Mercurial > emacs
view src/insdel.c @ 14594:37d38d8040a1
(lw_internal_update_other_instances): Move static var
outside the function, and rename it to lwlib_updating.
author | Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 19 Feb 1996 07:38:02 +0000 |
parents | 69fa625812a4 |
children | d6106d651a71 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Buffer insertion/deletion and gap motion for GNU Emacs. Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1993, 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs 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. GNU Emacs 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 GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "intervals.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "window.h" #include "blockinput.h" #define min(x, y) ((x) < (y) ? (x) : (y)) static void insert_from_string_1 (); static void insert_from_buffer_1 (); static void gap_left (); static void gap_right (); static void adjust_markers (); static void adjust_point (); /* Move gap to position `pos'. Note that this can quit! */ void move_gap (pos) int pos; { if (pos < GPT) gap_left (pos, 0); else if (pos > GPT) gap_right (pos); } /* Move the gap to POS, which is less than the current GPT. If NEWGAP is nonzero, then don't update beg_unchanged and end_unchanged. */ static void gap_left (pos, newgap) register int pos; int newgap; { register unsigned char *to, *from; register int i; int new_s1; pos--; if (!newgap) { if (unchanged_modified == MODIFF) { beg_unchanged = pos; end_unchanged = Z - pos - 1; } else { if (Z - GPT < end_unchanged) end_unchanged = Z - GPT; if (pos < beg_unchanged) beg_unchanged = pos; } } i = GPT; to = GAP_END_ADDR; from = GPT_ADDR; new_s1 = GPT - BEG; /* Now copy the characters. To move the gap down, copy characters up. */ while (1) { /* I gets number of characters left to copy. */ i = new_s1 - pos; if (i == 0) break; /* If a quit is requested, stop copying now. Change POS to be where we have actually moved the gap to. */ if (QUITP) { pos = new_s1; break; } /* Move at most 32000 chars before checking again for a quit. */ if (i > 32000) i = 32000; #ifdef GAP_USE_BCOPY if (i >= 128 /* bcopy is safe if the two areas of memory do not overlap or on systems where bcopy is always safe for moving upward. */ && (BCOPY_UPWARD_SAFE || to - from >= 128)) { /* If overlap is not safe, avoid it by not moving too many characters at once. */ if (!BCOPY_UPWARD_SAFE && i > to - from) i = to - from; new_s1 -= i; from -= i, to -= i; bcopy (from, to, i); } else #endif { new_s1 -= i; while (--i >= 0) *--to = *--from; } } /* Adjust markers, and buffer data structure, to put the gap at POS. POS is where the loop above stopped, which may be what was specified or may be where a quit was detected. */ adjust_markers (pos + 1, GPT, GAP_SIZE); GPT = pos + 1; QUIT; } static void gap_right (pos) register int pos; { register unsigned char *to, *from; register int i; int new_s1; pos--; if (unchanged_modified == MODIFF) { beg_unchanged = pos; end_unchanged = Z - pos - 1; } else { if (Z - pos - 1 < end_unchanged) end_unchanged = Z - pos - 1; if (GPT - BEG < beg_unchanged) beg_unchanged = GPT - BEG; } i = GPT; from = GAP_END_ADDR; to = GPT_ADDR; new_s1 = GPT - 1; /* Now copy the characters. To move the gap up, copy characters down. */ while (1) { /* I gets number of characters left to copy. */ i = pos - new_s1; if (i == 0) break; /* If a quit is requested, stop copying now. Change POS to be where we have actually moved the gap to. */ if (QUITP) { pos = new_s1; break; } /* Move at most 32000 chars before checking again for a quit. */ if (i > 32000) i = 32000; #ifdef GAP_USE_BCOPY if (i >= 128 /* bcopy is safe if the two areas of memory do not overlap or on systems where bcopy is always safe for moving downward. */ && (BCOPY_DOWNWARD_SAFE || from - to >= 128)) { /* If overlap is not safe, avoid it by not moving too many characters at once. */ if (!BCOPY_DOWNWARD_SAFE && i > from - to) i = from - to; new_s1 += i; bcopy (from, to, i); from += i, to += i; } else #endif { new_s1 += i; while (--i >= 0) *to++ = *from++; } } adjust_markers (GPT + GAP_SIZE, pos + 1 + GAP_SIZE, - GAP_SIZE); GPT = pos + 1; QUIT; } /* Add AMOUNT to the position of every marker in the current buffer whose current position is between FROM (exclusive) and TO (inclusive). Also, any markers past