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1 ;;; subr.el --- basic lisp subroutines for Emacs -*- coding: utf-8; lexical-binding:t -*-
2
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1985-1986, 1992, 1994-1995, 1999-2015 Free Software
4 ;; Foundation, Inc.
5
6 ;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
7 ;; Keywords: internal
8 ;; Package: emacs
9
10 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
11
12 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
13 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
15 ;; (at your option) any later version.
16
17 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
21
22 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
24
25 ;;; Commentary:
26
27 ;;; Code:
28
29 ;; Beware: while this file has tag `utf-8', before it's compiled, it gets
30 ;; loaded as "raw-text", so non-ASCII chars won't work right during bootstrap.
31
32 (defmacro declare-function (_fn _file &optional _arglist _fileonly)
33 "Tell the byte-compiler that function FN is defined, in FILE.
34 Optional ARGLIST is the argument list used by the function.
35 The FILE argument is not used by the byte-compiler, but by the
36 `check-declare' package, which checks that FILE contains a
37 definition for FN. ARGLIST is used by both the byte-compiler
38 and `check-declare' to check for consistency.
39
40 FILE can be either a Lisp file (in which case the \".el\"
41 extension is optional), or a C file. C files are expanded
42 relative to the Emacs \"src/\" directory. Lisp files are
43 searched for using `locate-library', and if that fails they are
44 expanded relative to the location of the file containing the
45 declaration. A FILE with an \"ext:\" prefix is an external file.
46 `check-declare' will check such files if they are found, and skip
47 them without error if they are not.
48
49 FILEONLY non-nil means that `check-declare' will only check that
50 FILE exists, not that it defines FN. This is intended for
51 function-definitions that `check-declare' does not recognize, e.g.
52 `defstruct'.
53
54 To specify a value for FILEONLY without passing an argument list,
55 set ARGLIST to t. This is necessary because nil means an
56 empty argument list, rather than an unspecified one.
57
58 Note that for the purposes of `check-declare', this statement
59 must be the first non-whitespace on a line.
60
61 For more information, see Info node `(elisp)Declaring Functions'."
62 ;; Does nothing - byte-compile-declare-function does the work.
63 nil)
64
65 \f
66 ;;;; Basic Lisp macros.
67
68 (defalias 'not 'null)
69
70 (defmacro noreturn (form)
71 "Evaluate FORM, expecting it not to return.
72 If FORM does return, signal an error."
73 (declare (debug t))
74 `(prog1 ,form
75 (error "Form marked with `noreturn' did return")))
76
77 (defmacro 1value (form)
78 "Evaluate FORM, expecting a constant return value.
79 This is the global do-nothing version. There is also `testcover-1value'
80 that complains if FORM ever does return differing values."
81 (declare (debug t))
82 form)
83
84 (defmacro def-edebug-spec (symbol spec)
85 "Set the `edebug-form-spec' property of SYMBOL according to SPEC.
86 Both SYMBOL and SPEC are unevaluated. The SPEC can be:
87 0 (instrument no arguments); t (instrument all arguments);
88 a symbol (naming a function with an Edebug specification); or a list.
89 The elements of the list describe the argument types; see
90 Info node `(elisp)Specification List' for details."
91 `(put (quote ,symbol) 'edebug-form-spec (quote ,spec)))
92
93 (defmacro lambda (&rest cdr)
94 "Return a lambda expression.
95 A call of the form (lambda ARGS DOCSTRING INTERACTIVE BODY) is
96 self-quoting; the result of evaluating the lambda expression is the
97 expression itself. The lambda expression may then be treated as a
98 function, i.e., stored as the function value of a symbol, passed to
99 `funcall' or `mapcar', etc.
100
101 ARGS should take the same form as an argument list for a `defun'.
102 DOCSTRING is an optional documentation string.
103 If present, it should describe how to call the function.
104 But documentation strings are usually not useful in nameless functions.
105 INTERACTIVE should be a call to the function `interactive', which see.
106 It may also be omitted.
107 BODY should be a list of Lisp expressions.
108
109 \(fn ARGS [DOCSTRING] [INTERACTIVE] BODY)"
110 (declare (doc-string 2) (indent defun)
111 (debug (&define lambda-list
112 [&optional stringp]
113 [&optional ("interactive" interactive)]
114 def-body)))
115 ;; Note that this definition should not use backquotes; subr.el should not
116 ;; depend on backquote.el.
117 (list 'function (cons 'lambda cdr)))
118
119 (defmacro setq-local (var val)
120 "Set variable VAR to value VAL in current buffer."
121 ;; Can't use backquote here, it's too early in the bootstrap.
122 (list 'set (list 'make-local-variable (list 'quote var)) val))
123
124 (defmacro defvar-local (var val &optional docstring)
125 "Define VAR as a buffer-local variable with default value VAL.
126 Like `defvar' but additionally marks the variable as being automatically
127 buffer-local wherever it is set."
128 (declare (debug defvar) (doc-string 3))
129 ;; Can't use backquote here, it's too early in the bootstrap.
130 (list 'progn (list 'defvar var val docstring)
131 (list 'make-variable-buffer-local (list 'quote var))))
132
133 (defun apply-partially (fun &rest args)
134 "Return a function that is a partial application of FUN to ARGS.
135 ARGS is a list of the first N arguments to pass to FUN.
136 The result is a new function which does the same as FUN, except that
137 the first N arguments are fixed at the values with which this function
138 was called."
139 (lambda (&rest args2)
140 (apply fun (append args args2))))
141
142 (defmacro push (newelt place)
143 "Add NEWELT to the list stored in the generalized variable PLACE.
144 This is morally equivalent to (setf PLACE (cons NEWELT PLACE)),
145 except that PLACE is only evaluated once (after NEWELT)."
146 (declare (debug (form gv-place)))
147 (if (symbolp place)
148 ;; Important special case, to avoid triggering GV too early in
149 ;; the bootstrap.
150 (list 'setq place
151 (list 'cons newelt place))
152 (require 'macroexp)
153 (macroexp-let2 macroexp-copyable-p v newelt
154 (gv-letplace (getter setter) place
155 (funcall setter `(cons ,v ,getter))))))
156
157 (defmacro pop (place)
158 "Return the first element of PLACE's value, and remove it from the list.
159 PLACE must be a generalized variable whose value is a list.
160 If the value is nil, `pop' returns nil but does not actually
161 change the list."
162 (declare (debug (gv-place)))
163 ;; We use `car-safe' here instead of `car' because the behavior is the same
164 ;; (if it's not a cons cell, the `cdr' would have signaled an error already),
165 ;; but `car-safe' is total, so the byte-compiler can safely remove it if the
166 ;; result is not used.
167 `(car-safe
168 ,(if (symbolp place)
169 ;; So we can use `pop' in the bootstrap before `gv' can be used.
170 (list 'prog1 place (list 'setq place (list 'cdr place)))
171 (gv-letplace (getter setter) place
172 (macroexp-let2 macroexp-copyable-p x getter
173 `(prog1 ,x ,(funcall setter `(cdr ,x))))))))
174
175 (defmacro when (cond &rest body)
176 "If COND yields non-nil, do BODY, else return nil.
177 When COND yields non-nil, eval BODY forms sequentially and return
178 value of last one, or nil if there are none.
179
180 \(fn COND BODY...)"
181 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
182 (list 'if cond (cons 'progn body)))
183
184 (defmacro unless (cond &rest body)
185 "If COND yields nil, do BODY, else return nil.
186 When COND yields nil, eval BODY forms sequentially and return
187 value of last one, or nil if there are none.
188
189 \(fn COND BODY...)"
190 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
191 (cons 'if (cons cond (cons nil body))))
192
193 (defmacro dolist (spec &rest body)
194 "Loop over a list.
195 Evaluate BODY with VAR bound to each car from LIST, in turn.
196 Then evaluate RESULT to get return value, default nil.
197
198 \(fn (VAR LIST [RESULT]) BODY...)"
199 (declare (indent 1) (debug ((symbolp form &optional form) body)))
200 ;; It would be cleaner to create an uninterned symbol,
201 ;; but that uses a lot more space when many functions in many files
202 ;; use dolist.
203 ;; FIXME: This cost disappears in byte-compiled lexical-binding files.
204 (let ((temp '--dolist-tail--))
205 ;; This is not a reliable test, but it does not matter because both
206 ;; semantics are acceptable, tho one is slightly faster with dynamic
207 ;; scoping and the other is slightly faster (and has cleaner semantics)
208 ;; with lexical scoping.
209 (if lexical-binding
210 `(let ((,temp ,(nth 1 spec)))
211 (while ,temp
212 (let ((,(car spec) (car ,temp)))
213 ,@body
214 (setq ,temp (cdr ,temp))))
215 ,@(cdr (cdr spec)))
216 `(let ((,temp ,(nth 1 spec))
217 ,(car spec))
218 (while ,temp
219 (setq ,(car spec) (car ,temp))
220 ,@body
221 (setq ,temp (cdr ,temp)))
222 ,@(if (cdr (cdr spec))
223 `((setq ,(car spec) nil) ,@(cdr (cdr spec))))))))
224
225 (defmacro dotimes (spec &rest body)
226 "Loop a certain number of times.
227 Evaluate BODY with VAR bound to successive integers running from 0,
228 inclusive, to COUNT, exclusive. Then evaluate RESULT to get
229 the return value (nil if RESULT is omitted).
230
231 \(fn (VAR COUNT [RESULT]) BODY...)"
232 (declare (indent 1) (debug dolist))
233 ;; It would be cleaner to create an uninterned symbol,
234 ;; but that uses a lot more space when many functions in many files
235 ;; use dotimes.
236 ;; FIXME: This cost disappears in byte-compiled lexical-binding files.
237 (let ((temp '--dotimes-limit--)
238 (start 0)
239 (end (nth 1 spec)))
240 ;; This is not a reliable test, but it does not matter because both
241 ;; semantics are acceptable, tho one is slightly faster with dynamic
242 ;; scoping and the other has cleaner semantics.
243 (if lexical-binding
244 (let ((counter '--dotimes-counter--))
245 `(let ((,temp ,end)
246 (,counter ,start))
247 (while (< ,counter ,temp)
248 (let ((,(car spec) ,counter))
249 ,@body)
250 (setq ,counter (1+ ,counter)))
251 ,@(if (cddr spec)
252 ;; FIXME: This let often leads to "unused var" warnings.
253 `((let ((,(car spec) ,counter)) ,@(cddr spec))))))
254 `(let ((,temp ,end)
255 (,(car spec) ,start))
256 (while (< ,(car spec) ,temp)
257 ,@body
258 (setq ,(car spec) (1+ ,(car spec))))
259 ,@(cdr (cdr spec))))))
260
261 (defmacro declare (&rest _specs)
262 "Do not evaluate any arguments, and return nil.
263 If a `declare' form appears as the first form in the body of a
264 `defun' or `defmacro' form, SPECS specifies various additional
265 information about the function or macro; these go into effect
266 during the evaluation of the `defun' or `defmacro' form.
267
268 The possible values of SPECS are specified by
269 `defun-declarations-alist' and `macro-declarations-alist'.
270
271 For more information, see info node `(elisp)Declare Form'."
272 ;; FIXME: edebug spec should pay attention to defun-declarations-alist.
273 nil)
274
275 (defmacro ignore-errors (&rest body)
276 "Execute BODY; if an error occurs, return nil.
277 Otherwise, return result of last form in BODY.
278 See also `with-demoted-errors' that does something similar
279 without silencing all errors."
280 (declare (debug t) (indent 0))
281 `(condition-case nil (progn ,@body) (error nil)))
282 \f
283 ;;;; Basic Lisp functions.
284
285 (defun ignore (&rest _ignore)
286 "Do nothing and return nil.
287 This function accepts any number of arguments, but ignores them."
288 (interactive)
289 nil)
290
291 ;; Signal a compile-error if the first arg is missing.
292 (defun error (&rest args)
293 "Signal an error, making error message by passing all args to `format'.
294 In Emacs, the convention is that error messages start with a capital
295 letter but *do not* end with a period. Please follow this convention
296 for the sake of consistency."
297 (declare (advertised-calling-convention (string &rest args) "23.1"))
298 (signal 'error (list (apply 'format args))))
299
300 (defun user-error (format &rest args)
301 "Signal a pilot error, making error message by passing all args to `format'.
302 In Emacs, the convention is that error messages start with a capital
303 letter but *do not* end with a period. Please follow this convention
304 for the sake of consistency.
305 This is just like `error' except that `user-error's are expected to be the
306 result of an incorrect manipulation on the part of the user, rather than the
307 result of an actual problem."
308 (signal 'user-error (list (apply #'format format args))))
309
310 (defun define-error (name message &optional parent)
311 "Define NAME as a new error signal.
312 MESSAGE is a string that will be output to the echo area if such an error
313 is signaled without being caught by a `condition-case'.
314 PARENT is either a signal or a list of signals from which it inherits.
315 Defaults to `error'."
316 (unless parent (setq parent 'error))
317 (let ((conditions
318 (if (consp parent)
319 (apply #'append
320 (mapcar (lambda (parent)
321 (cons parent
322 (or (get parent 'error-conditions)
323 (error "Unknown signal `%s'" parent))))
324 parent))
325 (cons parent (get parent 'error-conditions)))))
326 (put name 'error-conditions
327 (delete-dups (copy-sequence (cons name conditions))))
328 (when message (put name 'error-message message))))
329
330 ;; We put this here instead of in frame.el so that it's defined even on
331 ;; systems where frame.el isn't loaded.
332 (defun frame-configuration-p (object)
333 "Return non-nil if OBJECT seems to be a frame configuration.
334 Any list whose car is `frame-configuration' is assumed to be a frame
335 configuration."
336 (and (consp object)
337 (eq (car object) 'frame-configuration)))
338
339 \f
340 ;;;; List functions.
341
342 ;; Note: `internal--compiler-macro-cXXr' was copied from
343 ;; `cl--compiler-macro-cXXr' in cl-macs.el. If you amend either one,
344 ;; you may want to amend the other, too.
345 (defun internal--compiler-macro-cXXr (form x)
346 (let* ((head (car form))
347 (n (symbol-name (car form)))
348 (i (- (length n) 2)))
349 (if (not (string-match "c[ad]+r\\'" n))
350 (if (and (fboundp head) (symbolp (symbol-function head)))
351 (internal--compiler-macro-cXXr (cons (symbol-function head) (cdr form))
352 x)
353 (error "Compiler macro for cXXr applied to non-cXXr form"))
354 (while (> i (match-beginning 0))
355 (setq x (list (if (eq (aref n i) ?a) 'car 'cdr) x))
356 (setq i (1- i)))
357 x)))
358
359 (defun caar (x)
360 "Return the car of the car of X."
361 (declare (compiler-macro internal--compiler-macro-cXXr))
362 (car (car x)))
363
364 (defun cadr (x)
365 "Return the car of the cdr of X."
366 (declare (compiler-macro internal--compiler-macro-cXXr))
367 (car (cdr x)))
368
369 (defun cdar (x)
370 "Return the cdr of the car of X."
371 (declare (compiler-macro internal--compiler-macro-cXXr))
372 (cdr (car x)))
373
374 (defun cddr (x)
375 "Return the cdr of the cdr of X."
376 (declare (compiler-macro internal--compiler-macro-cXXr))
377 (cdr (cdr x)))
378
379 (defun last (list &optional n)
380 "Return the last link of LIST. Its car is the last element.
381 If LIST is nil, return nil.
382 If N is non-nil, return the Nth-to-last link of LIST.
383 If N is bigger than the length of LIST, return LIST."
384 (if n
385 (and (>= n 0)
386 (let ((m (safe-length list)))
387 (if (< n m) (nthcdr (- m n) list) list)))
388 (and list
389 (nthcdr (1- (safe-length list)) list))))
390
391 (defun butlast (list &optional n)
392 "Return a copy of LIST with the last N elements removed.
393 If N is omitted or nil, the last element is removed from the
394 copy."
395 (if (and n (<= n 0)) list
396 (nbutlast (copy-sequence list) n)))
397
398 (defun nbutlast (list &optional n)
399 "Modifies LIST to remove the last N elements.
400 If N is omitted or nil, remove the last element."
401 (let ((m (length list)))
402 (or n (setq n 1))
403 (and (< n m)
404 (progn
405 (if (> n 0) (setcdr (nthcdr (- (1- m) n) list) nil))
406 list))))
407
408 (defun zerop (number)
409 "Return t if NUMBER is zero."
410 ;; Used to be in C, but it's pointless since (= 0 n) is faster anyway because
411 ;; = has a byte-code.
412 (declare (compiler-macro (lambda (_) `(= 0 ,number))))
413 (= 0 number))
414
415 (defun delete-dups (list)
416 "Destructively remove `equal' duplicates from LIST.
417 Store the result in LIST and return it. LIST must be a proper list.
418 Of several `equal' occurrences of an element in LIST, the first
419 one is kept."
420 (let ((tail list))
421 (while tail
422 (setcdr tail (delete (car tail) (cdr tail)))
423 (setq tail (cdr tail))))
424 list)
425
426 ;; See http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2013-05/msg00204.html
427 (defun delete-consecutive-dups (list &optional circular)
428 "Destructively remove `equal' consecutive duplicates from LIST.
429 First and last elements are considered consecutive if CIRCULAR is
430 non-nil."
431 (let ((tail list) last)
432 (while (consp tail)
433 (if (equal (car tail) (cadr tail))
434 (setcdr tail (cddr tail))
435 (setq last (car tail)
436 tail (cdr tail))))
437 (if (and circular
438 (cdr list)
439 (equal last (car list)))
440 (nbutlast list)
441 list)))
442
443 (defun number-sequence (from &optional to inc)
444 "Return a sequence of numbers from FROM to TO (both inclusive) as a list.
445 INC is the increment used between numbers in the sequence and defaults to 1.
446 So, the Nth element of the list is (+ FROM (* N INC)) where N counts from
447 zero. TO is only included if there is an N for which TO = FROM + N * INC.
448 If TO is nil or numerically equal to FROM, return (FROM).
449 If INC is positive and TO is less than FROM, or INC is negative
450 and TO is larger than FROM, return nil.
451 If INC is zero and TO is neither nil nor numerically equal to
452 FROM, signal an error.
453
454 This function is primarily designed for integer arguments.
455 Nevertheless, FROM, TO and INC can be integer or float. However,
456 floating point arithmetic is inexact. For instance, depending on
457 the machine, it may quite well happen that
458 \(number-sequence 0.4 0.6 0.2) returns the one element list (0.4),
459 whereas (number-sequence 0.4 0.8 0.2) returns a list with three
460 elements. Thus, if some of the arguments are floats and one wants
461 to make sure that TO is included, one may have to explicitly write
462 TO as (+ FROM (* N INC)) or use a variable whose value was
463 computed with this exact expression. Alternatively, you can,
464 of course, also replace TO with a slightly larger value
465 \(or a slightly more negative value if INC is negative)."
466 (if (or (not to) (= from to))
467 (list from)
468 (or inc (setq inc 1))
469 (when (zerop inc) (error "The increment can not be zero"))
470 (let (seq (n 0) (next from))
471 (if (> inc 0)
472 (while (<= next to)
473 (setq seq (cons next seq)
474 n (1+ n)
475 next (+ from (* n inc))))
476 (while (>= next to)
477 (setq seq (cons next seq)
478 n (1+ n)
479 next (+ from (* n inc)))))
480 (nreverse seq))))
481
482 (defun copy-tree (tree &optional vecp)
483 "Make a copy of TREE.
484 If TREE is a cons cell, this recursively copies both its car and its cdr.
485 Contrast to `copy-sequence', which copies only along the cdrs. With second
486 argument VECP, this copies vectors as well as conses."
487 (if (consp tree)
488 (let (result)
489 (while (consp tree)
490 (let ((newcar (car tree)))
491 (if (or (consp (car tree)) (and vecp (vectorp (car tree))))
492 (setq newcar (copy-tree (car tree) vecp)))
493 (push newcar result))
494 (setq tree (cdr tree)))
495 (nconc (nreverse result) tree))
496 (if (and vecp (vectorp tree))
497 (let ((i (length (setq tree (copy-sequence tree)))))
498 (while (>= (setq i (1- i)) 0)
499 (aset tree i (copy-tree (aref tree i) vecp)))
500 tree)
501 tree)))
502 \f
503 ;;;; Various list-search functions.
504
505 (defun assoc-default (key alist &optional test default)
506 "Find object KEY in a pseudo-alist ALIST.
507 ALIST is a list of conses or objects. Each element
508 (or the element's car, if it is a cons) is compared with KEY by
509 calling TEST, with two arguments: (i) the element or its car,
510 and (ii) KEY.
511 If that is non-nil, the element matches; then `assoc-default'
512 returns the element's cdr, if it is a cons, or DEFAULT if the
513 element is not a cons.
514
515 If no element matches, the value is nil.
516 If TEST is omitted or nil, `equal' is used."
517 (let (found (tail alist) value)
518 (while (and tail (not found))
519 (let ((elt (car tail)))
520 (when (funcall (or test 'equal) (if (consp elt) (car elt) elt) key)
521 (setq found t value (if (consp elt) (cdr elt) default))))
522 (setq tail (cdr tail)))
523 value))
524
525 (defun assoc-ignore-case (key alist)
526 "Like `assoc', but ignores differences in case and text representation.
527 KEY must be a string. Upper-case and lower-case letters are treated as equal.
528 Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte for comparison."
529 (declare (obsolete assoc-string "22.1"))
530 (assoc-string key alist t))
531
532 (defun assoc-ignore-representation (key alist)
533 "Like `assoc', but ignores differences in text representation.
534 KEY must be a string.
535 Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte for comparison."
536 (declare (obsolete assoc-string "22.1"))
537 (assoc-string key alist nil))
538
539 (defun member-ignore-case (elt list)
540 "Like `member', but ignore differences in case and text representation.
541 ELT must be a string. Upper-case and lower-case letters are treated as equal.
542 Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte for comparison.
543 Non-strings in LIST are ignored."
544 (while (and list
545 (not (and (stringp (car list))
546 (eq t (compare-strings elt 0 nil (car list) 0 nil t)))))
547 (setq list (cdr list)))
548 list)
549
550 (defun assq-delete-all (key alist)
551 "Delete from ALIST all elements whose car is `eq' to KEY.
552 Return the modified alist.
553 Elements of ALIST that are not conses are ignored."
554 (while (and (consp (car alist))
555 (eq (car (car alist)) key))
556 (setq alist (cdr alist)))
557 (let ((tail alist) tail-cdr)
558 (while (setq tail-cdr (cdr tail))
559 (if (and (consp (car tail-cdr))
560 (eq (car (car tail-cdr)) key))
561 (setcdr tail (cdr tail-cdr))
562 (setq tail tail-cdr))))
563 alist)
564
565 (defun rassq-delete-all (value alist)
566 "Delete from ALIST all elements whose cdr is `eq' to VALUE.
567 Return the modified alist.
568 Elements of ALIST that are not conses are ignored."
569 (while (and (consp (car alist))
570 (eq (cdr (car alist)) value))
571 (setq alist (cdr alist)))
572 (let ((tail alist) tail-cdr)
573 (while (setq tail-cdr (cdr tail))
574 (if (and (consp (car tail-cdr))
575 (eq (cdr (car tail-cdr)) value))
576 (setcdr tail (cdr tail-cdr))
577 (setq tail tail-cdr))))
578 alist)
579
580 (defun alist-get (key alist &optional default remove)
581 "Get the value associated to KEY in ALIST.
582 DEFAULT is the value to return if KEY is not found in ALIST.
583 REMOVE, if non-nil, means that when setting this element, we should
584 remove the entry if the new value is `eql' to DEFAULT."
585 (ignore remove) ;;Silence byte-compiler.
586 (let ((x (assq key alist)))
587 (if x (cdr x) default)))
588
589 (defun remove (elt seq)
590 "Return a copy of SEQ with all occurrences of ELT removed.
591 SEQ must be a list, vector, or string. The comparison is done with `equal'."
592 (if (nlistp seq)
593 ;; If SEQ isn't a list, there's no need to copy SEQ because
594 ;; `delete' will return a new object.
595 (delete elt seq)
596 (delete elt (copy-sequence seq))))
597
598 (defun remq (elt list)
599 "Return LIST with all occurrences of ELT removed.
600 The comparison is done with `eq'. Contrary to `delq', this does not use
601 side-effects, and the argument LIST is not modified."
602 (while (and (eq elt (car list)) (setq list (cdr list))))
603 (if (memq elt list)
604 (delq elt (copy-sequence list))
605 list))
606 \f
607 ;;;; Keymap support.
608
609 (defun kbd (keys)
610 "Convert KEYS to the internal Emacs key representation.
611 KEYS should be a string constant in the format used for
612 saving keyboard macros (see `edmacro-mode')."
613 ;; Don't use a defalias, since the `pure' property is only true for
614 ;; the calling convention of `kbd'.
615 (read-kbd-macro keys))
616 (put 'kbd 'pure t)
617
618 (defun undefined ()
619 "Beep to tell the user this binding is undefined."
620 (interactive)
621 (ding)
622 (message "%s is undefined" (key-description (this-single-command-keys)))
623 (setq defining-kbd-macro nil)
624 (force-mode-line-update)
625 ;; If this is a down-mouse event, don't reset prefix-arg;
626 ;; pass it to the command run by the up event.
627 (setq prefix-arg
628 (when (memq 'down (event-modifiers last-command-event))
629 current-prefix-arg)))
630
631 ;; Prevent the \{...} documentation construct
632 ;; from mentioning keys that run this command.
633 (put 'undefined 'suppress-keymap t)
634
635 (defun suppress-keymap (map &optional nodigits)
636 "Make MAP override all normally self-inserting keys to be undefined.
637 Normally, as an exception, digits and minus-sign are set to make prefix args,
638 but optional second arg NODIGITS non-nil treats them like other chars."
639 (define-key map [remap self-insert-command] 'undefined)
640 (or nodigits
641 (let (loop)
642 (define-key map "-" 'negative-argument)
643 ;; Make plain numbers do numeric args.
644 (setq loop ?0)
645 (while (<= loop ?9)
646 (define-key map (char-to-string loop) 'digit-argument)
647 (setq loop (1+ loop))))))
648
649 (defun make-composed-keymap (maps &optional parent)
650 "Construct a new keymap composed of MAPS and inheriting from PARENT.
651 When looking up a key in the returned map, the key is looked in each
652 keymap of MAPS in turn until a binding is found.
653 If no binding is found in MAPS, the lookup continues in PARENT, if non-nil.
654 As always with keymap inheritance, a nil binding in MAPS overrides
655 any corresponding binding in PARENT, but it does not override corresponding
656 bindings in other keymaps of MAPS.
657 MAPS can be a list of keymaps or a single keymap.
658 PARENT if non-nil should be a keymap."
659 `(keymap
660 ,@(if (keymapp maps) (list maps) maps)
661 ,@parent))
662
663 (defun define-key-after (keymap key definition &optional after)
664 "Add binding in KEYMAP for KEY => DEFINITION, right after AFTER's binding.
