Mercurial > emacs
view src/tparam.c @ 105137:1ca02a761eac
(elint): New custom group.
(elint-log-buffer): Make it a defcustom.
(elint-scan-preloaded, elint-ignored-warnings)
(elint-directory-skip-re): New options.
(elint-builtin-variables): Doc fix.
(elint-preloaded-env): New variable.
(elint-unknown-builtin-args): Add an entry for encode-time.
(elint-extra-errors): Make it a variable rather than a constant.
(elint-preloaded-skip-re): New constant.
(elint-directory): Skip files matching elint-directory-skip-re.
(elint-features): New variable, local to linted buffers.
(elint-update-env): Initialize elint-features. Possibly add
elint-preloaded-env to the buffer's environment.
(elint-get-top-forms): Bind elint-current-pos, for log messages.
Skip quoted forms.
(elint-init-form): New function, extracted from elint-init-env.
Make non-list forms a warning rather than an error.
Add the mode-map for define-derived-mode. Handle define-minor-mode,
easy-menu-define, put that adds an error-condition, and provide.
When requiring cl, also require cl-macs. Really require cl, to handle
some cl macros. Store required libraries in the list elint-features,
so as not to re-load them. Treat cc-require like require.
(elint-init-env): Call elint-init-form to do the work.
Handle eval-and-compile and such like.
(elint-add-required-env): Do not clear messages.
(elint-special-forms): Add handlers for function, defalias, if, when,
unless, and, or.
(elint-form): Add optional argument to ignore elint-special-forms,
useful to prevent recursive calls from handlers. Doc fix.
Respect elint-ignored-warnings.
(elint-form): Respect elint-ignored-warnings.
(elint-bound-variable, elint-bound-function): New variables.
(elint-unbound-variable): Respect elint-bound-variable.
(elint-get-args): Respect elint-bound-function.
(elint-check-cond-form): Add some simple handling for (f)boundp and
featurep tests.
(elint-check-defalias-form): New handler.
(elint-check-let-form): Make an empty let a warning rather than an error.
(elint-check-setq-form): Make an empty setq a warning rather than an
error. Respect elint-ignored-warnings.
(elint-check-defvar-form): Accept null doc-strings.
(elint-check-conditional-form): New handler. Does some simple-minded
checking of featurep and (f)boundp tests.
(elint-put-function-args): New function.
(elint-initialize): Use elint-scan-doc-file rather than
elint-find-builtin-variables. Use elint-put-function-args.
Possibly scan preloaded-file-list.
(elint-scan-doc-file): Rename from elint-find-builtin-variables and
extend to handle functions as well.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 22 Sep 2009 02:28:28 +0000 |
parents | 69177b934405 |
children | 68dd71358159 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Merge parameters into a termcap entry string. Copyright (C) 1985, 1987, 1993, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ /* Emacs config.h may rename various library functions such as malloc. */ #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H #include <config.h> #endif #ifdef emacs #include "lisp.h" /* for xmalloc */ #else #ifdef STDC_HEADERS #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #else char *malloc (); char *realloc (); #endif /* Do this after the include, in case string.h prototypes bcopy. */ #if (defined(HAVE_STRING_H) || defined(STDC_HEADERS)) && !defined(bcopy) #define bcopy(s, d, n) memcpy ((d), (s), (n)) #endif #endif /* not emacs */ #ifndef NULL #define NULL (char *) 0 #endif #ifndef emacs static void memory_out () { write (2, "virtual memory exhausted\n", 25); exit (1); } static char * xmalloc (size) unsigned size; { register char *tem = malloc (size); if (!tem) memory_out (); return tem; } static char * xrealloc (ptr, size) char *ptr; unsigned size; { register char *tem = realloc (ptr, size); if (!tem) memory_out (); return tem; } #endif /* not emacs */ /* Assuming STRING is the value of a termcap string entry containing `%' constructs to expand parameters, merge in parameter values and store result in block OUTSTRING points to. LEN is the length of OUTSTRING. If more space is needed, a block is allocated with `malloc'. The value returned is the address of the resulting string. This may be OUTSTRING or may be the address of a block got with `malloc'. In the latter case, the caller must free the block. The fourth and following args to tparam serve as the parameter values. */ static char *tparam1 (); /* VARARGS 2 */ char * tparam (string, outstring, len, arg0, arg1, arg2, arg3) char *string; char *outstring; int len; int