the outside of that interval, in the direction of adjustment, are first moved back to the near end of the interval and then adjusted by AMOUNT. When the latter adjustment is done, if AMOUNT is negative, we record the adjustment for undo. (This case happens only for deletion.) */ static void adjust_markers (from, to, amount) register int from, to, amount; { Lisp_Object marker; register struct Lisp_Marker *m; register int mpos; marker = BUF_MARKERS (current_buffer); while (!NILP (marker)) { m = XMARKER (marker); mpos = m->bufpos; if (amount > 0) { if (mpos > to && mpos < to + amount) mpos = to + amount; } else { /* Here's the case where a marker is inside text being deleted. AMOUNT can be negative for gap motion, too, but then this range contains no markers. */ if (mpos > from + amount && mpos <= from) { record_marker_adjustment (marker, from + amount - mpos); mpos = from + amount; } } if (mpos > from && mpos <= to) mpos += amount; m->bufpos = mpos; marker = m->chain; } } /* Adjust markers whose insertion-type is t for an insertion of AMOUNT characters at POS. */ static void adjust_markers_for_insert (pos, amount) register int pos, amount; { Lisp_Object marker; marker = BUF_MARKERS (current_buffer); while (!NILP (marker)) { register struct Lisp_Marker *m = XMARKER (marker); if (m->insertion_type && m->bufpos == pos) m->bufpos += amount; marker = m->chain; } } /* Add the specified amount to point. This is used only when the value of point changes due to an insert or delete; it does not represent a conceptual change in point as a marker. In particular, point is not crossing any interval boundaries, so there's no need to use the usual SET_PT macro. In fact it would be incorrect to do so, because either the old or the new value of point is out of sync with the current set of intervals. */ static void adjust_point (amount) int amount; { BUF_PT (current_buffer) += amount; } /* Make the gap INCREMENT characters longer. */ void make_gap (increment) int increment; { unsigned char *result; Lisp_Object tem; int real_gap_loc; int old_gap_size; /* If we have to get more space, get enough to last a while. */ increment += 2000; /* Don't allow a buffer size that won't fit in an int even if it will fit in a Lisp integer. That won't work because so many places use `int'. */ if (Z - BEG + GAP_SIZE + increment >= ((unsigned) 1 << (min (BITS_PER_INT, VALBITS) - 1))) error ("Buffer exceeds maximum size"); BLOCK_INPUT; result = BUFFER_REALLOC (BEG_ADDR, (Z - BEG + GAP_SIZE + increment)); if (result == 0) { UNBLOCK_INPUT; memory_full (); } /* We can't unblock until the new address is properly stored. */ BEG_ADDR = result; UNBLOCK_INPUT; /* Prevent quitting in move_gap. */ tem = Vinhibit_quit; Vinhibit_quit = Qt; real_gap_loc = GPT; old_gap_size = GAP_SIZE; /* Call the newly allocated space a gap at the end of the whole space. */ GPT = Z + GAP_SIZE; GAP_SIZE = increment; /* Move the new gap down to be consecutive with the end of the old one. This adjusts the markers properly too. */ gap_left (real_gap_loc + old_gap_size, 1); /* Now combine the two into one large gap. */ GAP_SIZE += old_gap_size; GPT = real_gap_loc; Vinhibit_quit = tem; } /* Insert a string of specified length before point. DO NOT use this for the contents of a Lisp string or a Lisp buffer! prepare_to_modify_buffer could relocate the text. */ void insert (string, length) register unsigned char *string; register length; { if (length > 0) { insert_1 (string, length, 0, 1); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } void insert_and_inherit (string, length) register unsigned char *string; register length; { if (length > 0) { insert_1 (string, length, 1, 1); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } void insert_1 (string, length, inherit, prepare) register unsigned char *string; register int length; int inherit, prepare; { register Lisp_Object temp; if (prepare) prepare_to_modify_buffer (PT, PT); if (PT != GPT) move_gap (PT); if (GAP_SIZE < length) make_gap (length - GAP_SIZE); record_insert (PT, length); MODIFF++; bcopy (string, GPT_ADDR, length); #ifdef USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES if (BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer) != 0) /* Only defined if Emacs is compiled with USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES. */ offset_intervals (current_buffer, PT, length); #endif