665 This is like `define-key' except that the binding for KEY is placed
666 just after the binding for the event AFTER, instead of at the beginning
667 of the map. Note that AFTER must be an event type (like KEY), NOT a command
668 \(like DEFINITION).
669
670 If AFTER is t or omitted, the new binding goes at the end of the keymap.
671 AFTER should be a single event type--a symbol or a character, not a sequence.
672
673 Bindings are always added before any inherited map.
674
675 The order of bindings in a keymap only matters when it is used as
676 a menu, so this function is not useful for non-menu keymaps."
677 (unless after (setq after t))
678 (or (keymapp keymap)
679 (signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'keymapp keymap)))
680 (setq key
681 (if (<= (length key) 1) (aref key 0)
682 (setq keymap (lookup-key keymap
683 (apply 'vector
684 (butlast (mapcar 'identity key)))))
685 (aref key (1- (length key)))))
686 (let ((tail keymap) done inserted)
687 (while (and (not done) tail)
688 ;; Delete any earlier bindings for the same key.
689 (if (eq (car-safe (car (cdr tail))) key)
690 (setcdr tail (cdr (cdr tail))))
691 ;; If we hit an included map, go down that one.
692 (if (keymapp (car tail)) (setq tail (car tail)))
693 ;; When we reach AFTER's binding, insert the new binding after.
694 ;; If we reach an inherited keymap, insert just before that.
695 ;; If we reach the end of this keymap, insert at the end.
696 (if (or (and (eq (car-safe (car tail)) after)
697 (not (eq after t)))
698 (eq (car (cdr tail)) 'keymap)
699 (null (cdr tail)))
700 (progn
701 ;; Stop the scan only if we find a parent keymap.
702 ;; Keep going past the inserted element
703 ;; so we can delete any duplications that come later.
704 (if (eq (car (cdr tail)) 'keymap)
705 (setq done t))
706 ;; Don't insert more than once.
707 (or inserted
708 (setcdr tail (cons (cons key definition) (cdr tail))))
709 (setq inserted t)))
710 (setq tail (cdr tail)))))
711
712 (defun map-keymap-sorted (function keymap)
713 "Implement `map-keymap' with sorting.
714 Don't call this function; it is for internal use only."
715 (let (list)
716 (map-keymap (lambda (a b) (push (cons a b) list))
717 keymap)
718 (setq list (sort list
719 (lambda (a b)
720 (setq a (car a) b (car b))
721 (if (integerp a)
722 (if (integerp b) (< a b)
723 t)
724 (if (integerp b) t
725 ;; string< also accepts symbols.
726 (string< a b))))))
727 (dolist (p list)
728 (funcall function (car p) (cdr p)))))
729
730 (defun keymap--menu-item-binding (val)
731 "Return the binding part of a menu-item."
732 (cond
733 ((not (consp val)) val) ;Not a menu-item.
734 ((eq 'menu-item (car val))
735 (let* ((binding (nth 2 val))
736 (plist (nthcdr 3 val))
737 (filter (plist-get plist :filter)))
738 (if filter (funcall filter binding)
739 binding)))
740 ((and (consp (cdr val)) (stringp (cadr val)))
741 (cddr val))
742 ((stringp (car val))
743 (cdr val))
744 (t val))) ;Not a menu-item either.
745
746 (defun keymap--menu-item-with-binding (item binding)
747 "Build a menu-item like ITEM but with its binding changed to BINDING."
748 (cond
749 ((not (consp item)) binding) ;Not a menu-item.
750 ((eq 'menu-item (car item))
751 (setq item (copy-sequence item))
752 (let ((tail (nthcdr 2 item)))
753 (setcar tail binding)
754 ;; Remove any potential filter.
755 (if (plist-get (cdr tail) :filter)
756 (setcdr tail (plist-put (cdr tail) :filter nil))))
757 item)
758 ((and (consp (cdr item)) (stringp (cadr item)))
759 (cons (car item) (cons (cadr item) binding)))
760 (t (cons (car item) binding))))
761
762 (defun keymap--merge-bindings (val1 val2)
763 "Merge bindings VAL1 and VAL2."
764 (let ((map1 (keymap--menu-item-binding val1))
765 (map2 (keymap--menu-item-binding val2)))
766 (if (not (and (keymapp map1) (keymapp map2)))
767 ;; There's nothing to merge: val1 takes precedence.
768 val1
769 (let ((map (list 'keymap map1 map2))
770 (item (if (keymapp val1) (if (keymapp val2) nil val2) val1)))
771 (keymap--menu-item-with-binding item map)))))
772
773 (defun keymap-canonicalize (map)
774 "Return a simpler equivalent keymap.
775 This resolves inheritance and redefinitions. The returned keymap
776 should behave identically to a copy of KEYMAP w.r.t `lookup-key'
777 and use in active keymaps and menus.
778 Subkeymaps may be modified but are not canonicalized."
779 ;; FIXME: Problem with the difference between a nil binding
780 ;; that hides a binding in an inherited map and a nil binding that's ignored
781 ;; to let some further binding visible. Currently a nil binding hides all.
782 ;; FIXME: we may want to carefully (re)order elements in case they're
783 ;; menu-entries.
784 (let ((bindings ())
785 (ranges ())
786 (prompt (keymap-prompt map)))
787 (while (keymapp map)
788 (setq map (map-keymap ;; -internal
789 (lambda (key item)
790 (if (consp key)
791 ;; Treat char-ranges specially.
792 (push (cons key item) ranges)
793 (push (cons key item) bindings)))
794 map)))
795 ;; Create the new map.
796 (setq map (funcall (if ranges 'make-keymap 'make-sparse-keymap) prompt))
797 (dolist (binding ranges)
798 ;; Treat char-ranges specially. FIXME: need to merge as well.
799 (define-key map (vector (car binding)) (cdr binding)))
800 ;; Process the bindings starting from the end.
801 (dolist (binding (prog1 bindings (setq bindings ())))
802 (let* ((key (car binding))
803 (oldbind (assq key bindings)))
804 (push (if (not oldbind)
805 ;; The normal case: no duplicate bindings.
806 binding
807 ;; This is the second binding for this key.
808 (setq bindings (delq oldbind bindings))
809 (cons key (keymap--merge-bindings (cdr binding)
810 (cdr oldbind))))
811 bindings)))
812 (nconc map bindings)))
813
814 (put 'keyboard-translate-table 'char-table-extra-slots 0)
815
816 (defun keyboard-translate (from to)
817 "Translate character FROM to TO on the current terminal.
818 This function creates a `keyboard-translate-table' if necessary
819 and then modifies one entry in it."
820 (or (char-table-p keyboard-translate-table)
821 (setq keyboard-translate-table
822 (make-char-table 'keyboard-translate-table nil)))
823 (aset keyboard-translate-table from to))
824 \f
825 ;;;; Key binding commands.
826
827 (defun global-set-key (key command)
828 "Give KEY a global binding as COMMAND.
829 COMMAND is the command definition to use; usually it is
830 a symbol naming an interactively-callable function.
831 KEY is a key sequence; noninteractively, it is a string or vector
832 of characters or event types, and non-ASCII characters with codes
833 above 127 (such as ISO Latin-1) can be included if you use a vector.
834
835 Note that if KEY has a local binding in the current buffer,
836 that local binding will continue to shadow any global binding
837 that you make with this function."
838 (interactive "KSet key globally: \nCSet key %s to command: ")
839 (or (vectorp key) (stringp key)
840 (signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'arrayp key)))
841 (define-key (current-global-map) key command))
842
843 (defun local-set-key (key command)
844 "Give KEY a local binding as COMMAND.
845 COMMAND is the command definition to use; usually it is
846 a symbol naming an interactively-callable function.
847 KEY is a key sequence; noninteractively, it is a string or vector
848 of characters or event types, and non-ASCII characters with codes
849 above 127 (such as ISO Latin-1) can be included if you use a vector.
850
851 The binding goes in the current buffer's local map, which in most
852 cases is shared with all other buffers in the same major mode."
853 (interactive "KSet key locally: \nCSet key %s locally to command: ")
854 (let ((map (current-local-map)))
855 (or map
856 (use-local-map (setq map (make-sparse-keymap))))
857 (or (vectorp key) (stringp key)
858 (signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'arrayp key)))
859 (define-key map key command)))
860
861 (defun global-unset-key (key)
862 "Remove global binding of KEY.
863 KEY is a string or vector representing a sequence of keystrokes."
864 (interactive "kUnset key globally: ")
865 (global-set-key key nil))
866
867 (defun local-unset-key (key)
868 "Remove local binding of KEY.
869 KEY is a string or vector representing a sequence of keystrokes."
870 (interactive "kUnset key locally: ")
871 (if (current-local-map)
872 (local-set-key key nil))
873 nil)
874 \f
875 ;;;; substitute-key-definition and its subroutines.
876
877 (defvar key-substitution-in-progress nil
878 "Used internally by `substitute-key-definition'.")
879
880 (defun substitute-key-definition (olddef newdef keymap &optional oldmap prefix)
881 "Replace OLDDEF with NEWDEF for any keys in KEYMAP now defined as OLDDEF.
882 In other words, OLDDEF is replaced with NEWDEF where ever it appears.
883 Alternatively, if optional fourth argument OLDMAP is specified, we redefine
884 in KEYMAP as NEWDEF those keys which are defined as OLDDEF in OLDMAP.
885
886 If you don't specify OLDMAP, you can usually get the same results
887 in a cleaner way with command remapping, like this:
888 (define-key KEYMAP [remap OLDDEF] NEWDEF)
889 \n(fn OLDDEF NEWDEF KEYMAP &optional OLDMAP)"
890 ;; Don't document PREFIX in the doc string because we don't want to
891 ;; advertise it. It's meant for recursive calls only. Here's its
892 ;; meaning
893
894 ;; If optional argument PREFIX is specified, it should be a key
895 ;; prefix, a string. Redefined bindings will then be bound to the
896 ;; original key, with PREFIX added at the front.
897 (or prefix (setq prefix ""))
898 (let* ((scan (or oldmap keymap))
899 (prefix1 (vconcat prefix [nil]))
900 (key-substitution-in-progress
901 (cons scan key-substitution-in-progress)))
902 ;; Scan OLDMAP, finding each char or event-symbol that
903 ;; has any definition, and act on it with hack-key.
904 (map-keymap
905 (lambda (char defn)
906 (aset prefix1 (length prefix) char)
907 (substitute-key-definition-key defn olddef newdef prefix1 keymap))
908 scan)))
909
910 (defun substitute-key-definition-key (defn olddef newdef prefix keymap)
911 (let (inner-def skipped menu-item)
912 ;; Find the actual command name within the binding.
913 (if (eq (car-safe defn) 'menu-item)
914 (setq menu-item defn defn (nth 2 defn))
915 ;; Skip past menu-prompt.
916 (while (stringp (car-safe defn))
917 (push (pop defn) skipped))
918 ;; Skip past cached key-equivalence data for menu items.
919 (if (consp (car-safe defn))
920 (setq defn (cdr defn))))
921 (if (or (eq defn olddef)
922 ;; Compare with equal if definition is a key sequence.
923 ;; That is useful for operating on function-key-map.
924 (and (or (stringp defn) (vectorp defn))
925 (equal defn olddef)))
926 (define-key keymap prefix
927 (if menu-item
928 (let ((copy (copy-sequence menu-item)))
929 (setcar (nthcdr 2 copy) newdef)
930 copy)
931 (nconc (nreverse skipped) newdef)))
932 ;; Look past a symbol that names a keymap.
933 (setq inner-def
934 (or (indirect-function defn) defn))
935 ;; For nested keymaps, we use `inner-def' rather than `defn' so as to
936 ;; avoid autoloading a keymap. This is mostly done to preserve the
937 ;; original non-autoloading behavior of pre-map-keymap times.
938 (if (and (keymapp inner-def)
939 ;; Avoid recursively scanning
940 ;; where KEYMAP does not have a submap.
941 (let ((elt (lookup-key keymap prefix)))
942 (or (null elt) (natnump elt) (keymapp elt)))
943 ;; Avoid recursively rescanning keymap being scanned.
944 (not (memq inner-def key-substitution-in-progress)))
945 ;; If this one isn't being scanned already, scan it now.
946 (substitute-key-definition olddef newdef keymap inner-def prefix)))))
947
948 \f
949 ;;;; The global keymap tree.
950
951 ;; global-map, esc-map, and ctl-x-map have their values set up in
952 ;; keymap.c; we just give them docstrings here.
953
954 (defvar global-map nil
955 "Default global keymap mapping Emacs keyboard input into commands.
956 The value is a keymap which is usually (but not necessarily) Emacs's
957 global map.")
958
959 (defvar esc-map nil
960 "Default keymap for ESC (meta) commands.
961 The normal global definition of the character ESC indirects to this keymap.")
962
963 (defvar ctl-x-map nil
964 "Default keymap for C-x commands.
965 The normal global definition of the character C-x indirects to this keymap.")
966
967 (defvar ctl-x-4-map (make-sparse-keymap)
968 "Keymap for subcommands of C-x 4.")
969 (defalias 'ctl-x-4-prefix ctl-x-4-map)
970 (define-key ctl-x-map "4" 'ctl-x-4-prefix)
971
972 (defvar ctl-x-5-map (make-sparse-keymap)
973 "Keymap for frame commands.")
974 (defalias 'ctl-x-5-prefix ctl-x-5-map)
975 (define-key ctl-x-map "5" 'ctl-x-5-prefix)
976
977 \f
978 ;;;; Event manipulation functions.
979
980 (defconst listify-key-sequence-1 (logior 128 ?\M-\C-@))
981
982 (defun listify-key-sequence (key)
983 "Convert a key sequence to a list of events."
984 (if (vectorp key)
985 (append key nil)
986 (mapcar (function (lambda (c)
987 (if (> c 127)
988 (logxor c listify-key-sequence-1)
989 c)))
990 key)))
991
992 (defun eventp (obj)
993 "True if the argument is an event object."
994 (when obj
995 (or (integerp obj)
996 (and (symbolp obj) obj (not (keywordp obj)))
997 (and (consp obj) (symbolp (car obj))))))
998
999 (defun event-modifiers (event)
1000 "Return a list of symbols representing the modifier keys in event EVENT.
1001 The elements of the list may include `meta', `control',
1002 `shift', `hyper', `super', `alt', `click', `double', `triple', `drag',
1003 and `down'.
1004 EVENT may be an event or an event type. If EVENT is a symbol
1005 that has never been used in an event that has been read as input
1006 in the current Emacs session, then this function may fail to include
1007 the `click' modifier."
1008 (let ((type event))
1009 (if (listp type)
1010 (setq type (car type)))
1011 (if (symbolp type)
1012 ;; Don't read event-symbol-elements directly since we're not
1013 ;; sure the symbol has already been parsed.
1014 (cdr (internal-event-symbol-parse-modifiers type))
1015 (let ((list nil)
1016 (char (logand type (lognot (logior ?\M-\^@ ?\C-\^@ ?\S-\^@
1017 ?\H-\^@ ?\s-\^@ ?\A-\^@)))))
1018 (if (not (zerop (logand type ?\M-\^@)))
1019 (push 'meta list))
1020 (if (or (not (zerop (logand type ?\C-\^@)))
1021 (< char 32))
1022 (push 'control list))
1023 (if (or (not (zerop (logand type ?\S-\^@)))
1024 (/= char (downcase char)))
1025 (push 'shift list))
1026 (or (zerop (logand type ?\H-\^@))
1027 (push 'hyper list))
1028 (or (zerop (logand type ?\s-\^@))
1029 (push 'super list))
1030 (or (zerop (logand type ?\A-\^@))
1031 (push 'alt list))
1032 list))))
1033
1034 (defun event-basic-type (event)
1035 "Return the basic type of the given event (all modifiers removed).
1036 The value is a printing character (not upper case) or a symbol.
1037 EVENT may be an event or an event type. If EVENT is a symbol
1038 that has never been used in an event that has been read as input
1039 in the current Emacs session, then this function may return nil."
1040 (if (consp event)
1041 (setq event (car event)))
1042 (if (symbolp event)
1043 (car (get event 'event-symbol-elements))
1044 (let* ((base (logand event (1- ?\A-\^@)))
1045 (uncontrolled (if (< base 32) (logior base 64) base)))
1046 ;; There are some numbers that are invalid characters and
1047 ;; cause `downcase' to get an error.
1048 (condition-case ()
1049 (downcase uncontrolled)
1050 (error uncontrolled)))))
1051
1052 (defsubst mouse-movement-p (object)
1053 "Return non-nil if OBJECT is a mouse movement event."
1054 (eq (car-safe object) 'mouse-movement))
1055
1056 (defun mouse-event-p (object)
1057 "Return non-nil if OBJECT is a mouse click event."
1058 ;; is this really correct? maybe remove mouse-movement?
1059 (memq (event-basic-type object) '(mouse-1 mouse-2 mouse-3 mouse-movement)))
1060
1061 (defun event-start (event)
1062 "Return the starting position of EVENT.
1063 EVENT should be a mouse click, drag, or key press event. If
1064 EVENT is nil, the value of `posn-at-point' is used instead.
1065
1066 The following accessor functions are used to access the elements
1067 of the position:
1068
1069 `posn-window': The window the event is in.
1070 `posn-area': A symbol identifying the area the event occurred in,
1071 or nil if the event occurred in the text area.
1072 `posn-point': The buffer position of the event.
1073 `posn-x-y': The pixel-based coordinates of the event.
1074 `posn-col-row': The estimated column and row corresponding to the
1075 position of the event.
1076 `posn-actual-col-row': The actual column and row corresponding to the
1077 position of the event.
1078 `posn-string': The string object of the event, which is either
1079 nil or (STRING . POSITION)'.
1080 `posn-image': The image object of the event, if any.
1081 `posn-object': The image or string object of the event, if any.
1082 `posn-timestamp': The time the event occurred, in milliseconds.
1083
1084 For more information, see Info node `(elisp)Click Events'."
1085 (if (consp event) (nth 1 event)
1086 (or (posn-at-point)
1087 (list (selected-window) (point) '(0 . 0) 0))))
1088
1089 (defun event-end (event)
1090 "Return the ending position of EVENT.
1091 EVENT should be a click, drag, or key press event.
1092
1093 See `event-start' for a description of the value returned."
1094 (if (consp event) (nth (if (consp (nth 2 event)) 2 1) event)
1095 (or (posn-at-point)
1096 (list (selected-window) (point) '(0 . 0) 0))))
1097
1098 (defsubst event-click-count (event)
1099 "Return the multi-click count of EVENT, a click or drag event.
1100 The return value is a positive integer."
1101 (if (and (consp event) (integerp (nth 2 event))) (nth 2 event) 1))
1102 \f
1103 ;;;; Extracting fields of the positions in an event.
1104
1105 (defun posnp (obj)
1106 "Return non-nil if OBJ appears to be a valid `posn' object specifying a window.
1107 If OBJ is a valid `posn' object, but specifies a frame rather
1108 than a window, return nil."
1109 ;; FIXME: Correct the behavior of this function so that all valid
1110 ;; `posn' objects are recognized, after updating other code that
1111 ;; depends on its present behavior.
1112 (and (windowp (car-safe obj))
1113 (atom (car-safe (setq obj (cdr obj)))) ;AREA-OR-POS.
1114 (integerp (car-safe (car-safe (setq obj (cdr obj))))) ;XOFFSET.
1115 (integerp (car-safe (cdr obj))))) ;TIMESTAMP.
1116
1117 (defsubst posn-window (position)
1118 "Return the window in POSITION.
1119 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1120 and `event-end' functions."
1121 (nth 0 position))
1122
1123 (defsubst posn-area (position)
1124 "Return the window area recorded in POSITION, or nil for the text area.
1125 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1126 and `event-end' functions."
1127 (let ((area (if (consp (nth 1 position))
1128 (car (nth 1 position))
1129 (nth 1 position))))
1130 (and (symbolp area) area)))
1131
1132 (defun posn-point (position)
1133 "Return the buffer location in POSITION.
1134 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1135 and `event-end' functions.
1136 Returns nil if POSITION does not correspond to any buffer location (e.g.
1137 a click on a scroll bar)."
1138 (or (nth 5 position)
1139 (let ((pt (nth 1 position)))
1140 (or (car-safe pt)
1141 ;; Apparently this can also be `vertical-scroll-bar' (bug#13979).
1142 (if (integerp pt) pt)))))
1143
1144 (defun posn-set-point (position)
1145 "Move point to POSITION.
1146 Select the corresponding window as well."
1147 (if (not (windowp (posn-window position)))
1148 (error "Position not in text area of window"))
1149 (select-window (posn-window position))
1150 (if (numberp (posn-point position))
1151 (goto-char (posn-point position))))
1152
1153 (defsubst posn-x-y (position)
1154 "Return the x and y coordinates in POSITION.
1155 The return value has the form (X . Y), where X and Y are given in
1156 pixels. POSITION should be a list of the form returned by
1157 `event-start' and `event-end'."
1158 (nth 2 position))
1159
1160 (declare-function scroll-bar-scale "scroll-bar" (num-denom whole))
1161
1162 (defun posn-col-row (position)
1163 "Return the nominal column and row in POSITION, measured in characters.
1164 The column and row values are approximations calculated from the x
1165 and y coordinates in POSITION and the frame's default character width
1166 and default line height, including spacing.
1167 For a scroll-bar event, the result column is 0, and the row
1168 corresponds to the vertical position of the click in the scroll bar.
1169 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1170 and `event-end' functions."
1171 (let* ((pair (posn-x-y position))
1172 (frame-or-window (posn-window position))
1173 (frame (if (framep frame-or-window)
1174 frame-or-window
1175 (window-frame frame-or-window)))
1176 (window (when (windowp frame-or-window) frame-or-window))
1177 (area (posn-area position)))
1178 (cond
1179 ((null frame-or-window)
1180 '(0 . 0))
1181 ((eq area 'vertical-scroll-bar)
1182 (cons 0 (scroll-bar-scale pair (1- (window-height window)))))
1183 ((eq area 'horizontal-scroll-bar)
1184 (cons (scroll-bar-scale pair (window-width window)) 0))
1185 (t
1186 ;; FIXME: This should take line-spacing properties on
1187 ;; newlines into account.
1188 (let* ((spacing (when (display-graphic-p frame)
1189 (or (with-current-buffer
1190 (window-buffer (frame-selected-window frame))
1191 line-spacing)
1192 (frame-parameter frame 'line-spacing)))))
1193 (cond ((floatp spacing)
1194 (setq spacing (truncate (* spacing
1195 (frame-char-height frame)))))
1196 ((null spacing)
1197 (setq spacing 0)))
1198 (cons (/ (car pair) (frame-char-width frame))
1199 (/ (cdr pair) (+ (frame-char-height frame) spacing))))))))
1200
1201 (defun posn-actual-col-row (position)
1202 "Return the window row number in POSITION and character number in that row.
1203
1204 Return nil if POSITION does not contain the actual position; in that case
1205 \`posn-col-row' can be used to get approximate values.
1206 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1207 and `event-end' functions.
1208
1209 This function does not account for the width on display, like the
1210 number of visual columns taken by a TAB or image. If you need
1211 the coordinates of POSITION in character units, you should use
1212 \`posn-col-row', not this function."
1213 (nth 6 position))
1214
1215 (defsubst posn-timestamp (position)
1216 "Return the timestamp of POSITION.
1217 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1218 and `event-end' functions."
1219 (nth 3 position))
1220
1221 (defun posn-string (position)
1222 "Return the string object of POSITION.
1223 Value is a cons (STRING . STRING-POS), or nil if not a string.
1224 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1225 and `event-end' functions."
1226 (let ((x (nth 4 position)))
1227 ;; Apparently this can also be `handle' or `below-handle' (bug#13979).
1228 (when (consp x) x)))
1229
1230 (defsubst posn-image (position)
1231 "Return the image object of POSITION.
1232 Value is a list (image ...), or nil if not an image.
1233 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1234 and `event-end' functions."
1235 (nth 7 position))
1236
1237 (defsubst posn-object (position)
1238 "Return the object (image or string) of POSITION.
1239 Value is a list (image ...) for an image object, a cons cell
1240 \(STRING . STRING-POS) for a string object, and nil for a buffer position.
1241 POSITION should be a list of the form returned by the `event-start'
1242 and `event-end' functions."
1243 (or (posn-image position) (posn-string position)))
1244
1245 (defsubst posn-object-x-y (position)
1246 "Return the x and y coordinates relative to the object of POSITION.
1247 The return value has the form (DX . DY), where DX and DY are
1248 given in pixels. POSITION should be a list of the form returned
1249 by `event-start' and `event-end'."
1250 (nth 8 position))
1251
1252 (defsubst posn-object-width-height (position)
1253 "Return the pixel width and height of the object of POSITION.
1254 The return value has the form (WIDTH . HEIGHT). POSITION should
1255 be a list of the form returned by `event-start' and `event-end'."
1256 (nth 9 position))
1257
1258 \f
1259 ;;;; Obsolescent names for functions.
1260
1261 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'window-dot 'window-point "22.1")
1262 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'set-window-dot 'set-window-point "22.1")
1263 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'read-input 'read-string "22.1")
1264 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'show-buffer 'set-window-buffer "22.1")
1265 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'eval-current-buffer 'eval-buffer "22.1")
1266 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'string-to-int 'string-to-number "22.1")
1267
1268 (make-obsolete 'forward-point "use (+ (point) N) instead." "23.1")
1269 (make-obsolete 'buffer-has-markers-at nil "24.3")
1270
1271 (defun insert-string (&rest args)
1272 "Mocklisp-compatibility insert function.
1273 Like the function `insert' except that any argument that is a number
1274 is converted into a string by expressing it in decimal."
1275 (declare (obsolete insert "22.1"))
1276 (dolist (el args)
1277 (insert (if (integerp el) (number-to-string el) el))))
1278
1279 (defun makehash (&optional test)
1280 (declare (obsolete make-hash-table "22.1"))
1281 (make-hash-table :test (or test 'eql)))
1282
1283 (defun log10 (x)
1284 "Return (log X 10), the log base 10 of X."
1285 (declare (obsolete log "24.4"))
1286 (log x 10))
1287
1288 ;; These are used by VM and some old programs
1289 (defalias 'focus-frame 'ignore "")
1290 (make-obsolete 'focus-frame "it does nothing." "22.1")
1291 (defalias 'unfocus-frame 'ignore "")
1292 (make-obsolete 'unfocus-frame "it does nothing." "22.1")
1293 (make-obsolete 'make-variable-frame-local
1294 "explicitly check for a frame-parameter instead." "22.2")
1295 (set-advertised-calling-convention
1296 'all-completions '(string collection &optional predicate) "23.1")
1297 (set-advertised-calling-convention 'unintern '(name obarray) "23.3")
1298 (set-advertised-calling-convention 'indirect-function '(object) "25.1")
1299 (set-advertised-calling-convention 'redirect-frame-focus '(frame focus-frame) "24.3")
1300 (set-advertised-calling-convention 'decode-char '(ch charset) "21.4")
1301 (set-advertised-calling-convention 'encode-char '(ch charset) "21.4")
1302 \f
1303 ;;;; Obsolescence declarations for variables, and aliases.
