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1 /* Declarations useful when processing input.
2 Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
3 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 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 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) 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. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #include "systime.h" /* for EMACS_TIME */
21 #include "coding.h" /* for ENCODE_UTF_8 and ENCODE_SYSTEM */
22
23 /* Length of echobuf field in each KBOARD. */
24
25 /* Each KBOARD represents one logical input stream from which Emacs
26 gets input. If we are using ordinary terminals, it has one KBOARD
27 object for each terminal device.
28 Usually each X display screen has its own KBOARD,
29 but when two of them are on the same X server,
30 we assume they share a keyboard and give them one KBOARD in common.
31
32 Some Lisp variables are per-kboard; they are stored in the KBOARD structure
33 and accessed indirectly via a Lisp_Misc_Kboard_Objfwd object.
34
35 So that definition of keyboard macros, and reading of prefix arguments,
36 can happen in parallel on various KBOARDs at once,
37 the state information for those activities is stored in the KBOARD.
38
39 Emacs has two states for reading input:
40
41 ** Any kboard. Emacs can accept input from any KBOARD,
42 and as soon as any of them provides a complete command, Emacs can run it.
43
44 ** Single kboard. Then Emacs is running a command for one KBOARD
45 and can only read input from that KBOARD.
46
47 All input, from all KBOARDs, goes together in a single event queue
48 at interrupt level. read_char sees the events sequentially,
49 but deals with them in accord with the current input state.
50
51 In the any-kboard state, read_key_sequence processes input from any KBOARD
52 immediately. When a new event comes in from a particular KBOARD,
53 read_key_sequence switches to that KBOARD. As a result,
54 as soon as a complete key arrives from some KBOARD or other,
55 Emacs starts executing that key's binding. It switches to the
56 single-kboard state for the execution of that command,
57 so that that command can get input only from its own KBOARD.
58
59 While in the single-kboard state, read_char can consider input only
60 from the current KBOARD. If events come from other KBOARDs, they
61 are put aside for later in the KBOARDs' kbd_queue lists.
62 The flag kbd_queue_has_data in a KBOARD is 1 if this has happened.
63 When Emacs goes back to the any-kboard state, it looks at all the KBOARDs
64 to find those; and it tries processing their input right away. */
65
66 typedef struct kboard KBOARD;
67 struct kboard
68 {
69 KBOARD *next_kboard;
70
71 /* If non-nil, a keymap that overrides all others but applies only to
72 this KBOARD. Lisp code that uses this instead of calling read-char
73 can effectively wait for input in the any-kboard state, and hence
74 avoid blocking out the other KBOARDs. See universal-argument in
75 lisp/simple.el for an example. */
76 Lisp_Object Voverriding_terminal_local_map;
77
78 /* Last command executed by the editor command loop, not counting
79 commands that set the prefix argument. */
80 Lisp_Object Vlast_command;
81
82 /* Normally same as last-command, but never modified by other commands. */
83 Lisp_Object Vreal_last_command;
84
85 /* User-supplied table to translate input characters through. */
86 Lisp_Object Vkeyboard_translate_table;
87
88 /* Last command that may be repeated by `repeat'. */
89 Lisp_Object Vlast_repeatable_command;
90
91 /* The prefix argument for the next command, in raw form. */
92 Lisp_Object Vprefix_arg;
93
94 /* Saved prefix argument for the last command, in raw form. */
95 Lisp_Object Vlast_prefix_arg;
96
97 /* Unread events specific to this kboard. */
98 Lisp_Object kbd_queue;
99
100 /* Non-nil while a kbd macro is being defined. */
101 Lisp_Object defining_kbd_macro;
102
103 /* The start of storage for the current keyboard macro. */
104 Lisp_Object *kbd_macro_buffer;
105
106 /* Where to store the next keystroke of the macro. */
107 Lisp_Object *kbd_macro_ptr;
108
109 /* The finalized section of the macro starts at kbd_macro_buffer and
110 ends before this. This is not the same as kbd_macro_ptr, because
111 we advance this to kbd_macro_ptr when a key's command is complete.
