (beg);
656 }
657
658 DEFUN ("field-end", Ffield_end, Sfield_end, 0, 3, 0,
659 doc: /* Return the end of the field surrounding POS.
660 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
661 If POS is nil, the value of point is used for POS.
662 If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is non-nil and POS is at the end of its field,
663 then the end of the *following* field is returned.
664 If LIMIT is non-nil, it is a buffer position; if the end of the field
665 is after LIMIT, then LIMIT will be returned instead. */)
666 (pos, escape_from_edge, limit)
667 Lisp_Object pos, escape_from_edge, limit;
668 {
669 int end;
670 find_field (pos, escape_from_edge, Qnil, 0, limit, &end);
671 return make_number (end);
672 }
673
674 DEFUN ("constrain-to-field", Fconstrain_to_field, Sconstrain_to_field, 2, 5, 0,
675 doc: /* Return the position closest to NEW-POS that is in the same field as OLD-POS.
676
677 A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
678 If NEW-POS is nil, then the current point is used instead, and set to the
679 constrained position if that is different.
680
681 If OLD-POS is at the boundary of two fields, then the allowable
682 positions for NEW-POS depends on the value of the optional argument
683 ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE: If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is nil, then NEW-POS is
684 constrained to the field that has the same `field' char-property
685 as any new characters inserted at OLD-POS, whereas if ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE
686 is non-nil, NEW-POS is constrained to the union of the two adjacent
687 fields. Additionally, if two fields are separated by another field with
688 the special value `boundary', then any point within this special field is
689 also considered to be `on the boundary'.
690
691 If the optional argument ONLY-IN-LINE is non-nil and constraining
692 NEW-POS would move it to a different line, NEW-POS is returned
693 unconstrained. This useful for commands that move by line, like
694 \\[next-line] or \\[beginning-of-line], which should generally respect field boundaries
695 only in the case where they can still move to the right line.
696
697 If the optional argument INHIBIT-CAPTURE-PROPERTY is non-nil, and OLD-POS has
698 a non-nil property of that name, then any field boundaries are ignored.
699
700 Field boundaries are not noticed if `inhibit-field-text-motion' is non-nil. */)
701 (new_pos, old_pos, escape_from_edge, only_in_line, inhibit_capture_property)
702 Lisp_Object new_pos, old_pos;
703 Lisp_Object escape_from_edge, only_in_line, inhibit_capture_property;
704 {
705 /* If non-zero, then the original point, before re-positioning. */
706 int orig_point = 0;
707
708 if (NILP (new_pos))
709 /* Use the current point, and afterwards, set it. */
710 {
711 orig_point = PT;
712 XSETFASTINT (new_pos, PT);
713 }
714
715 if (NILP (Vinhibit_field_text_motion)
716 && !EQ (new_pos, old_pos)
717 && (!NILP (Fget_char_property (new_pos, Qfield, Qnil))
718 || !NILP (Fget_char_property (old_pos, Qfield, Qnil)))
719 && (NILP (inhibit_capture_property)
720 || NILP (Fget_char_property(old_pos, inhibit_capture_property, Qnil))))
721 /* NEW_POS is not within the same field as OLD_POS; try to
722 move NEW_POS so that it is. */
723 {
724 int fwd, shortage;
725 Lisp_Object field_bound;
726
727 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (new_pos);
728 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (old_pos);
729
730 fwd = (XFASTINT (new_pos) > XFASTINT (old_pos));
731
732 if (fwd)
733 field_bound = Ffield_end (old_pos, escape_from_edge, new_pos);
734 else
735 field_bound = Ffield_beginning (old_pos, escape_from_edge, new_pos);
736
737 if (/* See if ESCAPE_FROM_EDGE caused FIELD_BOUND to jump to the
738 other side of NEW_POS, which would mean that NEW_POS is
739 already acceptable, and it's not necessary to constrain it
740 to FIELD_BOUND. */
741 ((XFASTINT (field_bound) < XFASTINT (new_pos)) ? fwd : !fwd)
742 /* NEW_POS should be constrained, but only if either
743 ONLY_IN_LINE is nil (in which case any constraint is OK),
744 or NEW_POS and FIELD_BOUND are on the same line (in which
745 case the constraint is OK even if ONLY_IN_LINE is non-nil). */
746 && (NILP (only_in_line)
747 /* This is the ONLY_IN_LINE case, check that NEW_POS and
748 FIELD_BOUND are on the same line by seeing whether
749 there's an intervening newline or not. */
750 || (scan_buffer ('\n',
751 XFASTINT (new_pos), XFASTINT (field_bound),
752 fwd ? -1 : 1, &shortage, 1),
753 shortage != 0)))
754 /* Constrain NEW_POS to FIELD_BOUND. */
755 new_pos = field_bound;
756
757 if (orig_point && XFASTINT (new_pos) != orig_point)
758 /* The NEW_POS argument was originally nil, so automatically set PT. */
759 SET_PT (XFASTINT (new_pos));
760 }
761
762 return new_pos;
763 }
764
765 \f
766 DEFUN ("line-beginning-position",
767 Fline_beginning_position, Sline_beginning_position, 0, 1, 0,
768 doc: /* Return the character position of the first character on the current line.
769 With argument N not nil or 1, move forward N - 1 lines first.
770 If scan reaches end of buffer, return that position.
771
772 The scan does not cross a field boundary unless doing so would move
773 beyond there to a different line; if N is nil or 1, and scan starts at a
774 field boundary, the scan stops as soon as it starts. To ignore field
775 boundaries bind `inhibit-field-text-motion' to t.
776
777 This function does not move point. */)
778 (n)
779 Lisp_Object n;
780 {
781 int orig, orig_byte, end;
782
783 if (NILP (n))
784 XSETFASTINT (n, 1);
785 else
786 CHECK_NUMBER (n);
787
788 orig = PT;
789 orig_byte = PT_BYTE;
790 Fforward_line (make_number (XINT (n) - 1));
791 end = PT;
792
793 SET_PT_BOTH (orig, orig_byte);
794
795 /* Return END constrained to the current input field. */
796 return Fconstrain_to_field (make_number (end), make_number (orig),
797 XINT (n) != 1 ? Qt : Qnil,
798 Qt, Qnil);
799 }
800
801 DEFUN ("line-end-position", Fline_end_position, Sline_end_position, 0, 1, 0,
802 doc: /* Return the character position of the last character on the current line.
803 With argument N not nil or 1, move forward N - 1 lines first.
804 If scan reaches end of buffer, return that position.
805
806 The scan does not cross a field boundary unless doing so would move
807 beyond there to a different line; if N is nil or 1, and scan starts at a
808 field boundary, the scan stops as soon as it starts. To ignore field
809 boundaries bind `inhibit-field-text-motion' to t.
810
811 This function does not move point. */)
812 (n)
813 Lisp_Object n;
814 {
815 int end_pos;
816 int orig = PT;
817
818 if (NILP (n))
819 XSETFASTINT (n, 1);
820 else
821 CHECK_NUMBER (n);
822
823 end_pos = find_before_next_newline (orig, 0, XINT (n) - (XINT (n) <= 0));
824
825 /* Return END_POS constrained to the current input field. */
826 return Fconstrain_to_field (make_number (end_pos), make_number (orig),
827 Qnil, Qt, Qnil);
828 }
829
830 \f
831 Lisp_Object
832 save_excursion_save ()
833 {
834 int visible = (XBUFFER (XWINDOW (selected_window)->buffer)
835 == current_buffer);
836
837 return Fcons (Fpoint_marker (),
838 Fcons (Fcopy_marker (current_buffer->mark, Qnil),
839 Fcons (visible ? Qt : Qnil,
840 Fcons (current_buffer->mark_active,
841 selected_window))));
842 }
843
844 Lisp_Object
845 save_excursion_restore (info)
846 Lisp_Object info;
847 {
848 Lisp_Object tem, tem1, omark, nmark;
849 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2, gcpro3;
850 int visible_p;
851
852 tem = Fmarker_buffer (XCAR (info));
853 /* If buffer being returned to is now deleted, avoid error */
854 /* Otherwise could get error here while unwinding to top level
855 and crash */
856 /* In that case, Fmarker_buffer returns nil now. */
857 if (NILP (tem))
858 return Qnil;
859
860 omark = nmark = Qnil;
861 GCPRO3 (info, omark, nmark);
862
863 Fset_buffer (tem);
864
865 /* Point marker. */
866 tem = XCAR (info);
867 Fgoto_char (tem);
868 unchain_marker (XMARKER (tem));
869
870 /* Mark marker. */
871 info = XCDR (info);
872 tem = XCAR (info);
873 omark = Fmarker_position (current_buffer->mark);
874 Fset_marker (current_buffer->mark, tem, Fcurrent_buffer ());
875 nmark = Fmarker_position (tem);
876 unchain_marker (XMARKER (tem));
877
878 /* visible */
879 info = XCDR (info);
880 visible_p = !NILP (XCAR (info));
881
882 #if 0 /* We used to make the current buffer visible in the selected window
883 if that was true previously. That avoids some anomalies.
884 But it creates others, and it wasn't documented, and it is simpler
885 and cleaner never to alter the window/buffer connections. */
886 tem1 = Fcar (tem);
887 if (!NILP (tem1)
888 && current_buffer != XBUFFER (XWINDOW (selected_window)->buffer))
889 Fswitch_to_buffer (Fcurrent_buffer (), Qnil);
890 #endif /* 0 */
891
892 /* Mark active */
893 info = XCDR (info);
894 tem = XCAR (info);
895 tem1 = current_buffer->mark_active;
896 current_buffer->mark_active = tem;
897
898 if (!NILP (Vrun_hooks))
899 {
900 /* If mark is active now, and either was not active
901 or was at a different place, run the activate hook. */
902 if (! NILP (current_buffer->mark_active))
903 {
904 if (! EQ (omark, nmark))
905 call1 (Vrun_hooks, intern ("activate-mark-hook"));
906 }
907 /* If mark has ceased to be active, run deactivate hook. */
908 else if (! NILP (tem1))
909 call1 (Vrun_hooks, intern ("deactivate-mark-hook"));
910 }
911
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 = XCDR (info);
916 if (visible_p
917 && !EQ (tem, selected_window)
918 && (tem1 = XWINDOW (tem)->buffer,
919 (/* Window is live... */
920 BUFFERP (tem1)
921 /* ...and it shows the current buffer. */
922 && XBUFFER (tem1) == current_buffer)))
923 Fset_window_point (tem, make_number (PT));
924
925 UNGCPRO;
926 return Qnil;
927 }
928
929 DEFUN ("save-excursion", Fsave_excursion, Ssave_excursion, 0, UNEVALLED, 0,
930 doc: /* Save point, mark, and current buffer; execute BODY; restore those things.
931 Executes BODY just like `progn'.
932 The values of point, mark and the current buffer are restored
933 even in case of abnormal exit (throw or error).
934 The state of activation of the mark is also restored.
935
936 This construct does not save `deactivate-mark', and therefore
937 functions that change the buffer will still cause deactivation
938 of the mark at the end of the command. To prevent that, bind
939 `deactivate-mark' with `let'.
940
941 usage: (save-excursion &rest BODY) */)
942 (args)
943 Lisp_Object args;
944 {
945 register Lisp_Object val;
946 int count = SPECPDL_INDEX ();
947
948 record_unwind_protect (save_excursion_restore, save_excursion_save ());
949
950 val = Fprogn (args);
951 return unbind_to (count, val);
952 }
953
954 DEFUN ("save-current-buffer", Fsave_current_buffer, Ssave_current_buffer, 0, UNEVALLED, 0,
955 doc: /* Save the current buffer; execute BODY; restore the current buffer.
956 Executes BODY just like `progn'.
957 usage: (save-current-buffer &rest BODY) */)
958 (args)
959 Lisp_Object args;
960 {
961 Lisp_Object val;
962 int count = SPECPDL_INDEX ();
963
964 record_unwind_protect (set_buffer_if_live, Fcurrent_buffer ());
965
966 val = Fprogn (args);
967 return unbind_to (count, val);
968 }
969 \f
970 DEFUN ("buffer-size", Fbufsize, Sbufsize, 0, 1, 0,
971 doc: /* Return the number of characters in the current buffer.
972 If BUFFER, return the number of characters in that buffer instead. */)
973 (buffer)
974 Lisp_Object buffer;
975 {
976 if (NILP (buffer))
977 return make_number (Z - BEG);
978 else
979 {
980 CHECK_BUFFER (buffer);
981 return make_number (BUF_Z (XBUFFER (buffer))
982 - BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (buffer)));
983 }
984 }
985
986 DEFUN ("point-min", Fpoint_min, Spoint_min, 0, 0, 0,
987 doc: /* Return the minimum permissible value of point in the current buffer.
988 This is 1, unless narrowing (a buffer restriction) is in effect. */)
989 ()
990 {
991 Lisp_Object temp;
992 XSETFASTINT (temp, BEGV);
993 return temp;
994 }
995
996 DEFUN ("point-min-marker", Fpoint_min_marker, Spoint_min_marker, 0, 0, 0,
997 doc: /* Return a marker to the minimum permissible value of point in this buffer.
998 This is the beginning, unless narrowing (a buffer restriction) is in effect. */)
999 ()
1000 {
1001 return buildmark (BEGV, BEGV_BYTE);
1002 }
1003
1004 DEFUN ("point-max", Fpoint_max, Spoint_max, 0, 0, 0,
1005 doc: /* Return the maximum permissible value of point in the current buffer.
1006 This is (1+ (buffer-size)), unless narrowing (a buffer restriction)
1007 is in effect, in which case it is less. */)
1008 ()
1009 {
1010 Lisp_Object temp;
1011 XSETFASTINT (temp, ZV);
1012 return temp;
1013 }
1014
1015 DEFUN ("point-max-marker", Fpoint_max_marker, Spoint_max_marker, 0, 0, 0,
1016 doc: /* Return a marker to the maximum permissible value of point in this buffer.
1017 This is (1+ (buffer-size)), unless narrowing (a buffer restriction)
1018 is in effect, in which case it is less. */)
1019 ()
1020 {
1021 return buildmark (ZV, ZV_BYTE);
1022 }
1023
1024 DEFUN ("gap-position", Fgap_position, Sgap_position, 0, 0, 0,
1025 doc: /* Return the position of the gap, in the current buffer.
1026 See also `gap-size'. */)
1027 ()
1028 {
1029 Lisp_Object temp;
1030 XSETFASTINT (temp, GPT);
1031 return temp;
1032 }
1033
1034 DEFUN ("gap-size", Fgap_size, Sgap_size, 0, 0, 0,
1035 doc: /* Return the size of the current buffer's gap.
1036 See also `gap-position'. */)
1037 ()
1038 {
1039 Lisp_Object temp;
1040 XSETFASTINT (temp, GAP_SIZE);
1041 return temp;
1042 }
1043
1044 DEFUN ("position-bytes", Fposition_bytes, Sposition_bytes, 1, 1, 0,
1045 doc: /* Return the byte position for character position POSITION.
1046 If POSITION is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1047 (position)
1048 Lisp_Object position;
1049 {
1050 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position);
1051 if (XINT (position) < BEG || XINT (position) > Z)
1052 return Qnil;
1053 return make_number (CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (position)));
1054 }
1055
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 (bytepos)
1060 Lisp_Object bytepos;
1061 {
1062 CHECK_NUMBER (bytepos);
1063 if (XINT (bytepos) < BEG_BYTE || XINT (bytepos) > Z_BYTE)
1064 return Qnil;
1065 return make_number (BYTE_TO_CHAR (XINT (bytepos)));
1066 }
1067 \f
1068 DEFUN ("following-char", Ffollowing_char, Sfollowing_char, 0, 0, 0,
1069 doc: /* Return the character following point, as a number.
1070 At the end of the buffer or accessible region, return 0. */)
1071 ()
1072 {
1073 Lisp_Object temp;
1074 if (PT >= ZV)
1075 XSETFASTINT (temp, 0);
1076 else
1077 XSETFASTINT (temp, FETCH_CHAR (PT_BYTE));
1078 return temp;
1079 }
1080
1081 DEFUN ("preceding-char", Fprevious_char, Sprevious_char, 0, 0, 0,
1082 doc: /* Return the character preceding point, as a number.
1083 At the beginning of the buffer or accessible region, return 0. */)
1084 ()
1085 {
1086 Lisp_Object temp;
1087 if (PT <= BEGV)
1088 XSETFASTINT (temp, 0);
1089 else if (!NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters))
1090 {
1091 int pos = PT_BYTE;
1092 DEC_POS (pos);
1093 XSETFASTINT (temp, FETCH_CHAR (pos));
1094 }
1095 else
1096 XSETFASTINT (temp, FETCH_BYTE (PT_BYTE - 1));
1097 return temp;
1098 }
1099
1100 DEFUN ("bobp", Fbobp, Sbobp, 0, 0, 0,
1101 doc: /* Return t if point is at the beginning of the buffer.
