Mercurial > emacs
view lib-src/=timer.c @ 1785:19755499df90
* window.c (window_internal_width): New function, which accounts
for scrollbars if present.
* lisp.h (window_internal_height, window_internal_width): Add
extern declarations for these.
* dispnew.c (direct_output_for_insert, direct_output_forward_char,
buffer_posn_from_coords): Use window_internal_width instead of
writing out its definition.
* indent.c (compute_motion): Doc fix; mention scrollbars and
window_internal_width.
(pos_tab_offset, Fvertical_motion): Use window_internal_width
instead of writing it out.
* window.c (Fpos_visible_in_window_p, Fwindow_width, Fscroll_left,
Fscroll_right): Same.
* xdisp.c (redisplay, try_window, try_window_id,
display_text_line): Same.
* xdisp.c (display_string): Add new variable `f', to be W's
frame. Use it to set desired_glyphs, and to get the frame's width
to decide whether or not to draw vertical bars.
* xdisp.c (display_text_line): If we're using vertical scrollbars,
don't draw the vertical bars separating side-by-side windows.
(display_string): Same thing. Draw spaces to fill in the part of
the mode line that is under the scrollbar in partial-width
windows.
* xdisp.c (display_text_line): Use the usable internal width of
the window, as calculated above, as the limit on the length of the
overlay arrow's image, rather than using the window's width field,
less one.
* xdisp.c (redisplay): Call condemn_scrollbars_hook and
judge_scrollbars_hook whenever they are set, not just when the
frame has vertical scrollbars.
* termhooks.h (mouse_position_hook): Doc fix.
(set_vertical_scrollbar_hook): This doesn't return anything any
more, and doesn't take a struct scrollbar * argument any more.
(condemn_scrollbars_hook, redeem_scrollbar_hook,
judge_scrollbars_hook): Doc fixes.
* term.c (mouse_position_hook): Doc fix.
(set_vertical_scrollbar_hook): This doesn't return
anything any more. Doc fixes.
* keyboard.c (kbd_buffer_get_event): Receive the scrollbar's
window from *mouse_position_hook and pass it to
make_lispy_movement, instead of working with a pointer to a struct
scrollbar.
(make_lispy_event): We don't need a window_from_scrollbar function
anymore; we are given the window directly in *EVENT.
Unify the code which generates
text-area mouse clicks and scrollbar clicks; use the same code to
distinguish clicks from drags on the scrollbar as in the text area.
Distinguish clicks from drags by storing a copy of the lispy
position list returned as part of the event.
(button_down_location): Make this a lisp vector, rather than an
array of random structures.
(struct mouse_position): Remove this; it's been replaced by a lisp
list.
(make_lispy_movement): Accept the scrollbar's window as a
parameter, rather than the scrollbar itself.
If FRAME is zero, assume that the other arguments are garbage.
(syms_of_keyboard): No need to staticpro each window of
button_down_location now; just initialize and staticpro it.
* window.c (window_from_scrollbar): Function deleted; no longer
needed.
* xdisp.c (redisplay_window): Just pass the window to
set_vertical_scrollbar hook; don't pass the scrollbar object too.
* xterm.c (XTmouse_position): Don't return a pointer to the
scrollbar for scrollbar motion; instead, return the scrollbar's
window.
* xdisp.c (echo_area_display): Move the assignment of f and the
check for visibility out of the "#ifdef MULTI_FRAME" clause; they
should work under any circumstances.
* xdisp.c (redisplay_window): If we're not going to redisplay this
window because it's a minibuffer whose contents have already been
updated, go ahead and jump to the scrollbar refreshing code
anyway; they still need to be updated. Initialize opoint, so it's
known to be valid when we jump. Calculate the scrollbar settings
properly for minibuffers, no matter what they are displaying at
the time.
* xdisp.c (redisplay_windows): Don't restore the current buffer
and its point before refreshing the scrollbars; we need the buffer
accurate.
author | Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 14 Jan 1993 15:18:53 +0000 |
parents | fac61b478a41 |
children | f149ad4ad9d4 |
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line source
/* timer.c --- daemon to provide a tagged interval timer service This little daemon runs forever waiting for signals. SIGIO (or SIGUSR1) causes it to read an event spec from stdin; that is, a date followed by colon followed by an event label. SIGALRM causes it to check its queue for events attached to the current second; if one is found, its label is written to stdout. SIGTERM causes it to terminate, printing a list of pending events. This program is intended to be used with the lisp package called timer.el. It was written anonymously in 1990. This version was documented and rewritten for portability by esr@snark,thyrsus.com, Aug 7 1992. */ #include <stdio.h> #include <signal.h> #include <fcntl.h> /* FASYNC */ #include <sys/types.h> /* time_t */ #include "../src/config.h" #ifdef USG #undef SIGIO #define SIGIO SIGUSR1 #endif extern int errno; extern char *sys_errlist[], *malloc (); extern time_t time (); /* * The field separator for input. This character shouldn't be legal in a date, * and should be printable so event strings are readable by people. Was * originally ';', then got changed to bogus `\001'. */ #define FS '@' struct event { char *token; time_t reply_at; }; int events_size; /* How many slots have we allocated? */ int num_events; /* How many are actually scheduled? */ struct event *events; /* events[0 .. num_events-1] are the valid events. */ char *pname; /* programme name for error messages */ /* Accepts a string of two fields seperated by FS. First field is string for getdate, saying when to wake-up. Second field is a token to identify the request. */ void schedule (str) char *str; { extern time_t getdate (); extern char *strcpy (); time_t now; register char *p; static struct event *ep; /* check entry format */ for (p = str; *p && *p != FS; p++) continue; if (!*p) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: bad input format: %s\n", pname, str); return; } *p++ = 0; /* allocate an event slot */ ep = events + num_events; /* If the event array is full, stretch it. After stretching, we know that ep will be pointing to an available event spot. */ if (ep == events + events_size) { int old_size = events_size; events_size *= 2; events = ((struct event *) realloc (events, events_size * sizeof (struct event))); if (! events) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: virtual memory exhausted.\n", pname); /* Should timer exit now? Well, we've still got other events in the queue, and more memory might become available in the future, so we'll just toss this event. This will screw up whoever scheduled the event, but maybe someone else will survive. */ return; } while (old_size < events_size) events[old_size++].token = NULL; } /* Don't allow users to schedule events in past time. */ ep->reply_at = get_date (str, NULL); if (ep->reply_at - time (&now) < 0) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: bad time spec: %s%c%s\n", pname, str, FS, p); return; } /* save the event description */ ep->token = (char *) malloc ((unsigned) strlen (p) + 1); if (! ep->token) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: malloc %s: %s%c%s\n", pname, sys_errlist[errno], str, FS, p); return; } strcpy (ep->token, p); num_events++; } void notify () { time_t now, tdiff, waitfor; register struct event *ep; now = time ((time_t *) NULL); for (ep = events; ep < events + num_events; ep++) /* Are any events ready to fire? */ if (ep->reply_at <= now) { fputs (ep->token, stdout); putc ('\n', stdout); fflush (stdout); free (ep->token); /* We now have a hole in the event array; fill it with the last event. */ ep->token = events[num_events].token; ep->reply_at = events[num_events].reply_at; num_events--; /* We ought to scan this event again. */ ep--; } else { /* next timeout should be the soonest of any remaining */ if ((tdiff = ep->reply_at - now) < waitfor || waitfor < 0) waitfor = (long)tdiff; } /* If there are no more events, we needn't bother setting an alarm. */ if (num_events > 0) alarm (waitfor); } void getevent () { int i; char *buf; int buf_size; /* In principle the itimer should be disabled on entry to this function, but it really doesn't make any important difference if it isn't. */ buf_size = 80; buf = (char *) malloc (buf_size); /* Read a line from standard input, expanding buf if it is too short to hold the line. */ for (i = 0; ; i++) { int c; if (i >= buf_size) { buf_size *= 2; buf = (char *) realloc (buf, buf_size); /* If we're out of memory, toss this event. */ do { c = getchar (); } while (c != '\n' && c != EOF); return; } c = getchar (); if (c == EOF) exit (0); if (c == '\n') { buf[i] = '\0'; break; } buf[i] = c; } /* Register the event. */ schedule (buf); free (buf); /* Who knows what this interrupted, or if it said "now"? */ notify (); } void sigcatch (sig) int sig; /* dispatch on incoming signal, then restore it */ { struct event *ep; switch (sig) { case SIGALRM: notify (); break; case SIGIO: getevent (); break; case SIGTERM: fprintf (stderr, "Events still queued:\n"); for (ep = events; ep < events + num_events; ep++) fprintf (stderr, "%d = %ld @ %s\n", ep - events, ep->reply_at, ep->token); exit (0); break; } /* required on older UNIXes; harmless on newer ones */ signal (sig, sigcatch); } /*ARGSUSED*/ int main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { for (pname = argv[0] + strlen (argv[0]); *pname != '/' && pname != argv[0]; pname--); if (*pname == '/') pname++; events_size = 16; events = ((struct event *) malloc (events_size * sizeof (*events))); num_events = 0; signal (SIGIO, sigcatch); signal (SIGALRM, sigcatch); signal (SIGTERM, sigcatch); #ifndef USG fcntl (0, F_SETFL, FASYNC); #endif /* USG */ while (1) pause (); } /* timer.c ends here */