112 This way, the keystrokes for "end-kbd-macro" are not included in the
113 macro. This also allows us to throw away the events added to the
114 macro by the last command: all the events between kbd_macro_end and
115 kbd_macro_ptr belong to the last command; see
116 cancel-kbd-macro-events. */
117 Lisp_Object *kbd_macro_end;
118
119 /* Allocated size of kbd_macro_buffer. */
120 int kbd_macro_bufsize;
121
122 /* Last anonymous kbd macro defined. */
123 Lisp_Object Vlast_kbd_macro;
124
125 /* Alist of system-specific X windows key symbols. */
126 Lisp_Object Vsystem_key_alist;
127
128 /* Cache for modify_event_symbol. */
129 Lisp_Object system_key_syms;
130
131 /* The kind of display: x, w32, ... */
132 Lisp_Object Vwindow_system;
133
134 /* Keymap mapping keys to alternative preferred forms.
135 See the DEFVAR for more documentation. */
136 Lisp_Object Vlocal_function_key_map;
137
138 /* Keymap mapping ASCII function key sequences onto their preferred
139 forms. Initialized by the terminal-specific lisp files. See the
140 DEFVAR for more documentation. */
141 Lisp_Object Vinput_decode_map;
142
143 /* Minibufferless frames on this display use this frame's minibuffer. */
144 Lisp_Object Vdefault_minibuffer_frame;
145
146 /* Number of displays using this KBOARD. Normally 1, but can be
147 larger when you have multiple screens on a single X display. */
148 int reference_count;
149
150 /* The text we're echoing in the modeline - partial key sequences,
151 usually. This is nil when not echoing. */
152 Lisp_Object echo_string;
153
154 /* This flag indicates that events were put into kbd_queue
155 while Emacs was running for some other KBOARD.
156 The flag means that, when Emacs goes into the any-kboard state again,
157 it should check this KBOARD to see if there is a complete command
158 waiting.
159
160 Note that the kbd_queue field can be non-nil even when
161 kbd_queue_has_data is 0. When we push back an incomplete
162 command, then this flag is 0, meaning we don't want to try
163 reading from this KBOARD again until more input arrives. */
164 char kbd_queue_has_data;
165
166 /* Nonzero means echo each character as typed. */
167 char immediate_echo;
168
169 /* If we have echoed a prompt string specified by the user,
170 this is its length in characters. Otherwise this is -1. */
171 char echo_after_prompt;
172 };
173
174 /* Temporarily used before a frame has been opened. */
175 extern KBOARD *initial_kboard;
176
177 /* In the single-kboard state, this is the kboard
178 from which input is accepted.
179
180 In the any-kboard state, this is the kboard from which we are
181 right now considering input. We can consider input from another
182 kboard, but doing so requires throwing to wrong_kboard_jmpbuf. */
183 extern KBOARD *current_kboard;
184
185 /* A list of all kboard objects, linked through next_kboard. */
186 extern KBOARD *all_kboards;
187
188 /* Nonzero in the single-kboard state, 0 in the any-kboard state. */
189 extern int single_kboard;
190 \f
191 /* Total number of times read_char has returned. */
192 extern int num_input_events;
193
194 /* Nonzero means polling for input is temporarily suppressed. */
195 extern int poll_suppress_count;
196
197 /* Vector holding the key sequence that invoked the current command.
198 It is reused for each command, and it may be longer than the current
199 sequence; this_command_key_count indicates how many elements
200 actually mean something. */
201 extern Lisp_Object this_command_keys;
202 extern int this_command_key_count;
203
204 /* The frame in which the last input event occurred, or Qmacro if the
205 last event came from a macro. We use this to determine when to
206 generate switch-frame events. This may be cleared by functions
207 like Fselect_frame, to make sure that a switch-frame event is
208 generated by the next character. */
209 extern Lisp_Object internal_last_event_frame;
210 \f
211 extern Lisp_Object Qrecompute_lucid_menubar, Qactivate_menubar_hook;
212
213 /* This holds a Lisp vector that holds the properties of a single
214 menu item while decoding it in parse_menu_item.