1102 If the buffer is narrowed, this means the beginning of the narrowed part. */)
1103 ()
1104 {
1105 if (PT == BEGV)
1106 return Qt;
1107 return Qnil;
1108 }
1109
1110 DEFUN ("eobp", Feobp, Seobp, 0, 0, 0,
1111 doc: /* Return t if point is at the end of the buffer.
1112 If the buffer is narrowed, this means the end of the narrowed part. */)
1113 ()
1114 {
1115 if (PT == ZV)
1116 return Qt;
1117 return Qnil;
1118 }
1119
1120 DEFUN ("bolp", Fbolp, Sbolp, 0, 0, 0,
1121 doc: /* Return t if point is at the beginning of a line. */)
1122 ()
1123 {
1124 if (PT == BEGV || FETCH_BYTE (PT_BYTE - 1) == '\n')
1125 return Qt;
1126 return Qnil;
1127 }
1128
1129 DEFUN ("eolp", Feolp, Seolp, 0, 0, 0,
1130 doc: /* Return t if point is at the end of a line.
1131 `End of a line' includes point being at the end of the buffer. */)
1132 ()
1133 {
1134 if (PT == ZV || FETCH_BYTE (PT_BYTE) == '\n')
1135 return Qt;
1136 return Qnil;
1137 }
1138
1139 DEFUN ("char-after", Fchar_after, Schar_after, 0, 1, 0,
1140 doc: /* Return character in current buffer at position POS.
1141 POS is an integer or a marker.
1142 If POS is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1143 (pos)
1144 Lisp_Object pos;
1145 {
1146 register int pos_byte;
1147
1148 if (NILP (pos))
1149 {
1150 pos_byte = PT_BYTE;
1151 XSETFASTINT (pos, PT);
1152 }
1153
1154 if (MARKERP (pos))
1155 {
1156 pos_byte = marker_byte_position (pos);
1157 if (pos_byte < BEGV_BYTE || pos_byte >= ZV_BYTE)
1158 return Qnil;
1159 }
1160 else
1161 {
1162 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos);
1163 if (XINT (pos) < BEGV || XINT (pos) >= ZV)
1164 return Qnil;
1165
1166 pos_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (pos));
1167 }
1168
1169 return make_number (FETCH_CHAR (pos_byte));
1170 }
1171
1172 DEFUN ("char-before", Fchar_before, Schar_before, 0, 1, 0,
1173 doc: /* Return character in current buffer preceding position POS.
1174 POS is an integer or a marker.
1175 If POS is out of range, the value is nil. */)
1176 (pos)
1177 Lisp_Object pos;
1178 {
1179 register Lisp_Object val;
1180 register int pos_byte;
1181
1182 if (NILP (pos))
1183 {
1184 pos_byte = PT_BYTE;
1185 XSETFASTINT (pos, PT);
1186 }
1187
1188 if (MARKERP (pos))
1189 {
1190 pos_byte = marker_byte_position (pos);
1191
1192 if (pos_byte <= BEGV_BYTE || pos_byte > ZV_BYTE)
1193 return Qnil;
1194 }
1195 else
1196 {
1197 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos);
1198
1199 if (XINT (pos) <= BEGV || XINT (pos) > ZV)
1200 return Qnil;
1201
1202 pos_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (pos));
1203 }
1204
1205 if (!NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters))
1206 {
1207 DEC_POS (pos_byte);
1208 XSETFASTINT (val, FETCH_CHAR (pos_byte));
1209 }
1210 else
1211 {
1212 pos_byte--;
1213 XSETFASTINT (val, FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte));
1214 }
1215 return val;
1216 }
1217 \f
1218 DEFUN ("user-login-name", Fuser_login_name, Suser_login_name, 0, 1, 0,
1219 doc: /* Return the name under which the user logged in, as a string.
1220 This is based on the effective uid, not the real uid.
1221 Also, if the environment variable LOGNAME or USER is set,
1222 that determines the value of this function.
1223
1224 If optional argument UID is an integer, return the login name of the user
1225 with that uid, or nil if there is no such user. */)
1226 (uid)
1227 Lisp_Object uid;
1228 {
1229 struct passwd *pw;
1230
1231 /* Set up the user name info if we didn't do it before.
1232 (That can happen if Emacs is dumpable
1233 but you decide to run `temacs -l loadup' and not dump. */
1234 if (INTEGERP (Vuser_login_name))
1235 init_editfns ();
1236
1237 if (NILP (uid))
1238 return Vuser_login_name;
1239
1240 CHECK_NUMBER (uid);
1241 pw = (struct passwd *) getpwuid (XINT (uid));
1242 return (pw ? build_string (pw->pw_name) : Qnil);
1243 }
1244
1245 DEFUN ("user-real-login-name", Fuser_real_login_name, Suser_real_login_name,
1246 0, 0, 0,
1247 doc: /* Return the name of the user's real uid, as a string.
1248 This ignores the environment variables LOGNAME and USER, so it differs from
1249 `user-login-name' when running under `su'. */)
1250 ()
1251 {
1252 /* Set up the user name info if we didn't do it before.
1253 (That can happen if Emacs is dumpable
1254 but you decide to run `temacs -l loadup' and not dump. */
1255 if (INTEGERP (Vuser_login_name))
1256 init_editfns ();
1257 return Vuser_real_login_name;
1258 }
1259
1260 DEFUN ("user-uid", Fuser_uid, Suser_uid, 0, 0, 0,
1261 doc: /* Return the effective uid of Emacs.
1262 Value is an integer or float, depending on the value. */)
1263 ()
1264 {
1265 return make_fixnum_or_float (geteuid ());
1266 }
1267
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 float, depending on the value. */)
1271 ()
1272 {
1273 return make_fixnum_or_float (getuid ());
1274 }
1275
1276 DEFUN ("user-full-name", Fuser_full_name, Suser_full_name, 0, 1, 0,
1277 doc: /* Return the full name of the user logged in, as a string.
1278 If the full name corresponding to Emacs's userid is not known,
1279 return "unknown".
1280
1281 If optional argument UID is an integer or float, return the full name
1282 of the user with that uid, or nil if there is no such user.
1283 If UID is a string, return the full name of the user with that login
1284 name, or nil if there is no such user. */)
1285 (uid)
1286 Lisp_Object uid;
1287 {
1288 struct passwd *pw;
1289 register unsigned char *p, *q;
1290 Lisp_Object full;
1291
1292 if (NILP (uid))
1293 return Vuser_full_name;
1294 else if (NUMBERP (uid))
1295 pw = (struct passwd *) getpwuid ((uid_t) XFLOATINT (uid));
1296 else if (STRINGP (uid))
1297 pw = (struct passwd *) getpwnam (SDATA (uid));
1298 else
1299 error ("Invalid UID specification");
1300
1301 if (!pw)
1302 return Qnil;
1303
1304 p = (unsigned char *) USER_FULL_NAME;
1305 /* Chop off everything after the first comma. */
1306 q = (unsigned char *) index (p, ',');
1307 full = make_string (p, q ? q - p : strlen (p));
1308
1309 #ifdef AMPERSAND_FULL_NAME
1310 p = SDATA (full);
1311 q = (unsigned char *) index (p, '&');
1312 /* Substitute the login name for the &, upcasing the first character. */
1313 if (q)
1314 {
1315 register unsigned char *r;
1316 Lisp_Object login;
1317
1318 login = Fuser_login_name (make_number (pw->pw_uid));
1319 r = (unsigned char *) alloca (strlen (p) + SCHARS (login) + 1);
1320 bcopy (p, r, q - p);
1321 r[q - p] = 0;
1322 strcat (r, SDATA (login));
1323 r[q - p] = UPCASE (r[q - p]);
1324 strcat (r, q + 1);
1325 full = build_string (r);
1326 }
1327 #endif /* AMPERSAND_FULL_NAME */
1328
1329 return full;
1330 }
1331
1332 DEFUN ("system-name", Fsystem_name, Ssystem_name, 0, 0, 0,
1333 doc: /* Return the name of the machine you are running on, as a string. */)
1334 ()
1335 {
1336 return Vsystem_name;
1337 }
1338
1339 /* For the benefit of callers who don't want to include lisp.h */
1340
1341 char *
1342 get_system_name ()
1343 {
1344 if (STRINGP (Vsystem_name))
1345 return (char *) SDATA (Vsystem_name);
1346 else
1347 return "";
1348 }
1349
1350 DEFUN ("emacs-pid", Femacs_pid, Semacs_pid, 0, 0, 0,
1351 doc: /* Return the process ID of Emacs, as an integer. */)
1352 ()
1353 {
1354 return make_number (getpid ());
1355 }
1356
1357 DEFUN ("current-time", Fcurrent_time, Scurrent_time, 0, 0, 0,
1358 doc: /* Return the current time, as the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00.
1359 The time is returned as a list of three integers. The first has the
1360 most significant 16 bits of the seconds, while the second has the
1361 least significant 16 bits. The third integer gives the microsecond
1362 count.
1363
1364 The microsecond count is zero on systems that do not provide
1365 resolution finer than a second. */)
1366 ()
1367 {
1368 EMACS_TIME t;
1369 Lisp_Object result[3];
1370
1371 EMACS_GET_TIME (t);
1372 XSETINT (result[0], (EMACS_SECS (t) >> 16) & 0xffff);
1373 XSETINT (result[1], (EMACS_SECS (t) >> 0) & 0xffff);
1374 XSETINT (result[2], EMACS_USECS (t));
1375
1376 return Flist (3, result);
1377 }
1378 \f
1379
1380 static int
1381 lisp_time_argument (specified_time, result, usec)
1382 Lisp_Object specified_time;
1383 time_t *result;
1384 int *usec;
1385 {
1386 if (NILP (specified_time))
1387 {
1388 if (usec)
1389 {
1390 EMACS_TIME t;
1391
1392 EMACS_GET_TIME (t);
1393 *usec = EMACS_USECS (t);
1394 *result = EMACS_SECS (t);
1395 return 1;
1396 }
1397 else
1398 return time (result) != -1;
1399 }
1400 else
1401 {
1402 Lisp_Object high, low;
1403 high = Fcar (specified_time);
1404 CHECK_NUMBER (high);
1405 low = Fcdr (specified_time);
1406 if (CONSP (low))
1407 {
1408 if (usec)
1409 {
1410 Lisp_Object usec_l = Fcdr (low);
1411 if (CONSP (usec_l))
1412 usec_l = Fcar (usec_l);
1413 if (NILP (usec_l))
1414 *usec = 0;
1415 else
1416 {
1417 CHECK_NUMBER (usec_l);
1418 *usec = XINT (usec_l);
1419 }
1420 }
1421 low = Fcar (low);
1422 }
1423 else if (usec)
1424 *usec = 0;
1425 CHECK_NUMBER (low);
1426 *result = (XINT (high) << 16) + (XINT (low) & 0xffff);
1427 return *result >> 16 == XINT (high);
1428 }
1429 }
1430
1431 DEFUN ("float-time", Ffloat_time, Sfloat_time, 0, 1, 0,
1432 doc: /* Return the current time, as a float number of seconds since the epoch.
1433 If an argument is given, it specifies a time to convert to float
1434 instead of the current time. The argument should have the forms:
1435 (HIGH . LOW) or (HIGH LOW USEC) or (HIGH LOW . USEC).
1436 Thus, you can use times obtained from `current-time'
1437 and from `file-attributes'.
1438
1439 WARNING: Since the result is floating point, it may not be exact.
1440 Do not use this function if precise time stamps are required. */)
1441 (specified_time)
1442 Lisp_Object specified_time;
1443 {
1444 time_t sec;
1445 int usec;
1446
1447 if (! lisp_time_argument (specified_time, &sec, &usec))
1448 error ("Invalid time specification");
1449
1450 return make_float ((sec * 1e6 + usec) / 1e6);
1451 }
1452
1453 /* Write information into buffer S of size MAXSIZE, according to the
1454 FORMAT of length FORMAT_LEN, using time information taken from *TP.
1455 Default to Universal Time if UT is nonzero, local time otherwise.
1456 Return the number of bytes written, not including the terminating
1457 '\0'. If S is NULL, nothing will be written anywhere; so to
1458 determine how many bytes would be written, use NULL for S and
1459 ((size_t) -1) for MAXSIZE.
1460
1461 This function behaves like emacs_strftimeu, except it allows null
1462 bytes in FORMAT. */
1463 static size_t
1464 emacs_memftimeu (s, maxsize, format, format_len, tp, ut)
1465 char *s;
1466 size_t maxsize;
1467 const char *format;
1468 size_t format_len;
1469 const struct tm *tp;
1470 int ut;
1471 {
1472 size_t total = 0;
1473
1474 /* Loop through all the null-terminated strings in the format
1475 argument. Normally there's just one null-terminated string, but
1476 there can be arbitrarily many, concatenated together, if the
1477 format contains '\0' bytes. emacs_strftimeu stops at the first
1478 '\0' byte so we must invoke it separately for each such string. */
1479 for (;;)
1480 {
1481 size_t len;
1482 size_t result;
1483
1484 if (s)
1485 s[0] = '\1';
1486
1487 result = emacs_strftimeu (s, maxsize, format, tp, ut);
1488
1489 if (s)
1490 {
1491 if (result == 0 && s[0] != '\0')
1492 return 0;
1493 s += result + 1;
1494 }
1495
1496 maxsize -= result + 1;
1497 total += result;
1498 len = strlen (format);
1499 if (len == format_len)
1500 return total;
1501 total++;
1502 format += len + 1;
1503 format_len -= len + 1;
1504 }
1505 }
1506
1507 DEFUN ("format-time-string", Fformat_time_string, Sformat_time_string, 1, 3, 0,
1508 doc: /* Use FORMAT-STRING to format the time TIME, or now if omitted.
1509 TIME is specified as (HIGH LOW . IGNORED) or (HIGH . LOW), as returned by
1510 `current-time' or `file-attributes'.
1511 The third, optional, argument UNIVERSAL, if non-nil, means describe TIME
1512 as Universal Time; nil means describe TIME in the local time zone.
1513 The value is a copy of FORMAT-STRING, but with certain constructs replaced
1514 by text that describes the specified date and time in TIME:
1515
1516 %Y is the year, %y within the century, %C the century.
1517 %G is the year corresponding to the ISO week, %g within the century.
1518 %m is the numeric month.
1519 %b and %h are the locale's abbreviated month name, %B the full name.
1520 %d is the day of the month, zero-padded, %e is blank-padded.
1521 %u is the numeric day of week from 1 (Monday) to 7, %w from 0 (Sunday) to 6.
1522 %a is the locale's abbreviated name of the day of week, %A the full name.
1523 %U is the week number starting on Sunday, %W starting on Monday,
1524 %V according to ISO 8601.
1525 %j is the day of the year.
1526
1527 %H is the hour on a 24-hour clock, %I is on a 12-hour clock, %k is like %H
1528 only blank-padded, %l is like %I blank-padded.
1529 %p is the locale's equivalent of either AM or PM.
1530 %M is the minute.
1531 %S is the second.
1532 %Z is the time zone name, %z is the numeric form.
1533 %s is the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000.
1534
1535 %c is the locale's date and time format.
1536 %x is the locale's "preferred" date format.
1537 %D is like "%m/%d/%y".
1538
1539 %R is like "%H:%M", %T is like "%H:%M:%S", %r is like "%I:%M:%S %p".
1540 %X is the locale's "preferred" time format.
1541
1542 Finally, %n is a newline, %t is a tab, %% is a literal %.
1543
1544 Certain flags and modifiers are available with some format controls.
1545 The flags are `_', `-', `^' and `#'. For certain characters X,
1546 %_X is like %X, but padded with blanks; %-X is like %X,
1547 but without padding. %^X is like %X, but with all textual
1548 characters up-cased; %#X is like %X, but with letter-case of
1549 all textual characters reversed.
1550 %NX (where N stands for an integer) is like %X,
1551 but takes up at least N (a number) positions.
1552 The modifiers are `E' and `O'. For certain characters X,
1553 %EX is a locale's alternative version of %X;
1554 %OX is like %X, but uses the locale's number symbols.
1555
1556 For example, to produce full ISO 8601 format, use "%Y-%m-%dT%T%z". */)
1557 (format_string, time, universal)
1558 Lisp_Object format_string, time, universal;
1559 {
1560 time_t value;
1561 int size;
1562 struct tm *tm;
1563 int ut = ! NILP (universal);
1564
1565 CHECK_STRING (format_string);
1566
1567 if (! lisp_time_argument (time, &value, NULL))
1568 error ("Invalid time specification");
1569
1570 format_string = code_convert_string_norecord (format_string,
1571 Vlocale_coding_system, 1);
1572
1573 /* This is probably enough. */
1574 size = SBYTES (format_string) * 6 + 50;
1575
1576 tm = ut ? gmtime (&value) : localtime (&value);
1577 if (! tm)
1578 error ("Specified time is not representable");
1579
1580 synchronize_system_time_locale ();
1581
1582 while (1)
1583 {
1584 char *buf = (char *) alloca (size + 1);
1585 int result;
1586
1587 buf[0] = '\1';
1588 result = emacs_memftimeu (buf, size, SDATA (format_string),
1589 SBYTES (format_string),
1590 tm, ut);
1591 if ((result > 0 && result < size) || (result == 0 && buf[0] == '\0'))
1592 return code_convert_string_norecord (make_string (buf, result),
1593 Vlocale_coding_system, 0);
1594
1595 /* If buffer was too small, make it bigger and try again. */
1596 result = emacs_memftimeu (NULL, (size_t) -1,
1597 SDATA (format_string),
1598 SBYTES (format_string),
1599 tm, ut);
1600 size = result + 1;
1601 }
1602 }
1603
1604 DEFUN ("decode-time", Fdecode_time, Sdecode_time, 0, 1, 0,
1605 doc: /* Decode a time value as (SEC MINUTE HOUR DAY MONTH YEAR DOW DST ZONE).