1304
1305 ;; Special "default-FOO" variables which contain the default value of
1306 ;; the "FOO" variable are nasty. Their implementation is brittle, and
1307 ;; slows down several unrelated variable operations; furthermore, they
1308 ;; can lead to really odd behavior if you decide to make them
1309 ;; buffer-local.
1310
1311 ;; Not used at all in Emacs, last time I checked:
1312 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-mode-line-format 'mode-line-format "23.2")
1313 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-header-line-format 'header-line-format "23.2")
1314 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-line-spacing 'line-spacing "23.2")
1315 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-abbrev-mode 'abbrev-mode "23.2")
1316 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-ctl-arrow 'ctl-arrow "23.2")
1317 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-truncate-lines 'truncate-lines "23.2")
1318 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-left-margin 'left-margin "23.2")
1319 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-tab-width 'tab-width "23.2")
1320 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-case-fold-search 'case-fold-search "23.2")
1321 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-left-margin-width 'left-margin-width "23.2")
1322 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-right-margin-width 'right-margin-width "23.2")
1323 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-left-fringe-width 'left-fringe-width "23.2")
1324 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-right-fringe-width 'right-fringe-width "23.2")
1325 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-fringes-outside-margins 'fringes-outside-margins "23.2")
1326 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-scroll-bar-width 'scroll-bar-width "23.2")
1327 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-vertical-scroll-bar 'vertical-scroll-bar "23.2")
1328 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-indicate-empty-lines 'indicate-empty-lines "23.2")
1329 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-indicate-buffer-boundaries 'indicate-buffer-boundaries "23.2")
1330 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-fringe-indicator-alist 'fringe-indicator-alist "23.2")
1331 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-fringe-cursor-alist 'fringe-cursor-alist "23.2")
1332 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-scroll-up-aggressively 'scroll-up-aggressively "23.2")
1333 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-scroll-down-aggressively 'scroll-down-aggressively "23.2")
1334 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-fill-column 'fill-column "23.2")
1335 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-cursor-type 'cursor-type "23.2")
1336 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-cursor-in-non-selected-windows 'cursor-in-non-selected-windows "23.2")
1337 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-buffer-file-coding-system 'buffer-file-coding-system "23.2")
1338 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-major-mode 'major-mode "23.2")
1339 (make-obsolete-variable 'default-enable-multibyte-characters
1340 "use enable-multibyte-characters or set-buffer-multibyte instead" "23.2")
1341
1342 (make-obsolete-variable 'define-key-rebound-commands nil "23.2")
1343 (make-obsolete-variable 'redisplay-end-trigger-functions 'jit-lock-register "23.1")
1344 (make-obsolete-variable 'deferred-action-list 'post-command-hook "24.1")
1345 (make-obsolete-variable 'deferred-action-function 'post-command-hook "24.1")
1346 (make-obsolete-variable 'redisplay-dont-pause nil "24.5")
1347 (make-obsolete 'window-redisplay-end-trigger nil "23.1")
1348 (make-obsolete 'set-window-redisplay-end-trigger nil "23.1")
1349
1350 (make-obsolete 'process-filter-multibyte-p nil "23.1")
1351 (make-obsolete 'set-process-filter-multibyte nil "23.1")
1352
1353 ;; Lisp manual only updated in 22.1.
1354 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'executing-macro 'executing-kbd-macro
1355 "before 19.34")
1356
1357 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'x-lost-selection-hooks
1358 'x-lost-selection-functions "22.1")
1359 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'x-sent-selection-hooks
1360 'x-sent-selection-functions "22.1")
1361
1362 ;; This was introduced in 21.4 for pre-unicode unification. That
1363 ;; usage was rendered obsolete in 23.1 which uses Unicode internally.
1364 ;; Other uses are possible, so this variable is not _really_ obsolete,
1365 ;; but Stefan insists to mark it so.
1366 (make-obsolete-variable 'translation-table-for-input nil "23.1")
1367
1368 (defvaralias 'messages-buffer-max-lines 'message-log-max)
1369 \f
1370 ;;;; Alternate names for functions - these are not being phased out.
1371
1372 (defalias 'send-string 'process-send-string)
1373 (defalias 'send-region 'process-send-region)
1374 (defalias 'string= 'string-equal)
1375 (defalias 'string< 'string-lessp)
1376 (defalias 'move-marker 'set-marker)
1377 (defalias 'rplaca 'setcar)
1378 (defalias 'rplacd 'setcdr)
1379 (defalias 'beep 'ding) ;preserve lingual purity
1380 (defalias 'indent-to-column 'indent-to)
1381 (defalias 'backward-delete-char 'delete-backward-char)
1382 (defalias 'search-forward-regexp (symbol-function 're-search-forward))
1383 (defalias 'search-backward-regexp (symbol-function 're-search-backward))
1384 (defalias 'int-to-string 'number-to-string)
1385 (defalias 'store-match-data 'set-match-data)
1386 (defalias 'chmod 'set-file-modes)
1387 (defalias 'mkdir 'make-directory)
1388 ;; These are the XEmacs names:
1389 (defalias 'point-at-eol 'line-end-position)
1390 (defalias 'point-at-bol 'line-beginning-position)
1391
1392 (defalias 'user-original-login-name 'user-login-name)
1393
1394 \f
1395 ;;;; Hook manipulation functions.
1396
1397 (defun add-hook (hook function &optional append local)
1398 "Add to the value of HOOK the function FUNCTION.
1399 FUNCTION is not added if already present.
1400 FUNCTION is added (if necessary) at the beginning of the hook list
1401 unless the optional argument APPEND is non-nil, in which case
1402 FUNCTION is added at the end.
1403
1404 The optional fourth argument, LOCAL, if non-nil, says to modify
1405 the hook's buffer-local value rather than its global value.
1406 This makes the hook buffer-local, and it makes t a member of the
1407 buffer-local value. That acts as a flag to run the hook
1408 functions of the global value as well as in the local value.
1409
1410 HOOK should be a symbol, and FUNCTION may be any valid function. If
1411 HOOK is void, it is first set to nil. If HOOK's value is a single
1412 function, it is changed to a list of functions."
1413 (or (boundp hook) (set hook nil))
1414 (or (default-boundp hook) (set-default hook nil))
1415 (if local (unless (local-variable-if-set-p hook)
1416 (set (make-local-variable hook) (list t)))
1417 ;; Detect the case where make-local-variable was used on a hook
1418 ;; and do what we used to do.
1419 (unless (and (consp (symbol-value hook)) (memq t (symbol-value hook)))
1420 (setq local t)))
1421 (let ((hook-value (if local (symbol-value hook) (default-value hook))))
1422 ;; If the hook value is a single function, turn it into a list.
1423 (when (or (not (listp hook-value)) (functionp hook-value))
1424 (setq hook-value (list hook-value)))
1425 ;; Do the actual addition if necessary
1426 (unless (member function hook-value)
1427 (when (stringp function)
1428 (setq function (purecopy function)))
1429 (setq hook-value
1430 (if append
1431 (append hook-value (list function))
1432 (cons function hook-value))))
1433 ;; Set the actual variable
1434 (if local
1435 (progn
1436 ;; If HOOK isn't a permanent local,
1437 ;; but FUNCTION wants to survive a change of modes,
1438 ;; mark HOOK as partially permanent.
1439 (and (symbolp function)
1440 (get function 'permanent-local-hook)
1441 (not (get hook 'permanent-local))
1442 (put hook 'permanent-local 'permanent-local-hook))
1443 (set hook hook-value))
1444 (set-default hook hook-value))))
1445
1446 (defun remove-hook (hook function &optional local)
1447 "Remove from the value of HOOK the function FUNCTION.
1448 HOOK should be a symbol, and FUNCTION may be any valid function. If
1449 FUNCTION isn't the value of HOOK, or, if FUNCTION doesn't appear in the
1450 list of hooks to run in HOOK, then nothing is done. See `add-hook'.
1451
1452 The optional third argument, LOCAL, if non-nil, says to modify
1453 the hook's buffer-local value rather than its default value."
1454 (or (boundp hook) (set hook nil))
1455 (or (default-boundp hook) (set-default hook nil))
1456 ;; Do nothing if LOCAL is t but this hook has no local binding.
1457 (unless (and local (not (local-variable-p hook)))
1458 ;; Detect the case where make-local-variable was used on a hook
1459 ;; and do what we used to do.
1460 (when (and (local-variable-p hook)
1461 (not (and (consp (symbol-value hook))
1462 (memq t (symbol-value hook)))))
1463 (setq local t))
1464 (let ((hook-value (if local (symbol-value hook) (default-value hook))))
1465 ;; Remove the function, for both the list and the non-list cases.
1466 (if (or (not (listp hook-value)) (eq (car hook-value) 'lambda))
1467 (if (equal hook-value function) (setq hook-value nil))
1468 (setq hook-value (delete function (copy-sequence hook-value))))
1469 ;; If the function is on the global hook, we need to shadow it locally
1470 ;;(when (and local (member function (default-value hook))
1471 ;; (not (member (cons 'not function) hook-value)))
1472 ;; (push (cons 'not function) hook-value))
1473 ;; Set the actual variable
1474 (if (not local)
1475 (set-default hook hook-value)
1476 (if (equal hook-value '(t))
1477 (kill-local-variable hook)
1478 (set hook hook-value))))))
1479
1480 (defmacro letrec (binders &rest body)
1481 "Bind variables according to BINDERS then eval BODY.
1482 The value of the last form in BODY is returned.
1483 Each element of BINDERS is a list (SYMBOL VALUEFORM) which binds
1484 SYMBOL to the value of VALUEFORM.
1485 All symbols are bound before the VALUEFORMs are evalled."
1486 ;; Only useful in lexical-binding mode.
1487 ;; As a special-form, we could implement it more efficiently (and cleanly,
1488 ;; making the vars actually unbound during evaluation of the binders).
1489 (declare (debug let) (indent 1))
1490 `(let ,(mapcar #'car binders)
1491 ,@(mapcar (lambda (binder) `(setq ,@binder)) binders)
1492 ,@body))
1493
1494 (defmacro with-wrapper-hook (hook args &rest body)
1495 "Run BODY, using wrapper functions from HOOK with additional ARGS.
1496 HOOK is an abnormal hook. Each hook function in HOOK \"wraps\"
1497 around the preceding ones, like a set of nested `around' advices.
1498
1499 Each hook function should accept an argument list consisting of a
1500 function FUN, followed by the additional arguments in ARGS.
1501
1502 The first hook function in HOOK is passed a FUN that, if it is called
1503 with arguments ARGS, performs BODY (i.e., the default operation).
1504 The FUN passed to each successive hook function is defined based
1505 on the preceding hook functions; if called with arguments ARGS,
1506 it does what the `with-wrapper-hook' call would do if the
1507 preceding hook functions were the only ones present in HOOK.
1508
1509 Each hook function may call its FUN argument as many times as it wishes,
1510 including never. In that case, such a hook function acts to replace
1511 the default definition altogether, and any preceding hook functions.
1512 Of course, a subsequent hook function may do the same thing.
1513
1514 Each hook function definition is used to construct the FUN passed
1515 to the next hook function, if any. The last (or \"outermost\")
1516 FUN is then called once."
1517 (declare (indent 2) (debug (form sexp body))
1518 (obsolete "use a <foo>-function variable modified by `add-function'."
1519 "24.4"))
1520 ;; We need those two gensyms because CL's lexical scoping is not available
1521 ;; for function arguments :-(
1522 (let ((funs (make-symbol "funs"))
1523 (global (make-symbol "global"))
1524 (argssym (make-symbol "args"))
1525 (runrestofhook (make-symbol "runrestofhook")))
1526 ;; Since the hook is a wrapper, the loop has to be done via
1527 ;; recursion: a given hook function will call its parameter in order to
1528 ;; continue looping.
1529 `(letrec ((,runrestofhook
1530 (lambda (,funs ,global ,argssym)
1531 ;; `funs' holds the functions left on the hook and `global'
1532 ;; holds the functions left on the global part of the hook
1533 ;; (in case the hook is local).
1534 (if (consp ,funs)
1535 (if (eq t (car ,funs))
1536 (funcall ,runrestofhook
1537 (append ,global (cdr ,funs)) nil ,argssym)
1538 (apply (car ,funs)
1539 (apply-partially
1540 (lambda (,funs ,global &rest ,argssym)
1541 (funcall ,runrestofhook ,funs ,global ,argssym))
1542 (cdr ,funs) ,global)
1543 ,argssym))
1544 ;; Once there are no more functions on the hook, run
1545 ;; the original body.
1546 (apply (lambda ,args ,@body) ,argssym)))))
1547 (funcall ,runrestofhook ,hook
1548 ;; The global part of the hook, if any.
1549 ,(if (symbolp hook)
1550 `(if (local-variable-p ',hook)
1551 (default-value ',hook)))
1552 (list ,@args)))))
1553
1554 (defun add-to-list (list-var element &optional append compare-fn)
1555 "Add ELEMENT to the value of LIST-VAR if it isn't there yet.
1556 The test for presence of ELEMENT is done with `equal', or with
1557 COMPARE-FN if that's non-nil.
1558 If ELEMENT is added, it is added at the beginning of the list,
1559 unless the optional argument APPEND is non-nil, in which case
1560 ELEMENT is added at the end.
1561
1562 The return value is the new value of LIST-VAR.
1563
1564 This is handy to add some elements to configuration variables,
1565 but please do not abuse it in Elisp code, where you are usually
1566 better off using `push' or `cl-pushnew'.
1567
1568 If you want to use `add-to-list' on a variable that is not
1569 defined until a certain package is loaded, you should put the
1570 call to `add-to-list' into a hook function that will be run only
1571 after loading the package. `eval-after-load' provides one way to
1572 do this. In some cases other hooks, such as major mode hooks,
1573 can do the job."
1574 (declare
1575 (compiler-macro
1576 (lambda (exp)
1577 ;; FIXME: Something like this could be used for `set' as well.
1578 (if (or (not (eq 'quote (car-safe list-var)))
1579 (special-variable-p (cadr list-var))
1580 (not (macroexp-const-p append)))
1581 exp
1582 (let* ((sym (cadr list-var))
1583 (append (eval append))
1584 (msg (format "`add-to-list' can't use lexical var `%s'; use `push' or `cl-pushnew'"
1585 sym))
1586 ;; Big ugly hack so we only output a warning during
1587 ;; byte-compilation, and so we can use
1588 ;; byte-compile-not-lexical-var-p to silence the warning
1589 ;; when a defvar has been seen but not yet executed.
1590 (warnfun (lambda ()
1591 ;; FIXME: We should also emit a warning for let-bound
1592 ;; variables with dynamic binding.
1593 (when (assq sym byte-compile--lexical-environment)
1594 (byte-compile-log-warning msg t :error))))
1595 (code
1596 (macroexp-let2 macroexp-copyable-p x element
1597 `(if ,(if compare-fn
1598 (progn
1599 (require 'cl-lib)
1600 `(cl-member ,x ,sym :test ,compare-fn))
1601 ;; For bootstrapping reasons, don't rely on
1602 ;; cl--compiler-macro-member for the base case.
1603 `(member ,x ,sym))
1604 ,sym
1605 ,(if append
1606 `(setq ,sym (append ,sym (list ,x)))
1607 `(push ,x ,sym))))))
1608 (if (not (macroexp--compiling-p))
1609 code
1610 `(progn
1611 (macroexp--funcall-if-compiled ',warnfun)
1612 ,code)))))))
1613 (if (cond
1614 ((null compare-fn)
1615 (member element (symbol-value list-var)))
1616 ((eq compare-fn 'eq)
1617 (memq element (symbol-value list-var)))
1618 ((eq compare-fn 'eql)
1619 (memql element (symbol-value list-var)))
1620 (t
1621 (let ((lst (symbol-value list-var)))
1622 (while (and lst
1623 (not (funcall compare-fn element (car lst))))
1624 (setq lst (cdr lst)))
1625 lst)))
1626 (symbol-value list-var)
1627 (set list-var
1628 (if append
1629 (append (symbol-value list-var) (list element))
1630 (cons element (symbol-value list-var))))))
1631
1632
1633 (defun add-to-ordered-list (list-var element &optional order)
1634 "Add ELEMENT to the value of LIST-VAR if it isn't there yet.
1635 The test for presence of ELEMENT is done with `eq'.
1636
1637 The resulting list is reordered so that the elements are in the
1638 order given by each element's numeric list order. Elements
1639 without a numeric list order are placed at the end of the list.
1640
1641 If the third optional argument ORDER is a number (integer or
1642 float), set the element's list order to the given value. If
1643 ORDER is nil or omitted, do not change the numeric order of
1644 ELEMENT. If ORDER has any other value, remove the numeric order
1645 of ELEMENT if it has one.
1646
1647 The list order for each element is stored in LIST-VAR's
1648 `list-order' property.
1649
1650 The return value is the new value of LIST-VAR."
1651 (let ((ordering (get list-var 'list-order)))
1652 (unless ordering
1653 (put list-var 'list-order
1654 (setq ordering (make-hash-table :weakness 'key :test 'eq))))
1655 (when order
1656 (puthash element (and (numberp order) order) ordering))
1657 (unless (memq element (symbol-value list-var))
1658 (set list-var (cons element (symbol-value list-var))))
1659 (set list-var (sort (symbol-value list-var)
1660 (lambda (a b)
1661 (let ((oa (gethash a ordering))
1662 (ob (gethash b ordering)))
1663 (if (and oa ob)
1664 (< oa ob)
1665 oa)))))))
1666
1667 (defun add-to-history (history-var newelt &optional maxelt keep-all)
1668 "Add NEWELT to the history list stored in the variable HISTORY-VAR.
1669 Return the new history list.
1670 If MAXELT is non-nil, it specifies the maximum length of the history.
1671 Otherwise, the maximum history length is the value of the `history-length'
1672 property on symbol HISTORY-VAR, if set, or the value of the `history-length'
1673 variable.
1674 Remove duplicates of NEWELT if `history-delete-duplicates' is non-nil.
1675 If optional fourth arg KEEP-ALL is non-nil, add NEWELT to history even
1676 if it is empty or a duplicate."
1677 (unless maxelt
1678 (setq maxelt (or (get history-var 'history-length)
1679 history-length)))
1680 (let ((history (symbol-value history-var))
1681 tail)
1682 (when (and (listp history)
1683 (or keep-all
1684 (not (stringp newelt))
1685 (> (length newelt) 0))
1686 (or keep-all
1687 (not (equal (car history) newelt))))
1688 (if history-delete-duplicates
1689 (setq history (delete newelt history)))
1690 (setq history (cons newelt history))
1691 (when (integerp maxelt)
1692 (if (= 0 maxelt)
1693 (setq history nil)
1694 (setq tail (nthcdr (1- maxelt) history))
1695 (when (consp tail)
1696 (setcdr tail nil)))))
1697 (set history-var history)))
1698
1699 \f
1700 ;;;; Mode hooks.
1701
1702 (defvar delay-mode-hooks nil
1703 "If non-nil, `run-mode-hooks' should delay running the hooks.")
1704 (defvar delayed-mode-hooks nil
1705 "List of delayed mode hooks waiting to be run.")
1706 (make-variable-buffer-local 'delayed-mode-hooks)
1707 (put 'delay-mode-hooks 'permanent-local t)
1708
1709 (defvar change-major-mode-after-body-hook nil
1710 "Normal hook run in major mode functions, before the mode hooks.")
1711
1712 (defvar after-change-major-mode-hook nil
1713 "Normal hook run at the very end of major mode functions.")
1714
1715 (defun run-mode-hooks (&rest hooks)
1716 "Run mode hooks `delayed-mode-hooks' and HOOKS, or delay HOOKS.
1717 If the variable `delay-mode-hooks' is non-nil, does not run any hooks,
1718 just adds the HOOKS to the list `delayed-mode-hooks'.
1719 Otherwise, runs hooks in the sequence: `change-major-mode-after-body-hook',
1720 `delayed-mode-hooks' (in reverse order), HOOKS, and finally
1721 `after-change-major-mode-hook'. Major mode functions should use
1722 this instead of `run-hooks' when running their FOO-mode-hook."
1723 (if delay-mode-hooks
1724 ;; Delaying case.
1725 (dolist (hook hooks)
1726 (push hook delayed-mode-hooks))
1727 ;; Normal case, just run the hook as before plus any delayed hooks.
1728 (setq hooks (nconc (nreverse delayed-mode-hooks) hooks))
1729 (setq delayed-mode-hooks nil)
1730 (apply 'run-hooks (cons 'change-major-mode-after-body-hook hooks))
1731 (run-hooks 'after-change-major-mode-hook)))
1732
1733 (defmacro delay-mode-hooks (&rest body)
1734 "Execute BODY, but delay any `run-mode-hooks'.
1735 These hooks will be executed by the first following call to
1736 `run-mode-hooks' that occurs outside any `delayed-mode-hooks' form.
1737 Only affects hooks run in the current buffer."
1738 (declare (debug t) (indent 0))
1739 `(progn
1740 (make-local-variable 'delay-mode-hooks)
1741 (let ((delay-mode-hooks t))
1742 ,@body)))
1743
1744 ;; PUBLIC: find if the current mode derives from another.
1745
1746 (defun derived-mode-p (&rest modes)
1747 "Non-nil if the current major mode is derived from one of MODES.
1748 Uses the `derived-mode-parent' property of the symbol to trace backwards."
1749 (let ((parent major-mode))
1750 (while (and (not (memq parent modes))
1751 (setq parent (get parent 'derived-mode-parent))))
1752 parent))
1753 \f
1754 ;;;; Minor modes.
1755
1756 ;; If a minor mode is not defined with define-minor-mode,
1757 ;; add it here explicitly.
1758 ;; isearch-mode is deliberately excluded, since you should
1759 ;; not call it yourself.
1760 (defvar minor-mode-list '(auto-save-mode auto-fill-mode abbrev-mode
1761 overwrite-mode view-mode
1762 hs-minor-mode)
1763 "List of all minor mode functions.")
1764
1765 (defun add-minor-mode (toggle name &optional keymap after toggle-fun)
1766 "Register a new minor mode.
1767
1768 This is an XEmacs-compatibility function. Use `define-minor-mode' instead.
1769
1770 TOGGLE is a symbol which is the name of a buffer-local variable that
1771 is toggled on or off to say whether the minor mode is active or not.
1772
1773 NAME specifies what will appear in the mode line when the minor mode
1774 is active. NAME should be either a string starting with a space, or a
1775 symbol whose value is such a string.
1776
1777 Optional KEYMAP is the keymap for the minor mode that will be added
1778 to `minor-mode-map-alist'.
1779
1780 Optional AFTER specifies that TOGGLE should be added after AFTER
1781 in `minor-mode-alist'.
1782
1783 Optional TOGGLE-FUN is an interactive function to toggle the mode.
1784 It defaults to (and should by convention be) TOGGLE.
1785
1786 If TOGGLE has a non-nil `:included' property, an entry for the mode is
1787 included in the mode-line minor mode menu.
1788 If TOGGLE has a `:menu-tag', that is used for the menu item's label."
1789 (unless (memq toggle minor-mode-list)
1790 (push toggle minor-mode-list))
1791
1792 (unless toggle-fun (setq toggle-fun toggle))
1793 (unless (eq toggle-fun toggle)
1794 (put toggle :minor-mode-function toggle-fun))
1795 ;; Add the name to the minor-mode-alist.
1796 (when name
1797 (let ((existing (assq toggle minor-mode-alist)))
1798 (if existing
1799 (setcdr existing (list name))
1800 (let ((tail minor-mode-alist) found)
1801 (while (and tail (not found))
1802 (if (eq after (caar tail))
1803 (setq found tail)
1804 (setq tail (cdr tail))))
1805 (if found
1806 (let ((rest (cdr found)))
1807 (setcdr found nil)
1808 (nconc found (list (list toggle name)) rest))
1809 (push (list toggle name) minor-mode-alist))))))
1810 ;; Add the toggle to the minor-modes menu if requested.
1811 (when (get toggle :included)
1812 (define-key mode-line-mode-menu
1813 (vector toggle)
1814 (list 'menu-item
1815 (concat
1816 (or (get toggle :menu-tag)
1817 (if (stringp name) name (symbol-name toggle)))
1818 (let ((mode-name (if (symbolp name) (symbol-value name))))
1819 (if (and (stringp mode-name) (string-match "[^ ]+" mode-name))
1820 (concat " (" (match-string 0 mode-name) ")"))))
1821 toggle-fun
1822 :button (cons :toggle toggle))))
1823
1824 ;; Add the map to the minor-mode-map-alist.
1825 (when keymap
1826 (let ((existing (assq toggle minor-mode-map-alist)))
1827 (if existing
1828 (setcdr existing keymap)
1829 (let ((tail minor-mode-map-alist) found)
1830 (while (and tail (not found))
1831 (if (eq after (caar tail))
1832 (setq found tail)
1833 (setq tail (cdr tail))))
1834 (if found
1835 (let ((rest (cdr found)))
1836 (setcdr found nil)
1837 (nconc found (list (cons toggle keymap)) rest))
1838 (push (cons toggle keymap) minor-mode-map-alist)))))))
1839 \f
1840 ;;;; Load history
1841
1842 (defsubst autoloadp (object)
1843 "Non-nil if OBJECT is an autoload."
1844 (eq 'autoload (car-safe object)))
1845
1846 ;; (defun autoload-type (object)
1847 ;; "Returns the type of OBJECT or `function' or `command' if the type is nil.
1848 ;; OBJECT should be an autoload object."
1849 ;; (when (autoloadp object)
1850 ;; (let ((type (nth 3 object)))
1851 ;; (cond ((null type) (if (nth 2 object) 'command 'function))
1852 ;; ((eq 'keymap t) 'macro)
1853 ;; (type)))))
1854
1855 ;; (defalias 'autoload-file #'cadr
1856 ;; "Return the name of the file from which AUTOLOAD will be loaded.
1857 ;; \n\(fn AUTOLOAD)")
1858
1859 (defun symbol-file (symbol &optional type)
1860 "Return the name of the file that defined SYMBOL.
1861 The value is normally an absolute file name. It can also be nil,
1862 if the definition is not associated with any file. If SYMBOL
1863 specifies an autoloaded function, the value can be a relative
1864 file name without extension.
1865
1866 If TYPE is nil, then any kind of definition is acceptable. If
1867 TYPE is `defun', `defvar', or `defface', that specifies function
1868 definition, variable definition, or face definition only."
1869 (if (and (or (null type) (eq type 'defun))
1870 (symbolp symbol)
1871 (autoloadp (symbol-function symbol)))
1872 (nth 1 (symbol-function symbol))
1873 (let ((files load-history)
1874 file)
1875 (while files
1876 (if (if type
1877 (if (eq type 'defvar)
1878 ;; Variables are present just as their names.