215 Using a Lisp vector to hold this information while we decode it
216 takes care of protecting all the data from GC. */
217 extern Lisp_Object item_properties;
218
219 /* This describes the elements of item_properties.
220 The first element is not a property, it is a pointer to the item properties
221 that is saved for GC protection. */
222 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_ITEM 0
223 /* The item string. */
224 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_NAME 1
225 /* Start of initialize to nil */
226 /* The binding: nil, a command or a keymap. */
227 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_DEF 2
228 /* The keymap if the binding is a keymap, otherwise nil. */
229 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_MAP 3
230 /* Nil, :radio or :toggle. */
231 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_TYPE 4
232 /* Nil or a string describing an equivalent key binding. */
233 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_KEYEQ 5
234 /* Not nil if a selected toggle box or radio button, otherwise nil. */
235 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_SELECTED 6
236 /* Place for a help string. Not yet used. */
237 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_HELP 7
238 /* Start of initialize to t */
239 /* Last property. */
240 /* Not nil if item is enabled. */
241 #define ITEM_PROPERTY_ENABLE 8
242
243 /* This holds a Lisp vector that holds the results of decoding
244 the keymaps or alist-of-alists that specify a menu.
245
246 It describes the panes and items within the panes.
247
248 Each pane is described by 3 elements in the vector:
249 t, the pane name, the pane's prefix key.
250 Then follow the pane's items, with 5 elements per item:
251 the item string, the enable flag, the item's value,
252 the definition, and the equivalent keyboard key's description string.
253
254 In some cases, multiple levels of menus may be described.
255 A single vector slot containing nil indicates the start of a submenu.
256 A single vector slot containing lambda indicates the end of a submenu.
257 The submenu follows a menu item which is the way to reach the submenu.
258
259 A single vector slot containing quote indicates that the
260 following items should appear on the right of a dialog box.
261
262 Using a Lisp vector to hold this information while we decode it
263 takes care of protecting all the data from GC. */
264 extern Lisp_Object menu_items;
265
266 /* If non-nil, means that the global vars defined here are already in use.
267 Used to detect cases where we try to re-enter this non-reentrant code. */
268 extern Lisp_Object menu_items_inuse;
269
270 /* Number of slots currently allocated in menu_items. */
271 extern int menu_items_allocated;
272
273 /* This is the index in menu_items of the first empty slot. */
274 extern int menu_items_used;
275
276 /* The number of panes currently recorded in menu_items,
277 excluding those within submenus. */
278 extern int menu_items_n_panes;
279
280 #define MENU_ITEMS_PANE_NAME 1
281 #define MENU_ITEMS_PANE_PREFIX 2
282 #define MENU_ITEMS_PANE_LENGTH 3
283
284 enum menu_item_idx
285 {
286 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_NAME = 0,
287 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_ENABLE,
288 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_VALUE,
289 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_EQUIV_KEY,
290 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_DEFINITION,
291 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_TYPE,
292 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_SELECTED,
293 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_HELP,
294 MENU_ITEMS_ITEM_LENGTH
295 };
296
297 extern Lisp_Object unuse_menu_items (Lisp_Object dummy);
298
299 /* This is how to deal with multibyte text if HAVE_MULTILINGUAL_MENU
300 isn't defined. The use of HAVE_MULTILINGUAL_MENU could probably be
301 confined to an extended version of this with sections of code below
302 using it unconditionally. */
303 #ifndef HAVE_NTGUI
304 #if defined (USE_GTK) || defined (HAVE_NS)
305 # define ENCODE_MENU_STRING(str) ENCODE_UTF_8 (str)
306 #elif defined HAVE_X_I18N
307 #define ENCODE_MENU_STRING(str) ENCODE_SYSTEM (str)
308 #else
309 #define ENCODE_MENU_STRING(str) string_make_unibyte (str)
310 #endif /* USE_GTK */
311 #else /* HAVE_NTGUI */
312 #define ENCODE_MENU_STRING(str) (str)
313 #endif
314
315 #if defined (HAVE_NS) || defined (HAVE_NTGUI) || defined (USE_GTK)
316
317 /* Definitions copied from lwlib.h */
318
319 enum button_type
320 {
321 BUTTON_TYPE_NONE,
322 BUTTON_TYPE_TOGGLE,
323 BUTTON_TYPE_RADIO
324 };
325
326 /* This structure is based on the one in ../lwlib/lwlib.h, with unused portions
327 removed. No term uses these. */
328 typedef struct _widget_value
329 {
330 /* name of widget */
331 Lisp_Object lname;
332 const char* name;
333 /* value (meaning depend on widget type) */
334 const char* value;
335 /* keyboard equivalent. no implications for XtTranslations */
336 Lisp_Object lkey;
337 const char* key;
338 /* Help string or nil if none.