1606 The optional SPECIFIED-TIME should be a list of (HIGH LOW . IGNORED)
1607 or (HIGH . LOW), as from `current-time' and `file-attributes', or `nil'
1608 to use the current time. The list has the following nine members:
1609 SEC is an integer between 0 and 60; SEC is 60 for a leap second, which
1610 only some operating systems support. MINUTE is an integer between 0 and 59.
1611 HOUR is an integer between 0 and 23. DAY is an integer between 1 and 31.
1612 MONTH is an integer between 1 and 12. YEAR is an integer indicating the
1613 four-digit year. DOW is the day of week, an integer between 0 and 6, where
1614 0 is Sunday. DST is t if daylight savings time is effect, otherwise nil.
1615 ZONE is an integer indicating the number of seconds east of Greenwich.
1616 (Note that Common Lisp has different meanings for DOW and ZONE.) */)
1617 (specified_time)
1618 Lisp_Object specified_time;
1619 {
1620 time_t time_spec;
1621 struct tm save_tm;
1622 struct tm *decoded_time;
1623 Lisp_Object list_args[9];
1624
1625 if (! lisp_time_argument (specified_time, &time_spec, NULL))
1626 error ("Invalid time specification");
1627
1628 decoded_time = localtime (&time_spec);
1629 if (! decoded_time)
1630 error ("Specified time is not representable");
1631 XSETFASTINT (list_args[0], decoded_time->tm_sec);
1632 XSETFASTINT (list_args[1], decoded_time->tm_min);
1633 XSETFASTINT (list_args[2], decoded_time->tm_hour);
1634 XSETFASTINT (list_args[3], decoded_time->tm_mday);
1635 XSETFASTINT (list_args[4], decoded_time->tm_mon + 1);
1636 XSETINT (list_args[5], decoded_time->tm_year + 1900);
1637 XSETFASTINT (list_args[6], decoded_time->tm_wday);
1638 list_args[7] = (decoded_time->tm_isdst)? Qt : Qnil;
1639
1640 /* Make a copy, in case gmtime modifies the struct. */
1641 save_tm = *decoded_time;
1642 decoded_time = gmtime (&time_spec);
1643 if (decoded_time == 0)
1644 list_args[8] = Qnil;
1645 else
1646 XSETINT (list_args[8], tm_diff (&save_tm, decoded_time));
1647 return Flist (9, list_args);
1648 }
1649
1650 DEFUN ("encode-time", Fencode_time, Sencode_time, 6, MANY, 0,
1651 doc: /* Convert SECOND, MINUTE, HOUR, DAY, MONTH, YEAR and ZONE to internal time.
1652 This is the reverse operation of `decode-time', which see.
1653 ZONE defaults to the current time zone rule. This can
1654 be a string or t (as from `set-time-zone-rule'), or it can be a list
1655 \(as from `current-time-zone') or an integer (as from `decode-time')
1656 applied without consideration for daylight savings time.
1657
1658 You can pass more than 7 arguments; then the first six arguments
1659 are used as SECOND through YEAR, and the *last* argument is used as ZONE.
1660 The intervening arguments are ignored.
1661 This feature lets (apply 'encode-time (decode-time ...)) work.
1662
1663 Out-of-range values for SEC, MINUTE, HOUR, DAY, or MONTH are allowed;
1664 for example, a DAY of 0 means the day preceding the given month.
1665 Year numbers less than 100 are treated just like other year numbers.
1666 If you want them to stand for years in this century, you must do that yourself.
1667
1668 Years before 1970 are not guaranteed to work. On some systems,
1669 year values as low as 1901 do work.
1670
1671 usage: (encode-time SECOND MINUTE HOUR DAY MONTH YEAR &optional ZONE) */)
1672 (nargs, args)
1673 int nargs;
1674 register Lisp_Object *args;
1675 {
1676 time_t time;
1677 struct tm tm;
1678 Lisp_Object zone = (nargs > 6 ? args[nargs - 1] : Qnil);
1679
1680 CHECK_NUMBER (args[0]); /* second */
1681 CHECK_NUMBER (args[1]); /* minute */
1682 CHECK_NUMBER (args[2]); /* hour */
1683 CHECK_NUMBER (args[3]); /* day */
1684 CHECK_NUMBER (args[4]); /* month */
1685 CHECK_NUMBER (args[5]); /* year */
1686
1687 tm.tm_sec = XINT (args[0]);
1688 tm.tm_min = XINT (args[1]);
1689 tm.tm_hour = XINT (args[2]);
1690 tm.tm_mday = XINT (args[3]);
1691 tm.tm_mon = XINT (args[4]) - 1;
1692 tm.tm_year = XINT (args[5]) - 1900;
1693 tm.tm_isdst = -1;
1694
1695 if (CONSP (zone))
1696 zone = Fcar (zone);
1697 if (NILP (zone))
1698 time = mktime (&tm);
1699 else
1700 {
1701 char tzbuf[100];
1702 char *tzstring;
1703 char **oldenv = environ, **newenv;
1704
1705 if (EQ (zone, Qt))
1706 tzstring = "UTC0";
1707 else if (STRINGP (zone))
1708 tzstring = (char *) SDATA (zone);
1709 else if (INTEGERP (zone))
1710 {
1711 int abszone = abs (XINT (zone));
1712 sprintf (tzbuf, "XXX%s%d:%02d:%02d", "-" + (XINT (zone) < 0),
1713 abszone / (60*60), (abszone/60) % 60, abszone % 60);
1714 tzstring = tzbuf;
1715 }
1716 else
1717 error ("Invalid time zone specification");
1718
1719 /* Set TZ before calling mktime; merely adjusting mktime's returned
1720 value doesn't suffice, since that would mishandle leap seconds. */
1721 set_time_zone_rule (tzstring);
1722
1723 time = mktime (&tm);
1724
1725 /* Restore TZ to previous value. */
1726 newenv = environ;
1727 environ = oldenv;
1728 xfree (newenv);
1729 #ifdef LOCALTIME_CACHE
1730 tzset ();
1731 #endif
1732 }
1733
1734 if (time == (time_t) -1)
1735 error ("Specified time is not representable");
1736
1737 return make_time (time);
1738 }
1739
1740 DEFUN ("current-time-string", Fcurrent_time_string, Scurrent_time_string, 0, 1, 0,
1741 doc: /* Return the current time, as a human-readable string.
1742 Programs can use this function to decode a time,
1743 since the number of columns in each field is fixed.
1744 The format is `Sun Sep 16 01:03:52 1973'.
1745 However, see also the functions `decode-time' and `format-time-string'
1746 which provide a much more powerful and general facility.
1747
1748 If an argument is given, it specifies a time to format
1749 instead of the current time. The argument should have the form:
1750 (HIGH . LOW)
1751 or the form:
1752 (HIGH LOW . IGNORED).
1753 Thus, you can use times obtained from `current-time'
1754 and from `file-attributes'. */)
1755 (specified_time)
1756 Lisp_Object specified_time;
1757 {
1758 time_t value;
1759 char buf[30];
1760 register char *tem;
1761
1762 if (! lisp_time_argument (specified_time, &value, NULL))
1763 value = -1;
1764 tem = (char *) ctime (&value);
1765
1766 strncpy (buf, tem, 24);
1767 buf[24] = 0;
1768
1769 return build_string (buf);
1770 }
1771
1772 #define TM_YEAR_BASE 1900
1773
1774 /* Yield A - B, measured in seconds.
1775 This function is copied from the GNU C Library. */
1776 static int
1777 tm_diff (a, b)
1778 struct tm *a, *b;
1779 {
1780 /* Compute intervening leap days correctly even if year is negative.
1781 Take care to avoid int overflow in leap day calculations,
1782 but it's OK to assume that A and B are close to each other. */
1783 int a4 = (a->tm_year >> 2) + (TM_YEAR_BASE >> 2) - ! (a->tm_year & 3);
1784 int b4 = (b->tm_year >> 2) + (TM_YEAR_BASE >> 2) - ! (b->tm_year & 3);
1785 int a100 = a4 / 25 - (a4 % 25 < 0);
1786 int b100 = b4 / 25 - (b4 % 25 < 0);
1787 int a400 = a100 >> 2;
1788 int b400 = b100 >> 2;
1789 int intervening_leap_days = (a4 - b4) - (a100 - b100) + (a400 - b400);
1790 int years = a->tm_year - b->tm_year;
1791 int days = (365 * years + intervening_leap_days
1792 + (a->tm_yday - b->tm_yday));
1793 return (60 * (60 * (24 * days + (a->tm_hour - b->tm_hour))
1794 + (a->tm_min - b->tm_min))
1795 + (a->tm_sec - b->tm_sec));
1796 }
1797
1798 DEFUN ("current-time-zone", Fcurrent_time_zone, Scurrent_time_zone, 0, 1, 0,
1799 doc: /* Return the offset and name for the local time zone.
1800 This returns a list of the form (OFFSET NAME).
1801 OFFSET is an integer number of seconds ahead of UTC (east of Greenwich).
1802 A negative value means west of Greenwich.
1803 NAME is a string giving the name of the time zone.
1804 If an argument is given, it specifies when the time zone offset is determined
1805 instead of using the current time. The argument should have the form:
1806 (HIGH . LOW)
1807 or the form:
1808 (HIGH LOW . IGNORED).
1809 Thus, you can use times obtained from `current-time'
1810 and from `file-attributes'.
1811
1812 Some operating systems cannot provide all this information to Emacs;
1813 in this case, `current-time-zone' returns a list containing nil for
1814 the data it can't find. */)
1815 (specified_time)
1816 Lisp_Object specified_time;
1817 {
1818 time_t value;
1819 struct tm *t;
1820 struct tm gmt;
1821
1822 if (lisp_time_argument (specified_time, &value, NULL)
1823 && (t = gmtime (&value)) != 0
1824 && (gmt = *t, t = localtime (&value)) != 0)
1825 {
1826 int offset = tm_diff (t, &gmt);
1827 char *s = 0;
1828 char buf[6];
1829 #ifdef HAVE_TM_ZONE
1830 if (t->tm_zone)
1831 s = (char *)t->tm_zone;
1832 #else /* not HAVE_TM_ZONE */
1833 #ifdef HAVE_TZNAME
1834 if (t->tm_isdst == 0 || t->tm_isdst == 1)
1835 s = tzname[t->tm_isdst];
1836 #endif
1837 #endif /* not HAVE_TM_ZONE */
1838
1839 #if defined HAVE_TM_ZONE || defined HAVE_TZNAME
1840 if (s)
1841 {
1842 /* On Japanese w32, we can get a Japanese string as time
1843 zone name. Don't accept that. */
1844 char *p;
1845 for (p = s; *p && (isalnum ((unsigned char)*p) || *p == ' '); ++p)
1846 ;
1847 if (p == s || *p)
1848 s = NULL;
1849 }
1850 #endif
1851
1852 if (!s)
1853 {
1854 /* No local time zone name is available; use "+-NNNN" instead. */
1855 int am = (offset < 0 ? -offset : offset) / 60;
1856 sprintf (buf, "%c%02d%02d", (offset < 0 ? '-' : '+'), am/60, am%60);
1857 s = buf;
1858 }
1859 return Fcons (make_number (offset), Fcons (build_string (s), Qnil));
1860 }
1861 else
1862 return Fmake_list (make_number (2), Qnil);
1863 }
1864
1865 /* This holds the value of `environ' produced by the previous
1866 call to Fset_time_zone_rule, or 0 if Fset_time_zone_rule
1867 has never been called. */
1868 static char **environbuf;
1869
1870 DEFUN ("set-time-zone-rule", Fset_time_zone_rule, Sset_time_zone_rule, 1, 1, 0,
1871 doc: /* Set the local time zone using TZ, a string specifying a time zone rule.
1872 If TZ is nil, use implementation-defined default time zone information.
1873 If TZ is t, use Universal Time. */)
1874 (tz)
1875 Lisp_Object tz;
1876 {
1877 char *tzstring;
1878
1879 if (NILP (tz))
1880 tzstring = 0;
1881 else if (EQ (tz, Qt))
1882 tzstring = "UTC0";
1883 else
1884 {
1885 CHECK_STRING (tz);
1886 tzstring = (char *) SDATA (tz);
1887 }
1888
1889 set_time_zone_rule (tzstring);
1890 if (environbuf)
1891 free (environbuf);
1892 environbuf = environ;
1893
1894 return Qnil;
1895 }
1896
1897 #ifdef LOCALTIME_CACHE
1898
1899 /* These two values are known to load tz files in buggy implementations,
1900 i.e. Solaris 1 executables running under either Solaris 1 or Solaris 2.
1901 Their values shouldn't matter in non-buggy implementations.
1902 We don't use string literals for these strings,
1903 since if a string in the environment is in readonly
1904 storage, it runs afoul of bugs in SVR4 and Solaris 2.3.
1905 See Sun bugs 1113095 and 1114114, ``Timezone routines
1906 improperly modify environment''. */
1907
1908 static char set_time_zone_rule_tz1[] = "TZ=GMT+0";
1909 static char set_time_zone_rule_tz2[] = "TZ=GMT+1";
1910
1911 #endif
1912
1913 /* Set the local time zone rule to TZSTRING.
1914 This allocates memory into `environ', which it is the caller's
1915 responsibility to free. */
1916
1917 void
1918 set_time_zone_rule (tzstring)
1919 char *tzstring;
1920 {
1921 int envptrs;
1922 char **from, **to, **newenv;
1923
1924 /* Make the ENVIRON vector longer with room for TZSTRING. */
1925 for (from = environ; *from; from++)
1926 continue;
1927 envptrs = from - environ + 2;
1928 newenv = to = (char **) xmalloc (envptrs * sizeof (char *)
1929 + (tzstring ? strlen (tzstring) + 4 : 0));
1930
1931 /* Add TZSTRING to the end of environ, as a value for TZ. */
1932 if (tzstring)
1933 {
1934 char *t = (char *) (to + envptrs);
1935 strcpy (t, "TZ=");
1936 strcat (t, tzstring);
1937 *to++ = t;
1938 }
1939
1940 /* Copy the old environ vector elements into NEWENV,
1941 but don't copy the TZ variable.
1942 So we have only one definition of TZ, which came from TZSTRING. */
1943 for (from = environ; *from; from++)
1944 if (strncmp (*from, "TZ=", 3) != 0)
1945 *to++ = *from;
1946 *to = 0;
1947
1948 environ = newenv;
1949
1950 /* If we do have a TZSTRING, NEWENV points to the vector slot where
1951 the TZ variable is stored. If we do not have a TZSTRING,
1952 TO points to the vector slot which has the terminating null. */
1953
1954 #ifdef LOCALTIME_CACHE
1955 {
1956 /* In SunOS 4.1.3_U1 and 4.1.4, if TZ has a value like
1957 "US/Pacific" that loads a tz file, then changes to a value like
1958 "XXX0" that does not load a tz file, and then changes back to
1959 its original value, the last change is (incorrectly) ignored.
1960 Also, if TZ changes twice in succession to values that do
1961 not load a tz file, tzset can dump core (see Sun bug#1225179).