arg0, arg1, arg2, arg3; { int arg[4]; arg[0] = arg0; arg[1] = arg1; arg[2] = arg2; arg[3] = arg3; return tparam1 (string, outstring, len, NULL, NULL, arg); } char *BC; char *UP; static char tgoto_buf[50]; char * tgoto (cm, hpos, vpos) char *cm; int hpos, vpos; { int args[2]; if (!cm) return NULL; args[0] = vpos; args[1] = hpos; return tparam1 (cm, tgoto_buf, 50, UP, BC, args); } static char * tparam1 (string, outstring, len, up, left, argp) char *string; char *outstring; int len; char *up, *left; register int *argp; { register int c; register char *p = string; register char *op = outstring; char *outend; int outlen = 0; register int tem; int *old_argp = argp; /* can move */ int *fixed_argp = argp; /* never moves */ int explicit_param_p = 0; /* set by %p */ int doleft = 0; int doup = 0; outend = outstring + len; while (1) { /* If the buffer might be too short, make it bigger. */ if (op + 5 >= outend) { register char *new; int offset = op - outstring; if (outlen == 0) { outlen = len + 40; new = (char *) xmalloc (outlen); bcopy (outstring, new, offset); } else { outlen *= 2; new = (char *) xrealloc (outstring, outlen); } op = new + offset; outend = new + outlen; outstring = new; } c = *p++; if (!c) break; if (c == '%') { c = *p++; if (explicit_param_p) explicit_param_p = 0; else tem = *argp; switch (c) { case 'd': /* %d means output in decimal. */ if (tem < 10) goto onedigit; if (tem < 100) goto twodigit; case '3': /* %3 means output in decimal, 3 digits. */ if (tem > 999) { *op++ = tem / 1000 + '0'; tem %= 1000; } *op++ = tem / 100 + '0'; case '2': /* %2 means output in decimal, 2 digits. */ twodigit: tem %= 100; *op++ = tem / 10 + '0'; onedigit: *op++ = tem % 10 + '0'; argp++; break; case 'p': /* %pN means use param N for next subst. */ tem = fixed_argp[(*p++) - '1']; explicit_param_p = 1; break; case 'C': /* For c-100: print quotient of value by 96, if nonzero, then do like %+. */ if (tem >= 96) { *op++ = tem / 96; tem %= 96; } case '+': /* %+x means add character code of char x. */ tem += *p++; case '.': /* %. means output as character. */ if (left) { /* If want to forbid output of 0 and \n and \t, and this is one of them, increment it. */ while (tem == 0 || tem == '\n' || tem == '\t') { tem++; if (argp == old_argp) doup++, outend -= strlen (up); else doleft++, outend -= strlen (left); } } *op++ = tem ? tem : 0200; case 'f': /* %f means discard next arg. */ argp++; break; case 'b': /* %b means back up one arg (and re-use it). */ argp--; break; case 'r': /* %r means interchange following two args. */ argp[0] = argp[1]; argp[1] = tem; old_argp++; break; case '>': /* %>xy means if arg is > char code of x, */ if (argp[0] > *p++) /* then add char code of y to the arg, */ argp[0] += *p; /* and in any case don't output. */ p++; /* Leave the arg to be output later. */ break; case 'a': /* %a means arithmetic. */ /* Next character says what operation. Add or subtract either a constant or some other arg. */ /* First following character is + to add or - to subtract or = to assign. */ /* Next following char is 'p' and an arg spec (0100 plus position of that arg relative to this one) or 'c' and a constant stored in a character. */ tem = p[2] & 0177; if (p[1] == 'p') tem = argp[tem - 0100]; if (p[0] == '-') argp[0] -= tem; else if (p[0] == '+') argp[0] += tem; else if (p[0] == '*') argp[0] *= tem; else if (p[0] == '/') argp[0] /= tem; else argp[0] = tem; p += 3; break; case 'i': /* %i means add one to arg, */ argp[0] ++; /* and leave it to be output later. */ argp[1] ++; /* Increment the following arg, too! */ break; case '%': /* %% means output %; no arg. */ goto ordinary; case 'n': /* %n means xor each of next two args with 140. */ argp[0] ^= 0140; argp[1] ^= 0140; break; case 'm': /* %m means xor each of next two args with 177. */ argp[0] ^= 0177; argp[1] ^= 0177; break; case 'B': /* %B means express arg as BCD char code. */ argp[0] += 6 * (tem / 10); break; case 'D': /* %D means weird Delta Data transformation. */ argp[0] -= 2 * (tem % 16); break; default: abort (); } } else /* Ordinary character in the argument string. */ ordinary: *op++ = c; } *op = 0; while (doup-- > 0) strcat (op, up); while (doleft-- > 0) strcat (op, left); return outstring; } #ifdef DEBUG main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char buf[50]; int args[3]; args[0] = atoi (argv[2]); args[1] = atoi (argv[3]); args[2] = atoi (argv[4]); tparam1 (argv[1], buf, "LEFT", "UP", args); printf ("%s\n", buf); return 0; } #endif /* DEBUG */ /* arch-tag: 83f7b5ac-a808-4f75-b87a-123de009b402 (do not change this comment) */