339 GC finds this string through the frame's menu_bar_vector
340 or through menu_items. */
341 Lisp_Object help;
342 /* true if enabled */
343 unsigned char enabled;
344 /* true if selected */
345 unsigned char selected;
346 /* The type of a button. */
347 enum button_type button_type;
348 #if defined (HAVE_NTGUI)
349 /* true if menu title */
350 unsigned char title;
351 #endif
352 /* Contents of the sub-widgets, also selected slot for checkbox */
353 struct _widget_value* contents;
354 /* data passed to callback */
355 void *call_data;
356 /* next one in the list */
357 struct _widget_value* next;
358 #ifdef USE_GTK
359 struct _widget_value *free_list;
360 #endif
361 } widget_value;
362
363 #endif /* HAVE_NS || HAVE_NTGUI */
364
365 \f
366 /* Macros for dealing with lispy events. */
367
368 /* True if EVENT has data fields describing it (i.e. a mouse click). */
369 #define EVENT_HAS_PARAMETERS(event) (CONSP (event))
370
371 /* Extract the head from an event.
372 This works on composite and simple events. */
373 #define EVENT_HEAD(event) \
374 (EVENT_HAS_PARAMETERS (event) ? XCAR (event) : (event))
375
376 /* Extract the starting and ending positions from a composite event. */
377 #define EVENT_START(event) (XCAR (XCDR (event)))
378 #define EVENT_END(event) (XCAR (XCDR (XCDR (event))))
379
380 /* Extract the click count from a multi-click event. */
381 #define EVENT_CLICK_COUNT(event) (Fnth (make_number (2), (event)))
382
383 /* Extract the fields of a position. */
384 #define POSN_WINDOW(posn) (XCAR (posn))
385 #define POSN_POSN(posn) (XCAR (XCDR (posn)))
386 #define POSN_SET_POSN(posn,x) (XSETCAR (XCDR (posn), (x)))
387 #define POSN_WINDOW_POSN(posn) (XCAR (XCDR (XCDR (posn))))
388 #define POSN_TIMESTAMP(posn) (XCAR (XCDR (XCDR (XCDR (posn)))))
389 #define POSN_SCROLLBAR_PART(posn) (Fnth (make_number (4), (posn)))
390
391 /* A cons (STRING . STRING-CHARPOS), or nil in mouse-click events.