1962 The following code works around these bugs. */
1963
1964 if (tzstring)
1965 {
1966 /* Temporarily set TZ to a value that loads a tz file
1967 and that differs from tzstring. */
1968 char *tz = *newenv;
1969 *newenv = (strcmp (tzstring, set_time_zone_rule_tz1 + 3) == 0
1970 ? set_time_zone_rule_tz2 : set_time_zone_rule_tz1);
1971 tzset ();
1972 *newenv = tz;
1973 }
1974 else
1975 {
1976 /* The implied tzstring is unknown, so temporarily set TZ to
1977 two different values that each load a tz file. */
1978 *to = set_time_zone_rule_tz1;
1979 to[1] = 0;
1980 tzset ();
1981 *to = set_time_zone_rule_tz2;
1982 tzset ();
1983 *to = 0;
1984 }
1985
1986 /* Now TZ has the desired value, and tzset can be invoked safely. */
1987 }
1988
1989 tzset ();
1990 #endif
1991 }
1992 \f
1993 /* Insert NARGS Lisp objects in the array ARGS by calling INSERT_FUNC
1994 (if a type of object is Lisp_Int) or INSERT_FROM_STRING_FUNC (if a
1995 type of object is Lisp_String). INHERIT is passed to
1996 INSERT_FROM_STRING_FUNC as the last argument. */
1997
1998 static void
1999 general_insert_function (insert_func, insert_from_string_func,
2000 inherit, nargs, args)
2001 void (*insert_func) P_ ((const unsigned char *, int));
2002 void (*insert_from_string_func) P_ ((Lisp_Object, int, int, int, int, int));
2003 int inherit, nargs;
2004 register Lisp_Object *args;
2005 {
2006 register int argnum;
2007 register Lisp_Object val;
2008
2009 for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
2010 {
2011 val = args[argnum];
2012 retry:
2013 if (INTEGERP (val))
2014 {
2015 unsigned char str[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH];
2016 int len;
2017
2018 if (!NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters))
2019 len = CHAR_STRING (XFASTINT (val), str);
2020 else
2021 {
2022 str[0] = (SINGLE_BYTE_CHAR_P (XINT (val))
2023 ? XINT (val)
2024 : multibyte_char_to_unibyte (XINT (val), Qnil));
2025 len = 1;
2026 }
2027 (*insert_func) (str, len);
2028 }
2029 else if (STRINGP (val))
2030 {
2031 (*insert_from_string_func) (val, 0, 0,
2032 SCHARS (val),
2033 SBYTES (val),
2034 inherit);
2035 }
2036 else
2037 {
2038 val = wrong_type_argument (Qchar_or_string_p, val);
2039 goto retry;
2040 }
2041 }
2042 }
2043
2044 void
2045 insert1 (arg)
2046 Lisp_Object arg;
2047 {
2048 Finsert (1, &arg);
2049 }
2050
2051
2052 /* Callers passing one argument to Finsert need not gcpro the
2053 argument "array", since the only element of the array will
2054 not be used after calling insert or insert_from_string, so
2055 we don't care if it gets trashed. */
2056
2057 DEFUN ("insert", Finsert, Sinsert, 0, MANY, 0,
2058 doc: /* Insert the arguments, either strings or characters, at point.
2059 Point and before-insertion markers move forward to end up
2060 after the inserted text.
2061 Any other markers at the point of insertion remain before the text.
2062
2063 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2064 to multibyte for insertion (see `string-make-multibyte').
2065 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2066 to unibyte for insertion (see `string-make-unibyte').
2067
2068 When operating on binary data, it may be necessary to preserve the
2069 original bytes of a unibyte string when inserting it into a multibyte
2070 buffer; to accomplish this, apply `string-as-multibyte' to the string
2071 and insert the result.
2072
2073 usage: (insert &rest ARGS) */)
2074 (nargs, args)
2075 int nargs;
2076 register Lisp_Object *args;
2077 {
2078 general_insert_function (insert, insert_from_string, 0, nargs, args);
2079 return Qnil;
2080 }
2081
2082 DEFUN ("insert-and-inherit", Finsert_and_inherit, Sinsert_and_inherit,
2083 0, MANY, 0,
2084 doc: /* Insert the arguments at point, inheriting properties from adjoining text.
2085 Point and before-insertion markers move forward to end up
2086 after the inserted text.
2087 Any other markers at the point of insertion remain before the text.
2088
2089 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2090 to multibyte for insertion (see `unibyte-char-to-multibyte').
2091 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2092 to unibyte for insertion.
2093
2094 usage: (insert-and-inherit &rest ARGS) */)
2095 (nargs, args)
2096 int nargs;
2097 register Lisp_Object *args;
2098 {
2099 general_insert_function (insert_and_inherit, insert_from_string, 1,
2100 nargs, args);
2101 return Qnil;
2102 }
2103
2104 DEFUN ("insert-before-markers", Finsert_before_markers, Sinsert_before_markers, 0, MANY, 0,
2105 doc: /* Insert strings or characters at point, relocating markers after the text.
2106 Point and markers move forward to end up after the inserted text.
2107
2108 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2109 to multibyte for insertion (see `unibyte-char-to-multibyte').
2110 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2111 to unibyte for insertion.
2112
2113 usage: (insert-before-markers &rest ARGS) */)
2114 (nargs, args)
2115 int nargs;
2116 register Lisp_Object *args;
2117 {
2118 general_insert_function (insert_before_markers,
2119 insert_from_string_before_markers, 0,
2120 nargs, args);
2121 return Qnil;
2122 }
2123
2124 DEFUN ("insert-before-markers-and-inherit", Finsert_and_inherit_before_markers,
2125 Sinsert_and_inherit_before_markers, 0, MANY, 0,
2126 doc: /* Insert text at point, relocating markers and inheriting properties.
2127 Point and markers move forward to end up after the inserted text.
2128
2129 If the current buffer is multibyte, unibyte strings are converted
2130 to multibyte for insertion (see `unibyte-char-to-multibyte').
2131 If the current buffer is unibyte, multibyte strings are converted
2132 to unibyte for insertion.
2133
2134 usage: (insert-before-markers-and-inherit &rest ARGS) */)
2135 (nargs, args)
2136 int nargs;
2137 register Lisp_Object *args;
2138 {
2139 general_insert_function (insert_before_markers_and_inherit,
2140 insert_from_string_before_markers, 1,
2141 nargs, args);
2142 return Qnil;
2143 }
2144 \f
2145 DEFUN ("insert-char", Finsert_char, Sinsert_char, 2, 3, 0,
2146 doc: /* Insert COUNT (second arg) copies of CHARACTER (first arg).
2147 Both arguments are required.
2148 Point, and before-insertion markers, are relocated as in the function `insert'.
2149 The optional third arg INHERIT, if non-nil, says to inherit text properties
2150 from adjoining text, if those properties are sticky. */)
2151 (character, count, inherit)
2152 Lisp_Object character, count, inherit;
2153 {
2154 register unsigned char *string;
2155 register int strlen;
2156 register int i, n;
2157 int len;
2158 unsigned char str[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH];
2159
2160 CHECK_NUMBER (character);
2161 CHECK_NUMBER (count);
2162
2163 if (!NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters))
2164 len = CHAR_STRING (XFASTINT (character), str);
2165 else
2166 str[0] = XFASTINT (character), len = 1;
2167 n = XINT (count) * len;
2168 if (n <= 0)
2169 return Qnil;
2170 strlen = min (n, 256 * len);
2171 string = (unsigned char *) alloca (strlen);
2172 for (i = 0; i < strlen; i++)
2173 string[i] = str[i % len];
2174 while (n >= strlen)
2175 {
2176 QUIT;
2177 if (!NILP (inherit))
2178 insert_and_inherit (string, strlen);
2179 else
2180 insert (string, strlen);
2181 n -= strlen;
2182 }
2183 if (n > 0)
2184 {
2185 if (!NILP (inherit))
2186 insert_and_inherit (string, n);
2187 else
2188 insert (string, n);
2189 }
2190 return Qnil;
2191 }
2192
2193 \f
2194 /* Making strings from buffer contents. */
2195
2196 /* Return a Lisp_String containing the text of the current buffer from
2197 START to END. If text properties are in use and the current buffer
2198 has properties in the range specified, the resulting string will also
2199 have them, if PROPS is nonzero.
2200
2201 We don't want to use plain old make_string here, because it calls
2202 make_uninit_string, which can cause the buffer arena to be
2203 compacted. make_string has no way of knowing that the data has
2204 been moved, and thus copies the wrong data into the string. This
2205 doesn't effect most of the other users of make_string, so it should
2206 be left as is. But we should use this function when conjuring
2207 buffer substrings. */
2208
2209 Lisp_Object
2210 make_buffer_string (start, end, props)
2211 int start, end;
2212 int props;
2213 {
2214 int start_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (start);
2215 int end_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (end);
2216
2217 return make_buffer_string_both (start, start_byte, end, end_byte, props);
2218 }
2219
2220 /* Return a Lisp_String containing the text of the current buffer from
2221 START / START_BYTE to END / END_BYTE.
2222
2223 If text properties are in use and the current buffer
2224 has properties in the range specified, the resulting string will also
2225 have them, if PROPS is nonzero.
2226
2227 We don't want to use plain old make_string here, because it calls
2228 make_uninit_string, which can cause the buffer arena to be
2229 compacted. make_string has no way of knowing that the data has
2230 been moved, and thus copies the wrong data into the string. This
2231 doesn't effect most of the other users of make_string, so it should
2232 be left as is. But we should use this function when conjuring
2233 buffer substrings. */
2234
2235 Lisp_Object
2236 make_buffer_string_both (start, start_byte, end, end_byte, props)
2237 int start, start_byte, end, end_byte;
2238 int props;
2239 {
2240 Lisp_Object result, tem, tem1;
2241
2242 if (start < GPT && GPT < end)
2243 move_gap (start);
2244
2245 if (! NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters))
2246 result = make_uninit_multibyte_string (end - start, end_byte - start_byte);
2247 else
2248 result = make_uninit_string (end - start);
2249 bcopy (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start_byte), SDATA (result),
2250 end_byte - start_byte);
2251
2252 /* If desired, update and copy the text properties. */
2253 if (props)
2254 {
2255 update_buffer_properties (start, end);
2256
2257 tem = Fnext_property_change (make_number (start), Qnil, make_number (end));
2258 tem1 = Ftext_properties_at (make_number (start), Qnil);
2259
2260 if (XINT (tem) != end || !NILP (tem1))
2261 copy_intervals_to_string (result, current_buffer, start,
2262 end - start);
2263 }
2264
2265 return result;
2266 }
2267
2268 /* Call Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions for the range START ... END
2269 in the current buffer, if necessary. */
2270
2271 static void
2272 update_buffer_properties (start, end)
2273 int start, end;
2274 {
2275 /* If this buffer has some access functions,
2276 call them, specifying the range of the buffer being accessed. */
2277 if (!NILP (Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions))
2278 {
2279 Lisp_Object args[3];
2280 Lisp_Object tem;
2281
2282 args[0] = Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions;
2283 XSETINT (args[1], start);
2284 XSETINT (args[2], end);
2285
2286 /* But don't call them if we can tell that the work
2287 has already been done. */
2288 if (!NILP (Vbuffer_access_fontified_property))
2289 {
2290 tem = Ftext_property_any (args[1], args[2],
2291 Vbuffer_access_fontified_property,
2292 Qnil, Qnil);
2293 if (! NILP (tem))
2294 Frun_hook_with_args (3, args);
2295 }
2296 else
2297 Frun_hook_with_args (3, args);
2298 }
2299 }
2300
2301 DEFUN ("buffer-substring", Fbuffer_substring, Sbuffer_substring, 2, 2, 0,
2302 doc: /* Return the contents of part of the current buffer as a string.
2303 The two arguments START and END are character positions;
2304 they can be in either order.
2305 The string returned is multibyte if the buffer is multibyte.
2306
2307 This function copies the text properties of that part of the buffer
2308 into the result string; if you don't want the text properties,
2309 use `buffer-substring-no-properties' instead. */)
2310 (start, end)
2311 Lisp_Object start, end;
2312 {
2313 register int b, e;
2314
2315 validate_region (&start, &end);
2316 b = XINT (start);
2317 e = XINT (end);
2318
2319 return make_buffer_string (b, e, 1);
2320 }
2321
2322 DEFUN ("buffer-substring-no-properties", Fbuffer_substring_no_properties,
2323 Sbuffer_substring_no_properties, 2, 2, 0,
2324 doc: /* Return the characters of part of the buffer, without the text properties.
2325 The two arguments START and END are character positions;
2326 they can be in either order. */)
2327 (start, end)
2328 Lisp_Object start, end;
2329 {
2330 register int b, e;
2331
2332 validate_region (&start, &end);
2333 b = XINT (start);
2334 e = XINT (end);
2335
2336 return make_buffer_string (b, e, 0);
2337 }
2338
2339 DEFUN ("buffer-string", Fbuffer_string, Sbuffer_string, 0, 0, 0,
2340 doc: /* Return the contents of the current buffer as a string.
2341 If narrowing is in effect, this function returns only the visible part
2342 of the buffer. */)
2343 ()
2344 {
2345 return make_buffer_string (BEGV, ZV, 1);
2346 }
2347
2348 DEFUN ("insert-buffer-substring", Finsert_buffer_substring, Sinsert_buffer_substring,
2349 1, 3, 0,
2350 doc: /* Insert before point a substring of the contents of buffer BUFFER.
2351 BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name.
2352 Arguments START and END are character numbers specifying the substring.
2353 They default to the beginning and the end of BUFFER. */)
2354 (buf, start, end)
2355 Lisp_Object buf, start, end;
2356 {
2357 register int b, e, temp;
2358 register struct buffer *bp, *obuf;
2359 Lisp_Object buffer;
2360
2361 buffer = Fget_buffer (buf);
2362 if (NILP (buffer))
2363 nsberror (buf);
2364 bp = XBUFFER (buffer);
2365 if (NILP (bp->name))
2366 error ("Selecting deleted buffer");
2367
2368 if (NILP (start))
2369 b = BUF_BEGV (bp);
2370 else
2371 {
2372 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start);
2373 b = XINT (start);
2374 }
2375 if (NILP (end))
2376 e = BUF_ZV (bp);
2377 else
2378 {
2379 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end);
2380 e = XINT (end);
2381 }
2382
2383 if (b > e)
2384 temp = b, b = e, e = temp;
2385
2386 if (!(BUF_BEGV (bp) <= b && e <= BUF_ZV (bp)))
2387 args_out_of_range (start, end);
2388
2389 obuf = current_buffer;
2390 set_buffer_internal_1 (bp);
2391 update_buffer_properties (b, e);
2392 set_buffer_internal_1 (obuf);
2393
2394 insert_from_buffer (bp, b, e - b, 0);
2395 return Qnil;
2396 }
2397
2398 DEFUN ("compare-buffer-substrings", Fcompare_buffer_substrings, Scompare_buffer_substrings,
2399 6, 6, 0,
2400 doc: /* Compare two substrings of two buffers; return result as number.
2401 the value is -N if first string is less after N-1 chars,
2402 +N if first string is greater after N-1 chars, or 0 if strings match.
2403 Each substring is represented as three arguments: BUFFER, START and END.
2404 That makes six args in all, three for each substring.
2405
2406 The value of `case-fold-search' in the current buffer
2407 determines whether case is significant or ignored. */)
2408 (buffer1, start1, end1, buffer2, start2, end2)
2409 Lisp_Object buffer1, start1, end1, buffer2, start2, end2;
2410 {
2411 register int begp1, endp1, begp2, endp2, temp;
2412 register struct buffer *bp1, *bp2;
2413 register Lisp_Object *trt
2414 = (!NILP (current_buffer->case_fold_search)
2415 ? XCHAR_TABLE (current_buffer->case_canon_table)->contents : 0);
2416 int chars = 0;
2417 int i1, i2, i1_byte, i2_byte;
2418
2419 /* Find the first buffer and its substring. */
2420
2421 if (NILP (buffer1))
2422 bp1 = current_buffer;
2423 else
2424 {
2425 Lisp_Object buf1;
2426 buf1 = Fget_buffer (buffer1);
2427 if (NILP (buf1))
2428 nsberror (buffer1);
2429 bp1 = XBUFFER (buf1);
2430 if (NILP (bp1->name))
2431 error ("Selecting deleted buffer");
2432 }
2433
2434 if (NILP (start1))
2435 begp1 = BUF_BEGV (bp1);
2436 else
2437 {
2438 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start1);
2439 begp1 = XINT (start1);
2440 }
2441 if (NILP (end1))
2442 endp1 = BUF_ZV (bp1);
2443 else
2444 {
2445 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end1);
2446 endp1 = XINT (end1);
2447 }
2448
2449 if (begp1 > endp1)
2450 temp = begp1, begp1 = endp1, endp1 = temp;
2451
2452 if (!(BUF_BEGV (bp1) <= begp1
2453 && begp1 <= endp1
2454 && endp1 <= BUF_ZV (bp1)))
2455 args_out_of_range (start1, end1);
2456
2457 /* Likewise for second substring. */
2458
2459 if (NILP (buffer2))
2460 bp2 = current_buffer;
2461 else
2462 {
2463 Lisp_Object buf2;
2464 buf2 = Fget_buffer (buffer2);
2465 if (NILP (buf2))
2466 nsberror (buffer2);
2467 bp2 = XBUFFER (buf2);
2468 if (NILP (bp2->name))
2469 error ("Selecting deleted buffer");
2470 }
2471
2472 if (NILP (start2))
2473 begp2 = BUF_BEGV (bp2);
2474 else
2475 {
2476 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start2);
2477 begp2 = XINT (start2);
2478 }
2479 if (NILP (end2))
2480 endp2 = BUF_ZV (bp2);
2481 else
2482 {
2483 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end2);
2484 endp2 = XINT (end2);
2485 }
2486
2487 if (begp2 > endp2)
2488 temp = begp2, begp2 = endp2, endp2 = temp;
2489
2490 if (!(BUF_BEGV (bp2) <= begp2
2491 && begp2 <= endp2
2492 && endp2 <= BUF_ZV (bp2)))
2493 args_out_of_range (start2, end2);
2494
2495 i1 = begp1;
2496 i2 = begp2;
2497 i1_byte = buf_charpos_to_bytepos (bp1, i1);
2498 i2_byte = buf_charpos_to_bytepos (bp2, i2);
2499
2500 while (i1 < endp1 && i2 < endp2)
2501 {
2502 /* When we find a mismatch, we must compare the
2503 characters, not just the bytes. */
2504 int c1, c2;
2505
2506 QUIT;
2507
2508 if (! NILP (bp1->enable_multibyte_characters))
2509 {
2510 c1 = BUF_FETCH_MULTIBYTE_CHAR (bp1, i1_byte);
2511 BUF_INC_POS (bp1, i1_byte);
2512 i1++;
2513 }
2514 else
2515 {
2516 c1 = BUF_FETCH_BYTE (bp1, i1);
2517 c1 = unibyte_char_to_multibyte (c1);
2518 i1++;
2519 }
2520
2521 if (! NILP (bp2->enable_multibyte_characters))
2522 {
2523 c2 = BUF_FETCH_MULTIBYTE_CHAR (bp2, i2_byte);
2524 BUF_INC_POS (bp2, i2_byte);
2525 i2++;
2526 }
2527 else
2528 {
2529 c2 = BUF_FETCH_BYTE (bp2, i2);
2530 c2 = unibyte_char_to_multibyte (c2);
2531 i2++;
2532 }
2533
2534 if (trt)
2535 {
2536 c1 = XINT (trt[c1]);
2537 c2 = XINT (trt[c2]);
2538 }
2539 if (c1 < c2)
2540 return make_number (- 1 - chars);
2541 if (c1 > c2)
2542 return make_number (chars + 1);
2543
2544 chars++;
2545 }
2546
2547 /* The strings match as far as they go.