GAP_SIZE -= length; GPT += length; ZV += length; Z += length; adjust_overlays_for_insert (PT, length); adjust_markers_for_insert (PT, length); adjust_point (length); #ifdef USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES if (!inherit && BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer) != 0) Fset_text_properties (make_number (PT - length), make_number (PT), Qnil, Qnil); #endif } /* Insert the part of the text of STRING, a Lisp object assumed to be of type string, consisting of the LENGTH characters starting at position POS. If the text of STRING has properties, they are absorbed into the buffer. It does not work to use `insert' for this, because a GC could happen before we bcopy the stuff into the buffer, and relocate the string without insert noticing. */ void insert_from_string (string, pos, length, inherit) Lisp_Object string; register int pos, length; int inherit; { if (length > 0) { insert_from_string_1 (string, pos, length, inherit); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } static void insert_from_string_1 (string, pos, length, inherit) Lisp_Object string; register int pos, length; int inherit; { register Lisp_Object temp; struct gcpro gcpro1; /* Make sure point-max won't overflow after this insertion. */ XSETINT (temp, length + Z); if (length + Z != XINT (temp)) error ("maximum buffer size exceeded"); GCPRO1 (string); prepare_to_modify_buffer (PT, PT); if (PT != GPT) move_gap (PT); if (GAP_SIZE < length) make_gap (length - GAP_SIZE); record_insert (PT, length); MODIFF++; UNGCPRO; bcopy (XSTRING (string)->data, GPT_ADDR, length); /* Only defined if Emacs is compiled with USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES */ offset_intervals (current_buffer, PT, length); GAP_SIZE -= length; GPT += length; ZV += length; Z += length; adjust_overlays_for_insert (PT, length); adjust_markers_for_insert (PT, length); /* Only defined if Emacs is compiled with USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES */ graft_intervals_into_buffer (XSTRING (string)->intervals, PT, length, current_buffer, inherit); adjust_point (length); } /* Insert text from BUF, starting at POS and having length LENGTH, into the current buffer. If the text in BUF has properties, they are absorbed into the current buffer. It does not work to use `insert' for this, because a malloc could happen and relocate BUF's text before the bcopy happens. */ void insert_from_buffer (buf, pos, length, inherit) struct buffer *buf; int pos, length; int inherit; { if (length > 0) { insert_from_buffer_1 (buf, pos, length, inherit); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } static void insert_from_buffer_1 (buf, pos, length, inherit) struct buffer *buf; int pos, length; int inherit; { register Lisp_Object temp; int chunk; /* Make sure point-max won't overflow after this insertion. */ XSETINT (temp, length + Z); if (length + Z != XINT (temp)) error ("maximum buffer size exceeded"); prepare_to_modify_buffer (PT, PT); if (PT != GPT) move_gap (PT); if (GAP_SIZE < length) make_gap (length - GAP_SIZE); record_insert (PT, length); MODIFF++; if (pos < BUF_GPT (buf)) { chunk = BUF_GPT (buf) - pos; if (chunk > length) chunk = length; bcopy (BUF_CHAR_ADDRESS (buf, pos), GPT_ADDR, chunk); } else chunk = 0; if (chunk < length) bcopy (BUF_CHAR_ADDRESS (buf, pos + chunk), GPT_ADDR + chunk, length - chunk); #ifdef USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES if (BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer) != 0) offset_intervals (current_buffer, PT, length); #endif GAP_SIZE -= length; GPT += length; ZV += length; Z += length; adjust_overlays_for_insert (PT, length); adjust_markers_for_insert (PT, length); adjust_point (length); /* Only defined if Emacs is compiled with USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES */ graft_intervals_into_buffer (copy_intervals (BUF_INTERVALS (buf), pos, length), PT - length, length, current_buffer, inherit); } /* Insert the character C before point */ void insert_char (c) unsigned char c; { insert (&c, 1); } /* Insert the null-terminated string S before point */ void insert_string (s) char *s; { insert (s, strlen (s)); } /* Like `insert' except that all markers pointing at the place where the insertion happens are adjusted to point after it. Don't use this function to insert part of a Lisp string, since gc could happen