392 It's a cons if the click is over a string in the mode line. */
393
394 #define POSN_STRING(posn) (Fnth (make_number (4), (posn)))
395
396 /* If POSN_STRING is nil, event refers to buffer location. */
397
398 #define POSN_INBUFFER_P(posn) (NILP (POSN_STRING (posn)))
399 #define POSN_BUFFER_POSN(posn) (Fnth (make_number (5), (posn)))
400
401 /* Some of the event heads. */
402 extern Lisp_Object Qswitch_frame;
403
404 /* Properties on event heads. */
405 extern Lisp_Object Qevent_kind, Qevent_symbol_elements;
406
407 /* Getting an unmodified version of an event head. */
408 #define EVENT_HEAD_UNMODIFIED(event_head) \
409 (Fcar (Fget ((event_head), Qevent_symbol_elements)))
410
411 /* The values of Qevent_kind properties. */
412 extern Lisp_Object Qfunction_key, Qmouse_click, Qmouse_movement;
413 extern Lisp_Object Qscroll_bar_movement;
414
415 extern Lisp_Object Qhelp_echo;
416
417 /* Getting the kind of an event head. */
418 #define EVENT_HEAD_KIND(event_head) \
419 (Fget ((event_head), Qevent_kind))
420
421 /* Symbols to use for non-text mouse positions. */
422 extern Lisp_Object Qmode_line, Qvertical_line, Qheader_line;
423
424 /* True while doing kbd input. */
425 extern int waiting_for_input;
426
427 /* Address (if not 0) of EMACS_TIME to zero out if a SIGIO interrupt
428 happens. */
429 extern EMACS_TIME *input_available_clear_time;
430
431 extern int ignore_mouse_drag_p;
432
433 /* The primary selection. */
434 extern Lisp_Object QPRIMARY;
435
436 /* Forward declaration for prototypes. */
437 struct input_event;
438
439 extern Lisp_Object parse_modifiers (Lisp_Object);
440 extern Lisp_Object reorder_modifiers (Lisp_Object);
441 extern Lisp_Object read_char (int, int, Lisp_Object *, Lisp_Object,
442 int *, EMACS_TIME *);
443 extern int parse_solitary_modifier (Lisp_Object symbol);
444
445
446 /* This is like Vthis_command, except that commands never set it. */
447 extern Lisp_Object real_this_command;
448
449 /* Non-nil disable property on a command means
450 do not execute it; call disabled-command-function's value instead. */
451 extern Lisp_Object QCbutton, QCtoggle, QCradio, QClabel;
452
453 extern Lisp_Object Qinput_method_function;
454
455 /* An event header symbol HEAD may have a property named
456 Qevent_symbol_element_mask, which is of the form (BASE MODIFIERS);
457 BASE is the base, unmodified version of HEAD, and MODIFIERS is the
458 mask of modifiers applied to it. If present, this is used to help
459 speed up parse_modifiers. */
460 extern Lisp_Object Qevent_symbol_element_mask;
461
462 /* The timestamp of the last input event we received from the X server.
463 X Windows wants this for selection ownership. */
464 extern unsigned long last_event_timestamp;
465
466 extern int quit_char;
467
468 extern int timers_run;
469
470 extern int menu_separator_name_p (const char *);
471 extern int parse_menu_item (Lisp_Object, int);
472
473 extern void echo_now (void);
474 extern void init_kboard (KBOARD *);
475 extern void delete_kboard (KBOARD *);
476 extern void not_single_kboard_state (KBOARD *);
477 extern void push_kboard (struct kboard *);
478 extern void push_frame_kboard (struct frame *);
479 extern void pop_kboard (void);
480 extern void temporarily_switch_to_single_kboard (struct frame *);
481 extern void record_asynch_buffer_change (void);
482 extern SIGTYPE input_poll_signal (int);
483 extern void start_polling (void);
484 extern void stop_polling (void);
485 extern void set_poll_suppress_count (int);
486 extern void gobble_input (int);
487 extern int input_polling_used (void);
488 extern void clear_input_pending (void);
489 extern int requeued_events_pending_p (void);
490 extern void bind_polling_period (int);
491 extern void stuff_buffered_input (Lisp_Object);
492 extern void clear_waiting_for_input (void);
493 extern void swallow_events (int);
494 extern int help_char_p (Lisp_Object);
495 extern void quit_throw_to_read_char (void) NO_RETURN;
496 extern int lucid_event_type_list_p (Lisp_Object);
497 extern void kbd_buffer_store_event (struct input_event *);
498 extern void kbd_buffer_store_event_hold (struct input_event *,
499 struct input_event *);
500 extern void kbd_buffer_unget_event (struct input_event *);
501 extern void poll_for_input_1 (void);
502 extern void show_help_echo (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object,
503 Lisp_Object, int);
504 extern void gen_help_event (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object,
505 Lisp_Object, EMACS_INT);
506 extern void kbd_buffer_store_help_event (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object);
507 extern Lisp_Object menu_item_eval_property (Lisp_Object);
508 extern int kbd_buffer_events_waiting (int);
509 extern void add_user_signal (int, const char *);
510
511 extern int tty_read_avail_input (struct terminal *, int,
512 struct input_event *);
513 extern EMACS_TIME timer_check (int);
514