2548 If one is shorter, that one is less. */
2549 if (chars < endp1 - begp1)
2550 return make_number (chars + 1);
2551 else if (chars < endp2 - begp2)
2552 return make_number (- chars - 1);
2553
2554 /* Same length too => they are equal. */
2555 return make_number (0);
2556 }
2557 \f
2558 static Lisp_Object
2559 subst_char_in_region_unwind (arg)
2560 Lisp_Object arg;
2561 {
2562 return current_buffer->undo_list = arg;
2563 }
2564
2565 static Lisp_Object
2566 subst_char_in_region_unwind_1 (arg)
2567 Lisp_Object arg;
2568 {
2569 return current_buffer->filename = arg;
2570 }
2571
2572 DEFUN ("subst-char-in-region", Fsubst_char_in_region,
2573 Ssubst_char_in_region, 4, 5, 0,
2574 doc: /* From START to END, replace FROMCHAR with TOCHAR each time it occurs.
2575 If optional arg NOUNDO is non-nil, don't record this change for undo
2576 and don't mark the buffer as really changed.
2577 Both characters must have the same length of multi-byte form. */)
2578 (start, end, fromchar, tochar, noundo)
2579 Lisp_Object start, end, fromchar, tochar, noundo;
2580 {
2581 register int pos, pos_byte, stop, i, len, end_byte;
2582 int changed = 0;
2583 unsigned char fromstr[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH], tostr[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH];
2584 unsigned char *p;
2585 int count = SPECPDL_INDEX ();
2586 #define COMBINING_NO 0
2587 #define COMBINING_BEFORE 1
2588 #define COMBINING_AFTER 2
2589 #define COMBINING_BOTH (COMBINING_BEFORE | COMBINING_AFTER)
2590 int maybe_byte_combining = COMBINING_NO;
2591 int last_changed = 0;
2592 int multibyte_p = !NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters);
2593
2594 validate_region (&start, &end);
2595 CHECK_NUMBER (fromchar);
2596 CHECK_NUMBER (tochar);
2597
2598 if (multibyte_p)
2599 {
2600 len = CHAR_STRING (XFASTINT (fromchar), fromstr);
2601 if (CHAR_STRING (XFASTINT (tochar), tostr) != len)
2602 error ("Characters in subst-char-in-region have different byte-lengths");
2603 if (!ASCII_BYTE_P (*tostr))
2604 {
2605 /* If *TOSTR is in the range 0x80..0x9F and TOCHAR is not a
2606 complete multibyte character, it may be combined with the
2607 after bytes. If it is in the range 0xA0..0xFF, it may be
2608 combined with the before and after bytes. */
2609 if (!CHAR_HEAD_P (*tostr))
2610 maybe_byte_combining = COMBINING_BOTH;
2611 else if (BYTES_BY_CHAR_HEAD (*tostr) > len)
2612 maybe_byte_combining = COMBINING_AFTER;
2613 }
2614 }
2615 else
2616 {
2617 len = 1;
2618 fromstr[0] = XFASTINT (fromchar);
2619 tostr[0] = XFASTINT (tochar);
2620 }
2621
2622 pos = XINT (start);
2623 pos_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (pos);
2624 stop = CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (end));
2625 end_byte = stop;
2626
2627 /* If we don't want undo, turn off putting stuff on the list.
2628 That's faster than getting rid of things,
2629 and it prevents even the entry for a first change.
2630 Also inhibit locking the file. */
2631 if (!NILP (noundo))
2632 {
2633 record_unwind_protect (subst_char_in_region_unwind,
2634 current_buffer->undo_list);
2635 current_buffer->undo_list = Qt;
2636 /* Don't do file-locking. */
2637 record_unwind_protect (subst_char_in_region_unwind_1,
2638 current_buffer->filename);
2639 current_buffer->filename = Qnil;
2640 }
2641
2642 if (pos_byte < GPT_BYTE)
2643 stop = min (stop, GPT_BYTE);
2644 while (1)
2645 {
2646 int pos_byte_next = pos_byte;
2647
2648 if (pos_byte >= stop)
2649 {
2650 if (pos_byte >= end_byte) break;
2651 stop = end_byte;
2652 }
2653 p = BYTE_POS_ADDR (pos_byte);
2654 if (multibyte_p)
2655 INC_POS (pos_byte_next);
2656 else
2657 ++pos_byte_next;
2658 if (pos_byte_next - pos_byte == len
2659 && p[0] == fromstr[0]
2660 && (len == 1
2661 || (p[1] == fromstr[1]
2662 && (len == 2 || (p[2] == fromstr[2]
2663 && (len == 3 || p[3] == fromstr[3]))))))
2664 {
2665 if (! changed)
2666 {
2667 changed = pos;
2668 modify_region (current_buffer, changed, XINT (end));
2669
2670 if (! NILP (noundo))
2671 {
2672 if (MODIFF - 1 == SAVE_MODIFF)
2673 SAVE_MODIFF++;
2674 if (MODIFF - 1 == current_buffer->auto_save_modified)
2675 current_buffer->auto_save_modified++;
2676 }
2677 }
2678
2679 /* Take care of the case where the new character
2680 combines with neighboring bytes. */
2681 if (maybe_byte_combining
2682 && (maybe_byte_combining == COMBINING_AFTER
2683 ? (pos_byte_next < Z_BYTE
2684 && ! CHAR_HEAD_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte_next)))
2685 : ((pos_byte_next < Z_BYTE
2686 && ! CHAR_HEAD_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte_next)))
2687 || (pos_byte > BEG_BYTE
2688 && ! ASCII_BYTE_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte - 1))))))
2689 {
2690 Lisp_Object tem, string;
2691
2692 struct gcpro gcpro1;
2693
2694 tem = current_buffer->undo_list;
2695 GCPRO1 (tem);
2696
2697 /* Make a multibyte string containing this single character. */
2698 string = make_multibyte_string (tostr, 1, len);
2699 /* replace_range is less efficient, because it moves the gap,
2700 but it handles combining correctly. */
2701 replace_range (pos, pos + 1, string,
2702 0, 0, 1);
2703 pos_byte_next = CHAR_TO_BYTE (pos);
2704 if (pos_byte_next > pos_byte)
2705 /* Before combining happened. We should not increment
2706 POS. So, to cancel the later increment of POS,
2707 decrease it now. */
2708 pos--;
2709 else
2710 INC_POS (pos_byte_next);
2711
2712 if (! NILP (noundo))
2713 current_buffer->undo_list = tem;
2714
2715 UNGCPRO;
2716 }
2717 else
2718 {
2719 if (NILP (noundo))
2720 record_change (pos, 1);
2721 for (i = 0; i < len; i++) *p++ = tostr[i];
2722 }
2723 last_changed = pos + 1;
2724 }
2725 pos_byte = pos_byte_next;
2726 pos++;
2727 }
2728
2729 if (changed)
2730 {
2731 signal_after_change (changed,
2732 last_changed - changed, last_changed - changed);
2733 update_compositions (changed, last_changed, CHECK_ALL);
2734 }
2735
2736 unbind_to (count, Qnil);
2737 return Qnil;
2738 }
2739
2740 DEFUN ("translate-region", Ftranslate_region, Stranslate_region, 3, 3, 0,
2741 doc: /* From START to END, translate characters according to TABLE.
2742 TABLE is a string; the Nth character in it is the mapping
2743 for the character with code N.
2744 This function does not alter multibyte characters.
2745 It returns the number of characters changed. */)
2746 (start, end, table)
2747 Lisp_Object start;
2748 Lisp_Object end;
2749 register Lisp_Object table;
2750 {
2751 register int pos_byte, stop; /* Limits of the region. */
2752 register unsigned char *tt; /* Trans table. */
2753 register int nc; /* New character. */
2754 int cnt; /* Number of changes made. */
2755 int size; /* Size of translate table. */
2756 int pos;
2757 int multibyte = !NILP (current_buffer->enable_multibyte_characters);
2758
2759 validate_region (&start, &end);
2760 CHECK_STRING (table);
2761
2762 size = SBYTES (table);
2763 tt = SDATA (table);
2764
2765 pos_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (start));
2766 stop = CHAR_TO_BYTE (XINT (end));
2767 modify_region (current_buffer, XINT (start), XINT (end));
2768 pos = XINT (start);
2769
2770 cnt = 0;
2771 for (; pos_byte < stop; )
2772 {
2773 register unsigned char *p = BYTE_POS_ADDR (pos_byte);
2774 int len;
2775 int oc;
2776 int pos_byte_next;
2777
2778 if (multibyte)
2779 oc = STRING_CHAR_AND_LENGTH (p, stop - pos_byte, len);
2780 else
2781 oc = *p, len = 1;
2782 pos_byte_next = pos_byte + len;
2783 if (oc < size && len == 1)
2784 {
2785 nc = tt[oc];
2786 if (nc != oc)
2787 {
2788 /* Take care of the case where the new character
2789 combines with neighboring bytes. */
2790 if (!ASCII_BYTE_P (nc)
2791 && (CHAR_HEAD_P (nc)
2792 ? ! CHAR_HEAD_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte + 1))
2793 : (pos_byte > BEG_BYTE
2794 && ! ASCII_BYTE_P (FETCH_BYTE (pos_byte - 1)))))
2795 {
2796 Lisp_Object string;
2797
2798 string = make_multibyte_string (tt + oc, 1, 1);
2799 /* This is less efficient, because it moves the gap,
2800 but it handles combining correctly. */
2801 replace_range (pos, pos + 1, string,
2802 1, 0, 1);
2803 pos_byte_next = CHAR_TO_BYTE (pos);
2804 if (pos_byte_next > pos_byte)
2805 /* Before combining happened. We should not
2806 increment POS. So, to cancel the later
2807 increment of POS, we decrease it now. */
2808 pos--;
2809 else
2810 INC_POS (pos_byte_next);
2811 }
2812 else
2813 {
2814 record_change (pos, 1);
2815 *p = nc;
2816 signal_after_change (pos, 1, 1);
2817 update_compositions (pos, pos + 1, CHECK_BORDER);
2818 }
2819 ++cnt;
2820 }
2821 }
2822 pos_byte = pos_byte_next;
2823 pos++;
2824 }
2825
2826 return make_number (cnt);
2827 }
2828
2829 DEFUN ("delete-region", Fdelete_region, Sdelete_region, 2, 2, "r",
2830 doc: /* Delete the text between point and mark.
2831 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
2832 positions (integers or markers) specifying the stretch to be deleted. */)
2833 (start, end)
2834 Lisp_Object start, end;
2835 {
2836 validate_region (&start, &end);
2837 del_range (XINT (start), XINT (end));
2838 return Qnil;
2839 }
2840
2841 DEFUN ("delete-and-extract-region", Fdelete_and_extract_region,
2842 Sdelete_and_extract_region, 2, 2, 0,
2843 doc: /* Delete the text between START and END and return it. */)
2844 (start, end)
2845 Lisp_Object start, end;
2846 {
2847 validate_region (&start, &end);
2848 return del_range_1 (XINT (start), XINT (end), 1, 1);
2849 }
2850 \f
2851 DEFUN ("widen", Fwiden, Swiden, 0, 0, "",
2852 doc: /* Remove restrictions (narrowing) from current buffer.
2853 This allows the buffer's full text to be seen and edited. */)
2854 ()
2855 {
2856 if (BEG != BEGV || Z != ZV)
2857 current_buffer->clip_changed = 1;
2858 BEGV = BEG;
2859 BEGV_BYTE = BEG_BYTE;
2860 SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH (current_buffer, Z, Z_BYTE);
2861 /* Changing the buffer bounds invalidates any recorded current column. */
2862 invalidate_current_column ();
2863 return Qnil;
2864 }
2865
2866 DEFUN ("narrow-to-region", Fnarrow_to_region, Snarrow_to_region, 2, 2, "r",
2867 doc: /* Restrict editing in this buffer to the current region.
2868 The rest of the text becomes temporarily invisible and untouchable
2869 but is not deleted; if you save the buffer in a file, the invisible
2870 text is included in the file. \\[widen] makes all visible again.
2871 See also `save-restriction'.
2872
2873 When calling from a program, pass two arguments; positions (integers
2874 or markers) bounding the text that should remain visible. */)
2875 (start, end)
2876 register Lisp_Object start, end;
2877 {
2878 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (start);
2879 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (end);
2880
2881 if (XINT (start) > XINT (end))
2882 {
2883 Lisp_Object tem;
2884 tem = start; start = end; end = tem;
2885 }
2886
2887 if (!(BEG <= XINT (start) && XINT (start) <= XINT (end) && XINT (end) <= Z))
2888 args_out_of_range (start, end);
2889
2890 if (BEGV != XFASTINT (start) || ZV != XFASTINT (end))
2891 current_buffer->clip_changed = 1;
2892
2893 SET_BUF_BEGV (current_buffer, XFASTINT (start));
2894 SET_BUF_ZV (current_buffer, XFASTINT (end));
2895 if (PT < XFASTINT (start))
2896 SET_PT (XFASTINT (start));
2897 if (PT > XFASTINT (end))
2898 SET_PT (XFASTINT (end));
2899 /* Changing the buffer bounds invalidates any recorded current column. */
2900 invalidate_current_column ();
2901 return Qnil;
2902 }
2903
2904 Lisp_Object
2905 save_restriction_save ()
2906 {
2907 if (BEGV == BEG && ZV == Z)
2908 /* The common case that the buffer isn't narrowed.
2909 We return just the buffer object, which save_restriction_restore
2910 recognizes as meaning `no restriction'. */
2911 return Fcurrent_buffer ();
2912 else
2913 /* We have to save a restriction, so return a pair of markers, one
2914 for the beginning and one for the end. */
2915 {
2916 Lisp_Object beg, end;
2917
2918 beg = buildmark (BEGV, BEGV_BYTE);
2919 end = buildmark (ZV, ZV_BYTE);
2920
2921 /* END must move forward if text is inserted at its exact location. */
2922 XMARKER(end)->insertion_type = 1;
2923
2924 return Fcons (beg, end);
2925 }
2926 }
2927
2928 Lisp_Object
2929 save_restriction_restore (data)
2930 Lisp_Object data;
2931 {
2932 if (CONSP (data))
2933 /* A pair of marks bounding a saved restriction. */
2934 {
2935 struct Lisp_Marker *beg = XMARKER (XCAR (data));
2936 struct Lisp_Marker *end = XMARKER (XCDR (data));
2937 struct buffer *buf = beg->buffer; /* END should have the same buffer. */
2938
2939 if (buf /* Verify marker still points to a buffer. */
2940 && (beg->charpos != BUF_BEGV (buf) || end->charpos != BUF_ZV (buf)))
2941 /* The restriction has changed from the saved one, so restore
2942 the saved restriction. */
2943 {
2944 int pt = BUF_PT (buf);
2945
2946 SET_BUF_BEGV_BOTH (buf, beg->charpos, beg->bytepos);
2947 SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH (buf, end->charpos, end->bytepos);
2948
2949 if (pt < beg->charpos || pt > end->charpos)
2950 /* The point is outside the new visible range, move it inside. */
2951 SET_BUF_PT_BOTH (buf,
2952 clip_to_bounds (beg->charpos, pt, end->charpos),
2953 clip_to_bounds (beg->bytepos, BUF_PT_BYTE (buf),
2954 end->bytepos));
2955
2956 buf->clip_changed = 1; /* Remember that the narrowing changed. */
2957 }
2958 }
2959 else
2960 /* A buffer, which means that there was no old restriction. */
2961 {
2962 struct buffer *buf = XBUFFER (data);
2963
2964 if (buf /* Verify marker still points to a buffer. */
2965 && (BUF_BEGV (buf) != BUF_BEG (buf) || BUF_ZV (buf) != BUF_Z (buf)))
2966 /* The buffer has been narrowed, get rid of the narrowing. */
2967 {
2968 SET_BUF_BEGV_BOTH (buf, BUF_BEG (buf), BUF_BEG_BYTE (buf));
2969 SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH (buf, BUF_Z (buf), BUF_Z_BYTE (buf));
2970
2971 buf->clip_changed = 1; /* Remember that the narrowing changed. */
2972 }
2973 }
2974
2975 return Qnil;
2976 }
2977
2978 DEFUN ("save-restriction", Fsave_restriction, Ssave_restriction, 0, UNEVALLED, 0,
2979 doc: /* Execute BODY, saving and restoring current buffer's restrictions.
