Mercurial > emacs
view etc/=TO-DO @ 26902:264b83a3a688
Changes for separate unspecified foreground and background colors
on character terminals:
* dispextern.h (FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR)
(FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR): New macros.
* xfaces.c (Qunspecified_fg, Qunspecified_bg): New variables.
(syms_of_xfaces): Initialize and staticpro them.
(tty_defined_color): If the color name is unspecified-fg or
unspecified-bg, return FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR, respectively, as the pixel value.
(tty_color_name): If the color pixel value is either
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR or FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR, return
Qunspecified_fg or Qunspecified_bg, respectively.
(Finternal_set_lisp_face_attribute): Allow values Qunspecified_fg
and Qunspecified_bg for foreground and background colors.
(realize_default_face): If the foreground and background colors
are not specified, default to Qunspecified_fg and Qunspecified_bg.
(realize_tty_face): By default, set the face colors to
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR.
[MSDOS]: Handle FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR when face colors are not defined.
Reverse the colors if the default colors were reversed.
* dispnew.c (init_display): Initialize the frame pixels of the
initial frame to FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR.
* term.c (turn_on_face): If the default fore- and background
colors are reversed, enter inverse video mode. Don't send color
escape sequences for unspecified foreground and background colors.
(turn_off_face): Handle unspecified-fg and unspecified-bg colors.
* dosfns.c (unspecified_colors): New variable.
(msdos_stdcolor_idx): Handle unspecified-fg and unspecified-bg
color names, return FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR, respectively.
(msdos_stdcolor_name): Handle FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR, return Qunspecified_fg and
Qunspecified_bg, respectively.
* msdos.c (IT_set_face): Support FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_FG_COLOR and
FACE_TTY_DEFAULT_BG_COLOR as pixel values.
* faces.el (face-read-integer, read-face-attribute)
(color-defined-p, color-values): Allow color values unspecified-fg
and unspecified-bg, handle them as unspecified.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 15 Dec 1999 13:14:38 +0000 |
parents | 59c8668f70c7 |
children |
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Things useful to do for GNU Emacs: * Primitive for random access insertion of part of a file. * Making I/O streams for files, so that read and prin1 can be used on files directly. The I/O stream itself would serve as a function to read or write one character. * If a file you can't write is in a directory you can write, make sure it works to modify and save this file. * Make dired's commands handle correctly the case where ls has listed several subdirectories' contents. It needs to be able to tell which directory each file is really in, by searching backward for the line which identifies the start of a directory. * Add more dired commands, such as sorting (use the sort utility through call-process-region). * Make display.c record inverse-video-ness on a character by character basis. Then make non-full-screen-width mode lines inverse video, and display the marked location in inverse video. * VMS code to list a file directory. Make dired work. Long range: Ideas for extending GNU Emacs to deal with arbitrary character sets. I would like GNU Emacs to be extended to handle all the world's alphabets and word signs. I don't expect to have time to do such a thing in the next few years, so here are my ideas on the best way to do it. * Each graphic is represented by a sequence of ordinary 8-bit characters. * All the characters that make up such a sequence have codes >= 0200. * The first character of such a sequence is between 0200 and 0237. * The remaining characters of such a sequence are all 0240 or higher. * The first character of the sequence determines the number of characters in the sequence. Thus, 0200...0207 could start two-character sequences, 0210...0227 could start three-character sequences, and 0230 could start four-character sequences. (Codes 0231...0237 would be reserved.) * Several common alphabets, and some mathematical symbols, would get two-character sequences. (Probably Greek, Russian, Hebrew(?), Arabic(?), Korean, and Japanese kana). The remaining alphabets, and some versions of Chinese, would get three-character sequences. Other sets of Chinese characters would get four-character sequences. Each country that uses Chinese characters has its own standard character set, and it is not easy to correlate them to avoid overlap. So there may need to be several sets of Chinese characters. That is why they need so much code space. True support for Hebrew and Arabic requires dealing with the problem of writing direction for mixed text; I don't know what to do for that. * The functions that use syntax table would determine the syntax of a sequence from its first character. * Functions in indent.c for computing widths and columns would determine the width of a sequence from its first character. So would display routines. * Only a few other editing routines would need any change. In particular, searching and regexp matching might not need any change. * Most of the work required would be in redisplay. The only case that needs to be supported is with X windows, since ordinary terminals can't display all these characters anyway. * There might need to be code to translate files from this format to whatever format is typically stored on disk. I would be very unhappy with half-measures, such as support for Japanese only.