1879 (member symbol (cdr (car files)))
1880 ;; Other types are represented as (TYPE . NAME).
1881 (member (cons type symbol) (cdr (car files))))
1882 ;; We accept all types, so look for variable def
1883 ;; and then for any other kind.
1884 (or (member symbol (cdr (car files)))
1885 (rassq symbol (cdr (car files)))))
1886 (setq file (car (car files)) files nil))
1887 (setq files (cdr files)))
1888 file)))
1889
1890 (defun locate-library (library &optional nosuffix path interactive-call)
1891 "Show the precise file name of Emacs library LIBRARY.
1892 LIBRARY should be a relative file name of the library, a string.
1893 It can omit the suffix (a.k.a. file-name extension) if NOSUFFIX is
1894 nil (which is the default, see below).
1895 This command searches the directories in `load-path' like `\\[load-library]'
1896 to find the file that `\\[load-library] RET LIBRARY RET' would load.
1897 Optional second arg NOSUFFIX non-nil means don't add suffixes `load-suffixes'
1898 to the specified name LIBRARY.
1899
1900 If the optional third arg PATH is specified, that list of directories
1901 is used instead of `load-path'.
1902
1903 When called from a program, the file name is normally returned as a
1904 string. When run interactively, the argument INTERACTIVE-CALL is t,
1905 and the file name is displayed in the echo area."
1906 (interactive (list (completing-read "Locate library: "
1907 (apply-partially
1908 'locate-file-completion-table
1909 load-path (get-load-suffixes)))
1910 nil nil
1911 t))
1912 (let ((file (locate-file library
1913 (or path load-path)
1914 (append (unless nosuffix (get-load-suffixes))
1915 load-file-rep-suffixes))))
1916 (if interactive-call
1917 (if file
1918 (message "Library is file %s" (abbreviate-file-name file))
1919 (message "No library %s in search path" library)))
1920 file))
1921
1922 \f
1923 ;;;; Process stuff.
1924
1925 (defun start-process (name buffer program &rest program-args)
1926 "Start a program in a subprocess. Return the process object for it.
1927 NAME is name for process. It is modified if necessary to make it unique.
1928 BUFFER is the buffer (or buffer name) to associate with the process.
1929
1930 Process output (both standard output and standard error streams) goes
1931 at end of BUFFER, unless you specify an output stream or filter
1932 function to handle the output. BUFFER may also be nil, meaning that
1933 this process is not associated with any buffer.
1934
1935 PROGRAM is the program file name. It is searched for in `exec-path'
1936 \(which see). If nil, just associate a pty with the buffer. Remaining
1937 arguments are strings to give program as arguments.
1938
1939 If you want to separate standard output from standard error, use
1940 `make-process' or invoke the command through a shell and redirect
1941 one of them using the shell syntax."
1942 (unless (fboundp 'make-process)
1943 (error "Emacs was compiled without subprocess support"))
1944 (apply #'make-process
1945 (append (list :name name :buffer buffer)
1946 (if program
1947 (list :command (cons program program-args))))))
1948
1949 (defun process-lines (program &rest args)
1950 "Execute PROGRAM with ARGS, returning its output as a list of lines.
1951 Signal an error if the program returns with a non-zero exit status."
1952 (with-temp-buffer
1953 (let ((status (apply 'call-process program nil (current-buffer) nil args)))
1954 (unless (eq status 0)
1955 (error "%s exited with status %s" program status))
1956 (goto-char (point-min))
1957 (let (lines)
1958 (while (not (eobp))
1959 (setq lines (cons (buffer-substring-no-properties
1960 (line-beginning-position)
1961 (line-end-position))
1962 lines))
1963 (forward-line 1))
1964 (nreverse lines)))))
1965
1966 (defun process-live-p (process)
1967 "Returns non-nil if PROCESS is alive.
1968 A process is considered alive if its status is `run', `open',
1969 `listen', `connect' or `stop'. Value is nil if PROCESS is not a
1970 process."
1971 (and (processp process)
1972 (memq (process-status process)
1973 '(run open listen connect stop))))
1974
1975 ;; compatibility
1976
1977 (defun process-kill-without-query (process &optional _flag)
1978 "Say no query needed if PROCESS is running when Emacs is exited.
1979 Optional second argument if non-nil says to require a query.
1980 Value is t if a query was formerly required."
1981 (declare (obsolete
1982 "use `process-query-on-exit-flag' or `set-process-query-on-exit-flag'."
1983 "22.1"))
1984 (let ((old (process-query-on-exit-flag process)))
1985 (set-process-query-on-exit-flag process nil)
1986 old))
1987
1988 (defun process-kill-buffer-query-function ()
1989 "Ask before killing a buffer that has a running process."
1990 (let ((process (get-buffer-process (current-buffer))))
1991 (or (not process)
1992 (not (memq (process-status process) '(run stop open listen)))
1993 (not (process-query-on-exit-flag process))
1994 (yes-or-no-p
1995 (format "Buffer %S has a running process; kill it? "
1996 (buffer-name (current-buffer)))))))
1997
1998 (add-hook 'kill-buffer-query-functions 'process-kill-buffer-query-function)
1999
2000 ;; process plist management
2001
2002 (defun process-get (process propname)
2003 "Return the value of PROCESS' PROPNAME property.
2004 This is the last value stored with `(process-put PROCESS PROPNAME VALUE)'."
2005 (plist-get (process-plist process) propname))
2006
2007 (defun process-put (process propname value)
2008 "Change PROCESS' PROPNAME property to VALUE.
2009 It can be retrieved with `(process-get PROCESS PROPNAME)'."
2010 (set-process-plist process
2011 (plist-put (process-plist process) propname value)))
2012
2013 \f
2014 ;;;; Input and display facilities.
2015
2016 (defconst read-key-empty-map (make-sparse-keymap))
2017
2018 (defvar read-key-delay 0.01) ;Fast enough for 100Hz repeat rate, hopefully.
2019
2020 (defun read-key (&optional prompt)
2021 "Read a key from the keyboard.
2022 Contrary to `read-event' this will not return a raw event but instead will
2023 obey the input decoding and translations usually done by `read-key-sequence'.
2024 So escape sequences and keyboard encoding are taken into account.
2025 When there's an ambiguity because the key looks like the prefix of
2026 some sort of escape sequence, the ambiguity is resolved via `read-key-delay'."
2027 ;; This overriding-terminal-local-map binding also happens to
2028 ;; disable quail's input methods, so although read-key-sequence
2029 ;; always inherits the input method, in practice read-key does not
2030 ;; inherit the input method (at least not if it's based on quail).
2031 (let ((overriding-terminal-local-map nil)
2032 (overriding-local-map read-key-empty-map)
2033 (echo-keystrokes 0)
2034 (old-global-map (current-global-map))
2035 (timer (run-with-idle-timer
2036 ;; Wait long enough that Emacs has the time to receive and
2037 ;; process all the raw events associated with the single-key.
2038 ;; But don't wait too long, or the user may find the delay
2039 ;; annoying (or keep hitting more keys which may then get
2040 ;; lost or misinterpreted).
2041 ;; This is only relevant for keys which Emacs perceives as
2042 ;; "prefixes", such as C-x (because of the C-x 8 map in
2043 ;; key-translate-table and the C-x @ map in function-key-map)
2044 ;; or ESC (because of terminal escape sequences in
2045 ;; input-decode-map).
2046 read-key-delay t
2047 (lambda ()
2048 (let ((keys (this-command-keys-vector)))
2049 (unless (zerop (length keys))
2050 ;; `keys' is non-empty, so the user has hit at least
2051 ;; one key; there's no point waiting any longer, even
2052 ;; though read-key-sequence thinks we should wait
2053 ;; for more input to decide how to interpret the
2054 ;; current input.
2055 (throw 'read-key keys)))))))
2056 (unwind-protect
2057 (progn
2058 (use-global-map
2059 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
2060 ;; Don't hide the menu-bar and tool-bar entries.
2061 (define-key map [menu-bar] (lookup-key global-map [menu-bar]))
2062 (define-key map [tool-bar]
2063 ;; This hack avoids evaluating the :filter (Bug#9922).
2064 (or (cdr (assq 'tool-bar global-map))
2065 (lookup-key global-map [tool-bar])))
2066 map))
2067 (let* ((keys
2068 (catch 'read-key (read-key-sequence-vector prompt nil t)))
2069 (key (aref keys 0)))
2070 (if (and (> (length keys) 1)
2071 (memq key '(mode-line header-line
2072 left-fringe right-fringe)))
2073 (aref keys 1)
2074 key)))
2075 (cancel-timer timer)
2076 (use-global-map old-global-map))))
2077
2078 (defvar read-passwd-map
2079 ;; BEWARE: `defconst' would purecopy it, breaking the sharing with
2080 ;; minibuffer-local-map along the way!
2081 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
2082 (set-keymap-parent map minibuffer-local-map)
2083 (define-key map "\C-u" #'delete-minibuffer-contents) ;bug#12570
2084 map)
2085 "Keymap used while reading passwords.")
2086
2087 (defun read-passwd (prompt &optional confirm default)
2088 "Read a password, prompting with PROMPT, and return it.
2089 If optional CONFIRM is non-nil, read the password twice to make sure.
2090 Optional DEFAULT is a default password to use instead of empty input.
2091
2092 This function echoes `.' for each character that the user types.
2093 You could let-bind `read-hide-char' to another hiding character, though.
2094
2095 Once the caller uses the password, it can erase the password
2096 by doing (clear-string STRING)."
2097 (if confirm
2098 (let (success)
2099 (while (not success)
2100 (let ((first (read-passwd prompt nil default))
2101 (second (read-passwd "Confirm password: " nil default)))
2102 (if (equal first second)
2103 (progn
2104 (and (arrayp second) (clear-string second))
2105 (setq success first))
2106 (and (arrayp first) (clear-string first))
2107 (and (arrayp second) (clear-string second))
2108 (message "Password not repeated accurately; please start over")
2109 (sit-for 1))))
2110 success)
2111 (let ((hide-chars-fun
2112 (lambda (beg end _len)
2113 (clear-this-command-keys)
2114 (setq beg (min end (max (minibuffer-prompt-end)
2115 beg)))
2116 (dotimes (i (- end beg))
2117 (put-text-property (+ i beg) (+ 1 i beg)
2118 'display (string (or read-hide-char ?.))))))
2119 minibuf)
2120 (minibuffer-with-setup-hook
2121 (lambda ()
2122 (setq minibuf (current-buffer))
2123 ;; Turn off electricity.
2124 (setq-local post-self-insert-hook nil)
2125 (setq-local buffer-undo-list t)
2126 (setq-local select-active-regions nil)
2127 (use-local-map read-passwd-map)
2128 (setq-local inhibit-modification-hooks nil) ;bug#15501.
2129 (setq-local show-paren-mode nil) ;bug#16091.
2130 (add-hook 'after-change-functions hide-chars-fun nil 'local))
2131 (unwind-protect
2132 (let ((enable-recursive-minibuffers t)
2133 (read-hide-char (or read-hide-char ?.)))
2134 (read-string prompt nil t default)) ; t = "no history"
2135 (when (buffer-live-p minibuf)
2136 (with-current-buffer minibuf
2137 ;; Not sure why but it seems that there might be cases where the
2138 ;; minibuffer is not always properly reset later on, so undo
2139 ;; whatever we've done here (bug#11392).
2140 (remove-hook 'after-change-functions hide-chars-fun 'local)
2141 (kill-local-variable 'post-self-insert-hook)
2142 ;; And of course, don't keep the sensitive data around.
2143 (erase-buffer))))))))
2144
2145 (defun read-number (prompt &optional default)
2146 "Read a numeric value in the minibuffer, prompting with PROMPT.
2147 DEFAULT specifies a default value to return if the user just types RET.
2148 The value of DEFAULT is inserted into PROMPT.
2149 This function is used by the `interactive' code letter `n'."
2150 (let ((n nil)
2151 (default1 (if (consp default) (car default) default)))
2152 (when default1
2153 (setq prompt
2154 (if (string-match "\\(\\):[ \t]*\\'" prompt)
2155 (replace-match (format " (default %s)" default1) t t prompt 1)
2156 (replace-regexp-in-string "[ \t]*\\'"
2157 (format " (default %s) " default1)
2158 prompt t t))))
2159 (while
2160 (progn
2161 (let ((str (read-from-minibuffer
2162 prompt nil nil nil nil
2163 (when default
2164 (if (consp default)
2165 (mapcar 'number-to-string (delq nil default))
2166 (number-to-string default))))))
2167 (condition-case nil
2168 (setq n (cond
2169 ((zerop (length str)) default1)
2170 ((stringp str) (read str))))
2171 (error nil)))
2172 (unless (numberp n)
2173 (message "Please enter a number.")
2174 (sit-for 1)
2175 t)))
2176 n))
2177
2178 (defun read-char-choice (prompt chars &optional inhibit-keyboard-quit)
2179 "Read and return one of CHARS, prompting for PROMPT.
2180 Any input that is not one of CHARS is ignored.
2181
2182 If optional argument INHIBIT-KEYBOARD-QUIT is non-nil, ignore
2183 keyboard-quit events while waiting for a valid input."
2184 (unless (consp chars)
2185 (error "Called `read-char-choice' without valid char choices"))
2186 (let (char done show-help (helpbuf " *Char Help*"))
2187 (let ((cursor-in-echo-area t)
2188 (executing-kbd-macro executing-kbd-macro)
2189 (esc-flag nil))
2190 (save-window-excursion ; in case we call help-form-show
2191 (while (not done)
2192 (unless (get-text-property 0 'face prompt)
2193 (setq prompt (propertize prompt 'face 'minibuffer-prompt)))
2194 (setq char (let ((inhibit-quit inhibit-keyboard-quit))
2195 (read-key prompt)))
2196 (and show-help (buffer-live-p (get-buffer helpbuf))
2197 (kill-buffer helpbuf))
2198 (cond
2199 ((not (numberp char)))
2200 ;; If caller has set help-form, that's enough.
2201 ;; They don't explicitly have to add help-char to chars.
2202 ((and help-form
2203 (eq char help-char)
2204 (setq show-help t)
2205 (help-form-show)))
2206 ((memq char chars)
2207 (setq done t))
2208 ((and executing-kbd-macro (= char -1))
2209 ;; read-event returns -1 if we are in a kbd macro and
2210 ;; there are no more events in the macro. Attempt to
2211 ;; get an event interactively.
2212 (setq executing-kbd-macro nil))
2213 ((not inhibit-keyboard-quit)
2214 (cond
2215 ((and (null esc-flag) (eq char ?\e))
2216 (setq esc-flag t))
2217 ((memq char '(?\C-g ?\e))
2218 (keyboard-quit))))))))
2219 ;; Display the question with the answer. But without cursor-in-echo-area.
2220 (message "%s%s" prompt (char-to-string char))
2221 char))
2222
2223 (defun sit-for (seconds &optional nodisp obsolete)
2224 "Redisplay, then wait for SECONDS seconds. Stop when input is available.
2225 SECONDS may be a floating-point value.
2226 \(On operating systems that do not support waiting for fractions of a
2227 second, floating-point values are rounded down to the nearest integer.)
2228
2229 If optional arg NODISP is t, don't redisplay, just wait for input.
2230 Redisplay does not happen if input is available before it starts.
2231
2232 Value is t if waited the full time with no input arriving, and nil otherwise.
2233
2234 An obsolete, but still supported form is
2235 \(sit-for SECONDS &optional MILLISECONDS NODISP)
2236 where the optional arg MILLISECONDS specifies an additional wait period,
2237 in milliseconds; this was useful when Emacs was built without
2238 floating point support."
2239 (declare (advertised-calling-convention (seconds &optional nodisp) "22.1"))
2240 ;; This used to be implemented in C until the following discussion:
2241 ;; http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2006-07/msg00401.html
2242 ;; Then it was moved here using an implementation based on an idle timer,
2243 ;; which was then replaced by the use of read-event.
2244 (if (numberp nodisp)
2245 (setq seconds (+ seconds (* 1e-3 nodisp))
2246 nodisp obsolete)
2247 (if obsolete (setq nodisp obsolete)))
2248 (cond
2249 (noninteractive
2250 (sleep-for seconds)
2251 t)
2252 ((input-pending-p t)
2253 nil)
2254 ((<= seconds 0)
2255 (or nodisp (redisplay)))
2256 (t
2257 (or nodisp (redisplay))
2258 ;; FIXME: we should not read-event here at all, because it's much too
2259 ;; difficult to reliably "undo" a read-event by pushing it onto
2260 ;; unread-command-events.
2261 ;; For bug#14782, we need read-event to do the keyboard-coding-system
2262 ;; decoding (hence non-nil as second arg under POSIX ttys).
2263 ;; For bug#15614, we need read-event not to inherit-input-method.
2264 ;; So we temporarily suspend input-method-function.
2265 (let ((read (let ((input-method-function nil))
2266 (read-event nil t seconds))))
2267 (or (null read)
2268 (progn
2269 ;; https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2006-10/msg00394.html
2270 ;; We want `read' appear in the next command's this-command-event
2271 ;; but not in the current one.
2272 ;; By pushing (cons t read), we indicate that `read' has not
2273 ;; yet been recorded in this-command-keys, so it will be recorded
2274 ;; next time it's read.
2275 ;; And indeed the `seconds' argument to read-event correctly
2276 ;; prevented recording this event in the current command's
2277 ;; this-command-keys.
2278 (push (cons t read) unread-command-events)
2279 nil))))))
2280
2281 ;; Behind display-popup-menus-p test.
2282 (declare-function x-popup-dialog "menu.c" (position contents &optional header))
2283
2284 (defun y-or-n-p (prompt)
2285 "Ask user a \"y or n\" question. Return t if answer is \"y\".
2286 PROMPT is the string to display to ask the question. It should
2287 end in a space; `y-or-n-p' adds \"(y or n) \" to it.
2288
2289 No confirmation of the answer is requested; a single character is
2290 enough. SPC also means yes, and DEL means no.
2291
2292 To be precise, this function translates user input into responses
2293 by consulting the bindings in `query-replace-map'; see the
2294 documentation of that variable for more information. In this
2295 case, the useful bindings are `act', `skip', `recenter',
2296 `scroll-up', `scroll-down', and `quit'.
2297 An `act' response means yes, and a `skip' response means no.
2298 A `quit' response means to invoke `keyboard-quit'.
2299 If the user enters `recenter', `scroll-up', or `scroll-down'
2300 responses, perform the requested window recentering or scrolling
2301 and ask again.
2302
2303 Under a windowing system a dialog box will be used if `last-nonmenu-event'
2304 is nil and `use-dialog-box' is non-nil."
2305 ;; ¡Beware! when I tried to edebug this code, Emacs got into a weird state
2306 ;; where all the keys were unbound (i.e. it somehow got triggered
2307 ;; within read-key, apparently). I had to kill it.
2308 (let ((answer 'recenter)
2309 (padded (lambda (prompt &optional dialog)
2310 (let ((l (length prompt)))
2311 (concat prompt
2312 (if (or (zerop l) (eq ?\s (aref prompt (1- l))))
2313 "" " ")
2314 (if dialog "" "(y or n) "))))))
2315 (cond
2316 (noninteractive
2317 (setq prompt (funcall padded prompt))
2318 (let ((temp-prompt prompt))
2319 (while (not (memq answer '(act skip)))
2320 (let ((str (read-string temp-prompt)))
2321 (cond ((member str '("y" "Y")) (setq answer 'act))
2322 ((member str '("n" "N")) (setq answer 'skip))
2323 (t (setq temp-prompt (concat "Please answer y or n. "
2324 prompt))))))))
2325 ((and (display-popup-menus-p)
2326 (listp last-nonmenu-event)
2327 use-dialog-box)
2328 (setq prompt (funcall padded prompt t)
2329 answer (x-popup-dialog t `(,prompt ("Yes" . act) ("No" . skip)))))
2330 (t
2331 (setq prompt (funcall padded prompt))
2332 (while
2333 (let* ((scroll-actions '(recenter scroll-up scroll-down
2334 scroll-other-window scroll-other-window-down))
2335 (key
2336 (let ((cursor-in-echo-area t))
2337 (when minibuffer-auto-raise
2338 (raise-frame (window-frame (minibuffer-window))))
2339 (read-key (propertize (if (memq answer scroll-actions)
2340 prompt
2341 (concat "Please answer y or n. "
2342 prompt))
2343 'face 'minibuffer-prompt)))))
2344 (setq answer (lookup-key query-replace-map (vector key) t))
2345 (cond
2346 ((memq answer '(skip act)) nil)
2347 ((eq answer 'recenter)
2348 (recenter) t)
2349 ((eq answer 'scroll-up)
2350 (ignore-errors (scroll-up-command)) t)
2351 ((eq answer 'scroll-down)
2352 (ignore-errors (scroll-down-command)) t)
2353 ((eq answer 'scroll-other-window)
2354 (ignore-errors (scroll-other-window)) t)
2355 ((eq answer 'scroll-other-window-down)
2356 (ignore-errors (scroll-other-window-down)) t)
2357 ((or (memq answer '(exit-prefix quit)) (eq key ?\e))
2358 (signal 'quit nil) t)
2359 (t t)))
2360 (ding)
2361 (discard-input))))
2362 (let ((ret (eq answer 'act)))
2363 (unless noninteractive
2364 (message "%s%c" prompt (if ret ?y ?n)))
2365 ret)))
2366
2367 \f
2368 ;;; Atomic change groups.
2369
2370 (defmacro atomic-change-group (&rest body)
2371 "Perform BODY as an atomic change group.
2372 This means that if BODY exits abnormally,
2373 all of its changes to the current buffer are undone.
2374 This works regardless of whether undo is enabled in the buffer.
2375
2376 This mechanism is transparent to ordinary use of undo;
2377 if undo is enabled in the buffer and BODY succeeds, the
2378 user can undo the change normally."
2379 (declare (indent 0) (debug t))
2380 (let ((handle (make-symbol "--change-group-handle--"))
2381 (success (make-symbol "--change-group-success--")))
2382 `(let ((,handle (prepare-change-group))
2383 ;; Don't truncate any undo data in the middle of this.
2384 (undo-outer-limit nil)
2385 (undo-limit most-positive-fixnum)
2386 (undo-strong-limit most-positive-fixnum)
2387 (,success nil))
2388 (unwind-protect
2389 (progn
2390 ;; This is inside the unwind-protect because
2391 ;; it enables undo if that was disabled; we need
2392 ;; to make sure that it gets disabled again.
2393 (activate-change-group ,handle)
2394 ,@body
2395 (setq ,success t))
2396 ;; Either of these functions will disable undo
2397 ;; if it was disabled before.
2398 (if ,success
2399 (accept-change-group ,handle)
2400 (cancel-change-group ,handle))))))
2401
2402 (defun prepare-change-group (&optional buffer)
2403 "Return a handle for the current buffer's state, for a change group.
2404 If you specify BUFFER, make a handle for BUFFER's state instead.
2405
2406 Pass the handle to `activate-change-group' afterward to initiate
2407 the actual changes of the change group.
2408
2409 To finish the change group, call either `accept-change-group' or
2410 `cancel-change-group' passing the same handle as argument. Call
2411 `accept-change-group' to accept the changes in the group as final;
2412 call `cancel-change-group' to undo them all. You should use
2413 `unwind-protect' to make sure the group is always finished. The call
2414 to `activate-change-group' should be inside the `unwind-protect'.
2415 Once you finish the group, don't use the handle again--don't try to
2416 finish the same group twice. For a simple example of correct use, see
2417 the source code of `atomic-change-group'.
2418
2419 The handle records only the specified buffer. To make a multibuffer
2420 change group, call this function once for each buffer you want to
2421 cover, then use `nconc' to combine the returned values, like this:
2422
2423 (nconc (prepare-change-group buffer-1)
2424 (prepare-change-group buffer-2))
2425
2426 You can then activate that multibuffer change group with a single
2427 call to `activate-change-group' and finish it with a single call
2428 to `accept-change-group' or `cancel-change-group'."
2429
2430 (if buffer
2431 (list (cons buffer (with-current-buffer buffer buffer-undo-list)))
2432 (list (cons (current-buffer) buffer-undo-list))))
2433
2434 (defun activate-change-group (handle)
2435 "Activate a change group made with `prepare-change-group' (which see)."
2436 (dolist (elt handle)
2437 (with-current-buffer (car elt)
2438 (if (eq buffer-undo-list t)
2439 (setq buffer-undo-list nil)))))
2440
2441 (defun accept-change-group (handle)
2442 "Finish a change group made with `prepare-change-group' (which see).
2443 This finishes the change group by accepting its changes as final."
2444 (dolist (elt handle)
2445 (with-current-buffer (car elt)
2446 (if (eq (cdr elt) t)
2447 (setq buffer-undo-list t)))))
2448
2449 (defun cancel-change-group (handle)
2450 "Finish a change group made with `prepare-change-group' (which see).
2451 This finishes the change group by reverting all of its changes."
2452 (dolist (elt handle)
2453 (with-current-buffer (car elt)
2454 (setq elt (cdr elt))
2455 (save-restriction
2456 ;; Widen buffer temporarily so if the buffer was narrowed within
2457 ;; the body of `atomic-change-group' all changes can be undone.
2458 (widen)
2459 (let ((old-car
2460 (if (consp elt) (car elt)))
2461 (old-cdr
2462 (if (consp elt) (cdr elt))))
2463 ;; Temporarily truncate the undo log at ELT.
2464 (when (consp elt)
2465 (setcar elt nil) (setcdr elt nil))
2466 (unless (eq last-command 'undo) (undo-start))
2467 ;; Make sure there's no confusion.
2468 (when (and (consp elt) (not (eq elt (last pending-undo-list))))
2469 (error "Undoing to some unrelated state"))
2470 ;; Undo it all.
2471 (save-excursion
2472 (while (listp pending-undo-list) (undo-more 1)))
2473 ;; Reset the modified cons cell ELT to its original content.
2474 (when (consp elt)
2475 (setcar elt old-car)
2476 (setcdr elt old-cdr))
2477 ;; Revert the undo info to what it was when we grabbed the state.
2478 (setq buffer-undo-list elt))))))
2479 \f
2480 ;;;; Display-related functions.
2481
2482 ;; For compatibility.
2483 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'redraw-modeline
2484 'force-mode-line-update "24.3")
2485
2486 (defun momentary-string-display (string pos &optional exit-char message)
2487 "Momentarily display STRING in the buffer at POS.
2488 Display remains until next event is input.
2489 If POS is a marker, only its position is used; its buffer is ignored.
2490 Optional third arg EXIT-CHAR can be a character, event or event
2491 description list. EXIT-CHAR defaults to SPC. If the input is
2492 EXIT-CHAR it is swallowed; otherwise it is then available as
2493 input (as a command if nothing else).