2980 The buffer's restrictions make parts of the beginning and end invisible.
2981 (They are set up with `narrow-to-region' and eliminated with `widen'.)
2982 This special form, `save-restriction', saves the current buffer's restrictions
2983 when it is entered, and restores them when it is exited.
2984 So any `narrow-to-region' within BODY lasts only until the end of the form.
2985 The old restrictions settings are restored
2986 even in case of abnormal exit (throw or error).
2987
2988 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY.
2989
2990 Note: if you are using both `save-excursion' and `save-restriction',
2991 use `save-excursion' outermost:
2992 (save-excursion (save-restriction ...))
2993
2994 usage: (save-restriction &rest BODY) */)
2995 (body)
2996 Lisp_Object body;
2997 {
2998 register Lisp_Object val;
2999 int count = SPECPDL_INDEX ();
3000
3001 record_unwind_protect (save_restriction_restore, save_restriction_save ());
3002 val = Fprogn (body);
3003 return unbind_to (count, val);
3004 }
3005 \f
3006 /* Buffer for the most recent text displayed by Fmessage_box. */
3007 static char *message_text;
3008
3009 /* Allocated length of that buffer. */
3010 static int message_length;
3011
3012 DEFUN ("message", Fmessage, Smessage, 1, MANY, 0,
3013 doc: /* Print a one-line message at the bottom of the screen.
3014 The first argument is a format control string, and the rest are data
3015 to be formatted under control of the string. See `format' for details.
3016
3017 If the first argument is nil, clear any existing message; let the
3018 minibuffer contents show.
3019
3020 usage: (message STRING &rest ARGS) */)
3021 (nargs, args)
3022 int nargs;
3023 Lisp_Object *args;
3024 {
3025 if (NILP (args[0])
3026 || (STRINGP (args[0])
3027 && SBYTES (args[0]) == 0))
3028 {
3029 message (0);
3030 return Qnil;
3031 }
3032 else
3033 {
3034 register Lisp_Object val;
3035 val = Fformat (nargs, args);
3036 message3 (val, SBYTES (val), STRING_MULTIBYTE (val));
3037 return val;
3038 }
3039 }
3040
3041 DEFUN ("message-box", Fmessage_box, Smessage_box, 1, MANY, 0,
3042 doc: /* Display a message, in a dialog box if possible.
3043 If a dialog box is not available, use the echo area.
3044 The first argument is a format control string, and the rest are data
3045 to be formatted under control of the string. See `format' for details.
3046
3047 If the first argument is nil, clear any existing message; let the
3048 minibuffer contents show.
3049
3050 usage: (message-box STRING &rest ARGS) */)
3051 (nargs, args)
3052 int nargs;
3053 Lisp_Object *args;
3054 {
3055 if (NILP (args[0]))
3056 {
3057 message (0);
3058 return Qnil;
3059 }
3060 else
3061 {
3062 register Lisp_Object val;
3063 val = Fformat (nargs, args);
3064 #ifdef HAVE_MENUS
3065 /* The MS-DOS frames support popup menus even though they are
3066 not FRAME_WINDOW_P. */
3067 if (FRAME_WINDOW_P (XFRAME (selected_frame))
3068 || FRAME_MSDOS_P (XFRAME (selected_frame)))
3069 {
3070 Lisp_Object pane, menu, obj;
3071 struct gcpro gcpro1;
3072 pane = Fcons (Fcons (build_string ("OK"), Qt), Qnil);
3073 GCPRO1 (pane);
3074 menu = Fcons (val, pane);
3075 obj = Fx_popup_dialog (Qt, menu);
3076 UNGCPRO;
3077 return val;
3078 }
3079 #endif /* HAVE_MENUS */
3080 /* Copy the data so that it won't move when we GC. */
3081 if (! message_text)
3082 {
3083 message_text = (char *)xmalloc (80);
3084 message_length = 80;
3085 }
3086 if (SBYTES (val) > message_length)
3087 {
3088 message_length = SBYTES (val);
3089 message_text = (char *)xrealloc (message_text, message_length);
3090 }
3091 bcopy (SDATA (val), message_text, SBYTES (val));
3092 message2 (message_text, SBYTES (val),
3093 STRING_MULTIBYTE (val));
3094 return val;
3095 }
3096 }
3097 #ifdef HAVE_MENUS
3098 extern Lisp_Object last_nonmenu_event;
3099 #endif
3100
3101 DEFUN ("message-or-box", Fmessage_or_box, Smessage_or_box, 1, MANY, 0,
3102 doc: /* Display a message in a dialog box or in the echo area.
3103 If this command was invoked with the mouse, use a dialog box if
3104 `use-dialog-box' is non-nil.
3105 Otherwise, use the echo area.
3106 The first argument is a format control string, and the rest are data
3107 to be formatted under control of the string. See `format' for details.
3108
3109 If the first argument is nil, clear any existing message; let the
3110 minibuffer contents show.
3111
3112 usage: (message-or-box STRING &rest ARGS) */)
3113 (nargs, args)
3114 int nargs;
3115 Lisp_Object *args;
3116 {
3117 #ifdef HAVE_MENUS
3118 if ((NILP (last_nonmenu_event) || CONSP (last_nonmenu_event))
3119 && use_dialog_box)
3120 return Fmessage_box (nargs, args);
3121 #endif
3122 return Fmessage (nargs, args);
3123 }
3124
3125 DEFUN ("current-message", Fcurrent_message, Scurrent_message, 0, 0, 0,
3126 doc: /* Return the string currently displayed in the echo area, or nil if none. */)
3127 ()
3128 {
3129 return current_message ();
3130 }
3131
3132
3133 DEFUN ("propertize", Fpropertize, Spropertize, 1, MANY, 0,
3134 doc: /* Return a copy of STRING with text properties added.
3135 First argument is the string to copy.
3136 Remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs for text
3137 properties to add to the result.
3138 usage: (propertize STRING &rest PROPERTIES) */)
3139 (nargs, args)
3140 int nargs;
3141 Lisp_Object *args;
3142 {
3143 Lisp_Object properties, string;
3144 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2;
3145 int i;
3146
3147 /* Number of args must be odd. */
3148 if ((nargs & 1) == 0 || nargs < 1)
3149 error ("Wrong number of arguments");
3150
3151 properties = string = Qnil;
3152 GCPRO2 (properties, string);
3153
3154 /* First argument must be a string. */
3155 CHECK_STRING (args[0]);
3156 string = Fcopy_sequence (args[0]);
3157
3158 for (i = 1; i < nargs; i += 2)
3159 {
3160 CHECK_SYMBOL (args[i]);
3161 properties = Fcons (args[i], Fcons (args[i + 1], properties));
3162 }
3163
3164 Fadd_text_properties (make_number (0),
3165 make_number (SCHARS (string)),
3166 properties, string);
3167 RETURN_UNGCPRO (string);
3168 }
3169
3170
3171 /* Number of bytes that STRING will occupy when put into the result.
3172 MULTIBYTE is nonzero if the result should be multibyte. */
3173
3174 #define CONVERTED_BYTE_SIZE(MULTIBYTE, STRING) \
3175 (((MULTIBYTE) && ! STRING_MULTIBYTE (STRING)) \
3176 ? count_size_as_multibyte (SDATA (STRING), SBYTES (STRING)) \
3177 : SBYTES (STRING))
3178
3179 DEFUN ("format", Fformat, Sformat, 1, MANY, 0,
3180 doc: /* Format a string out of a control-string and arguments.
3181 The first argument is a control string.
3182 The other arguments are substituted into it to make the result, a string.
3183 It may contain %-sequences meaning to substitute the next argument.
3184 %s means print a string argument. Actually, prints any object, with `princ'.
3185 %d means print as number in decimal (%o octal, %x hex).
3186 %X is like %x, but uses upper case.
3187 %e means print a number in exponential notation.
3188 %f means print a number in decimal-point notation.
3189 %g means print a number in exponential notation
3190 or decimal-point notation, whichever uses fewer characters.
3191 %c means print a number as a single character.
3192 %S means print any object as an s-expression (using `prin1').
3193 The argument used for %d, %o, %x, %e, %f, %g or %c must be a number.
3194 Use %% to put a single % into the output.
3195
3196 usage: (format STRING &rest OBJECTS) */)
3197 (nargs, args)
3198 int nargs;
3199 register Lisp_Object *args;
3200 {
3201 register int n; /* The number of the next arg to substitute */
3202 register int total; /* An estimate of the final length */
3203 char *buf, *p;
3204 register unsigned char *format, *end, *format_start;
3205 int nchars;
3206 /* Nonzero if the output should be a multibyte string,
3207 which is true if any of the inputs is one. */
3208 int multibyte = 0;
3209 /* When we make a multibyte string, we must pay attention to the
3210 byte combining problem, i.e., a byte may be combined with a
3211 multibyte charcter of the previous string. This flag tells if we
3212 must consider such a situation or not. */
3213 int maybe_combine_byte;
3214 unsigned char *this_format;
3215 /* Precision for each spec, or -1, a flag value meaning no precision
3216 was given in that spec. Element 0, corresonding to the format
3217 string itself, will not be used. Element NARGS, corresponding to
3218 no argument, *will* be assigned to in the case that a `%' and `.'
3219 occur after the final format specifier. */
3220 int *precision = (int *) (alloca(nargs * sizeof (int)));
3221 int longest_format;
3222 Lisp_Object val;
3223 int arg_intervals = 0;
3224
3225 /* discarded[I] is 1 if byte I of the format
3226 string was not copied into the output.
3227 It is 2 if byte I was not the first byte of its character. */
3228 char *discarded;
3229
3230 /* Each element records, for one argument,
3231 the start and end bytepos in the output string,
3232 and whether the argument is a string with intervals.
3233 info[0] is unused. Unused elements have -1 for start. */
3234 struct info
3235 {
3236 int start, end, intervals;
3237 } *info = 0;
3238
3239 /* It should not be necessary to GCPRO ARGS, because
3240 the caller in the interpreter should take care of that. */
3241
3242 /* Try to determine whether the result should be multibyte.
3243 This is not always right; sometimes the result needs to be multibyte
3244 because of an object that we will pass through prin1,
3245 and in that case, we won't know it here. */
3246 for (n = 0; n < nargs; n++)
3247 {
3248 if (STRINGP (args[n]) && STRING_MULTIBYTE (args[n]))
3249 multibyte = 1;
3250 /* Piggyback on this loop to initialize precision[N]. */
3251 precision[n] = -1;
3252 }
3253
3254 CHECK_STRING (args[0]);
3255 /* We may have to change "%S" to "%s". */
3256 args[0] = Fcopy_sequence (args[0]);
3257
3258 /* GC should never happen here, so abort if it does. */
3259 abort_on_gc++;
3260
3261 /* If we start out planning a unibyte result,
3262 then discover it has to be multibyte, we jump back to retry.
3263 That can only happen from the first large while loop below. */
3264 retry:
3265
3266 format = SDATA (args[0]);
3267 format_start = format;
3268 end = format + SBYTES (args[0]);
3269 longest_format = 0;
3270
3271 /* Make room in result for all the non-%-codes in the control string. */
3272 total = 5 + CONVERTED_BYTE_SIZE (multibyte, args[0]);
3273
3274 /* Allocate the info and discarded tables. */
3275 {
3276 int nbytes = nargs * sizeof *info;
3277 int i;
3278 info = (struct info *) alloca (nbytes);
3279 bzero (info, nbytes);
3280 for (i = 0; i <= nargs; i++)
3281 info[i].start = -1;
3282 discarded = (char *) alloca (SBYTES (args[0]));
3283 bzero (discarded, SBYTES (args[0]));
3284 }
3285
3286 /* Add to TOTAL enough space to hold the converted arguments. */
3287
3288 n = 0;
3289 while (format != end)
3290 if (*format++ == '%')
3291 {
3292 int thissize = 0;
3293 int actual_width = 0;
3294 unsigned char *this_format_start = format - 1;
3295 int field_width = 0;
3296
3297 /* General format specifications look like
3298
3299 '%' [flags] [field-width] [precision] format
3300
3301 where
3302
3303 flags ::= [#-* 0]+
3304 field-width ::= [0-9]+
3305 precision ::= '.' [0-9]*
3306
3307 If a field-width is specified, it specifies to which width
3308 the output should be padded with blanks, iff the output
3309 string is shorter than field-width.
3310
3311 If precision is specified, it specifies the number of
3312 digits to print after the '.' for floats, or the max.
3313 number of chars to print from a string. */
3314
3315 /* NOTE the handling of specifiers here differs in some ways
3316 from the libc model. There are bugs in this code that lead
3317 to incorrect formatting when flags recognized by C but
3318 neither parsed nor rejected here are used. Further
3319 revisions will be made soon. */
3320
3321 /* incorrect list of flags to skip; will be fixed */
3322 while (index ("-*# 0", *format))
3323 ++format;
3324
3325 if (*format >= '0' && *format <= '9')
3326 {
3327 for (field_width = 0; *format >= '0' && *format <= '9'; ++format)
3328 field_width = 10 * field_width + *format - '0';
3329 }
3330
3331 /* N is not incremented for another few lines below, so refer to
3332 element N+1 (which might be precision[NARGS]). */
3333 if (*format == '.')
3334 {
3335 ++format;
3336 for (precision[n+1] = 0; *format >= '0' && *format <= '9'; ++format)
3337 precision[n+1] = 10 * precision[n+1] + *format - '0';
3338 }
3339
3340 if (format - this_format_start + 1 > longest_format)
3341 longest_format = format - this_format_start + 1;
3342
3343 if (format == end)
3344 error ("Format string ends in middle of format specifier");
3345 if (*format == '%')
3346 format++;
3347 else if (++n >= nargs)
3348 error ("Not enough arguments for format string");
3349 else if (*format == 'S')
3350 {
3351 /* For `S', prin1 the argument and then treat like a string. */
3352 register Lisp_Object tem;
3353 tem = Fprin1_to_string (args[n], Qnil);
3354 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (tem) && ! multibyte)
3355 {
3356 multibyte = 1;
3357 goto retry;
3358 }
3359 args[n] = tem;
3360 /* If we restart the loop, we should not come here again
3361 because args[n] is now a string and calling
3362 Fprin1_to_string on it produces superflous double
3363 quotes. So, change "%S" to "%s" now. */
3364 *format = 's';
3365 goto string;
3366 }
3367 else if (SYMBOLP (args[n]))
3368 {
3369 args[n] = SYMBOL_NAME (args[n]);
3370 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (args[n]) && ! multibyte)
3371 {
3372 multibyte = 1;
3373 goto retry;
3374 }
3375 goto string;
3376 }
3377 else if (STRINGP (args[n]))
3378 {
3379 string:
3380 if (*format != 's' && *format != 'S')
3381 error ("Format specifier doesn't match argument type");
3382 /* In the case (PRECISION[N] > 0), THISSIZE may not need
3383 to be as large as is calculated here. Easy check for
3384 the case PRECISION = 0. */
3385 thissize = precision[n] ? CONVERTED_BYTE_SIZE (multibyte, args[n]) : 0;
3386 actual_width = lisp_string_width (args[n], -1, NULL, NULL);
3387 }
3388 /* Would get MPV otherwise, since Lisp_Int's `point' to low memory. */
3389 else if (INTEGERP (args[n]) && *format != 's')
3390 {
3391 /* The following loop assumes the Lisp type indicates
3392 the proper way to pass the argument.
