Mercurial > emacs
view src/keyboard.c @ 2149:9e21e9f8bb0d
(syms_of_keyboard): Set up Qmenu_bar.
(menu_bar_items): New function.
(menu_bar_one_keymap, menu_bar_item): New functions.
(make_lispy_event): Handle menu bar events.
(read_key_sequence): Make dummy prefix `menu-bar' for menu bar events.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 12 Mar 1993 06:25:48 +0000 |
parents | 63d15b0e048e |
children | f74e9c948380 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Keyboard and mouse input; editor command loop. Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1993 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, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* Allow config.h to undefine symbols found here. */ #include <signal.h> #include "config.h" #include <stdio.h> #undef NULL #include "termchar.h" #include "termopts.h" #include "lisp.h" #include "termhooks.h" #include "macros.h" #include "frame.h" #include "window.h" #include "commands.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "disptab.h" #include "dispextern.h" #include "keyboard.h" #include "intervals.h" #include <setjmp.h> #include <errno.h> #ifndef VMS #include <sys/ioctl.h> #endif #include "syssignal.h" #include "systty.h" #include "systime.h" extern int errno; #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS extern Lisp_Object Vmouse_grabbed; /* Make all keyboard buffers much bigger when using X windows. */ #define KBD_BUFFER_SIZE 4096 #else /* No X-windows, character input */ #define KBD_BUFFER_SIZE 256 #endif /* No X-windows */ /* Following definition copied from eval.c */ struct backtrace { struct backtrace *next; Lisp_Object *function; Lisp_Object *args; /* Points to vector of args. */ int nargs; /* length of vector. If nargs is UNEVALLED, args points to slot holding list of unevalled args */ char evalargs; }; /* Non-nil disable property on a command means do not execute it; call disabled-command-hook's value instead. */ Lisp_Object Qdisabled, Vdisabled_command_hook; #define NUM_RECENT_KEYS (100) int recent_keys_index; /* Index for storing next element into recent_keys */ int total_keys; /* Total number of elements stored into recent_keys */ Lisp_Object recent_keys; /* A vector, holding the last 100 keystrokes */ /* Vector holding the key sequence that invoked the current command. It is reused for each command, and it may be longer than the current sequence; this_command_key_count indicates how many elements actually mean something. It's easier to staticpro a single Lisp_Object than an array. */ Lisp_Object this_command_keys; int this_command_key_count; extern int minbuf_level; extern struct backtrace *backtrace_list; /* Nonzero means do menu prompting. */ static int menu_prompting; /* Character to see next line of menu prompt. */ static Lisp_Object menu_prompt_more_char; /* For longjmp to where kbd input is being done. */ static jmp_buf getcjmp; /* True while doing kbd input. */ int waiting_for_input; /* True while displaying for echoing. Delays C-g throwing. */ static int echoing; /* Nonzero means C-G should cause immediate error-signal. */ int immediate_quit; /* Character to recognize as the help char. */ Lisp_Object help_char; /* Form to execute when help char is typed. */ Lisp_Object Vhelp_form; /* Character that causes a quit. Normally C-g. If we are running on an ordinary terminal, this must be an ordinary ASCII char, since we want to make it our interrupt character. If we are not running on an ordinary terminal, it still needs to be an ordinary ASCII char. This character needs to be recognized in the input interrupt handler. At this point, the keystroke is represented as a struct input_event, while the desired quit character is specified as a lispy event. The mapping from struct input_events to lispy events cannot run in an interrupt handler, and the reverse mapping is difficult for anything but ASCII keystrokes. FOR THESE ELABORATE AND UNSATISFYING REASONS, quit_char must be an ASCII character. */ int quit_char; extern Lisp_Object current_global_map; extern int minibuf_level; /* Current depth in recursive edits. */ int command_loop_level; /* Total number of times command_loop has read a key sequence. */ int num_input_keys; /* Last input character read as a command. */ Lisp_Object last_command_char; /* Last input character read as a command, not counting menus reached by the mouse. */ Lisp_Object last_nonmenu_event; /* Last input character read for any purpose. */ Lisp_Object last_input_char; /* If not Qnil, a list of objects to be read as subsequent command input. */ Lisp_Object unread_command_events; /* If not -1, an event to be read as subsequent command input. */ int unread_command_char; /* If not Qnil, this is a switch-frame event which we decided to put off until the end of a key sequence. This should be read as the next command input, after any unread_command_events. read_key_sequence uses this to delay switch-frame events until the end of the key sequence; Fread_char uses it to put off switch-frame events until a non-ASCII event is acceptable as input. */ Lisp_Object unread_switch_frame; /* A mask of extra modifier bits to put into every keyboard char. */ int extra_keyboard_modifiers; /* Char to use as prefix when a meta character is typed in. This is bound on entry to minibuffer in case ESC is changed there. */ Lisp_Object meta_prefix_char; /* Last size recorded for a current buffer which is not a minibuffer. */ static int last_non_minibuf_size; /* Number of idle seconds before an auto-save and garbage collection. */ static Lisp_Object Vauto_save_timeout; /* Total number of times read_char has returned. */ int num_input_chars; /* Total number of times read_char has returned, outside of macros. */ int num_nonmacro_input_chars; /* Auto-save automatically when this many characters have been typed since the last time. */ static int auto_save_interval; /* Value of num_nonmacro_input_chars as of last auto save. */ int last_auto_save; /* Last command executed by the editor command loop, not counting commands that set the prefix argument. */ Lisp_Object last_command; /* The command being executed by the command loop. Commands may set this, and the value set