2494 Display MESSAGE (optional fourth arg) in the echo area.
2495 If MESSAGE is nil, instructions to type EXIT-CHAR are displayed there."
2496 (or exit-char (setq exit-char ?\s))
2497 (let ((ol (make-overlay pos pos))
2498 (str (copy-sequence string)))
2499 (unwind-protect
2500 (progn
2501 (save-excursion
2502 (overlay-put ol 'after-string str)
2503 (goto-char pos)
2504 ;; To avoid trouble with out-of-bounds position
2505 (setq pos (point))
2506 ;; If the string end is off screen, recenter now.
2507 (if (<= (window-end nil t) pos)
2508 (recenter (/ (window-height) 2))))
2509 (message (or message "Type %s to continue editing.")
2510 (single-key-description exit-char))
2511 (let ((event (read-key)))
2512 ;; `exit-char' can be an event, or an event description list.
2513 (or (eq event exit-char)
2514 (eq event (event-convert-list exit-char))
2515 (setq unread-command-events
2516 (append (this-single-command-raw-keys))))))
2517 (delete-overlay ol))))
2518
2519 \f
2520 ;;;; Overlay operations
2521
2522 (defun copy-overlay (o)
2523 "Return a copy of overlay O."
2524 (let ((o1 (if (overlay-buffer o)
2525 (make-overlay (overlay-start o) (overlay-end o)
2526 ;; FIXME: there's no easy way to find the
2527 ;; insertion-type of the two markers.
2528 (overlay-buffer o))
2529 (let ((o1 (make-overlay (point-min) (point-min))))
2530 (delete-overlay o1)
2531 o1)))
2532 (props (overlay-properties o)))
2533 (while props
2534 (overlay-put o1 (pop props) (pop props)))
2535 o1))
2536
2537 (defun remove-overlays (&optional beg end name val)
2538 "Clear BEG and END of overlays whose property NAME has value VAL.
2539 Overlays might be moved and/or split.
2540 BEG and END default respectively to the beginning and end of buffer."
2541 ;; This speeds up the loops over overlays.
2542 (unless beg (setq beg (point-min)))
2543 (unless end (setq end (point-max)))
2544 (overlay-recenter end)
2545 (if (< end beg)
2546 (setq beg (prog1 end (setq end beg))))
2547 (save-excursion
2548 (dolist (o (overlays-in beg end))
2549 (when (eq (overlay-get o name) val)
2550 ;; Either push this overlay outside beg...end
2551 ;; or split it to exclude beg...end
2552 ;; or delete it entirely (if it is contained in beg...end).
2553 (if (< (overlay-start o) beg)
2554 (if (> (overlay-end o) end)
2555 (progn
2556 (move-overlay (copy-overlay o)
2557 (overlay-start o) beg)
2558 (move-overlay o end (overlay-end o)))
2559 (move-overlay o (overlay-start o) beg))
2560 (if (> (overlay-end o) end)
2561 (move-overlay o end (overlay-end o))
2562 (delete-overlay o)))))))
2563 \f
2564 ;;;; Miscellanea.
2565
2566 (defvar suspend-hook nil
2567 "Normal hook run by `suspend-emacs', before suspending.")
2568
2569 (defvar suspend-resume-hook nil
2570 "Normal hook run by `suspend-emacs', after Emacs is continued.")
2571
2572 (defvar temp-buffer-show-hook nil
2573 "Normal hook run by `with-output-to-temp-buffer' after displaying the buffer.
2574 When the hook runs, the temporary buffer is current, and the window it
2575 was displayed in is selected.")
2576
2577 (defvar temp-buffer-setup-hook nil
2578 "Normal hook run by `with-output-to-temp-buffer' at the start.
2579 When the hook runs, the temporary buffer is current.
2580 This hook is normally set up with a function to put the buffer in Help
2581 mode.")
2582
2583 (defconst user-emacs-directory
2584 (if (eq system-type 'ms-dos)
2585 ;; MS-DOS cannot have initial dot.
2586 "~/_emacs.d/"
2587 "~/.emacs.d/")
2588 "Directory beneath which additional per-user Emacs-specific files are placed.
2589 Various programs in Emacs store information in this directory.
2590 Note that this should end with a directory separator.
2591 See also `locate-user-emacs-file'.")
2592 \f
2593 ;;;; Misc. useful functions.
2594
2595 (defsubst buffer-narrowed-p ()
2596 "Return non-nil if the current buffer is narrowed."
2597 (/= (- (point-max) (point-min)) (buffer-size)))
2598
2599 (defun find-tag-default-bounds ()
2600 "Determine the boundaries of the default tag, based on text at point.
2601 Return a cons cell with the beginning and end of the found tag.
2602 If there is no plausible default, return nil."
2603 (let (from to bound)
2604 (when (or (progn
2605 ;; Look at text around `point'.
2606 (save-excursion
2607 (skip-syntax-backward "w_") (setq from (point)))
2608 (save-excursion
2609 (skip-syntax-forward "w_") (setq to (point)))
2610 (> to from))
2611 ;; Look between `line-beginning-position' and `point'.
2612 (save-excursion
2613 (and (setq bound (line-beginning-position))
2614 (skip-syntax-backward "^w_" bound)
2615 (> (setq to (point)) bound)
2616 (skip-syntax-backward "w_")
2617 (setq from (point))))
2618 ;; Look between `point' and `line-end-position'.
2619 (save-excursion
2620 (and (setq bound (line-end-position))
2621 (skip-syntax-forward "^w_" bound)
2622 (< (setq from (point)) bound)
2623 (skip-syntax-forward "w_")
2624 (setq to (point)))))
2625 (cons from to))))
2626
2627 (defun find-tag-default ()
2628 "Determine default tag to search for, based on text at point.
2629 If there is no plausible default, return nil."
2630 (let ((bounds (find-tag-default-bounds)))
2631 (when bounds
2632 (buffer-substring-no-properties (car bounds) (cdr bounds)))))
2633
2634 (defun find-tag-default-as-regexp ()
2635 "Return regexp that matches the default tag at point.
2636 If there is no tag at point, return nil.
2637
2638 When in a major mode that does not provide its own
2639 `find-tag-default-function', return a regexp that matches the
2640 symbol at point exactly."
2641 (let ((tag (funcall (or find-tag-default-function
2642 (get major-mode 'find-tag-default-function)
2643 'find-tag-default))))
2644 (if tag (regexp-quote tag))))
2645
2646 (defun find-tag-default-as-symbol-regexp ()
2647 "Return regexp that matches the default tag at point as symbol.
2648 If there is no tag at point, return nil.
2649
2650 When in a major mode that does not provide its own
2651 `find-tag-default-function', return a regexp that matches the
2652 symbol at point exactly."
2653 (let ((tag-regexp (find-tag-default-as-regexp)))
2654 (if (and tag-regexp
2655 (eq (or find-tag-default-function
2656 (get major-mode 'find-tag-default-function)
2657 'find-tag-default)
2658 'find-tag-default))
2659 (format "\\_<%s\\_>" tag-regexp)
2660 tag-regexp)))
2661
2662 (defun play-sound (sound)
2663 "SOUND is a list of the form `(sound KEYWORD VALUE...)'.
2664 The following keywords are recognized:
2665
2666 :file FILE - read sound data from FILE. If FILE isn't an
2667 absolute file name, it is searched in `data-directory'.
2668
2669 :data DATA - read sound data from string DATA.
2670
2671 Exactly one of :file or :data must be present.
2672
2673 :volume VOL - set volume to VOL. VOL must an integer in the
2674 range 0..100 or a float in the range 0..1.0. If not specified,
2675 don't change the volume setting of the sound device.
2676
2677 :device DEVICE - play sound on DEVICE. If not specified,
2678 a system-dependent default device name is used.
2679
2680 Note: :data and :device are currently not supported on Windows."
2681 (if (fboundp 'play-sound-internal)
2682 (play-sound-internal sound)
2683 (error "This Emacs binary lacks sound support")))
2684
2685 (declare-function w32-shell-dos-semantics "w32-fns" nil)
2686
2687 (defun shell-quote-argument (argument)
2688 "Quote ARGUMENT for passing as argument to an inferior shell."
2689 (cond
2690 ((eq system-type 'ms-dos)
2691 ;; Quote using double quotes, but escape any existing quotes in
2692 ;; the argument with backslashes.
2693 (let ((result "")
2694 (start 0)
2695 end)
2696 (if (or (null (string-match "[^\"]" argument))
2697 (< (match-end 0) (length argument)))
2698 (while (string-match "[\"]" argument start)
2699 (setq end (match-beginning 0)
2700 result (concat result (substring argument start end)
2701 "\\" (substring argument end (1+ end)))
2702 start (1+ end))))
2703 (concat "\"" result (substring argument start) "\"")))
2704
2705 ((and (eq system-type 'windows-nt) (w32-shell-dos-semantics))
2706
2707 ;; First, quote argument so that CommandLineToArgvW will
2708 ;; understand it. See
2709 ;; http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/17w5ykft%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
2710 ;; After we perform that level of quoting, escape shell
2711 ;; metacharacters so that cmd won't mangle our argument. If the
2712 ;; argument contains no double quote characters, we can just
2713 ;; surround it with double quotes. Otherwise, we need to prefix
2714 ;; each shell metacharacter with a caret.
2715
2716 (setq argument
2717 ;; escape backslashes at end of string
2718 (replace-regexp-in-string
2719 "\\(\\\\*\\)$"
2720 "\\1\\1"
2721 ;; escape backslashes and quotes in string body
2722 (replace-regexp-in-string
2723 "\\(\\\\*\\)\""
2724 "\\1\\1\\\\\""
2725 argument)))
2726
2727 (if (string-match "[%!\"]" argument)
2728 (concat
2729 "^\""
2730 (replace-regexp-in-string
2731 "\\([%!()\"<>&|^]\\)"
2732 "^\\1"
2733 argument)
2734 "^\"")
2735 (concat "\"" argument "\"")))
2736
2737 (t
2738 (if (equal argument "")
2739 "''"
2740 ;; Quote everything except POSIX filename characters.
2741 ;; This should be safe enough even for really weird shells.
2742 (replace-regexp-in-string
2743 "\n" "'\n'"
2744 (replace-regexp-in-string "[^-0-9a-zA-Z_./\n]" "\\\\\\&" argument))))
2745 ))
2746
2747 (defun string-or-null-p (object)
2748 "Return t if OBJECT is a string or nil.
2749 Otherwise, return nil."
2750 (or (stringp object) (null object)))
2751
2752 (defun booleanp (object)
2753 "Return t if OBJECT is one of the two canonical boolean values: t or nil.
2754 Otherwise, return nil."
2755 (and (memq object '(nil t)) t))
2756
2757 (defun special-form-p (object)
2758 "Non-nil if and only if OBJECT is a special form."
2759 (if (and (symbolp object) (fboundp object))
2760 (setq object (indirect-function object)))
2761 (and (subrp object) (eq (cdr (subr-arity object)) 'unevalled)))
2762
2763 (defun macrop (object)
2764 "Non-nil if and only if OBJECT is a macro."
2765 (let ((def (indirect-function object)))
2766 (when (consp def)
2767 (or (eq 'macro (car def))
2768 (and (autoloadp def) (memq (nth 4 def) '(macro t)))))))
2769
2770 (defun field-at-pos (pos)
2771 "Return the field at position POS, taking stickiness etc into account."
2772 (let ((raw-field (get-char-property (field-beginning pos) 'field)))
2773 (if (eq raw-field 'boundary)
2774 (get-char-property (1- (field-end pos)) 'field)
2775 raw-field)))
2776
2777 (defun sha1 (object &optional start end binary)
2778 "Return the SHA1 (Secure Hash Algorithm) of an OBJECT.
2779 OBJECT is either a string or a buffer. Optional arguments START and
2780 END are character positions specifying which portion of OBJECT for
2781 computing the hash. If BINARY is non-nil, return a string in binary
2782 form."
2783 (secure-hash 'sha1 object start end binary))
2784
2785 (defun function-get (f prop &optional autoload)
2786 "Return the value of property PROP of function F.
2787 If AUTOLOAD is non-nil and F is autoloaded, try to autoload it
2788 in the hope that it will set PROP. If AUTOLOAD is `macro', only do it
2789 if it's an autoloaded macro."
2790 (let ((val nil))
2791 (while (and (symbolp f)
2792 (null (setq val (get f prop)))
2793 (fboundp f))
2794 (let ((fundef (symbol-function f)))
2795 (if (and autoload (autoloadp fundef)
2796 (not (equal fundef
2797 (autoload-do-load fundef f
2798 (if (eq autoload 'macro)
2799 'macro)))))
2800 nil ;Re-try `get' on the same `f'.
2801 (setq f fundef))))
2802 val))
2803 \f
2804 ;;;; Support for yanking and text properties.
2805 ;; Why here in subr.el rather than in simple.el? --Stef
2806
2807 (defvar yank-handled-properties)
2808 (defvar yank-excluded-properties)
2809
2810 (defun remove-yank-excluded-properties (start end)
2811 "Process text properties between START and END, inserted for a `yank'.
2812 Perform the handling specified by `yank-handled-properties', then
2813 remove properties specified by `yank-excluded-properties'."
2814 (let ((inhibit-read-only t))
2815 (dolist (handler yank-handled-properties)
2816 (let ((prop (car handler))
2817 (fun (cdr handler))
2818 (run-start start))
2819 (while (< run-start end)
2820 (let ((value (get-text-property run-start prop))
2821 (run-end (next-single-property-change
2822 run-start prop nil end)))
2823 (funcall fun value run-start run-end)
2824 (setq run-start run-end)))))
2825 (if (eq yank-excluded-properties t)
2826 (set-text-properties start end nil)
2827 (remove-list-of-text-properties start end yank-excluded-properties))))
2828
2829 (defvar yank-undo-function)
2830
2831 (defun insert-for-yank (string)
2832 "Call `insert-for-yank-1' repetitively for each `yank-handler' segment.
2833
2834 See `insert-for-yank-1' for more details."
2835 (let (to)
2836 (while (setq to (next-single-property-change 0 'yank-handler string))
2837 (insert-for-yank-1 (substring string 0 to))
2838 (setq string (substring string to))))
2839 (insert-for-yank-1 string))
2840
2841 (defun insert-for-yank-1 (string)
2842 "Insert STRING at point for the `yank' command.
2843 This function is like `insert', except it honors the variables
2844 `yank-handled-properties' and `yank-excluded-properties', and the
2845 `yank-handler' text property.
2846
2847 Properties listed in `yank-handled-properties' are processed,
2848 then those listed in `yank-excluded-properties' are discarded.
2849
2850 If STRING has a non-nil `yank-handler' property on its first
2851 character, the normal insert behavior is altered. The value of
2852 the `yank-handler' property must be a list of one to four
2853 elements, of the form (FUNCTION PARAM NOEXCLUDE UNDO).
2854 FUNCTION, if non-nil, should be a function of one argument, an
2855 object to insert; it is called instead of `insert'.
2856 PARAM, if present and non-nil, replaces STRING as the argument to
2857 FUNCTION or `insert'; e.g. if FUNCTION is `yank-rectangle', PARAM
2858 may be a list of strings to insert as a rectangle.
2859 If NOEXCLUDE is present and non-nil, the normal removal of
2860 `yank-excluded-properties' is not performed; instead FUNCTION is
2861 responsible for the removal. This may be necessary if FUNCTION
2862 adjusts point before or after inserting the object.
2863 UNDO, if present and non-nil, should be a function to be called
2864 by `yank-pop' to undo the insertion of the current object. It is
2865 given two arguments, the start and end of the region. FUNCTION
2866 may set `yank-undo-function' to override UNDO."
2867 (let* ((handler (and (stringp string)
2868 (get-text-property 0 'yank-handler string)))
2869 (param (or (nth 1 handler) string))
2870 (opoint (point))
2871 (inhibit-read-only inhibit-read-only)
2872 end)
2873
2874 (setq yank-undo-function t)
2875 (if (nth 0 handler) ; FUNCTION
2876 (funcall (car handler) param)
2877 (insert param))
2878 (setq end (point))
2879
2880 ;; Prevent read-only properties from interfering with the
2881 ;; following text property changes.
2882 (setq inhibit-read-only t)
2883
2884 (unless (nth 2 handler) ; NOEXCLUDE
2885 (remove-yank-excluded-properties opoint end))
2886
2887 ;; If last inserted char has properties, mark them as rear-nonsticky.
2888 (if (and (> end opoint)
2889 (text-properties-at (1- end)))
2890 (put-text-property (1- end) end 'rear-nonsticky t))
2891
2892 (if (eq yank-undo-function t) ; not set by FUNCTION
2893 (setq yank-undo-function (nth 3 handler))) ; UNDO
2894 (if (nth 4 handler) ; COMMAND
2895 (setq this-command (nth 4 handler)))))
2896
2897 (defun insert-buffer-substring-no-properties (buffer &optional start end)
2898 "Insert before point a substring of BUFFER, without text properties.
2899 BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name.
2900 Arguments START and END are character positions specifying the substring.
2901 They default to the values of (point-min) and (point-max) in BUFFER."
2902 (let ((opoint (point)))
2903 (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
2904 (let ((inhibit-read-only t))
2905 (set-text-properties opoint (point) nil))))
2906
2907 (defun insert-buffer-substring-as-yank (buffer &optional start end)
2908 "Insert before point a part of BUFFER, stripping some text properties.
2909 BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name.
2910 Arguments START and END are character positions specifying the substring.
2911 They default to the values of (point-min) and (point-max) in BUFFER.
2912 Before insertion, process text properties according to
2913 `yank-handled-properties' and `yank-excluded-properties'."
2914 ;; Since the buffer text should not normally have yank-handler properties,
2915 ;; there is no need to handle them here.
2916 (let ((opoint (point)))
2917 (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
2918 (remove-yank-excluded-properties opoint (point))))
2919
2920 (defun yank-handle-font-lock-face-property (face start end)
2921 "If `font-lock-defaults' is nil, apply FACE as a `face' property.
2922 START and END denote the start and end of the text to act on.
2923 Do nothing if FACE is nil."
2924 (and face
2925 (null font-lock-defaults)
2926 (put-text-property start end 'face face)))
2927
2928 ;; This removes `mouse-face' properties in *Help* buffer buttons:
2929 ;; http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2002-04/msg00648.html
2930 (defun yank-handle-category-property (category start end)
2931 "Apply property category CATEGORY's properties between START and END."
2932 (when category
2933 (let ((start2 start))
2934 (while (< start2 end)
2935 (let ((end2 (next-property-change start2 nil end))
2936 (original (text-properties-at start2)))
2937 (set-text-properties start2 end2 (symbol-plist category))
2938 (add-text-properties start2 end2 original)
2939 (setq start2 end2))))))
2940
2941 \f
2942 ;;;; Synchronous shell commands.
2943
2944 (defun start-process-shell-command (name buffer &rest args)
2945 "Start a program in a subprocess. Return the process object for it.
2946 NAME is name for process. It is modified if necessary to make it unique.
2947 BUFFER is the buffer (or buffer name) to associate with the process.
2948 Process output goes at end of that buffer, unless you specify
2949 an output stream or filter function to handle the output.
2950 BUFFER may be also nil, meaning that this process is not associated
2951 with any buffer
2952 COMMAND is the shell command to run.
2953
2954 An old calling convention accepted any number of arguments after COMMAND,
2955 which were just concatenated to COMMAND. This is still supported but strongly
2956 discouraged."
2957 (declare (advertised-calling-convention (name buffer command) "23.1"))
2958 ;; We used to use `exec' to replace the shell with the command,
2959 ;; but that failed to handle (...) and semicolon, etc.
2960 (start-process name buffer shell-file-name shell-command-switch
2961 (mapconcat 'identity args " ")))
2962
2963 (defun start-file-process-shell-command (name buffer &rest args)
2964 "Start a program in a subprocess. Return the process object for it.
2965 Similar to `start-process-shell-command', but calls `start-file-process'."
2966 (declare (advertised-calling-convention (name buffer command) "23.1"))
2967 (start-file-process
2968 name buffer
2969 (if (file-remote-p default-directory) "/bin/sh" shell-file-name)
2970 (if (file-remote-p default-directory) "-c" shell-command-switch)
2971 (mapconcat 'identity args " ")))
2972
2973 (defun call-process-shell-command (command &optional infile buffer display
2974 &rest args)
2975 "Execute the shell command COMMAND synchronously in separate process.
2976 The remaining arguments are optional.
2977 The program's input comes from file INFILE (nil means `/dev/null').
2978 Insert output in BUFFER before point; t means current buffer;
2979 nil for BUFFER means discard it; 0 means discard and don't wait.
2980 BUFFER can also have the form (REAL-BUFFER STDERR-FILE); in that case,
2981 REAL-BUFFER says what to do with standard output, as above,
2982 while STDERR-FILE says what to do with standard error in the child.
2983 STDERR-FILE may be nil (discard standard error output),
2984 t (mix it with ordinary output), or a file name string.
2985
2986 Fourth arg DISPLAY non-nil means redisplay buffer as output is inserted.
2987 Wildcards and redirection are handled as usual in the shell.
2988
2989 If BUFFER is 0, `call-process-shell-command' returns immediately with value nil.
2990 Otherwise it waits for COMMAND to terminate and returns a numeric exit
2991 status or a signal description string.
2992 If you quit, the process is killed with SIGINT, or SIGKILL if you quit again.
2993
2994 An old calling convention accepted any number of arguments after DISPLAY,
2995 which were just concatenated to COMMAND. This is still supported but strongly
2996 discouraged."
2997 (declare (advertised-calling-convention
2998 (command &optional infile buffer display) "24.5"))
2999 ;; We used to use `exec' to replace the shell with the command,
3000 ;; but that failed to handle (...) and semicolon, etc.
3001 (call-process shell-file-name
3002 infile buffer display
3003 shell-command-switch
3004 (mapconcat 'identity (cons command args) " ")))
3005
3006 (defun process-file-shell-command (command &optional infile buffer display
3007 &rest args)
3008 "Process files synchronously in a separate process.
3009 Similar to `call-process-shell-command', but calls `process-file'."
3010 (declare (advertised-calling-convention
3011 (command &optional infile buffer display) "24.5"))
3012 (process-file
3013 (if (file-remote-p default-directory) "/bin/sh" shell-file-name)
3014 infile buffer display
3015 (if (file-remote-p default-directory) "-c" shell-command-switch)
3016 (mapconcat 'identity (cons command args) " ")))
3017 \f
3018 ;;;; Lisp macros to do various things temporarily.
3019
3020 (defmacro track-mouse (&rest body)
3021 "Evaluate BODY with mouse movement events enabled.
3022 Within a `track-mouse' form, mouse motion generates input events that
3023 you can read with `read-event'.
3024 Normally, mouse motion is ignored."
3025 (declare (debug t) (indent 0))
3026 `(internal--track-mouse (lambda () ,@body)))
3027
3028 (defmacro with-current-buffer (buffer-or-name &rest body)
3029 "Execute the forms in BODY with BUFFER-OR-NAME temporarily current.
3030 BUFFER-OR-NAME must be a buffer or the name of an existing buffer.
3031 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY. See
3032 also `with-temp-buffer'."
3033 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3034 `(save-current-buffer
3035 (set-buffer ,buffer-or-name)
3036 ,@body))
3037
3038 (defun internal--before-with-selected-window (window)
3039 (let ((other-frame (window-frame window)))
3040 (list window (selected-window)
3041 ;; Selecting a window on another frame also changes that
3042 ;; frame's frame-selected-window. We must save&restore it.
3043 (unless (eq (selected-frame) other-frame)
3044 (frame-selected-window other-frame))
3045 ;; Also remember the top-frame if on ttys.
3046 (unless (eq (selected-frame) other-frame)
3047 (tty-top-frame other-frame)))))
3048
3049 (defun internal--after-with-selected-window (state)
3050 ;; First reset frame-selected-window.
3051 (when (window-live-p (nth 2 state))
3052 ;; We don't use set-frame-selected-window because it does not
3053 ;; pass the `norecord' argument to Fselect_window.
3054 (select-window (nth 2 state) 'norecord)
3055 (and (frame-live-p (nth 3 state))
3056 (not (eq (tty-top-frame) (nth 3 state)))
3057 (select-frame (nth 3 state) 'norecord)))
3058 ;; Then reset the actual selected-window.
3059 (when (window-live-p (nth 1 state))
3060 (select-window (nth 1 state) 'norecord)))
3061
3062 (defmacro with-selected-window (window &rest body)
3063 "Execute the forms in BODY with WINDOW as the selected window.
3064 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY.
3065
3066 This macro saves and restores the selected window, as well as the
3067 selected window of each frame. It does not change the order of
3068 recently selected windows. If the previously selected window of
3069 some frame is no longer live at the end of BODY, that frame's
3070 selected window is left alone. If the selected window is no
3071 longer live, then whatever window is selected at the end of BODY
3072 remains selected.
3073
3074 This macro uses `save-current-buffer' to save and restore the
3075 current buffer, since otherwise its normal operation could
3076 potentially make a different buffer current. It does not alter
3077 the buffer list ordering."
3078 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3079 `(let ((save-selected-window--state
3080 (internal--before-with-selected-window ,window)))
3081 (save-current-buffer
3082 (unwind-protect
3083 (progn (select-window (car save-selected-window--state) 'norecord)
3084 ,@body)
3085 (internal--after-with-selected-window save-selected-window--state)))))
3086
3087 (defmacro with-selected-frame (frame &rest body)
3088 "Execute the forms in BODY with FRAME as the selected frame.
3089 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY.
3090
3091 This macro saves and restores the selected frame, and changes the
3092 order of neither the recently selected windows nor the buffers in
3093 the buffer list."
3094 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3095 (let ((old-frame (make-symbol "old-frame"))
3096 (old-buffer (make-symbol "old-buffer")))
3097 `(let ((,old-frame (selected-frame))
3098 (,old-buffer (current-buffer)))
3099 (unwind-protect
3100 (progn (select-frame ,frame 'norecord)
3101 ,@body)
3102 (when (frame-live-p ,old-frame)
3103 (select-frame ,old-frame 'norecord))
3104 (when (buffer-live-p ,old-buffer)
3105 (set-buffer ,old-buffer))))))
3106
3107 (defmacro save-window-excursion (&rest body)
3108 "Execute BODY, then restore previous window configuration.
3109 This macro saves the window configuration on the selected frame,
3110 executes BODY, then calls `set-window-configuration' to restore
3111 the saved window configuration. The return value is the last
3112 form in BODY. The window configuration is also restored if BODY
3113 exits nonlocally.
3114
3115 BEWARE: Most uses of this macro introduce bugs.
3116 E.g. it should not be used to try and prevent some code from opening
3117 a new window, since that window may sometimes appear in another frame,
3118 in which case `save-window-excursion' cannot help."
3119 (declare (indent 0) (debug t))
3120 (let ((c (make-symbol "wconfig")))
3121 `(let ((,c (current-window-configuration)))
3122 (unwind-protect (progn ,@body)
3123 (set-window-configuration ,c)))))
3124
3125 (defun internal-temp-output-buffer-show (buffer)
3126 "Internal function for `with-output-to-temp-buffer'."