3393 So make sure we have a flonum if the argument should
3394 be a double. */
3395 if (*format == 'e' || *format == 'f' || *format == 'g')
3396 args[n] = Ffloat (args[n]);
3397 else
3398 if (*format != 'd' && *format != 'o' && *format != 'x'
3399 && *format != 'i' && *format != 'X' && *format != 'c')
3400 error ("Invalid format operation %%%c", *format);
3401
3402 thissize = 30;
3403 if (*format == 'c')
3404 {
3405 if (! SINGLE_BYTE_CHAR_P (XINT (args[n]))
3406 /* Note: No one can remeber why we have to treat
3407 the character 0 as a multibyte character here.
3408 But, until it causes a real problem, let's
3409 don't change it. */
3410 || XINT (args[n]) == 0)
3411 {
3412 if (! multibyte)
3413 {
3414 multibyte = 1;
3415 goto retry;
3416 }
3417 args[n] = Fchar_to_string (args[n]);
3418 thissize = SBYTES (args[n]);
3419 }
3420 else if (! ASCII_BYTE_P (XINT (args[n])) && multibyte)
3421 {
3422 args[n]
3423 = Fchar_to_string (Funibyte_char_to_multibyte (args[n]));
3424 thissize = SBYTES (args[n]);
3425 }
3426 }
3427 }
3428 else if (FLOATP (args[n]) && *format != 's')
3429 {
3430 if (! (*format == 'e' || *format == 'f' || *format == 'g'))
3431 {
3432 if (*format != 'd' && *format != 'o' && *format != 'x'
3433 && *format != 'i' && *format != 'X' && *format != 'c')
3434 error ("Invalid format operation %%%c", *format);
3435 args[n] = Ftruncate (args[n], Qnil);
3436 }
3437
3438 /* Note that we're using sprintf to print floats,
3439 so we have to take into account what that function
3440 prints. */
3441 /* Filter out flag value of -1. */
3442 thissize = (MAX_10_EXP + 100
3443 + (precision[n] > 0 ? precision[n] : 0));
3444 }
3445 else
3446 {
3447 /* Anything but a string, convert to a string using princ. */
3448 register Lisp_Object tem;
3449 tem = Fprin1_to_string (args[n], Qt);
3450 if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (tem) && ! multibyte)
3451 {
3452 multibyte = 1;
3453 goto retry;
3454 }
3455 args[n] = tem;
3456 goto string;
3457 }
3458
3459 thissize += max (0, field_width - actual_width);
3460 total += thissize + 4;
3461 }
3462
3463 abort_on_gc--;
3464
3465 /* Now we can no longer jump to retry.
3466 TOTAL and LONGEST_FORMAT are known for certain. */
3467
3468 this_format = (unsigned char *) alloca (longest_format + 1);
3469
3470 /* Allocate the space for the result.
3471 Note that TOTAL is an overestimate. */
3472 if (total < 1000)
3473 buf = (char *) alloca (total + 1);
3474 else
3475 buf = (char *) xmalloc (total + 1);
3476
3477 p = buf;
3478 nchars = 0;
3479 n = 0;
3480
3481 /* Scan the format and store result in BUF. */
3482 format = SDATA (args[0]);
3483 format_start = format;
3484 end = format + SBYTES (args[0]);
3485 maybe_combine_byte = 0;
3486 while (format != end)
3487 {
3488 if (*format == '%')
3489 {
3490 int minlen;
3491 int negative = 0;
3492 unsigned char *this_format_start = format;
3493
3494 discarded[format - format_start] = 1;
3495 format++;
3496
3497 /* Process a numeric arg and skip it. */
3498 /* NOTE atoi is the wrong thing to use here; will be fixed */
3499 minlen = atoi (format);
3500 if (minlen < 0)
3501 minlen = - minlen, negative = 1;
3502
3503 /* NOTE the parsing here is not consistent with the first
3504 pass, and neither attempt is what we want to do. Will be
3505 fixed. */
3506 while ((*format >= '0' && *format <= '9')
3507 || *format == '-' || *format == ' ' || *format == '.')
3508 {
3509 discarded[format - format_start] = 1;
3510 format++;
3511 }
3512
3513 if (*format++ == '%')
3514 {
3515 *p++ = '%';
3516 nchars++;
3517 continue;
3518 }
3519
3520 ++n;
3521
3522 discarded[format - format_start - 1] = 1;
3523 info[n].start = nchars;
3524
3525 if (STRINGP (args[n]))
3526 {
3527 /* handle case (precision[n] >= 0) */
3528
3529 int width, padding;
3530 int nbytes, start, end;
3531 int nchars_string;
3532
3533 /* lisp_string_width ignores a precision of 0, but GNU
3534 libc functions print 0 characters when the precision
3535 is 0. Imitate libc behavior here. Changing
3536 lisp_string_width is the right thing, and will be
3537 done, but meanwhile we work with it. */
3538
3539 if (precision[n] == 0)
3540 width = nchars_string = nbytes = 0;
3541 else if (precision[n] > 0)
3542 width = lisp_string_width (args[n], precision[n], &nchars_string, &nbytes);
3543 else
3544 { /* no precision spec given for this argument */
3545 width = lisp_string_width (args[n], -1, NULL, NULL);
3546 nbytes = SBYTES (args[n]);
3547 nchars_string = SCHARS (args[n]);
3548 }
3549
3550 /* If spec requires it, pad on right with spaces. */
3551 padding = minlen - width;
3552 if (! negative)
3553 while (padding-- > 0)
3554 {
3555 *p++ = ' ';
3556 ++nchars;
3557 }
3558
3559 start = nchars;
3560 nchars += nchars_string;
3561 end = nchars;
3562
3563 if (p > buf
3564 && multibyte
3565 && !ASCII_BYTE_P (*((unsigned char *) p - 1))
3566 && STRING_MULTIBYTE (args[n])
3567 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (SREF (args[n], 0)))
3568 maybe_combine_byte = 1;
3569
3570 p += copy_text (SDATA (args[n]), p,
3571 nbytes,
3572 STRING_MULTIBYTE (args[n]), multibyte);
3573
3574 if (negative)
3575 while (padding-- > 0)
3576 {
3577 *p++ = ' ';
3578 nchars++;
3579 }
3580
3581 /* If this argument has text properties, record where
3582 in the result string it appears. */
3583 if (STRING_INTERVALS (args[n]))
3584 info[n].intervals = arg_intervals = 1;
3585 }
3586 else if (INTEGERP (args[n]) || FLOATP (args[n]))
3587 {
3588 int this_nchars;
3589
3590 bcopy (this_format_start, this_format,
3591 format - this_format_start);
3592 this_format[format - this_format_start] = 0;
3593
3594 if (INTEGERP (args[n]))
3595 sprintf (p, this_format, XINT (args[n]));
3596 else
3597 sprintf (p, this_format, XFLOAT_DATA (args[n]));
3598
3599 if (p > buf
3600 && multibyte
3601 && !ASCII_BYTE_P (*((unsigned char *) p - 1))
3602 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (*((unsigned char *) p)))
3603 maybe_combine_byte = 1;
3604 this_nchars = strlen (p);
3605 if (multibyte)
3606 p += str_to_multibyte (p, buf + total - p, this_nchars);
3607 else
3608 p += this_nchars;
3609 nchars += this_nchars;
3610 }
3611
3612 info[n].end = nchars;
3613 }
3614 else if (STRING_MULTIBYTE (args[0]))
3615 {
3616 /* Copy a whole multibyte character. */
3617 if (p > buf
3618 && multibyte
3619 && !ASCII_BYTE_P (*((unsigned char *) p - 1))
3620 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (*format))
3621 maybe_combine_byte = 1;
3622 *p++ = *format++;
3623 while (! CHAR_HEAD_P (*format))
3624 {
3625 discarded[format - format_start] = 2;
3626 *p++ = *format++;
3627 }
3628 nchars++;
3629 }
3630 else if (multibyte)
3631 {
3632 /* Convert a single-byte character to multibyte. */
3633 int len = copy_text (format, p, 1, 0, 1);
3634
3635 p += len;
3636 format++;
3637 nchars++;
3638 }
3639 else
3640 *p++ = *format++, nchars++;
3641 }
3642
3643 if (p > buf + total + 1)
3644 abort ();
3645
3646 if (maybe_combine_byte)
3647 nchars = multibyte_chars_in_text (buf, p - buf);
3648 val = make_specified_string (buf, nchars, p - buf, multibyte);
3649
3650 /* If we allocated BUF with malloc, free it too. */
3651 if (total >= 1000)
3652 xfree (buf);
3653
3654 /* If the format string has text properties, or any of the string
3655 arguments has text properties, set up text properties of the
3656 result string. */
3657
3658 if (STRING_INTERVALS (args[0]) || arg_intervals)
3659 {
3660 Lisp_Object len, new_len, props;
3661 struct gcpro gcpro1;
3662
3663 /* Add text properties from the format string. */
3664 len = make_number (SCHARS (args[0]));
3665 props = text_property_list (args[0], make_number (0), len, Qnil);
3666 GCPRO1 (props);
3667
3668 if (CONSP (props))
3669 {
3670 int bytepos = 0, position = 0, translated = 0, argn = 1;
3671 Lisp_Object list;
3672
3673 /* Adjust the bounds of each text property
3674 to the proper start and end in the output string. */
3675 /* We take advantage of the fact that the positions in PROPS
3676 are in increasing order, so that we can do (effectively)
3677 one scan through the position space of the format string.
3678
3679 BYTEPOS is the byte position in the format string,
3680 POSITION is the untranslated char position in it,
3681 TRANSLATED is the translated char position in BUF,
3682 and ARGN is the number of the next arg we will come to. */
3683 for (list = props; CONSP (list); list = XCDR (list))
3684 {
3685 Lisp_Object item;
3686 int pos;
3687
3688 item = XCAR (list);
3689
3690 /* First adjust the property start position. */
3691 pos = XINT (XCAR (item));
3692
3693 /* Advance BYTEPOS, POSITION, TRANSLATED and ARGN
3694 up to this position. */
3695 for (; position < pos; bytepos++)
3696 {
3697 if (! discarded[bytepos])
3698 position++, translated++;
3699 else if (discarded[bytepos] == 1)
3700 {
3701 position++;
3702 if (translated == info[argn].start)
3703 {
3704 translated += info[argn].end - info[argn].start;
3705 argn++;
3706 }
3707 }
3708 }
3709
3710 XSETCAR (item, make_number (translated));
3711
3712 /* Likewise adjust the property end position. */
3713 pos = XINT (XCAR (XCDR (item)));
3714
3715 for (; bytepos < pos; bytepos++)
3716 {
3717 if (! discarded[bytepos])
3718 position++, translated++;
3719 else if (discarded[bytepos] == 1)
3720 {
3721 position++;
3722 if (translated == info[argn].start)
3723 {
3724 translated += info[argn].end - info[argn].start;
3725 argn++;
3726 }
3727 }
3728 }
3729
3730 XSETCAR (XCDR (item), make_number (translated));
3731 }
3732
3733 add_text_properties_from_list (val, props, make_number (0));
3734 }
3735
3736 /* Add text properties from arguments. */
3737 if (arg_intervals)
3738 for (n = 1; n < nargs; ++n)
3739 if (info[n].intervals)
3740 {
3741 len = make_number (SCHARS (args[n]));
3742 new_len = make_number (info[n].end - info[n].start);
3743 props = text_property_list (args[n], make_number (0), len, Qnil);
3744 extend_property_ranges (props, len, new_len);
3745 /* If successive arguments have properites, be sure that
3746 the value of `composition' property be the copy. */
3747 if (n > 1 && info[n - 1].end)
3748 make_composition_value_copy (props);
3749 add_text_properties_from_list (val, props,
3750 make_number (info[n].start));
3751 }
3752
3753 UNGCPRO;
3754 }
3755
3756 return val;
3757 }
3758
3759 Lisp_Object
3760 format2 (string1, arg0, arg1)
3761 char *string1;
3762 Lisp_Object arg0, arg1;
3763 {
3764 Lisp_Object args[3];
3765 args[0] = build_string (string1);
3766 args[1] = arg0;
3767 args[2] = arg1;
3768 return Fformat (3, args);
3769 }
3770 \f
3771 DEFUN ("char-equal", Fchar_equal, Schar_equal, 2, 2, 0,
3772 doc: /* Return t if two characters match, optionally ignoring case.
3773 Both arguments must be characters (i.e. integers).
3774 Case is ignored if `case-fold-search' is non-nil in the current buffer. */)
3775 (c1, c2)
3776 register Lisp_Object c1, c2;
3777 {
3778 int i1, i2;
3779 CHECK_NUMBER (c1);
3780 CHECK_NUMBER (c2);
3781
3782 if (XINT (c1) == XINT (c2))
3783 return Qt;
3784 if (NILP (current_buffer->case_fold_search))
3785 return Qnil;
3786
3787 /* Do these in separate statements,
3788 then compare the variables.
3789 because of the way DOWNCASE uses temp variables. */
3790 i1 = DOWNCASE (XFASTINT (c1));
3791 i2 = DOWNCASE (XFASTINT (c2));
3792 return (i1 == i2 ? Qt : Qnil);
3793 }
3794 \f
3795 /* Transpose the markers in two regions of the current buffer, and
3796 adjust the ones between them if necessary (i.e.: if the regions
3797 differ in size).
3798
3799 START1, END1 are the character positions of the first region.
3800 START1_BYTE, END1_BYTE are the byte positions.
3801 START2, END2 are the character positions of the second region.
3802 START2_BYTE, END2_BYTE are the byte positions.
3803
3804 Traverses the entire marker list of the buffer to do so, adding an
3805 appropriate amount to some, subtracting from some, and leaving the
3806 rest untouched. Most of this is copied from adjust_markers in insdel.c.
3807
3808 It's the caller's job to ensure that START1 <= END1 <= START2 <= END2. */
3809
3810 static void
3811 transpose_markers (start1, end1, start2, end2,
3812 start1_byte, end1_byte, start2_byte, end2_byte)
3813 register int start1, end1, start2, end2;
3814 register int start1_byte, end1_byte, start2_byte, end2_byte;
3815 {
3816 register int amt1, amt1_byte, amt2, amt2_byte, diff, diff_byte, mpos;
3817 register struct Lisp_Marker *marker;
3818
3819 /* Update point as if it were a marker. */
3820 if (PT < start1)
3821 ;
3822 else if (PT < end1)
3823 TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH (PT + (end2 - end1),
3824 PT_BYTE + (end2_byte - end1_byte));
3825 else if (PT < start2)
3826 TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH (PT + (end2 - start2) - (end1 - start1),
3827 (PT_BYTE + (end2_byte - start2_byte)
3828 - (end1_byte - start1_byte)));
3829 else if (PT < end2)
3830 TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH (PT - (start2 - start1),
3831 PT_BYTE - (start2_byte - start1_byte));
3832
3833 /* We used to adjust the endpoints here to account for the gap, but that
3834 isn't good enough. Even if we assume the caller has tried to move the
3835 gap out of our way, it might still be at start1 exactly, for example;
3836 and that places it `inside' the interval, for our purposes. The amount
3837 of adjustment is nontrivial if there's a `denormalized' marker whose
3838 position is between GPT and GPT + GAP_SIZE, so it's simpler to leave
3839 the dirty work to Fmarker_position, below. */
3840
3841 /* The difference between the region's lengths */
3842 diff = (end2 - start2) - (end1 - start1);
3843 diff_byte = (end2_byte - start2_byte) - (end1_byte - start1_byte);
3844
3845 /* For shifting each marker in a region by the length of the other
3846 region plus the distance between the regions. */
3847 amt1 = (end2 - start2) + (start2 - end1);
3848 amt2 = (end1 - start1) + (start2 - end1);
3849 amt1_byte = (end2_byte - start2_byte) + (start2_byte - end1_byte);
3850 amt2_byte = (end1_byte - start1_byte) + (start2_byte - end1_byte);
3851
3852 for (marker = BUF_MARKERS (current_buffer); marker; marker = marker->next)
3853 {
3854 mpos = marker->bytepos;
3855 if (mpos >= start1_byte && mpos < end2_byte)
3856 {
3857 if (mpos < end1_byte)
3858 mpos += amt1_byte;
3859 else if (mpos < start2_byte)
3860 mpos += diff_byte;
3861 else
3862 mpos -= amt2_byte;
3863 marker->bytepos = mpos;
3864 }
3865 mpos = marker->charpos;
3866 if (mpos >= start1 && mpos < end2)
3867 {
3868 if (mpos < end1)
3869 mpos += amt1;
3870 else if (mpos < start2)
3871 mpos += diff;
3872 else
3873 mpos -= amt2;
3874 }
3875 marker->charpos = mpos;
3876 }
3877 }
3878
3879 DEFUN ("transpose-regions", Ftranspose_regions, Stranspose_regions, 4, 5, 0,
3880 doc: /* Transpose region START1 to END1 with START2 to END2.
3881 The regions may not be overlapping, because the size of the buffer is
3882 never changed in a transposition.
3883
3884 Optional fifth arg LEAVE_MARKERS, if non-nil, means don't update
3885 any markers that happen to be located in the regions.
