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view src/casetab.c @ 60398:444829a91578
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author | Juri Linkov <juri@jurta.org> |
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date | Sat, 05 Mar 2005 04:32:30 +0000 |
parents | e99095db1a09 |
children | a96e8bdd2b37 fa9654493afb |
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/* GNU Emacs routines to deal with case tables. Copyright (C) 1993, 1994 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. */ /* Written by Howard Gayle. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "charset.h" Lisp_Object Qcase_table_p, Qcase_table; Lisp_Object Vascii_downcase_table, Vascii_upcase_table; Lisp_Object Vascii_canon_table, Vascii_eqv_table; /* Used as a temporary in DOWNCASE and other macros in lisp.h. No need to mark it, since it is used only very temporarily. */ int case_temp1; Lisp_Object case_temp2; static void set_canon (); static void set_identity (); static void shuffle (); DEFUN ("case-table-p", Fcase_table_p, Scase_table_p, 1, 1, 0, doc: /* Return t iff OBJECT is a case table. See `set-case-table' for more information on these data structures. */) (object) Lisp_Object object; { Lisp_Object up, canon, eqv; if (! CHAR_TABLE_P (object)) return Qnil; if (! EQ (XCHAR_TABLE (object)->purpose, Qcase_table)) return Qnil; up = XCHAR_TABLE (object)->extras[0]; canon = XCHAR_TABLE (object)->extras[1]; eqv = XCHAR_TABLE (object)->extras[2]; return ((NILP (up) || CHAR_TABLE_P (up)) && ((NILP (canon) && NILP (eqv)) || (CHAR_TABLE_P (canon) && (NILP (eqv) || CHAR_TABLE_P (eqv)))) ? Qt : Qnil); } static Lisp_Object check_case_table (obj) Lisp_Object obj; { register Lisp_Object tem; while (tem = Fcase_table_p (obj), NILP (tem)) obj = wrong_type_argument (Qcase_table_p, obj); return (obj); } DEFUN ("current-case-table", Fcurrent_case_table, Scurrent_case_table, 0, 0, 0, doc: /* Return the case table of the current buffer. */) () { return current_buffer->downcase_table; } DEFUN ("standard-case-table", Fstandard_case_table, Sstandard_case_table, 0, 0, 0, doc: /* Return the standard case table. This is the one used for new buffers. */) () { return Vascii_downcase_table; } static Lisp_Object set_case_table (); DEFUN ("set-case-table", Fset_case_table, Sset_case_table, 1, 1, 0, doc: /* Select a new case table for the current buffer. A case table is a char-table which maps characters to their lower-case equivalents. It also has three \"extra\" slots which may be additional char-tables or nil. These slots are called UPCASE, CANONICALIZE and EQUIVALENCES. UPCASE maps each character to its upper-case equivalent; if lower and upper case characters are in 1-1 correspondence, you may use nil and the upcase table will be deduced from DOWNCASE. CANONICALIZE maps each character to a canonical equivalent; any two characters that are related by case-conversion have the same canonical equivalent character; it may be nil, in which case it is deduced from DOWNCASE and UPCASE. EQUIVALENCES is a map that cyclicly permutes each equivalence class (of characters with the same canonical equivalent); it may be nil, in which case it is deduced from CANONICALIZE. */) (table) Lisp_Object table; { return set_case_table (table, 0); } DEFUN ("set-standard-case-table", Fset_standard_case_table, Sset_standard_case_table, 1, 1, 0, doc: /* Select a new standard case table for new buffers. See `set-case-table' for more info on case tables. */) (table) Lisp_Object table; { return set_case_table (table, 1); } static Lisp_Object set_case_table (table, standard) Lisp_Object table; int standard; { Lisp_Object up, canon, eqv; Lisp_Object indices[3]; check_case_table (table); up = XCHAR_TABLE (table)->extras[0]; canon = XCHAR_TABLE (table)->extras[1]; eqv = XCHAR_TABLE (table)->extras[2]; if (NILP (up)) { up = Fmake_char_table (Qcase_table, Qnil); map_char_table (set_identity, Qnil, table, table, up, 0, indices); map_char_table (shuffle, Qnil, table, table, up, 0, indices); XCHAR_TABLE (table)->extras[0] = up; } if (NILP (canon)) { canon = Fmake_char_table (Qcase_table, Qnil); XCHAR_TABLE (table)->extras[1] = canon; map_char_table (set_canon, Qnil, table, table, table, 0, indices); } if (NILP (eqv)) { eqv = Fmake_char_table (Qcase_table, Qnil); map_char_table (set_identity, Qnil, canon, canon, eqv, 0, indices); map_char_table (shuffle, Qnil, canon, canon, eqv, 0, indices); XCHAR_TABLE (table)->extras[2] = eqv; } /* This is so set_image_of_range_1 in regex.c can find the EQV table. */ XCHAR_TABLE (canon)->extras[2] = eqv; if (standard) Vascii_downcase_table = table; else { current_buffer->downcase_table = table; current_buffer->upcase_table = up; current_buffer->case_canon_table = canon; current_buffer->case_eqv_table = eqv; } return table; } /* The following functions are called in map_char_table. */ /* Set CANON char-table element for C to a translated ELT by UP and DOWN char-tables. This is done only when ELT is a character. The char-tables CANON, UP, and DOWN are in CASE_TABLE. */ static void set_canon (case_table, c, elt) Lisp_Object case_table, c, elt; { Lisp_Object up = XCHAR_TABLE (case_table)->extras[0]; Lisp_Object canon = XCHAR_TABLE (case_table)->extras[1]; if (NATNUMP (elt)) Faset (canon, c, Faref (case_table, Faref (up, elt))); } /* Set elements of char-table TABLE for C to C itself. This is done only when ELT is a character. This is called in map_char_table. */ static void set_identity (table, c, elt) Lisp_Object table, c, elt; { if (NATNUMP (elt)) Faset (table, c, c); } /* Permute the elements of TABLE (which is initially an identity mapping) so that it has one cycle for each equivalence class induced by the translation table on which map_char_table is operated. */ static void shuffle (table, c, elt) Lisp_Object table, c, elt; { if (NATNUMP (elt) && !EQ (c, elt)) { Lisp_Object tem = Faref (table, elt); Faset (table, elt, c); Faset (table, c, tem); } } void init_casetab_once () { register int i; Lisp_Object down, up; Qcase_table = intern ("case-table"); staticpro (&Qcase_table); /* Intern this now in case it isn't already done. Setting this variable twice is harmless. But don't staticpro it here--that is done in alloc.c. */ Qchar_table_extra_slots = intern ("char-table-extra-slots"); /* Now we are ready to set up this property, so we can create char tables. */ Fput (Qcase_table, Qchar_table_extra_slots, make_number (3)); down = Fmake_char_table (Qcase_table, Qnil); Vascii_downcase_table = down; XCHAR_TABLE (down)->purpose = Qcase_table; for (i = 0; i < CHAR_TABLE_SINGLE_BYTE_SLOTS; i++) XSETFASTINT (XCHAR_TABLE (down)->contents[i], (i >= 'A' && i <= 'Z') ? i + ('a' - 'A') : i); XCHAR_TABLE (down)->extras[1] = Fcopy_sequence (down); up = Fmake_char_table (Qcase_table, Qnil); XCHAR_TABLE (down)->extras[0] = up; for (i = 0; i < CHAR_TABLE_SINGLE_BYTE_SLOTS; i++) XSETFASTINT (XCHAR_TABLE (up)->contents[i], ((i >= 'A' && i <= 'Z') ? i + ('a' - 'A') : ((i >= 'a' && i <= 'z') ? i + ('A' - 'a') : i))); XCHAR_TABLE (down)->extras[2] = Fcopy_sequence (up); } void syms_of_casetab () { Qcase_table_p = intern ("case-table-p"); staticpro (&Qcase_table_p); staticpro (&Vascii_canon_table); staticpro (&Vascii_downcase_table); staticpro (&Vascii_eqv_table); staticpro (&Vascii_upcase_table); defsubr (&Scase_table_p); defsubr (&Scurrent_case_table); defsubr (&Sstandard_case_table); defsubr (&Sset_case_table); defsubr (&Sset_standard_case_table); } /* arch-tag: e06388ad-99fe-40ec-ba67-9d010fcc4916 (do not change this comment) */