3127 (with-current-buffer buffer
3128 (set-buffer-modified-p nil)
3129 (goto-char (point-min)))
3130
3131 (if temp-buffer-show-function
3132 (funcall temp-buffer-show-function buffer)
3133 (with-current-buffer buffer
3134 (let* ((window
3135 (let ((window-combination-limit
3136 ;; When `window-combination-limit' equals
3137 ;; `temp-buffer' or `temp-buffer-resize' and
3138 ;; `temp-buffer-resize-mode' is enabled in this
3139 ;; buffer bind it to t so resizing steals space
3140 ;; preferably from the window that was split.
3141 (if (or (eq window-combination-limit 'temp-buffer)
3142 (and (eq window-combination-limit
3143 'temp-buffer-resize)
3144 temp-buffer-resize-mode))
3145 t
3146 window-combination-limit)))
3147 (display-buffer buffer)))
3148 (frame (and window (window-frame window))))
3149 (when window
3150 (unless (eq frame (selected-frame))
3151 (make-frame-visible frame))
3152 (setq minibuffer-scroll-window window)
3153 (set-window-hscroll window 0)
3154 ;; Don't try this with NOFORCE non-nil!
3155 (set-window-start window (point-min) t)
3156 ;; This should not be necessary.
3157 (set-window-point window (point-min))
3158 ;; Run `temp-buffer-show-hook', with the chosen window selected.
3159 (with-selected-window window
3160 (run-hooks 'temp-buffer-show-hook))))))
3161 ;; Return nil.
3162 nil)
3163
3164 ;; Doc is very similar to with-temp-buffer-window.
3165 (defmacro with-output-to-temp-buffer (bufname &rest body)
3166 "Bind `standard-output' to buffer BUFNAME, eval BODY, then show that buffer.
3167
3168 This construct makes buffer BUFNAME empty before running BODY.
3169 It does not make the buffer current for BODY.
3170 Instead it binds `standard-output' to that buffer, so that output
3171 generated with `prin1' and similar functions in BODY goes into
3172 the buffer.
3173
3174 At the end of BODY, this marks buffer BUFNAME unmodified and displays
3175 it in a window, but does not select it. The normal way to do this is
3176 by calling `display-buffer', then running `temp-buffer-show-hook'.
3177 However, if `temp-buffer-show-function' is non-nil, it calls that
3178 function instead (and does not run `temp-buffer-show-hook'). The
3179 function gets one argument, the buffer to display.
3180
3181 The return value of `with-output-to-temp-buffer' is the value of the
3182 last form in BODY. If BODY does not finish normally, the buffer
3183 BUFNAME is not displayed.
3184
3185 This runs the hook `temp-buffer-setup-hook' before BODY,
3186 with the buffer BUFNAME temporarily current. It runs the hook
3187 `temp-buffer-show-hook' after displaying buffer BUFNAME, with that
3188 buffer temporarily current, and the window that was used to display it
3189 temporarily selected. But it doesn't run `temp-buffer-show-hook'
3190 if it uses `temp-buffer-show-function'.
3191
3192 By default, the setup hook puts the buffer into Help mode before running BODY.
3193 If BODY does not change the major mode, the show hook makes the buffer
3194 read-only, and scans it for function and variable names to make them into
3195 clickable cross-references.
3196
3197 See the related form `with-temp-buffer-window'."
3198 (declare (debug t))
3199 (let ((old-dir (make-symbol "old-dir"))
3200 (buf (make-symbol "buf")))
3201 `(let* ((,old-dir default-directory)
3202 (,buf
3203 (with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create ,bufname)
3204 (prog1 (current-buffer)
3205 (kill-all-local-variables)
3206 ;; FIXME: delete_all_overlays
3207 (setq default-directory ,old-dir)
3208 (setq buffer-read-only nil)
3209 (setq buffer-file-name nil)
3210 (setq buffer-undo-list t)
3211 (let ((inhibit-read-only t)
3212 (inhibit-modification-hooks t))
3213 (erase-buffer)
3214 (run-hooks 'temp-buffer-setup-hook)))))
3215 (standard-output ,buf))
3216 (prog1 (progn ,@body)
3217 (internal-temp-output-buffer-show ,buf)))))
3218
3219 (defmacro with-temp-file (file &rest body)
3220 "Create a new buffer, evaluate BODY there, and write the buffer to FILE.
3221 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY.
3222 See also `with-temp-buffer'."
3223 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3224 (let ((temp-file (make-symbol "temp-file"))
3225 (temp-buffer (make-symbol "temp-buffer")))
3226 `(let ((,temp-file ,file)
3227 (,temp-buffer
3228 (get-buffer-create (generate-new-buffer-name " *temp file*"))))
3229 (unwind-protect
3230 (prog1
3231 (with-current-buffer ,temp-buffer
3232 ,@body)
3233 (with-current-buffer ,temp-buffer
3234 (write-region nil nil ,temp-file nil 0)))
3235 (and (buffer-name ,temp-buffer)
3236 (kill-buffer ,temp-buffer))))))
3237
3238 (defmacro with-temp-message (message &rest body)
3239 "Display MESSAGE temporarily if non-nil while BODY is evaluated.
3240 The original message is restored to the echo area after BODY has finished.
3241 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY.
3242 MESSAGE is written to the message log buffer if `message-log-max' is non-nil.
3243 If MESSAGE is nil, the echo area and message log buffer are unchanged.
3244 Use a MESSAGE of \"\" to temporarily clear the echo area."
3245 (declare (debug t) (indent 1))
3246 (let ((current-message (make-symbol "current-message"))
3247 (temp-message (make-symbol "with-temp-message")))
3248 `(let ((,temp-message ,message)
3249 (,current-message))
3250 (unwind-protect
3251 (progn
3252 (when ,temp-message
3253 (setq ,current-message (current-message))
3254 (message "%s" ,temp-message))
3255 ,@body)
3256 (and ,temp-message
3257 (if ,current-message
3258 (message "%s" ,current-message)
3259 (message nil)))))))
3260
3261 (defmacro with-temp-buffer (&rest body)
3262 "Create a temporary buffer, and evaluate BODY there like `progn'.
3263 See also `with-temp-file' and `with-output-to-string'."
3264 (declare (indent 0) (debug t))
3265 (let ((temp-buffer (make-symbol "temp-buffer")))
3266 `(let ((,temp-buffer (generate-new-buffer " *temp*")))
3267 ;; FIXME: kill-buffer can change current-buffer in some odd cases.
3268 (with-current-buffer ,temp-buffer
3269 (unwind-protect
3270 (progn ,@body)
3271 (and (buffer-name ,temp-buffer)
3272 (kill-buffer ,temp-buffer)))))))
3273
3274 (defmacro with-silent-modifications (&rest body)
3275 "Execute BODY, pretending it does not modify the buffer.
3276 If BODY performs real modifications to the buffer's text, other
3277 than cosmetic ones, undo data may become corrupted.
3278
3279 This macro will run BODY normally, but doesn't count its buffer
3280 modifications as being buffer modifications. This affects things
3281 like `buffer-modified-p', checking whether the file is locked by
3282 someone else, running buffer modification hooks, and other things
3283 of that nature.
3284
3285 Typically used around modifications of text-properties which do
3286 not really affect the buffer's content."
3287 (declare (debug t) (indent 0))
3288 (let ((modified (make-symbol "modified")))
3289 `(let* ((,modified (buffer-modified-p))
3290 (buffer-undo-list t)
3291 (inhibit-read-only t)
3292 (inhibit-modification-hooks t))
3293 (unwind-protect
3294 (progn
3295 ,@body)
3296 (unless ,modified
3297 (restore-buffer-modified-p nil))))))
3298
3299 (defmacro with-output-to-string (&rest body)
3300 "Execute BODY, return the text it sent to `standard-output', as a string."
3301 (declare (indent 0) (debug t))
3302 `(let ((standard-output
3303 (get-buffer-create (generate-new-buffer-name " *string-output*"))))
3304 (unwind-protect
3305 (progn
3306 (let ((standard-output standard-output))
3307 ,@body)
3308 (with-current-buffer standard-output
3309 (buffer-string)))
3310 (kill-buffer standard-output))))
3311
3312 (defmacro with-local-quit (&rest body)
3313 "Execute BODY, allowing quits to terminate BODY but not escape further.
3314 When a quit terminates BODY, `with-local-quit' returns nil but
3315 requests another quit. That quit will be processed as soon as quitting
3316 is allowed once again. (Immediately, if `inhibit-quit' is nil.)"
3317 (declare (debug t) (indent 0))
3318 `(condition-case nil
3319 (let ((inhibit-quit nil))
3320 ,@body)
3321 (quit (setq quit-flag t)
3322 ;; This call is to give a chance to handle quit-flag
3323 ;; in case inhibit-quit is nil.
3324 ;; Without this, it will not be handled until the next function
3325 ;; call, and that might allow it to exit thru a condition-case
3326 ;; that intends to handle the quit signal next time.
3327 (eval '(ignore nil)))))
3328
3329 (defmacro while-no-input (&rest body)
3330 "Execute BODY only as long as there's no pending input.
3331 If input arrives, that ends the execution of BODY,
3332 and `while-no-input' returns t. Quitting makes it return nil.
3333 If BODY finishes, `while-no-input' returns whatever value BODY produced."
3334 (declare (debug t) (indent 0))
3335 (let ((catch-sym (make-symbol "input")))
3336 `(with-local-quit
3337 (catch ',catch-sym
3338 (let ((throw-on-input ',catch-sym))
3339 (or (input-pending-p)
3340 (progn ,@body)))))))
3341
3342 (defmacro condition-case-unless-debug (var bodyform &rest handlers)
3343 "Like `condition-case' except that it does not prevent debugging.
3344 More specifically if `debug-on-error' is set then the debugger will be invoked
3345 even if this catches the signal."
3346 (declare (debug condition-case) (indent 2))
3347 `(condition-case ,var
3348 ,bodyform
3349 ,@(mapcar (lambda (handler)
3350 `((debug ,@(if (listp (car handler)) (car handler)
3351 (list (car handler))))
3352 ,@(cdr handler)))
3353 handlers)))
3354
3355 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'condition-case-no-debug
3356 'condition-case-unless-debug "24.1")
3357
3358 (defmacro with-demoted-errors (format &rest body)
3359 "Run BODY and demote any errors to simple messages.
3360 FORMAT is a string passed to `message' to format any error message.
3361 It should contain a single %-sequence; e.g., \"Error: %S\".
3362
3363 If `debug-on-error' is non-nil, run BODY without catching its errors.
3364 This is to be used around code which is not expected to signal an error
3365 but which should be robust in the unexpected case that an error is signaled.
3366
3367 For backward compatibility, if FORMAT is not a constant string, it
3368 is assumed to be part of BODY, in which case the message format
3369 used is \"Error: %S\"."
3370 (declare (debug t) (indent 1))
3371 (let ((err (make-symbol "err"))
3372 (format (if (and (stringp format) body) format
3373 (prog1 "Error: %S"
3374 (if format (push format body))))))
3375 `(condition-case-unless-debug ,err
3376 ,(macroexp-progn body)
3377 (error (message ,format ,err) nil))))
3378
3379 (defmacro combine-after-change-calls (&rest body)
3380 "Execute BODY, but don't call the after-change functions till the end.
3381 If BODY makes changes in the buffer, they are recorded
3382 and the functions on `after-change-functions' are called several times
3383 when BODY is finished.
3384 The return value is the value of the last form in BODY.
3385
3386 If `before-change-functions' is non-nil, then calls to the after-change
3387 functions can't be deferred, so in that case this macro has no effect.
3388
3389 Do not alter `after-change-functions' or `before-change-functions'
3390 in BODY."
3391 (declare (indent 0) (debug t))
3392 `(unwind-protect
3393 (let ((combine-after-change-calls t))
3394 . ,body)
3395 (combine-after-change-execute)))
3396
3397 (defmacro with-case-table (table &rest body)
3398 "Execute the forms in BODY with TABLE as the current case table.
3399 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY."
3400 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3401 (let ((old-case-table (make-symbol "table"))
3402 (old-buffer (make-symbol "buffer")))
3403 `(let ((,old-case-table (current-case-table))
3404 (,old-buffer (current-buffer)))
3405 (unwind-protect
3406 (progn (set-case-table ,table)
3407 ,@body)
3408 (with-current-buffer ,old-buffer
3409 (set-case-table ,old-case-table))))))
3410
3411 (defmacro with-file-modes (modes &rest body)
3412 "Execute BODY with default file permissions temporarily set to MODES.
3413 MODES is as for `set-default-file-modes'."
3414 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3415 (let ((umask (make-symbol "umask")))
3416 `(let ((,umask (default-file-modes)))
3417 (unwind-protect
3418 (progn
3419 (set-default-file-modes ,modes)
3420 ,@body)
3421 (set-default-file-modes ,umask)))))
3422
3423 \f
3424 ;;; Matching and match data.
3425
3426 (defvar save-match-data-internal)
3427
3428 ;; We use save-match-data-internal as the local variable because
3429 ;; that works ok in practice (people should not use that variable elsewhere).
3430 ;; We used to use an uninterned symbol; the compiler handles that properly
3431 ;; now, but it generates slower code.
3432 (defmacro save-match-data (&rest body)
3433 "Execute the BODY forms, restoring the global value of the match data.
3434 The value returned is the value of the last form in BODY."
3435 ;; It is better not to use backquote here,
3436 ;; because that makes a bootstrapping problem
3437 ;; if you need to recompile all the Lisp files using interpreted code.
3438 (declare (indent 0) (debug t))
3439 (list 'let
3440 '((save-match-data-internal (match-data)))
3441 (list 'unwind-protect
3442 (cons 'progn body)
3443 ;; It is safe to free (evaporate) markers immediately here,
3444 ;; as Lisp programs should not copy from save-match-data-internal.
3445 '(set-match-data save-match-data-internal 'evaporate))))
3446
3447 (defun match-string (num &optional string)
3448 "Return string of text matched by last search.
3449 NUM specifies which parenthesized expression in the last regexp.
3450 Value is nil if NUMth pair didn't match, or there were less than NUM pairs.
3451 Zero means the entire text matched by the whole regexp or whole string.
3452 STRING should be given if the last search was by `string-match' on STRING.
3453 If STRING is nil, the current buffer should be the same buffer
3454 the search/match was performed in."
3455 (if (match-beginning num)
3456 (if string
3457 (substring string (match-beginning num) (match-end num))
3458 (buffer-substring (match-beginning num) (match-end num)))))
3459
3460 (defun match-string-no-properties (num &optional string)
3461 "Return string of text matched by last search, without text properties.
3462 NUM specifies which parenthesized expression in the last regexp.
3463 Value is nil if NUMth pair didn't match, or there were less than NUM pairs.
3464 Zero means the entire text matched by the whole regexp or whole string.
3465 STRING should be given if the last search was by `string-match' on STRING.
3466 If STRING is nil, the current buffer should be the same buffer
3467 the search/match was performed in."
3468 (if (match-beginning num)
3469 (if string
3470 (substring-no-properties string (match-beginning num)
3471 (match-end num))
3472 (buffer-substring-no-properties (match-beginning num)
3473 (match-end num)))))
3474
3475
3476 (defun match-substitute-replacement (replacement
3477 &optional fixedcase literal string subexp)
3478 "Return REPLACEMENT as it will be inserted by `replace-match'.
3479 In other words, all back-references in the form `\\&' and `\\N'
3480 are substituted with actual strings matched by the last search.
3481 Optional FIXEDCASE, LITERAL, STRING and SUBEXP have the same
3482 meaning as for `replace-match'."
3483 (let ((match (match-string 0 string)))
3484 (save-match-data
3485 (set-match-data (mapcar (lambda (x)
3486 (if (numberp x)
3487 (- x (match-beginning 0))
3488 x))
3489 (match-data t)))
3490 (replace-match replacement fixedcase literal match subexp))))
3491
3492
3493 (defun looking-back (regexp &optional limit greedy)
3494 "Return non-nil if text before point matches regular expression REGEXP.
3495 Like `looking-at' except matches before point, and is slower.
3496 LIMIT if non-nil speeds up the search by specifying a minimum
3497 starting position, to avoid checking matches that would start
3498 before LIMIT.
3499
3500 If GREEDY is non-nil, extend the match backwards as far as
3501 possible, stopping when a single additional previous character
3502 cannot be part of a match for REGEXP. When the match is
3503 extended, its starting position is allowed to occur before
3504 LIMIT.
3505
3506 As a general recommendation, try to avoid using `looking-back'
3507 wherever possible, since it is slow."
3508 (declare
3509 (advertised-calling-convention (regexp limit &optional greedy) "25.1"))
3510 (let ((start (point))
3511 (pos
3512 (save-excursion
3513 (and (re-search-backward (concat "\\(?:" regexp "\\)\\=") limit t)
3514 (point)))))
3515 (if (and greedy pos)
3516 (save-restriction
3517 (narrow-to-region (point-min) start)
3518 (while (and (> pos (point-min))
3519 (save-excursion
3520 (goto-char pos)
3521 (backward-char 1)
3522 (looking-at (concat "\\(?:" regexp "\\)\\'"))))
3523 (setq pos (1- pos)))
3524 (save-excursion
3525 (goto-char pos)
3526 (looking-at (concat "\\(?:" regexp "\\)\\'")))))
3527 (not (null pos))))
3528
3529 (defsubst looking-at-p (regexp)
3530 "\
3531 Same as `looking-at' except this function does not change the match data."
3532 (let ((inhibit-changing-match-data t))
3533 (looking-at regexp)))
3534
3535 (defsubst string-match-p (regexp string &optional start)
3536 "\
3537 Same as `string-match' except this function does not change the match data."
3538 (let ((inhibit-changing-match-data t))
3539 (string-match regexp string start)))
3540
3541 (defun subregexp-context-p (regexp pos &optional start)
3542 "Return non-nil if POS is in a normal subregexp context in REGEXP.
3543 A subregexp context is one where a sub-regexp can appear.
3544 A non-subregexp context is for example within brackets, or within a
3545 repetition bounds operator `\\=\\{...\\}', or right after a `\\'.
3546 If START is non-nil, it should be a position in REGEXP, smaller
3547 than POS, and known to be in a subregexp context."
3548 ;; Here's one possible implementation, with the great benefit that it
3549 ;; reuses the regexp-matcher's own parser, so it understands all the
3550 ;; details of the syntax. A disadvantage is that it needs to match the
3551 ;; error string.
3552 (condition-case err
3553 (progn
3554 (string-match (substring regexp (or start 0) pos) "")
3555 t)
3556 (invalid-regexp
3557 (not (member (cadr err) '("Unmatched [ or [^"
3558 "Unmatched \\{"
3559 "Trailing backslash")))))
3560 ;; An alternative implementation:
3561 ;; (defconst re-context-re
3562 ;; (let* ((harmless-ch "[^\\[]")
3563 ;; (harmless-esc "\\\\[^{]")
3564 ;; (class-harmless-ch "[^][]")
3565 ;; (class-lb-harmless "[^]:]")
3566 ;; (class-lb-colon-maybe-charclass ":\\([a-z]+:]\\)?")
3567 ;; (class-lb (concat "\\[\\(" class-lb-harmless
3568 ;; "\\|" class-lb-colon-maybe-charclass "\\)"))
3569 ;; (class
3570 ;; (concat "\\[^?]?"
3571 ;; "\\(" class-harmless-ch
3572 ;; "\\|" class-lb "\\)*"
3573 ;; "\\[?]")) ; special handling for bare [ at end of re
3574 ;; (braces "\\\\{[0-9,]+\\\\}"))
3575 ;; (concat "\\`\\(" harmless-ch "\\|" harmless-esc
3576 ;; "\\|" class "\\|" braces "\\)*\\'"))
3577 ;; "Matches any prefix that corresponds to a normal subregexp context.")
3578 ;; (string-match re-context-re (substring regexp (or start 0) pos))
3579 )
3580 \f
3581 ;;;; split-string
3582
3583 (defconst split-string-default-separators "[ \f\t\n\r\v]+"
3584 "The default value of separators for `split-string'.
3585
3586 A regexp matching strings of whitespace. May be locale-dependent
3587 \(as yet unimplemented). Should not match non-breaking spaces.
3588
3589 Warning: binding this to a different value and using it as default is
3590 likely to have undesired semantics.")
3591
3592 ;; The specification says that if both SEPARATORS and OMIT-NULLS are
3593 ;; defaulted, OMIT-NULLS should be treated as t. Simplifying the logical
3594 ;; expression leads to the equivalent implementation that if SEPARATORS
3595 ;; is defaulted, OMIT-NULLS is treated as t.
3596 (defun split-string (string &optional separators omit-nulls trim)
3597 "Split STRING into substrings bounded by matches for SEPARATORS.
3598
3599 The beginning and end of STRING, and each match for SEPARATORS, are
3600 splitting points. The substrings matching SEPARATORS are removed, and
3601 the substrings between the splitting points are collected as a list,
3602 which is returned.
3603
3604 If SEPARATORS is non-nil, it should be a regular expression matching text
3605 which separates, but is not part of, the substrings. If nil it defaults to
3606 `split-string-default-separators', normally \"[ \\f\\t\\n\\r\\v]+\", and
3607 OMIT-NULLS is forced to t.
3608
3609 If OMIT-NULLS is t, zero-length substrings are omitted from the list (so
3610 that for the default value of SEPARATORS leading and trailing whitespace
3611 are effectively trimmed). If nil, all zero-length substrings are retained,
3612 which correctly parses CSV format, for example.
3613
3614 If TRIM is non-nil, it should be a regular expression to match
3615 text to trim from the beginning and end of each substring. If trimming
3616 makes the substring empty, it is treated as null.
3617
3618 If you want to trim whitespace from the substrings, the reliably correct
3619 way is using TRIM. Making SEPARATORS match that whitespace gives incorrect
3620 results when there is whitespace at the start or end of STRING. If you
3621 see such calls to `split-string', please fix them.
3622
3623 Note that the effect of `(split-string STRING)' is the same as
3624 `(split-string STRING split-string-default-separators t)'. In the rare
3625 case that you wish to retain zero-length substrings when splitting on
3626 whitespace, use `(split-string STRING split-string-default-separators)'.
3627
3628 Modifies the match data; use `save-match-data' if necessary."
3629 (let* ((keep-nulls (not (if separators omit-nulls t)))
3630 (rexp (or separators split-string-default-separators))
3631 (start 0)
3632 this-start this-end
3633 notfirst
3634 (list nil)
3635 (push-one
3636 ;; Push the substring in range THIS-START to THIS-END
3637 ;; onto LIST, trimming it and perhaps discarding it.
3638 (lambda ()
3639 (when trim
3640 ;; Discard the trim from start of this substring.
3641 (let ((tem (string-match trim string this-start)))
3642 (and (eq tem this-start)
3643 (setq this-start (match-end 0)))))
3644
3645 (when (or keep-nulls (< this-start this-end))
3646 (let ((this (substring string this-start this-end)))
3647
3648 ;; Discard the trim from end of this substring.
3649 (when trim
3650 (let ((tem (string-match (concat trim "\\'") this 0)))
3651 (and tem (< tem (length this))
3652 (setq this (substring this 0 tem)))))
3653
3654 ;; Trimming could make it empty; check again.
3655 (when (or keep-nulls (> (length this) 0))
3656 (push this list)))))))
3657
3658 (while (and (string-match rexp string
3659 (if (and notfirst
3660 (= start (match-beginning 0))
3661 (< start (length string)))
3662 (1+ start) start))
3663 (< start (length string)))
3664 (setq notfirst t)
3665 (setq this-start start this-end (match-beginning 0)
3666 start (match-end 0))
3667
3668 (funcall push-one))
3669
3670 ;; Handle the substring at the end of STRING.
3671 (setq this-start start this-end (length string))
3672 (funcall push-one)
3673
3674 (nreverse list)))
3675
3676 (defun combine-and-quote-strings (strings &optional separator)
3677 "Concatenate the STRINGS, adding the SEPARATOR (default \" \").
3678 This tries to quote the strings to avoid ambiguity such that
3679 (split-string-and-unquote (combine-and-quote-strings strs)) == strs
3680 Only some SEPARATORs will work properly."
3681 (let* ((sep (or separator " "))
3682 (re (concat "[\\\"]" "\\|" (regexp-quote sep))))
3683 (mapconcat
3684 (lambda (str)
3685 (if (string-match re str)
3686 (concat "\"" (replace-regexp-in-string "[\\\"]" "\\\\\\&" str) "\"")
3687 str))
3688 strings sep)))
3689
3690 (defun split-string-and-unquote (string &optional separator)
3691 "Split the STRING into a list of strings.
3692 It understands Emacs Lisp quoting within STRING, such that
3693 (split-string-and-unquote (combine-and-quote-strings strs)) == strs
3694 The SEPARATOR regexp defaults to \"\\s-+\"."
3695 (let ((sep (or separator "\\s-+"))
3696 (i (string-match "\"" string)))
3697 (if (null i)
3698 (split-string string sep t) ; no quoting: easy
3699 (append (unless (eq i 0) (split-string (substring string 0 i) sep t))
3700 (let ((rfs (read-from-string string i)))
3701 (cons (car rfs)
3702 (split-string-and-unquote (substring string (cdr rfs))
3703 sep)))))))
3704
3705 \f
3706 ;;;; Replacement in strings.
3707
3708 (defun subst-char-in-string (fromchar tochar string &optional inplace)
3709 "Replace FROMCHAR with TOCHAR in STRING each time it occurs.
3710 Unless optional argument INPLACE is non-nil, return a new string."
3711 (let ((i (length string))
3712 (newstr (if inplace string (copy-sequence string))))
3713 (while (> i 0)
3714 (setq i (1- i))
3715 (if (eq (aref newstr i) fromchar)
3716 (aset newstr i tochar)))
3717 newstr))
3718
3719 (defun replace-regexp-in-string (regexp rep string &optional
3720 fixedcase literal subexp start)
3721 "Replace all matches for REGEXP with REP in STRING.
3722
3723 Return a new string containing the replacements.
3724
3725 Optional arguments FIXEDCASE, LITERAL and SUBEXP are like the
3726 arguments with the same names of function `replace-match'. If START
3727 is non-nil, start replacements at that index in STRING.
3728
3729 REP is either a string used as the NEWTEXT arg of `replace-match' or a
3730 function. If it is a function, it is called with the actual text of each
3731 match, and its value is used as the replacement text. When REP is called,
3732 the match data are the result of matching REGEXP against a substring
3733 of STRING.
3734
3735 To replace only the first match (if any), make REGEXP match up to \\'
3736 and replace a sub-expression, e.g.
3737 (replace-regexp-in-string \"\\\\(foo\\\\).*\\\\'\" \"bar\" \" foo foo\" nil nil 1)
3738 => \" bar foo\""
3739
3740 ;; To avoid excessive consing from multiple matches in long strings,
3741 ;; don't just call `replace-match' continually. Walk down the
3742 ;; string looking for matches of REGEXP and building up a (reversed)
3743 ;; list MATCHES. This comprises segments of STRING which weren't
3744 ;; matched interspersed with replacements for segments that were.