and relocate it. */ void insert_before_markers (string, length) unsigned char *string; register int length; { if (length > 0) { register int opoint = PT; insert_1 (string, length, 0, 1); adjust_markers (opoint - 1, opoint, length); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } void insert_before_markers_and_inherit (string, length) unsigned char *string; register int length; { if (length > 0) { register int opoint = PT; insert_1 (string, length, 1, 1); adjust_markers (opoint - 1, opoint, length); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } /* Insert part of a Lisp string, relocating markers after. */ void insert_from_string_before_markers (string, pos, length, inherit) Lisp_Object string; register int pos, length; int inherit; { if (length > 0) { register int opoint = PT; insert_from_string_1 (string, pos, length, inherit); adjust_markers (opoint - 1, opoint, length); signal_after_change (PT-length, 0, length); } } /* Delete characters in current buffer from FROM up to (but not including) TO. */ void del_range (from, to) register int from, to; { del_range_1 (from, to, 1); } /* Like del_range; PREPARE says whether to call prepare_to_modify_buffer. */ void del_range_1 (from, to, prepare) register int from, to, prepare; { register int numdel; /* Make args be valid */ if (from < BEGV) from = BEGV; if (to > ZV) to = ZV; if ((numdel = to - from) <= 0) return; /* Make sure the gap is somewhere in or next to what we are deleting. */ if (from > GPT) gap_right (from); if (to < GPT) gap_left (to, 0); if (prepare) prepare_to_modify_buffer (from, to); /* Relocate all markers pointing into the new, larger gap to point at the end of the text before the gap. This has to be done before recording the deletion, so undo handles this after reinserting the text. */ adjust_markers (to + GAP_SIZE, to + GAP_SIZE, - numdel - GAP_SIZE); record_delete (from, numdel); MODIFF++; /* Relocate point as if it were a marker. */ if (from < PT) adjust_point (from - (PT < to ? PT : to)); /* Only defined if Emacs is compiled with USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES */ offset_intervals (current_buffer, from, - numdel); /* Adjust the overlay center as needed. This must be done after adjusting the markers that bound the overlays. */ adjust_overlays_for_delete (from, numdel); GAP_SIZE += numdel; ZV -= numdel; Z -= numdel; GPT = from; if (GPT - BEG < beg_unchanged) beg_unchanged = GPT - BEG; if (Z - GPT < end_unchanged) end_unchanged = Z - GPT; evaporate_overlays (from); signal_after_change (from, numdel, 0); } /* Call this if you're about to change the region of BUFFER from START to END. This checks the read-only properties of the region, calls the necessary modification hooks, and warns the next redisplay that it should pay attention to that area. */ void modify_region (buffer, start, end) struct buffer *buffer; int start, end; { struct buffer *old_buffer = current_buffer; if (buffer != old_buffer) set_buffer_internal (buffer); prepare_to_modify_buffer (start, end); if (start - 1 < beg_unchanged || unchanged_modified == MODIFF) beg_unchanged = start - 1; if (Z - end < end_unchanged || unchanged_modified == MODIFF) end_unchanged = Z - end; if (MODIFF <= SAVE_MODIFF) record_first_change (); MODIFF++; buffer->point_before_scroll = Qnil; if (buffer != old_buffer) set_buffer_internal (old_buffer); } /* Check that it is okay to modify the buffer between START and END. Run the before-change-function, if any. If intervals are in use, verify that the text to be modified is not read-only, and call any modification properties the text may have. */ void prepare_to_modify_buffer (start, end) Lisp_Object start, end; { if (!NILP (current_buffer->read_only)) Fbarf_if_buffer_read_only (); /* Only defined if Emacs is compiled with USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES */ if (BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer) != 0) verify_interval_modification (current_buffer, start, end); #ifdef CLASH_DETECTION if (!NILP (current_buffer->file_truename) /* Make binding buffer-file-name to nil effective. */ && !NILP (current_buffer->filename) && SAVE_MODIFF >= MODIFF) lock_file (current_buffer->file_truename); #else /* At least warn if this file has changed on disk since it was visited. */ if (!NILP (current_buffer->filename) && SAVE_MODIFF >= MODIFF && NILP (Fverify_visited_file_modtime (Fcurrent_buffer ())) && !NILP (Ffile_exists_p (current_buffer->filename))) call1 (intern ("ask-user-about-supersession-threat"), current_buffer->filename); #endif /* not CLASH_DETECTION */ signal_before_change (start, end); if (current_buffer->newline_cache) invalidate_region_cache (current_buffer, current_buffer->newline_cache, start - BEG, Z - end); if (current_buffer->width_run_cache) invalidate_region_cache (current_buffer, current_buffer->width_run_cache, start - BEG, Z - end); Vdeactivate_mark = Qt; } /* Signal a change to the buffer immediately before it happens. START and END are the bounds of the text to be changed, as Lisp objects. */ void signal_before_change (start, end) Lisp_Object start, end; { /* If buffer is unmodified, run a special hook for that case. */ if (SAVE_MODIFF >= MODIFF && !NILP (Vfirst_change_hook) && !NILP (Vrun_hooks)) call1 (Vrun_hooks, Qfirst_change_hook); /* Run the before-change-function if any. We don't bother "binding" this variable to nil because it is obsolete anyway and new code should not use it. */ if (!NILP (Vbefore_change_function)) call2 (Vbefore_change_function, start, end); /* Now run the before-change-functions if any. */ if (!NILP (Vbefore_change_functions)) { Lisp_Object args[3]; Lisp_Object before_change_functions; Lisp_Object after_change_functions; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; /* "Bind" before-change-functions and after-change-functions to nil--but in a way that errors don't know about. That way, if there's an error in them, they will stay nil. */ before_change_functions = Vbefore_change_functions; after_change_functions = Vafter_change_functions; Vbefore_change_functions = Qnil; Vafter_change_functions = Qnil; GCPRO2 (before_change_functions, after_change_functions); /* Actually run the hook functions. */ args[0] = Qbefore_change_functions; args[1] = start; args[2] = end; run_hook_list_with_args (before_change_functions, 3, args); /* "Unbind" the variables we "bound" to nil. */ Vbefore_change_functions = before_change_functions; Vafter_change_functions = after_change_functions; UNGCPRO; } if (!NILP (current_buffer->overlays_before) || !NILP (current_buffer->overlays_after)) report_overlay_modification (start, end, 0, start, end, Qnil); } /* Signal a change immediately after it happens. POS is the address of the start of the changed text. LENDEL is the number of characters of the text before the change. (Not the whole buffer; just the part that was changed.) LENINS is the number of characters in the changed text. (Hence POS + LENINS - LENDEL is the position after the changed text.) */ void signal_after_change (pos, lendel, lenins) int pos, lendel, lenins; { /* Run the after-change-function if any. We don't bother "binding" this variable to nil because it is obsolete anyway and new code should not use it. */ if (!NILP (Vafter_change_function)) call3 (Vafter_change_function, make_number (pos), make_number (pos + lenins), make_number (lendel)); if (!NILP (Vafter_change_functions)) { Lisp_Object args[4]; Lisp_Object before_change_functions; Lisp_Object after_change_functions; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; /* "Bind" before-change-functions and after-change-functions to nil--but in a way that errors don't know about. That way, if there's an error in them, they will stay nil. */ before_change_functions = Vbefore_change_functions; after_change_functions = Vafter_change_functions; Vbefore_change_functions = Qnil; Vafter_change_functions = Qnil; GCPRO2 (before_change_functions, after_change_functions); /* Actually run the hook functions. */ args[0] = Qafter_change_functions; XSETFASTINT (args[1], pos); XSETFASTINT (args[2], pos + lenins); XSETFASTINT (args[3], lendel); run_hook_list_with_args (after_change_functions, 4, args); /* "Unbind" the variables we "bound" to nil. */ Vbefore_change_functions = before_change_functions; Vafter_change_functions = after_change_functions; UNGCPRO; } if (!NILP (current_buffer->overlays_before) || !NILP (current_buffer->overlays_after)) report_overlay_modification (make_number (pos), make_number (pos + lenins - lendel), 1, make_number (pos), make_number (pos + lenins), make_number (lendel)); /* After an insertion, call the text properties insert-behind-hooks or insert-in-front-hooks. */ if (lendel == 0) report_interval_modification (pos, pos + lenins); }