3886
3887 Transposing beyond buffer boundaries is an error. */)
3888 (startr1, endr1, startr2, endr2, leave_markers)
3889 Lisp_Object startr1, endr1, startr2, endr2, leave_markers;
3890 {
3891 register int start1, end1, start2, end2;
3892 int start1_byte, start2_byte, len1_byte, len2_byte;
3893 int gap, len1, len_mid, len2;
3894 unsigned char *start1_addr, *start2_addr, *temp;
3895
3896 INTERVAL cur_intv, tmp_interval1, tmp_interval_mid, tmp_interval2;
3897 cur_intv = BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer);
3898
3899 validate_region (&startr1, &endr1);
3900 validate_region (&startr2, &endr2);
3901
3902 start1 = XFASTINT (startr1);
3903 end1 = XFASTINT (endr1);
3904 start2 = XFASTINT (startr2);
3905 end2 = XFASTINT (endr2);
3906 gap = GPT;
3907
3908 /* Swap the regions if they're reversed. */
3909 if (start2 < end1)
3910 {
3911 register int glumph = start1;
3912 start1 = start2;
3913 start2 = glumph;
3914 glumph = end1;
3915 end1 = end2;
3916 end2 = glumph;
3917 }
3918
3919 len1 = end1 - start1;
3920 len2 = end2 - start2;
3921
3922 if (start2 < end1)
3923 error ("Transposed regions overlap");
3924 else if (start1 == end1 || start2 == end2)
3925 error ("Transposed region has length 0");
3926
3927 /* The possibilities are:
3928 1. Adjacent (contiguous) regions, or separate but equal regions
3929 (no, really equal, in this case!), or
3930 2. Separate regions of unequal size.
3931
3932 The worst case is usually No. 2. It means that (aside from
3933 potential need for getting the gap out of the way), there also
3934 needs to be a shifting of the text between the two regions. So
3935 if they are spread far apart, we are that much slower... sigh. */
3936
3937 /* It must be pointed out that the really studly thing to do would
3938 be not to move the gap at all, but to leave it in place and work
3939 around it if necessary. This would be extremely efficient,
3940 especially considering that people are likely to do
3941 transpositions near where they are working interactively, which
3942 is exactly where the gap would be found. However, such code
3943 would be much harder to write and to read. So, if you are
3944 reading this comment and are feeling squirrely, by all means have
3945 a go! I just didn't feel like doing it, so I will simply move
3946 the gap the minimum distance to get it out of the way, and then
3947 deal with an unbroken array. */
3948
3949 /* Make sure the gap won't interfere, by moving it out of the text
3950 we will operate on. */
3951 if (start1 < gap && gap < end2)
3952 {
3953 if (gap - start1 < end2 - gap)
3954 move_gap (start1);
3955 else
3956 move_gap (end2);
3957 }
3958
3959 start1_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (start1);
3960 start2_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (start2);
3961 len1_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (end1) - start1_byte;
3962 len2_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (end2) - start2_byte;
3963
3964 #ifdef BYTE_COMBINING_DEBUG
3965 if (end1 == start2)
3966 {
3967 if (count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte),
3968 len2_byte, start1, start1_byte)
3969 || count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte),
3970 len1_byte, end2, start2_byte + len2_byte)
3971 || count_combining_after (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte),
3972 len1_byte, end2, start2_byte + len2_byte))
3973 abort ();
3974 }
3975 else
3976 {
3977 if (count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte),
3978 len2_byte, start1, start1_byte)
3979 || count_combining_before (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte),
3980 len1_byte, start2, start2_byte)
3981 || count_combining_after (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte),
3982 len2_byte, end1, start1_byte + len1_byte)
3983 || count_combining_after (BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte),
3984 len1_byte, end2, start2_byte + len2_byte))
3985 abort ();
3986 }
3987 #endif
3988
3989 /* Hmmm... how about checking to see if the gap is large
3990 enough to use as the temporary storage? That would avoid an
3991 allocation... interesting. Later, don't fool with it now. */
3992
3993 /* Working without memmove, for portability (sigh), so must be
3994 careful of overlapping subsections of the array... */
3995
3996 if (end1 == start2) /* adjacent regions */
3997 {
3998 modify_region (current_buffer, start1, end2);
3999 record_change (start1, len1 + len2);
4000
4001 tmp_interval1 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start1, len1);
4002 tmp_interval2 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start2, len2);
4003 Fset_text_properties (make_number (start1), make_number (end2),
4004 Qnil, Qnil);
4005
4006 /* First region smaller than second. */
4007 if (len1_byte < len2_byte)
4008 {
4009 /* We use alloca only if it is small,
4010 because we want to avoid stack overflow. */
4011 if (len2_byte > 20000)
4012 temp = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (len2_byte);
4013 else
4014 temp = (unsigned char *) alloca (len2_byte);
4015
4016 /* Don't precompute these addresses. We have to compute them
4017 at the last minute, because the relocating allocator might
4018 have moved the buffer around during the xmalloc. */
4019 start1_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte);
4020 start2_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte);
4021
4022 bcopy (start2_addr, temp, len2_byte);
4023 bcopy (start1_addr, start1_addr + len2_byte, len1_byte);
4024 bcopy (temp, start1_addr, len2_byte);
4025 if (len2_byte > 20000)
4026 xfree (temp);
4027 }
4028 else
4029 /* First region not smaller than second. */
4030 {
4031 if (len1_byte > 20000)
4032 temp = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (len1_byte);
4033 else
4034 temp = (unsigned char *) alloca (len1_byte);
4035 start1_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte);
4036 start2_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte);
4037 bcopy (start1_addr, temp, len1_byte);
4038 bcopy (start2_addr, start1_addr, len2_byte);
4039 bcopy (temp, start1_addr + len2_byte, len1_byte);
4040 if (len1_byte > 20000)
4041 xfree (temp);
4042 }
4043 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1, start1 + len2,
4044 len1, current_buffer, 0);
4045 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2, start1,
4046 len2, current_buffer, 0);
4047 update_compositions (start1, start1 + len2, CHECK_BORDER);
4048 update_compositions (start1 + len2, end2, CHECK_TAIL);
4049 }
4050 /* Non-adjacent regions, because end1 != start2, bleagh... */
4051 else
4052 {
4053 len_mid = start2_byte - (start1_byte + len1_byte);
4054
4055 if (len1_byte == len2_byte)
4056 /* Regions are same size, though, how nice. */
4057 {
4058 modify_region (current_buffer, start1, end1);
4059 modify_region (current_buffer, start2, end2);
4060 record_change (start1, len1);
4061 record_change (start2, len2);
4062 tmp_interval1 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start1, len1);
4063 tmp_interval2 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start2, len2);
4064 Fset_text_properties (make_number (start1), make_number (end1),
4065 Qnil, Qnil);
4066 Fset_text_properties (make_number (start2), make_number (end2),
4067 Qnil, Qnil);
4068
4069 if (len1_byte > 20000)
4070 temp = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (len1_byte);
4071 else
4072 temp = (unsigned char *) alloca (len1_byte);
4073 start1_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte);
4074 start2_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte);
4075 bcopy (start1_addr, temp, len1_byte);
4076 bcopy (start2_addr, start1_addr, len2_byte);
4077 bcopy (temp, start2_addr, len1_byte);
4078 if (len1_byte > 20000)
4079 xfree (temp);
4080 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1, start2,
4081 len1, current_buffer, 0);
4082 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2, start1,
4083 len2, current_buffer, 0);
4084 }
4085
4086 else if (len1_byte < len2_byte) /* Second region larger than first */
4087 /* Non-adjacent & unequal size, area between must also be shifted. */
4088 {
4089 modify_region (current_buffer, start1, end2);
4090 record_change (start1, (end2 - start1));
4091 tmp_interval1 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start1, len1);
4092 tmp_interval_mid = copy_intervals (cur_intv, end1, len_mid);
4093 tmp_interval2 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start2, len2);
4094 Fset_text_properties (make_number (start1), make_number (end2),
4095 Qnil, Qnil);
4096
4097 /* holds region 2 */
4098 if (len2_byte > 20000)
4099 temp = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (len2_byte);
4100 else
4101 temp = (unsigned char *) alloca (len2_byte);
4102 start1_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte);
4103 start2_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte);
4104 bcopy (start2_addr, temp, len2_byte);
4105 bcopy (start1_addr, start1_addr + len_mid + len2_byte, len1_byte);
4106 safe_bcopy (start1_addr + len1_byte, start1_addr + len2_byte, len_mid);
4107 bcopy (temp, start1_addr, len2_byte);
4108 if (len2_byte > 20000)
4109 xfree (temp);
4110 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1, end2 - len1,
4111 len1, current_buffer, 0);
4112 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval_mid, start1 + len2,
4113 len_mid, current_buffer, 0);
4114 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2, start1,
4115 len2, current_buffer, 0);
4116 }
4117 else
4118 /* Second region smaller than first. */
4119 {
4120 record_change (start1, (end2 - start1));
4121 modify_region (current_buffer, start1, end2);
4122
4123 tmp_interval1 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start1, len1);
4124 tmp_interval_mid = copy_intervals (cur_intv, end1, len_mid);
4125 tmp_interval2 = copy_intervals (cur_intv, start2, len2);
4126 Fset_text_properties (make_number (start1), make_number (end2),
4127 Qnil, Qnil);
4128
4129 /* holds region 1 */
4130 if (len1_byte > 20000)
4131 temp = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (len1_byte);
4132 else
4133 temp = (unsigned char *) alloca (len1_byte);
4134 start1_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start1_byte);
4135 start2_addr = BYTE_POS_ADDR (start2_byte);
4136 bcopy (start1_addr, temp, len1_byte);
4137 bcopy (start2_addr, start1_addr, len2_byte);
4138 bcopy (start1_addr + len1_byte, start1_addr + len2_byte, len_mid);
4139 bcopy (temp, start1_addr + len2_byte + len_mid, len1_byte);
4140 if (len1_byte > 20000)
4141 xfree (temp);
4142 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval1, end2 - len1,
4143 len1, current_buffer, 0);
4144 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval_mid, start1 + len2,
4145 len_mid, current_buffer, 0);
4146 graft_intervals_into_buffer (tmp_interval2, start1,
4147 len2, current_buffer, 0);
4148 }
4149
4150 update_compositions (start1, start1 + len2, CHECK_BORDER);
4151 update_compositions (end2 - len1, end2, CHECK_BORDER);
4152 }
4153
4154 /* When doing multiple transpositions, it might be nice
4155 to optimize this. Perhaps the markers in any one buffer
4156 should be organized in some sorted data tree. */
4157 if (NILP (leave_markers))
4158 {
4159 transpose_markers (start1, end1, start2, end2,
4160 start1_byte, start1_byte + len1_byte,
4161 start2_byte, start2_byte + len2_byte);
4162 fix_overlays_in_range (start1, end2);
4163 }
4164
4165 return Qnil;
4166 }
4167
4168 \f
4169 void
4170 syms_of_editfns ()
4171 {
4172 environbuf = 0;
4173
4174 Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions
4175 = intern ("buffer-access-fontify-functions");
4176 staticpro (&Qbuffer_access_fontify_functions);
4177
4178 DEFVAR_LISP ("inhibit-field-text-motion", &Vinhibit_field_text_motion,
4179 doc: /* Non-nil means text motion commands don't notice fields. */);
4180 Vinhibit_field_text_motion = Qnil;
4181
4182 DEFVAR_LISP ("buffer-access-fontify-functions",
4183 &Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions,
4184 doc: /* List of functions called by `buffer-substring' to fontify if necessary.
4185 Each function is called with two arguments which specify the range
4186 of the buffer being accessed. */);
4187 Vbuffer_access_fontify_functions = Qnil;
4188
4189 {
4190 Lisp_Object obuf;
4191 extern Lisp_Object Vprin1_to_string_buffer;
4192 obuf = Fcurrent_buffer ();
4193 /* Do this here, because init_buffer_once is too early--it won't work. */
4194 Fset_buffer (Vprin1_to_string_buffer);
4195 /* Make sure buffer-access-fontify-functions is nil in this buffer. */
4196 Fset (Fmake_local_variable (intern ("buffer-access-fontify-functions")),
4197 Qnil);
4198 Fset_buffer (obuf);
4199 }
4200
4201 DEFVAR_LISP ("buffer-access-fontified-property",
4202 &Vbuffer_access_fontified_property,
4203 doc: /* Property which (if non-nil) indicates text has been fontified.
4204 `buffer-substring' need not call the `buffer-access-fontify-functions'
4205 functions if all the text being accessed has this property. */);
4206 Vbuffer_access_fontified_property = Qnil;
4207
4208 DEFVAR_LISP ("system-name", &Vsystem_name,
4209 doc: /* The name of the machine Emacs is running on. */);
4210
4211 DEFVAR_LISP ("user-full-name", &Vuser_full_name,
4212 doc: /* The full name of the user logged in. */);
4213
4214 DEFVAR_LISP ("user-login-name", &Vuser_login_name,
4215 doc: /* The user's name, taken from environment variables if possible. */);
4216
4217 DEFVAR_LISP ("user-real-login-name", &Vuser_real_login_name,
4218 doc: /* The user's name, based upon the real uid only. */);
4219
4220 defsubr (&Spropertize);
4221 defsubr (&Schar_equal);
4222 defsubr (&Sgoto_char);
4223 defsubr (&Sstring_to_char);
4224 defsubr (&Schar_to_string);
4225 defsubr (&Sbuffer_substring);
4226 defsubr (&Sbuffer_substring_no_properties);
4227 defsubr (&Sbuffer_string);
4228
4229 defsubr (&Spoint_marker);
4230 defsubr (&Smark_marker);
4231 defsubr (&Spoint);
4232 defsubr (&Sregion_beginning);
4233 defsubr (&Sregion_end);
4234
4235 staticpro (&Qfield);
4236 Qfield = intern ("field");
4237 staticpro (&Qboundary);
4238 Qboundary = intern ("boundary");
4239 defsubr (&Sfield_beginning);
4240 defsubr (&Sfield_end);
4241 defsubr (&Sfield_string);
4242 defsubr (&Sfield_string_no_properties);
4243 defsubr (&Sdelete_field);
4244 defsubr (&Sconstrain_to_field);
4245
4246 defsubr (&Sline_beginning_position);
4247 defsubr (&Sline_end_position);
4248
4249 /* defsubr (&Smark); */
4250 /* defsubr (&Sset_mark); */
4251 defsubr (&Ssave_excursion);
4252 defsubr (&Ssave_current_buffer);
4253
4254 defsubr (&Sbufsize);
4255 defsubr (&Spoint_max);
4256 defsubr (&Spoint_min);
4257 defsubr (&Spoint_min_marker);
4258 defsubr (&Spoint_max_marker);
4259 defsubr (&Sgap_position);
4260 defsubr (&Sgap_size);
4261 defsubr (&Sposition_bytes);
4262 defsubr (&Sbyte_to_position);
4263
4264 defsubr (&Sbobp);
4265 defsubr (&Seobp);
4266 defsubr (&Sbolp);
4267 defsubr (&Seolp);
4268 defsubr (&Sfollowing_char);
4269 defsubr (&Sprevious_char);
4270 defsubr (&Schar_after);
4271 defsubr (&Schar_before);
4272 defsubr (&Sinsert);
4273 defsubr (&Sinsert_before_markers);
4274 defsubr (&Sinsert_and_inherit);
4275 defsubr (&Sinsert_and_inherit_before_markers);
4276 defsubr (&Sinsert_char);
4277
4278 defsubr (&Suser_login_name);
4279 defsubr (&Suser_real_login_name);
4280 defsubr (&Suser_uid);
4281 defsubr (&Suser_real_uid);
4282 defsubr (&Suser_full_name);
4283 defsubr (&Semacs_pid);
4284 defsubr (&Scurrent_time);
4285 defsubr (&Sformat_time_string);
4286 defsubr (&Sfloat_time);
4287 defsubr (&Sdecode_time);
4288 defsubr (&Sencode_time);
4289 defsubr (&Scurrent_time_string);
4290 defsubr (&Scurrent_time_zone);
4291 defsubr (&Sset_time_zone_rule);
4292 defsubr (&Ssystem_name);
4293 defsubr (&Smessage);
4294 defsubr (&Smessage_box);
4295 defsubr (&Smessage_or_box);
4296 defsubr (&Scurrent_message);
4297 defsubr (&Sformat);
4298
4299 defsubr (&Sinsert_buffer_substring);
4300 defsubr (&Scompare_buffer_substrings);
4301 defsubr (&Ssubst_char_in_region);
4302 defsubr (&Stranslate_region);
4303 defsubr (&Sdelete_region);
4304 defsubr (&Sdelete_and_extract_region);
4305 defsubr (&Swiden);
4306 defsubr (&Snarrow_to_region);
4307 defsubr (&Ssave_restriction);
4308 defsubr (&Stranspose_regions);
4309 }
4310
4311 /* arch-tag: fc3827d8-6f60-4067-b11e-c3218031b018
4312 (do not change this comment) */