3745 ;; [For a `large' number of replacements it's more efficient to
3746 ;; operate in a temporary buffer; we can't tell from the function's
3747 ;; args whether to choose the buffer-based implementation, though it
3748 ;; might be reasonable to do so for long enough STRING.]
3749 (let ((l (length string))
3750 (start (or start 0))
3751 matches str mb me)
3752 (save-match-data
3753 (while (and (< start l) (string-match regexp string start))
3754 (setq mb (match-beginning 0)
3755 me (match-end 0))
3756 ;; If we matched the empty string, make sure we advance by one char
3757 (when (= me mb) (setq me (min l (1+ mb))))
3758 ;; Generate a replacement for the matched substring.
3759 ;; Operate only on the substring to minimize string consing.
3760 ;; Set up match data for the substring for replacement;
3761 ;; presumably this is likely to be faster than munging the
3762 ;; match data directly in Lisp.
3763 (string-match regexp (setq str (substring string mb me)))
3764 (setq matches
3765 (cons (replace-match (if (stringp rep)
3766 rep
3767 (funcall rep (match-string 0 str)))
3768 fixedcase literal str subexp)
3769 (cons (substring string start mb) ; unmatched prefix
3770 matches)))
3771 (setq start me))
3772 ;; Reconstruct a string from the pieces.
3773 (setq matches (cons (substring string start l) matches)) ; leftover
3774 (apply #'concat (nreverse matches)))))
3775 \f
3776 (defun string-prefix-p (prefix string &optional ignore-case)
3777 "Return non-nil if PREFIX is a prefix of STRING.
3778 If IGNORE-CASE is non-nil, the comparison is done without paying attention
3779 to case differences."
3780 (let ((prefix-length (length prefix)))
3781 (if (> prefix-length (length string)) nil
3782 (eq t (compare-strings prefix 0 prefix-length string
3783 0 prefix-length ignore-case)))))
3784
3785 (defun string-suffix-p (suffix string &optional ignore-case)
3786 "Return non-nil if SUFFIX is a suffix of STRING.
3787 If IGNORE-CASE is non-nil, the comparison is done without paying
3788 attention to case differences."
3789 (let ((start-pos (- (length string) (length suffix))))
3790 (and (>= start-pos 0)
3791 (eq t (compare-strings suffix nil nil
3792 string start-pos nil ignore-case)))))
3793
3794 (defun bidi-string-mark-left-to-right (str)
3795 "Return a string that can be safely inserted in left-to-right text.
3796
3797 Normally, inserting a string with right-to-left (RTL) script into
3798 a buffer may cause some subsequent text to be displayed as part
3799 of the RTL segment (usually this affects punctuation characters).
3800 This function returns a string which displays as STR but forces
3801 subsequent text to be displayed as left-to-right.
3802
3803 If STR contains any RTL character, this function returns a string
3804 consisting of STR followed by an invisible left-to-right mark
3805 \(LRM) character. Otherwise, it returns STR."
3806 (unless (stringp str)
3807 (signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'stringp str)))
3808 (if (string-match "\\cR" str)
3809 (concat str (propertize (string ?\x200e) 'invisible t))
3810 str))
3811 \f
3812 ;;;; Specifying things to do later.
3813
3814 (defun load-history-regexp (file)
3815 "Form a regexp to find FILE in `load-history'.
3816 FILE, a string, is described in the function `eval-after-load'."
3817 (if (file-name-absolute-p file)
3818 (setq file (file-truename file)))
3819 (concat (if (file-name-absolute-p file) "\\`" "\\(\\`\\|/\\)")
3820 (regexp-quote file)
3821 (if (file-name-extension file)
3822 ""
3823 ;; Note: regexp-opt can't be used here, since we need to call
3824 ;; this before Emacs has been fully started. 2006-05-21
3825 (concat "\\(" (mapconcat 'regexp-quote load-suffixes "\\|") "\\)?"))
3826 "\\(" (mapconcat 'regexp-quote jka-compr-load-suffixes "\\|")
3827 "\\)?\\'"))
3828
3829 (defun load-history-filename-element (file-regexp)
3830 "Get the first elt of `load-history' whose car matches FILE-REGEXP.
3831 Return nil if there isn't one."
3832 (let* ((loads load-history)
3833 (load-elt (and loads (car loads))))
3834 (save-match-data
3835 (while (and loads
3836 (or (null (car load-elt))
3837 (not (string-match file-regexp (car load-elt)))))
3838 (setq loads (cdr loads)
3839 load-elt (and loads (car loads)))))
3840 load-elt))
3841
3842 (put 'eval-after-load 'lisp-indent-function 1)
3843 (defun eval-after-load (file form)
3844 "Arrange that if FILE is loaded, FORM will be run immediately afterwards.
3845 If FILE is already loaded, evaluate FORM right now.
3846 FORM can be an Elisp expression (in which case it's passed to `eval'),
3847 or a function (in which case it's passed to `funcall' with no argument).
3848
3849 If a matching file is loaded again, FORM will be evaluated again.
3850
3851 If FILE is a string, it may be either an absolute or a relative file
3852 name, and may have an extension (e.g. \".el\") or may lack one, and
3853 additionally may or may not have an extension denoting a compressed
3854 format (e.g. \".gz\").
3855
3856 When FILE is absolute, this first converts it to a true name by chasing
3857 symbolic links. Only a file of this name (see next paragraph regarding
3858 extensions) will trigger the evaluation of FORM. When FILE is relative,
3859 a file whose absolute true name ends in FILE will trigger evaluation.
3860
3861 When FILE lacks an extension, a file name with any extension will trigger
3862 evaluation. Otherwise, its extension must match FILE's. A further
3863 extension for a compressed format (e.g. \".gz\") on FILE will not affect
3864 this name matching.
3865
3866 Alternatively, FILE can be a feature (i.e. a symbol), in which case FORM
3867 is evaluated at the end of any file that `provide's this feature.
3868 If the feature is provided when evaluating code not associated with a
3869 file, FORM is evaluated immediately after the provide statement.
3870
3871 Usually FILE is just a library name like \"font-lock\" or a feature name
3872 like 'font-lock.
3873
3874 This function makes or adds to an entry on `after-load-alist'."
3875 (declare (compiler-macro
3876 (lambda (whole)
3877 (if (eq 'quote (car-safe form))
3878 ;; Quote with lambda so the compiler can look inside.
3879 `(eval-after-load ,file (lambda () ,(nth 1 form)))
3880 whole))))
3881 ;; Add this FORM into after-load-alist (regardless of whether we'll be
3882 ;; evaluating it now).
3883 (let* ((regexp-or-feature
3884 (if (stringp file)
3885 (setq file (purecopy (load-history-regexp file)))
3886 file))
3887 (elt (assoc regexp-or-feature after-load-alist))
3888 (func
3889 (if (functionp form) form
3890 ;; Try to use the "current" lexical/dynamic mode for `form'.
3891 (eval `(lambda () ,form) lexical-binding))))
3892 (unless elt
3893 (setq elt (list regexp-or-feature))
3894 (push elt after-load-alist))
3895 ;; Is there an already loaded file whose name (or `provide' name)
3896 ;; matches FILE?
3897 (prog1 (if (if (stringp file)
3898 (load-history-filename-element regexp-or-feature)
3899 (featurep file))
3900 (funcall func))
3901 (let ((delayed-func
3902 (if (not (symbolp regexp-or-feature)) func
3903 ;; For features, the after-load-alist elements get run when
3904 ;; `provide' is called rather than at the end of the file.
3905 ;; So add an indirection to make sure that `func' is really run
3906 ;; "after-load" in case the provide call happens early.
3907 (lambda ()
3908 (if (not load-file-name)
3909 ;; Not being provided from a file, run func right now.
3910 (funcall func)
3911 (let ((lfn load-file-name)
3912 ;; Don't use letrec, because equal (in
3913 ;; add/remove-hook) would get trapped in a cycle.
3914 (fun (make-symbol "eval-after-load-helper")))
3915 (fset fun (lambda (file)
3916 (when (equal file lfn)
3917 (remove-hook 'after-load-functions fun)
3918 (funcall func))))
3919 (add-hook 'after-load-functions fun 'append)))))))
3920 ;; Add FORM to the element unless it's already there.
3921 (unless (member delayed-func (cdr elt))
3922 (nconc elt (list delayed-func)))))))
3923
3924 (defmacro with-eval-after-load (file &rest body)
3925 "Execute BODY after FILE is loaded.
3926 FILE is normally a feature name, but it can also be a file name,
3927 in case that file does not provide any feature."
3928 (declare (indent 1) (debug t))
3929 `(eval-after-load ,file (lambda () ,@body)))
3930
3931 (defvar after-load-functions nil
3932 "Special hook run after loading a file.
3933 Each function there is called with a single argument, the absolute
3934 name of the file just loaded.")
3935
3936 (defun do-after-load-evaluation (abs-file)
3937 "Evaluate all `eval-after-load' forms, if any, for ABS-FILE.
3938 ABS-FILE, a string, should be the absolute true name of a file just loaded.
3939 This function is called directly from the C code."
3940 ;; Run the relevant eval-after-load forms.
3941 (dolist (a-l-element after-load-alist)
3942 (when (and (stringp (car a-l-element))
3943 (string-match-p (car a-l-element) abs-file))
3944 ;; discard the file name regexp
3945 (mapc #'funcall (cdr a-l-element))))
3946 ;; Complain when the user uses obsolete files.
3947 (when (string-match-p "/obsolete/\\([^/]*\\)\\'" abs-file)
3948 ;; Maybe we should just use display-warning? This seems yucky...
3949 (let* ((file (file-name-nondirectory abs-file))
3950 (msg (format "Package %s is obsolete!"
3951 (substring file 0
3952 (string-match "\\.elc?\\>" file)))))
3953 ;; Cribbed from cl--compiling-file.
3954 (if (and (boundp 'byte-compile--outbuffer)
3955 (bufferp (symbol-value 'byte-compile--outbuffer))
3956 (equal (buffer-name (symbol-value 'byte-compile--outbuffer))
3957 " *Compiler Output*"))
3958 ;; Don't warn about obsolete files using other obsolete files.
3959 (unless (and (stringp byte-compile-current-file)
3960 (string-match-p "/obsolete/[^/]*\\'"
3961 (expand-file-name
3962 byte-compile-current-file
3963 byte-compile-root-dir)))
3964 (byte-compile-log-warning msg))
3965 (run-with-timer 0 nil
3966 (lambda (msg)
3967 (message "%s" msg))
3968 msg))))
3969
3970 ;; Finally, run any other hook.
3971 (run-hook-with-args 'after-load-functions abs-file))
3972
3973 (defun eval-next-after-load (file)
3974 "Read the following input sexp, and run it whenever FILE is loaded.
3975 This makes or adds to an entry on `after-load-alist'.
3976 FILE should be the name of a library, with no directory name."
3977 (declare (obsolete eval-after-load "23.2"))
3978 (eval-after-load file (read)))
3979
3980 \f
3981 (defun display-delayed-warnings ()
3982 "Display delayed warnings from `delayed-warnings-list'.
3983 Used from `delayed-warnings-hook' (which see)."
3984 (dolist (warning (nreverse delayed-warnings-list))
3985 (apply 'display-warning warning))
3986 (setq delayed-warnings-list nil))
3987
3988 (defun collapse-delayed-warnings ()
3989 "Remove duplicates from `delayed-warnings-list'.
3990 Collapse identical adjacent warnings into one (plus count).
3991 Used from `delayed-warnings-hook' (which see)."
3992 (let ((count 1)
3993 collapsed warning)
3994 (while delayed-warnings-list
3995 (setq warning (pop delayed-warnings-list))
3996 (if (equal warning (car delayed-warnings-list))
3997 (setq count (1+ count))
3998 (when (> count 1)
3999 (setcdr warning (cons (format "%s [%d times]" (cadr warning) count)
4000 (cddr warning)))
4001 (setq count 1))
4002 (push warning collapsed)))
4003 (setq delayed-warnings-list (nreverse collapsed))))
4004
4005 ;; At present this is only used for Emacs internals.
4006 ;; Ref http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2012-02/msg00085.html
4007 (defvar delayed-warnings-hook '(collapse-delayed-warnings
4008 display-delayed-warnings)
4009 "Normal hook run to process and display delayed warnings.
4010 By default, this hook contains functions to consolidate the
4011 warnings listed in `delayed-warnings-list', display them, and set
4012 `delayed-warnings-list' back to nil.")
4013
4014 (defun delay-warning (type message &optional level buffer-name)
4015 "Display a delayed warning.
4016 Aside from going through `delayed-warnings-list', this is equivalent
4017 to `display-warning'."
4018 (push (list type message level buffer-name) delayed-warnings-list))
4019
4020 \f
4021 ;;;; invisibility specs
4022
4023 (defun add-to-invisibility-spec (element)
4024 "Add ELEMENT to `buffer-invisibility-spec'.
4025 See documentation for `buffer-invisibility-spec' for the kind of elements
4026 that can be added."
4027 (if (eq buffer-invisibility-spec t)
4028 (setq buffer-invisibility-spec (list t)))
4029 (setq buffer-invisibility-spec
4030 (cons element buffer-invisibility-spec)))
4031
4032 (defun remove-from-invisibility-spec (element)
4033 "Remove ELEMENT from `buffer-invisibility-spec'."
4034 (if (consp buffer-invisibility-spec)
4035 (setq buffer-invisibility-spec
4036 (delete element buffer-invisibility-spec))))
4037 \f
4038 ;;;; Syntax tables.
4039
4040 (defmacro with-syntax-table (table &rest body)
4041 "Evaluate BODY with syntax table of current buffer set to TABLE.
4042 The syntax table of the current buffer is saved, BODY is evaluated, and the
4043 saved table is restored, even in case of an abnormal exit.
4044 Value is what BODY returns."
4045 (declare (debug t) (indent 1))
4046 (let ((old-table (make-symbol "table"))
4047 (old-buffer (make-symbol "buffer")))
4048 `(let ((,old-table (syntax-table))
4049 (,old-buffer (current-buffer)))
4050 (unwind-protect
4051 (progn
4052 (set-syntax-table ,table)
4053 ,@body)
4054 (save-current-buffer
4055 (set-buffer ,old-buffer)
4056 (set-syntax-table ,old-table))))))
4057
4058 (defun make-syntax-table (&optional oldtable)
4059 "Return a new syntax table.
4060 Create a syntax table which inherits from OLDTABLE (if non-nil) or
4061 from `standard-syntax-table' otherwise."
4062 (let ((table (make-char-table 'syntax-table nil)))
4063 (set-char-table-parent table (or oldtable (standard-syntax-table)))
4064 table))
4065
4066 (defun syntax-after (pos)
4067 "Return the raw syntax descriptor for the char after POS.
4068 If POS is outside the buffer's accessible portion, return nil."
4069 (unless (or (< pos (point-min)) (>= pos (point-max)))
4070 (let ((st (if parse-sexp-lookup-properties
4071 (get-char-property pos 'syntax-table))))
4072 (if (consp st) st
4073 (aref (or st (syntax-table)) (char-after pos))))))
4074
4075 (defun syntax-class (syntax)
4076 "Return the code for the syntax class described by SYNTAX.
4077
4078 SYNTAX should be a raw syntax descriptor; the return value is a
4079 integer which encodes the corresponding syntax class. See Info
4080 node `(elisp)Syntax Table Internals' for a list of codes.
4081
4082 If SYNTAX is nil, return nil."
4083 (and syntax (logand (car syntax) 65535)))
4084 \f
4085 ;; Utility motion commands
4086
4087 ;; Whitespace
4088
4089 (defun forward-whitespace (arg)
4090 "Move point to the end of the next sequence of whitespace chars.
4091 Each such sequence may be a single newline, or a sequence of
4092 consecutive space and/or tab characters.
4093 With prefix argument ARG, do it ARG times if positive, or move
4094 backwards ARG times if negative."
4095 (interactive "^p")
4096 (if (natnump arg)
4097 (re-search-forward "[ \t]+\\|\n" nil 'move arg)
4098 (while (< arg 0)
4099 (if (re-search-backward "[ \t]+\\|\n" nil 'move)
4100 (or (eq (char-after (match-beginning 0)) ?\n)
4101 (skip-chars-backward " \t")))
4102 (setq arg (1+ arg)))))
4103
4104 ;; Symbols
4105
4106 (defun forward-symbol (arg)
4107 "Move point to the next position that is the end of a symbol.
4108 A symbol is any sequence of characters that are in either the
4109 word constituent or symbol constituent syntax class.
4110 With prefix argument ARG, do it ARG times if positive, or move
4111 backwards ARG times if negative."
4112 (interactive "^p")
4113 (if (natnump arg)
4114 (re-search-forward "\\(\\sw\\|\\s_\\)+" nil 'move arg)
4115 (while (< arg 0)
4116 (if (re-search-backward "\\(\\sw\\|\\s_\\)+" nil 'move)
4117 (skip-syntax-backward "w_"))
4118 (setq arg (1+ arg)))))
4119
4120 ;; Syntax blocks
4121
4122 (defun forward-same-syntax (&optional arg)
4123 "Move point past all characters with the same syntax class.
4124 With prefix argument ARG, do it ARG times if positive, or move
4125 backwards ARG times if negative."
4126 (interactive "^p")
4127 (or arg (setq arg 1))
4128 (while (< arg 0)
4129 (skip-syntax-backward
4130 (char-to-string (char-syntax (char-before))))
4131 (setq arg (1+ arg)))
4132 (while (> arg 0)
4133 (skip-syntax-forward (char-to-string (char-syntax (char-after))))
4134 (setq arg (1- arg))))
4135
4136 \f
4137 ;;;; Text clones
4138
4139 (defvar text-clone--maintaining nil)
4140
4141 (defun text-clone--maintain (ol1 after beg end &optional _len)
4142 "Propagate the changes made under the overlay OL1 to the other clones.
4143 This is used on the `modification-hooks' property of text clones."
4144 (when (and after (not undo-in-progress)
4145 (not text-clone--maintaining)
4146 (overlay-start ol1))
4147 (let ((margin (if (overlay-get ol1 'text-clone-spreadp) 1 0)))
4148 (setq beg (max beg (+ (overlay-start ol1) margin)))
4149 (setq end (min end (- (overlay-end ol1) margin)))
4150 (when (<= beg end)
4151 (save-excursion
4152 (when (overlay-get ol1 'text-clone-syntax)
4153 ;; Check content of the clone's text.
4154 (let ((cbeg (+ (overlay-start ol1) margin))
4155 (cend (- (overlay-end ol1) margin)))
4156 (goto-char cbeg)
4157 (save-match-data
4158 (if (not (re-search-forward
4159 (overlay-get ol1 'text-clone-syntax) cend t))
4160 ;; Mark the overlay for deletion.
4161 (setq end cbeg)
4162 (when (< (match-end 0) cend)
4163 ;; Shrink the clone at its end.
4164 (setq end (min end (match-end 0)))
4165 (move-overlay ol1 (overlay-start ol1)
4166 (+ (match-end 0) margin)))
4167 (when (> (match-beginning 0) cbeg)
4168 ;; Shrink the clone at its beginning.
4169 (setq beg (max (match-beginning 0) beg))
4170 (move-overlay ol1 (- (match-beginning 0) margin)
4171 (overlay-end ol1)))))))
4172 ;; Now go ahead and update the clones.
4173 (let ((head (- beg (overlay-start ol1)))
4174 (tail (- (overlay-end ol1) end))
4175 (str (buffer-substring beg end))
4176 (nothing-left t)
4177 (text-clone--maintaining t))
4178 (dolist (ol2 (overlay-get ol1 'text-clones))
4179 (let ((oe (overlay-end ol2)))
4180 (unless (or (eq ol1 ol2) (null oe))
4181 (setq nothing-left nil)
4182 (let ((mod-beg (+ (overlay-start ol2) head)))
4183 ;;(overlay-put ol2 'modification-hooks nil)
4184 (goto-char (- (overlay-end ol2) tail))
4185 (unless (> mod-beg (point))
4186 (save-excursion (insert str))
4187 (delete-region mod-beg (point)))
4188 ;;(overlay-put ol2 'modification-hooks '(text-clone--maintain))
4189 ))))
4190 (if nothing-left (delete-overlay ol1))))))))
4191
4192 (defun text-clone-create (start end &optional spreadp syntax)
4193 "Create a text clone of START...END at point.
4194 Text clones are chunks of text that are automatically kept identical:
4195 changes done to one of the clones will be immediately propagated to the other.
4196
4197 The buffer's content at point is assumed to be already identical to
4198 the one between START and END.
4199 If SYNTAX is provided it's a regexp that describes the possible text of
4200 the clones; the clone will be shrunk or killed if necessary to ensure that
4201 its text matches the regexp.
4202 If SPREADP is non-nil it indicates that text inserted before/after the
4203 clone should be incorporated in the clone."
4204 ;; To deal with SPREADP we can either use an overlay with `nil t' along
4205 ;; with insert-(behind|in-front-of)-hooks or use a slightly larger overlay
4206 ;; (with a one-char margin at each end) with `t nil'.
4207 ;; We opted for a larger overlay because it behaves better in the case
4208 ;; where the clone is reduced to the empty string (we want the overlay to
4209 ;; stay when the clone's content is the empty string and we want to use
4210 ;; `evaporate' to make sure those overlays get deleted when needed).
4211 ;;
4212 (let* ((pt-end (+ (point) (- end start)))
4213 (start-margin (if (or (not spreadp) (bobp) (<= start (point-min)))
4214 0 1))
4215 (end-margin (if (or (not spreadp)
4216 (>= pt-end (point-max))
4217 (>= start (point-max)))
4218 0 1))
4219 ;; FIXME: Reuse overlays at point to extend dups!
4220 (ol1 (make-overlay (- start start-margin) (+ end end-margin) nil t))
4221 (ol2 (make-overlay (- (point) start-margin) (+ pt-end end-margin) nil t))
4222 (dups (list ol1 ol2)))
4223 (overlay-put ol1 'modification-hooks '(text-clone--maintain))
4224 (when spreadp (overlay-put ol1 'text-clone-spreadp t))
4225 (when syntax (overlay-put ol1 'text-clone-syntax syntax))
4226 ;;(overlay-put ol1 'face 'underline)
4227 (overlay-put ol1 'evaporate t)
4228 (overlay-put ol1 'text-clones dups)
4229 ;;
4230 (overlay-put ol2 'modification-hooks '(text-clone--maintain))
4231 (when spreadp (overlay-put ol2 'text-clone-spreadp t))
4232 (when syntax (overlay-put ol2 'text-clone-syntax syntax))
4233 ;;(overlay-put ol2 'face 'underline)
4234 (overlay-put ol2 'evaporate t)
4235 (overlay-put ol2 'text-clones dups)))
4236 \f
4237 ;;;; Mail user agents.
4238
4239 ;; Here we include just enough for other packages to be able
4240 ;; to define them.
4241
4242 (defun define-mail-user-agent (symbol composefunc sendfunc
4243 &optional abortfunc hookvar)
4244 "Define a symbol to identify a mail-sending package for `mail-user-agent'.
4245
4246 SYMBOL can be any Lisp symbol. Its function definition and/or
4247 value as a variable do not matter for this usage; we use only certain
4248 properties on its property list, to encode the rest of the arguments.
4249
4250 COMPOSEFUNC is program callable function that composes an outgoing
4251 mail message buffer. This function should set up the basics of the
4252 buffer without requiring user interaction. It should populate the
4253 standard mail headers, leaving the `to:' and `subject:' headers blank
4254 by default.
4255
4256 COMPOSEFUNC should accept several optional arguments--the same
4257 arguments that `compose-mail' takes. See that function's documentation.
4258
4259 SENDFUNC is the command a user would run to send the message.
4260
4261 Optional ABORTFUNC is the command a user would run to abort the
4262 message. For mail packages that don't have a separate abort function,
4263 this can be `kill-buffer' (the equivalent of omitting this argument).
4264
4265 Optional HOOKVAR is a hook variable that gets run before the message
4266 is actually sent. Callers that use the `mail-user-agent' may
4267 install a hook function temporarily on this hook variable.
4268 If HOOKVAR is nil, `mail-send-hook' is used.
4269
4270 The properties used on SYMBOL are `composefunc', `sendfunc',
4271 `abortfunc', and `hookvar'."
4272 (put symbol 'composefunc composefunc)
4273 (put symbol 'sendfunc sendfunc)
4274 (put symbol 'abortfunc (or abortfunc 'kill-buffer))
4275 (put symbol 'hookvar (or hookvar 'mail-send-hook)))
4276 \f
4277 (defvar called-interactively-p-functions nil
4278 "Special hook called to skip special frames in `called-interactively-p'.
4279 The functions are called with 3 arguments: (I FRAME1 FRAME2),
4280 where FRAME1 is a \"current frame\", FRAME2 is the next frame,
4281 I is the index of the frame after FRAME2. It should return nil
4282 if those frames don't seem special and otherwise, it should return
4283 the number of frames to skip (minus 1).")
4284
4285 (defconst internal--funcall-interactively
4286 (symbol-function 'funcall-interactively))
4287
4288 (defun called-interactively-p (&optional kind)
4289 "Return t if the containing function was called by `call-interactively'.
4290 If KIND is `interactive', then only return t if the call was made
4291 interactively by the user, i.e. not in `noninteractive' mode nor
4292 when `executing-kbd-macro'.
4293 If KIND is `any', on the other hand, it will return t for any kind of
4294 interactive call, including being called as the binding of a key or
4295 from a keyboard macro, even in `noninteractive' mode.
4296
4297 This function is very brittle, it may fail to return the intended result when
4298 the code is debugged, advised, or instrumented in some form. Some macros and
4299 special forms (such as `condition-case') may also sometimes wrap their bodies
4300 in a `lambda', so any call to `called-interactively-p' from those bodies will
4301 indicate whether that lambda (rather than the surrounding function) was called
4302 interactively.
4303
4304 Instead of using this function, it is cleaner and more reliable to give your
4305 function an extra optional argument whose `interactive' spec specifies
4306 non-nil unconditionally (\"p\" is a good way to do this), or via
4307 \(not (or executing-kbd-macro noninteractive)).
4308
4309 The only known proper use of `interactive' for KIND is in deciding
4310 whether to display a helpful message, or how to display it. If you're
4311 thinking of using it for any other purpose, it is quite likely that
4312 you're making a mistake. Think: what do you want to do when the
4313 command is called from a keyboard macro?"
4314 (declare (advertised-calling-convention (kind) "23.1"))
4315 (when (not (and (eq kind 'interactive)
4316 (or executing-kbd-macro noninteractive)))
4317 (let* ((i 1) ;; 0 is the called-interactively-p frame.
4318 frame nextframe
4319 (get-next-frame
4320 (lambda ()
4321 (setq frame nextframe)
4322 (setq nextframe (backtrace-frame i 'called-interactively-p))
4323 ;; (message "Frame %d = %S" i nextframe)
4324 (setq i (1+ i)))))
4325 (funcall get-next-frame) ;; Get the first frame.
4326 (while
4327 ;; FIXME: The edebug and advice handling should be made modular and
4328 ;; provided directly by edebug.el and nadvice.el.
4329 (progn
4330 ;; frame =(backtrace-frame i-2)
4331 ;; nextframe=(backtrace-frame i-1)
4332 (funcall get-next-frame)
4333 ;; `pcase' would be a fairly good fit here, but it sometimes moves
4334 ;; branches within local functions, which then messes up the
4335 ;; `backtrace-frame' data we get,
4336 (or
4337 ;; Skip special forms (from non-compiled code).
4338 (and frame (null (car frame)))
4339 ;; Skip also `interactive-p' (because we don't want to know if
4340 ;; interactive-p was called interactively but if it's caller was)
4341 ;; and `byte-code' (idem; this appears in subexpressions of things
4342 ;; like condition-case, which are wrapped in a separate bytecode
4343 ;; chunk).
4344 ;; FIXME: For lexical-binding code, this is much worse,
4345 ;; because the frames look like "byte-code -> funcall -> #[...]",
4346 ;; which is not a reliable signature.
4347 (memq (nth 1 frame) '(interactive-p 'byte-code))
4348 ;; Skip package-specific stack-frames.
4349 (let ((skip (run-hook-with-args-until-success
4350 'called-interactively-p-functions
4351 i frame nextframe)))
4352 (pcase skip
4353 (`nil nil)
4354 (`0 t)
4355 (_ (setq i (+ i skip -1)) (funcall get-next-frame)))))))
4356 ;; Now `frame' should be "the function from which we were called".
4357 (pcase (cons frame nextframe)
4358 ;; No subr calls `interactive-p', so we can rule that out.
4359 (`((,_ ,(pred (lambda (f) (subrp (indirect-function f)))) . ,_) . ,_) nil)
4360 ;; In case #<subr funcall-interactively> without going through the
4361 ;; `funcall-interactively' symbol (bug#3984).
4362 (`(,_ . (t ,(pred (lambda (f)
4363 (eq internal--funcall-interactively
4364 (indirect-function f))))
4365 . ,_))
4366 t)))))
4367
4368 (defun interactive-p ()
4369 "Return t if the containing function was run directly by user input.
4370 This means that the function was called with `call-interactively'
4371 \(which includes being called as the binding of a key)
4372 and input is currently coming from the keyboard (not a keyboard macro),
4373 and Emacs is not running in batch mode (`noninteractive' is nil).
4374
4375 The only known proper use of `interactive-p' is in deciding whether to
4376 display a helpful message, or how to display it. If you're thinking
4377 of using it for any other purpose, it is quite likely that you're
4378 making a mistake. Think: what do you want to do when the command is
4379 called from a keyboard macro or in batch mode?
4380
4381 To test whether your function was called with `call-interactively',
4382 either (i) add an extra optional argument and give it an `interactive'
4383 spec that specifies non-nil unconditionally (such as \"p\"); or (ii)
4384 use `called-interactively-p'."
4385 (declare (obsolete called-interactively-p "23.2"))
4386 (called-interactively-p 'interactive))
4387
4388 (defun internal-push-keymap (keymap symbol)
4389 (let ((map (symbol-value symbol)))
4390 (unless (memq keymap map)
4391 (unless (memq 'add-keymap-witness (symbol-value symbol))
4392 (setq map (make-composed-keymap nil (symbol-value symbol)))
4393 (push 'add-keymap-witness (cdr map))
4394 (set symbol map))
4395 (push keymap (cdr map)))))
4396
4397 (defun internal-pop-keymap (keymap symbol)
4398 (let ((map (symbol-value symbol)))
4399 (when (memq keymap map)
4400 (setf (cdr map) (delq keymap (cdr map))))
4401 (let ((tail (cddr map)))
4402 (and (or (null tail) (keymapp tail))
4403 (eq 'add-keymap-witness (nth 1 map))
4404 (set symbol tail)))))
4405
4406 (define-obsolete-function-alias
4407 'set-temporary-overlay-map 'set-transient-map "24.4")
4408
4409 (defun set-transient-map (map &optional keep-pred on-exit)
4410 "Set MAP as a temporary keymap taking precedence over other keymaps.
4411 Normally, MAP is used only once, to look up the very next key.
4412 However, if the optional argument KEEP-PRED is t, MAP stays
4413 active if a key from MAP is used. KEEP-PRED can also be a
4414 function of no arguments: it is called from `pre-command-hook' and
4415 if it returns non-nil, then MAP stays active.
4416
4417 Optional arg ON-EXIT, if non-nil, specifies a function that is
4418 called, with no arguments, after MAP is deactivated.
4419
4420 This uses `overriding-terminal-local-map' which takes precedence over all other
4421 keymaps. As usual, if no match for a key is found in MAP, the normal key
4422 lookup sequence then continues.
4423
4424 This returns an \"exit function\", which can be called with no argument
4425 to deactivate this transient map, regardless of KEEP-PRED."
4426 (let* ((clearfun (make-symbol "clear-transient-map"))
4427 (exitfun
4428 (lambda ()
4429 (internal-pop-keymap map 'overriding-terminal-local-map)
4430 (remove-hook 'pre-command-hook clearfun)
4431 (when on-exit (funcall on-exit)))))
4432 ;; Don't use letrec, because equal (in add/remove-hook) would get trapped
4433 ;; in a cycle.
4434 (fset clearfun
4435 (lambda ()
4436 (with-demoted-errors "set-transient-map PCH: %S"
4437 (unless (cond
4438 ((null keep-pred) nil)
4439 ((not (eq map (cadr overriding-terminal-local-map)))
4440 ;; There's presumably some other transient-map in
4441 ;; effect. Wait for that one to terminate before we
4442 ;; remove ourselves.
4443 ;; For example, if isearch and C-u both use transient
4444 ;; maps, then the lifetime of the C-u should be nested
4445 ;; within isearch's, so the pre-command-hook of
4446 ;; isearch should be suspended during the C-u one so
4447 ;; we don't exit isearch just because we hit 1 after
4448 ;; C-u and that 1 exits isearch whereas it doesn't
4449 ;; exit C-u.
4450 t)
4451 ((eq t keep-pred)
4452 (eq this-command
4453 (lookup-key map (this-command-keys-vector))))
4454 (t (funcall keep-pred)))
4455 (funcall exitfun)))))
4456 (add-hook 'pre-command-hook clearfun)
4457 (internal-push-keymap map 'overriding-terminal-local-map)
4458 exitfun))
4459
4460 ;;;; Progress reporters.
4461
4462 ;; Progress reporter has the following structure:
4463 ;;
4464 ;; (NEXT-UPDATE-VALUE . [NEXT-UPDATE-TIME
4465 ;; MIN-VALUE
4466 ;; MAX-VALUE
4467 ;; MESSAGE
4468 ;; MIN-CHANGE
4469 ;; MIN-TIME])
4470 ;;
4471 ;; This weirdness is for optimization reasons: we want
4472 ;; `progress-reporter-update' to be as fast as possible, so
4473 ;; `(car reporter)' is better than `(aref reporter 0)'.
4474 ;;
4475 ;; NEXT-UPDATE-TIME is a float. While `float-time' loses a couple
4476 ;; digits of precision, it doesn't really matter here. On the other
4477 ;; hand, it greatly simplifies the code.
4478
4479 (defsubst progress-reporter-update (reporter &optional value)
4480 "Report progress of an operation in the echo area.
4481 REPORTER should be the result of a call to `make-progress-reporter'.
4482
4483 If REPORTER is a numerical progress reporter---i.e. if it was
4484 made using non-nil MIN-VALUE and MAX-VALUE arguments to
4485 `make-progress-reporter'---then VALUE should be a number between
4486 MIN-VALUE and MAX-VALUE.
4487
4488 If REPORTER is a non-numerical reporter, VALUE should be nil.
4489
4490 This function is relatively inexpensive. If the change since
4491 last update is too small or insufficient time has passed, it does
4492 nothing."
4493 (when (or (not (numberp value)) ; For pulsing reporter
4494 (>= value (car reporter))) ; For numerical reporter
4495 (progress-reporter-do-update reporter value)))
4496
4497 (defun make-progress-reporter (message &optional min-value max-value
4498 current-value min-change min-time)
4499 "Return progress reporter object for use with `progress-reporter-update'.
4500
4501 MESSAGE is shown in the echo area, with a status indicator
4502 appended to the end. When you call `progress-reporter-done', the
4503 word \"done\" is printed after the MESSAGE. You can change the
4504 MESSAGE of an existing progress reporter by calling
4505 `progress-reporter-force-update'.
4506
4507 MIN-VALUE and MAX-VALUE, if non-nil, are starting (0% complete)
4508 and final (100% complete) states of operation; the latter should
4509 be larger. In this case, the status message shows the percentage
4510 progress.
4511
4512 If MIN-VALUE and/or MAX-VALUE is omitted or nil, the status
4513 message shows a \"spinning\", non-numeric indicator.
4514
4515 Optional CURRENT-VALUE is the initial progress; the default is
4516 MIN-VALUE.
4517 Optional MIN-CHANGE is the minimal change in percents to report;
4518 the default is 1%.
4519 CURRENT-VALUE and MIN-CHANGE do not have any effect if MIN-VALUE
4520 and/or MAX-VALUE are nil.
4521
4522 Optional MIN-TIME specifies the minimum interval time between
4523 echo area updates (default is 0.2 seconds.) If the function
4524 `float-time' is not present, time is not tracked at all. If the
4525 OS is not capable of measuring fractions of seconds, this
4526 parameter is effectively rounded up."
4527 (when (string-match "[[:alnum:]]\\'" message)
4528 (setq message (concat message "...")))
4529 (unless min-time
4530 (setq min-time 0.2))
4531 (let ((reporter
4532 ;; Force a call to `message' now
4533 (cons (or min-value 0)
4534 (vector (if (and (fboundp 'float-time)
4535 (>= min-time 0.02))
4536 (float-time) nil)
4537 min-value
4538 max-value
4539 message
4540 (if min-change (max (min min-change 50) 1) 1)
4541 min-time))))
4542 (progress-reporter-update reporter (or current-value min-value))
4543 reporter))
4544
4545 (defun progress-reporter-force-update (reporter &optional value new-message)
4546 "Report progress of an operation in the echo area unconditionally.
4547
4548 The first two arguments are the same as in `progress-reporter-update'.
4549 NEW-MESSAGE, if non-nil, sets a new message for the reporter."
4550 (let ((parameters (cdr reporter)))
4551 (when new-message
4552 (aset parameters 3 new-message))
4553 (when (aref parameters 0)
4554 (aset parameters 0 (float-time)))
4555 (progress-reporter-do-update reporter value)))
4556
4557 (defvar progress-reporter--pulse-characters ["-" "\\" "|" "/"]
4558 "Characters to use for pulsing progress reporters.")
4559
4560 (defun progress-reporter-do-update (reporter value)
4561 (let* ((parameters (cdr reporter))
4562 (update-time (aref parameters 0))
4563 (min-value (aref parameters 1))
4564 (max-value (aref parameters 2))
4565 (text (aref parameters 3))
4566 (enough-time-passed
4567 ;; See if enough time has passed since the last update.
4568 (or (not update-time)
4569 (when (>= (float-time) update-time)
4570 ;; Calculate time for the next update
4571 (aset parameters 0 (+ update-time (aref parameters 5)))))))
4572 (cond ((and min-value max-value)
4573 ;; Numerical indicator
4574 (let* ((one-percent (/ (- max-value min-value) 100.0))
4575 (percentage (if (= max-value min-value)
4576 0
4577 (truncate (/ (- value min-value)
4578 one-percent)))))
4579 ;; Calculate NEXT-UPDATE-VALUE. If we are not printing
4580 ;; message because not enough time has passed, use 1
4581 ;; instead of MIN-CHANGE. This makes delays between echo
4582 ;; area updates closer to MIN-TIME.
4583 (setcar reporter
4584 (min (+ min-value (* (+ percentage
4585 (if enough-time-passed
4586 ;; MIN-CHANGE
4587 (aref parameters 4)
4588 1))
4589 one-percent))
4590 max-value))
4591 (when (integerp value)
4592 (setcar reporter (ceiling (car reporter))))
4593 ;; Only print message if enough time has passed
4594 (when enough-time-passed
4595 (if (> percentage 0)
4596 (message "%s%d%%" text percentage)
4597 (message "%s" text)))))
4598 ;; Pulsing indicator
4599 (enough-time-passed
4600 (let ((index (mod (1+ (car reporter)) 4))
4601 (message-log-max nil))
4602 (setcar reporter index)
4603 (message "%s %s"
4604 text
4605 (aref progress-reporter--pulse-characters
4606 index)))))))
4607
4608 (defun progress-reporter-done (reporter)
4609 "Print reporter's message followed by word \"done\" in echo area."
4610 (message "%sdone" (aref (cdr reporter) 3)))
4611
4612 (defmacro dotimes-with-progress-reporter (spec message &rest body)
4613 "Loop a certain number of times and report progress in the echo area.
4614 Evaluate BODY with VAR bound to successive integers running from
4615 0, inclusive, to COUNT, exclusive. Then evaluate RESULT to get
4616 the return value (nil if RESULT is omitted).
4617
4618 At each iteration MESSAGE followed by progress percentage is
4619 printed in the echo area. After the loop is finished, MESSAGE
4620 followed by word \"done\" is printed. This macro is a
4621 convenience wrapper around `make-progress-reporter' and friends.
4622
4623 \(fn (VAR COUNT [RESULT]) MESSAGE BODY...)"
4624 (declare (indent 2) (debug ((symbolp form &optional form) form body)))
4625 (let ((temp (make-symbol "--dotimes-temp--"))
4626 (temp2 (make-symbol "--dotimes-temp2--"))
4627 (start 0)
4628 (end (nth 1 spec)))
4629 `(let ((,temp ,end)
4630 (,(car spec) ,start)
4631 (,temp2 (make-progress-reporter ,message ,start ,end)))
4632 (while (< ,(car spec) ,temp)
4633 ,@body
4634 (progress-reporter-update ,temp2
4635 (setq ,(car spec) (1+ ,(car spec)))))
4636 (progress-reporter-done ,temp2)
4637 nil ,@(cdr (cdr spec)))))
4638
4639 \f
4640 ;;;; Comparing version strings.
4641
4642 (defconst version-separator "."
4643 "Specify the string used to separate the version elements.
4644
4645 Usually the separator is \".\", but it can be any other string.")
4646
4647
4648 (defconst version-regexp-alist
4649 '(("^[-_+ ]?snapshot$" . -4)
4650 ;; treat "1.2.3-20050920" and "1.2-3" as snapshot releases
4651 ("^[-_+]$" . -4)
4652 ;; treat "1.2.3-CVS" as snapshot release
4653 ("^[-_+ ]?\\(cvs\\|git\\|bzr\\|svn\\|hg\\|darcs\\)$" . -4)
4654 ("^[-_+ ]?alpha$" . -3)
4655 ("^[-_+ ]?beta$" . -2)
4656 ("^[-_+ ]?\\(pre\\|rc\\)$" . -1))
4657 "Specify association between non-numeric version and its priority.
4658
4659 This association is used to handle version string like \"1.0pre2\",
4660 \"0.9alpha1\", etc. It's used by `version-to-list' (which see) to convert the
4661 non-numeric part of a version string to an integer. For example:
4662
4663 String Version Integer List Version
4664 \"0.9snapshot\" (0 9 -4)
4665 \"1.0-git\" (1 0 -4)
4666 \"1.0pre2\" (1 0 -1 2)
4667 \"1.0PRE2\" (1 0 -1 2)
4668 \"22.8beta3\" (22 8 -2 3)
4669 \"22.8 Beta3\" (22 8 -2 3)
4670 \"0.9alpha1\" (0 9 -3 1)
4671 \"0.9AlphA1\" (0 9 -3 1)
4672 \"0.9 alpha\" (0 9 -3)
4673
4674 Each element has the following form:
4675
4676 (REGEXP . PRIORITY)
4677
4678 Where:
4679
4680 REGEXP regexp used to match non-numeric part of a version string.
4681 It should begin with the `^' anchor and end with a `$' to
4682 prevent false hits. Letter-case is ignored while matching
4683 REGEXP.
4684
4685 PRIORITY a negative integer specifying non-numeric priority of REGEXP.")
4686
4687
4688 (defun version-to-list (ver)
4689 "Convert version string VER into a list of integers.
4690
4691 The version syntax is given by the following EBNF:
4692
4693 VERSION ::= NUMBER ( SEPARATOR NUMBER )*.
4694
4695 NUMBER ::= (0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9)+.
4696
4697 SEPARATOR ::= `version-separator' (which see)
4698 | `version-regexp-alist' (which see).
4699
4700 The NUMBER part is optional if SEPARATOR is a match for an element
4701 in `version-regexp-alist'.
4702
4703 Examples of valid version syntax:
4704
4705 1.0pre2 1.0.7.5 22.8beta3 0.9alpha1 6.9.30Beta
4706
4707 Examples of invalid version syntax:
4708
4709 1.0prepre2 1.0..7.5 22.8X3 alpha3.2 .5
4710
4711 Examples of version conversion:
4712
4713 Version String Version as a List of Integers
4714 \"1.0.7.5\" (1 0 7 5)
4715 \"1.0pre2\" (1 0 -1 2)
4716 \"1.0PRE2\" (1 0 -1 2)
4717 \"22.8beta3\" (22 8 -2 3)
4718 \"22.8Beta3\" (22 8 -2 3)
4719 \"0.9alpha1\" (0 9 -3 1)
4720 \"0.9AlphA1\" (0 9 -3 1)
4721 \"0.9alpha\" (0 9 -3)
4722 \"0.9snapshot\" (0 9 -4)
4723 \"1.0-git\" (1 0 -4)
4724
4725 See documentation for `version-separator' and `version-regexp-alist'."
4726 (or (and (stringp ver) (> (length ver) 0))
4727 (error "Invalid version string: '%s'" ver))
4728 ;; Change .x.y to 0.x.y
4729 (if (and (>= (length ver) (length version-separator))
4730 (string-equal (substring ver 0 (length version-separator))
4731 version-separator))
4732 (setq ver (concat "0" ver)))
4733 (save-match-data
4734 (let ((i 0)
4735 (case-fold-search t) ; ignore case in matching
4736 lst s al)
4737 (while (and (setq s (string-match "[0-9]+" ver i))
4738 (= s i))
4739 ;; handle numeric part
4740 (setq lst (cons (string-to-number (substring ver i (match-end 0)))
4741 lst)
4742 i (match-end 0))
4743 ;; handle non-numeric part
4744 (when (and (setq s (string-match "[^0-9]+" ver i))
4745 (= s i))
4746 (setq s (substring ver i (match-end 0))
4747 i (match-end 0))
4748 ;; handle alpha, beta, pre, etc. separator
4749 (unless (string= s version-separator)
4750 (setq al version-regexp-alist)
4751 (while (and al (not (string-match (caar al) s)))
4752 (setq al (cdr al)))
4753 (cond (al
4754 (push (cdar al) lst))
4755 ;; Convert 22.3a to 22.3.1, 22.3b to 22.3.2, etc.
4756 ((string-match "^[-_+ ]?\\([a-zA-Z]\\)$" s)
4757 (push (- (aref (downcase (match-string 1 s)) 0) ?a -1)
4758 lst))
4759 (t (error "Invalid version syntax: '%s'" ver))))))
4760 (if (null lst)
4761 (error "Invalid version syntax: '%s'" ver)
4762 (nreverse lst)))))
4763
4764
4765 (defun version-list-< (l1 l2)
4766 "Return t if L1, a list specification of a version, is lower than L2.
4767
4768 Note that a version specified by the list (1) is equal to (1 0),
4769 \(1 0 0), (1 0 0 0), etc. That is, the trailing zeros are insignificant.
4770 Also, a version given by the list (1) is higher than (1 -1), which in
4771 turn is higher than (1 -2), which is higher than (1 -3)."
4772 (while (and l1 l2 (= (car l1) (car l2)))
4773 (setq l1 (cdr l1)
4774 l2 (cdr l2)))
4775 (cond
4776 ;; l1 not null and l2 not null
4777 ((and l1 l2) (< (car l1) (car l2)))
4778 ;; l1 null and l2 null ==> l1 length = l2 length
4779 ((and (null l1) (null l2)) nil)
4780 ;; l1 not null and l2 null ==> l1 length > l2 length
4781 (l1 (< (version-list-not-zero l1) 0))
4782 ;; l1 null and l2 not null ==> l2 length > l1 length
4783 (t (< 0 (version-list-not-zero l2)))))
4784
4785
4786 (defun version-list-= (l1 l2)
4787 "Return t if L1, a list specification of a version, is equal to L2.
4788
4789 Note that a version specified by the list (1) is equal to (1 0),
4790 \(1 0 0), (1 0 0 0), etc. That is, the trailing zeros are insignificant.
4791 Also, a version given by the list (1) is higher than (1 -1), which in
4792 turn is higher than (1 -2), which is higher than (1 -3)."
4793 (while (and l1 l2 (= (car l1) (car l2)))
4794 (setq l1 (cdr l1)
4795 l2 (cdr l2)))
4796 (cond
4797 ;; l1 not null and l2 not null
4798 ((and l1 l2) nil)
4799 ;; l1 null and l2 null ==> l1 length = l2 length
4800 ((and (null l1) (null l2)))
4801 ;; l1 not null and l2 null ==> l1 length > l2 length
4802 (l1 (zerop (version-list-not-zero l1)))
4803 ;; l1 null and l2 not null ==> l2 length > l1 length
4804 (t (zerop (version-list-not-zero l2)))))
4805
4806
4807 (defun version-list-<= (l1 l2)
4808 "Return t if L1, a list specification of a version, is lower or equal to L2.
4809
4810 Note that integer list (1) is equal to (1 0), (1 0 0), (1 0 0 0),
4811 etc. That is, the trailing zeroes are insignificant. Also, integer
4812 list (1) is greater than (1 -1) which is greater than (1 -2)
4813 which is greater than (1 -3)."
4814 (while (and l1 l2 (= (car l1) (car l2)))
4815 (setq l1 (cdr l1)
4816 l2 (cdr l2)))
4817 (cond
4818 ;; l1 not null and l2 not null
4819 ((and l1 l2) (< (car l1) (car l2)))
4820 ;; l1 null and l2 null ==> l1 length = l2 length
4821 ((and (null l1) (null l2)))
4822 ;; l1 not null and l2 null ==> l1 length > l2 length
4823 (l1 (<= (version-list-not-zero l1) 0))
4824 ;; l1 null and l2 not null ==> l2 length > l1 length
4825 (t (<= 0 (version-list-not-zero l2)))))
4826
4827 (defun version-list-not-zero (lst)
4828 "Return the first non-zero element of LST, which is a list of integers.
4829
4830 If all LST elements are zeros or LST is nil, return zero."
4831 (while (and lst (zerop (car lst)))
4832 (setq lst (cdr lst)))
4833 (if lst
4834 (car lst)
4835 ;; there is no element different of zero
4836 0))
4837
4838
4839 (defun version< (v1 v2)
4840 "Return t if version V1 is lower (older) than V2.
4841
4842 Note that version string \"1\" is equal to \"1.0\", \"1.0.0\", \"1.0.0.0\",
4843 etc. That is, the trailing \".0\"s are insignificant. Also, version
4844 string \"1\" is higher (newer) than \"1pre\", which is higher than \"1beta\",
4845 which is higher than \"1alpha\", which is higher than \"1snapshot\".
4846 Also, \"-GIT\", \"-CVS\" and \"-NNN\" are treated as snapshot versions."
4847 (version-list-< (version-to-list v1) (version-to-list v2)))
4848
4849 (defun version<= (v1 v2)
4850 "Return t if version V1 is lower (older) than or equal to V2.
4851
4852 Note that version string \"1\" is equal to \"1.0\", \"1.0.0\", \"1.0.0.0\",
4853 etc. That is, the trailing \".0\"s are insignificant. Also, version
4854 string \"1\" is higher (newer) than \"1pre\", which is higher than \"1beta\",
4855 which is higher than \"1alpha\", which is higher than \"1snapshot\".
4856 Also, \"-GIT\", \"-CVS\" and \"-NNN\" are treated as snapshot versions."
4857 (version-list-<= (version-to-list v1) (version-to-list v2)))
4858
4859 (defun version= (v1 v2)
4860 "Return t if version V1 is equal to V2.
4861
4862 Note that version string \"1\" is equal to \"1.0\", \"1.0.0\", \"1.0.0.0\",
4863 etc. That is, the trailing \".0\"s are insignificant. Also, version
4864 string \"1\" is higher (newer) than \"1pre\", which is higher than \"1beta\",
4865 which is higher than \"1alpha\", which is higher than \"1snapshot\".
4866 Also, \"-GIT\", \"-CVS\" and \"-NNN\" are treated as snapshot versions."
4867 (version-list-= (version-to-list v1) (version-to-list v2)))
4868
4869 (defvar package--builtin-versions
4870 ;; Mostly populated by loaddefs.el via autoload-builtin-package-versions.
4871 (purecopy `((emacs . ,(version-to-list emacs-version))))
4872 "Alist giving the version of each versioned builtin package.
4873 I.e. each element of the list is of the form (NAME . VERSION) where
4874 NAME is the package name as a symbol, and VERSION is its version
4875 as a list.")
4876
4877 (defun package--description-file (dir)
4878 (concat (let ((subdir (file-name-nondirectory
4879 (directory-file-name dir))))
4880 (if (string-match "\\([^.].*?\\)-\\([0-9]+\\(?:[.][0-9]+\\|\\(?:pre\\|beta\\|alpha\\)[0-9]+\\)*\\)" subdir)
4881 (match-string 1 subdir) subdir))
4882 "-pkg.el"))
4883
4884 \f
4885 ;;; Misc.
4886 (defconst menu-bar-separator '("--")
4887 "Separator for menus.")
4888
4889 ;; The following statement ought to be in print.c, but `provide' can't
4890 ;; be used there.
4891 ;; http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2009-08/msg00236.html
4892 (when (hash-table-p (car (read-from-string
4893 (prin1-to-string (make-hash-table)))))
4894 (provide 'hashtable-print-readable))
4895
4896 ;; This is used in lisp/Makefile.in and in leim/Makefile.in to
4897 ;; generate file names for autoloads, custom-deps, and finder-data.
4898 (defun unmsys--file-name (file)
4899 "Produce the canonical file name for FILE from its MSYS form.
4900
4901 On systems other than MS-Windows, just returns FILE.
4902 On MS-Windows, converts /d/foo/bar form of file names
4903 passed by MSYS Make into d:/foo/bar that Emacs can grok.
4904
4905 This function is called from lisp/Makefile and leim/Makefile."
4906 (when (and (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
4907 (string-match "\\`/[a-zA-Z]/" file))
4908 (setq file (concat (substring file 1 2) ":" (substring file 2))))
4909 file)
4910
4911
4912 ;;; subr.el ends here