will be copied into last_command instead of the actual command. */ Lisp_Object this_command; #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* The frame in which the last input event occurred, or Qmacro if the last event came from a macro. We use this to determine when to generate switch-frame events. This may be cleared by functions like Fselect_frame, to make sure that a switch-frame event is generated by the next character. */ Lisp_Object internal_last_event_frame; /* A user-visible version of the above, intended to allow users to figure out where the last event came from, if the event doesn't carry that information itself (i.e. if it was a character). */ Lisp_Object Vlast_event_frame; #endif /* The timestamp of the last input event we received from the X server. X Windows wants this for selection ownership. */ unsigned long last_event_timestamp; Lisp_Object Qself_insert_command; Lisp_Object Qforward_char; Lisp_Object Qbackward_char; /* read_key_sequence stores here the command definition of the key sequence that it reads. */ Lisp_Object read_key_sequence_cmd; /* Form to evaluate (if non-nil) when Emacs is started. */ Lisp_Object Vtop_level; /* User-supplied string to translate input characters through. */ Lisp_Object Vkeyboard_translate_table; /* Keymap mapping ASCII function key sequences onto their preferred forms. */ extern Lisp_Object Vfunction_key_map; /* Non-nil means deactivate the mark at end of this command. */ Lisp_Object Vdeactivate_mark; /* Hooks to run before and after each command. */ Lisp_Object Qpre_command_hook, Qpost_command_hook; Lisp_Object Vpre_command_hook, Vpost_command_hook; /* File in which we write all commands we read. */ FILE *dribble; /* Nonzero if input is available. */ int input_pending; /* Nonzero if should obey 0200 bit in input chars as "Meta". */ int meta_key; extern char *pending_malloc_warning; /* Circular buffer for pre-read keyboard input. */ static struct input_event kbd_buffer[KBD_BUFFER_SIZE]; /* Vector to GCPRO the frames and windows mentioned in kbd_buffer. The interrupt-level event handlers will never enqueue an event on a frame which is not in Vframe_list, and once an event is dequeued, internal_last_event_frame or the event itself points to the frame. So that's all fine. But while the event is sitting in the queue, it's completely unprotected. Suppose the user types one command which will run for a while and then delete a frame, and then types another event at the frame that will be deleted, before the command gets around to it. Suppose there are no references to this frame elsewhere in Emacs, and a GC occurs before the second event is dequeued. Now we have an event referring to a freed frame, which will crash Emacs when it is dequeued. Similar things happen when an event on a scroll bar is enqueued; the window may be deleted while the event is in the queue. So, we use this vector to protect the frame_or_window field in the event queue. That way, they'll be dequeued as dead frames or windows, but still valid lisp objects. If kbd_buffer[i].kind != no_event, then (XVECTOR (kbd_buffer_frame_or_window)->contents[i] == kbd_buffer[i].frame_or_window. */ static Lisp_Object kbd_buffer_frame_or_window; /* Pointer to next available character in kbd_buffer. If kbd_fetch_ptr == kbd_store_ptr, the buffer is empty. This may be kbd_buffer + KBD_BUFFER_SIZE, meaning that the the next available char is in kbd_buffer[0]. */ static struct input_event *kbd_fetch_ptr; /* Pointer to next place to store character in kbd_buffer. This may be kbd_buffer + KBD_BUFFER_SIZE, meaning that the next character should go in kbd_buffer[0]. */ #ifdef __STDC__ volatile #endif static struct input_event *kbd_store_ptr; /* The above pair of variables forms a "queue empty" flag. When we enqueue a non-hook event, we increment kbd_write_count. When we dequeue a non-hook event, we increment kbd_read_count. We say that there is input available iff the two counters are not equal. Why not just have a flag set and cleared by the enqueuing and dequeuing functions? Such a flag could be screwed up by interrupts at inopportune times. */ /* If this flag is non-zero, we will check mouse_moved to see when the mouse moves, and motion events will appear in the input stream. If it is zero, mouse motion will be ignored. */ int do_mouse_tracking; /* The window system handling code should set this if the mouse has moved since the last call to the mouse_position_hook. Calling that hook should clear this. Code assumes that if this is set, it can call mouse_position_hook to get the promised position, so don't set it unless you're prepared to substantiate the claim! */ int mouse_moved; /* True iff there is an event in kbd_buffer, or if mouse tracking is enabled and there is a new mouse position in the mouse movement buffer. Note that if this is false, that doesn't mean that there is readable input; all the events in the queue might be button-up events, and do_mouse_tracking might be off. */ #define EVENT_QUEUES_EMPTY \ ((kbd_fetch_ptr == kbd_store_ptr) && (!do_mouse_tracking || !mouse_moved)) /* Symbols to head events. */ Lisp_Object Qmouse_movement; Lisp_Object Qscroll_bar_movement; Lisp_Object Qswitch_frame; /* Symbols to denote kinds of events. */ Lisp_Object Qfunction_key; Lisp_Object Qmouse_click; /* Lisp_Object Qmouse_movement; - also an event header */ /* Properties of event headers. */ Lisp_Object Qevent_kind; Lisp_Object Qevent_symbol_elements; /* An event header symbol HEAD may have a property named Qevent_symbol_element_mask, which is of the form (BASE MODIFIERS); BASE is the base, unmodified version of HEAD, and MODIFIERS is the mask of modifiers applied to it. If present, this is used to help speed up parse_modifiers. */ Lisp_Object Qevent_symbol_element_mask; /* An unmodified event header BASE may have a property named Qmodifier_cache, which is an alist mapping modifier masks onto modified versions of BASE. If present, this helps speed up apply_modifiers. */ Lisp_Object Qmodifier_cache; /* Symbols to use for parts of windows. */ Lisp_Object Qmode_line; Lisp_Object Qvertical_line; Lisp_Object Qvertical_scroll_bar; Lisp_Object Qmenu_bar; extern Lisp_Object Qmenu_enable; Lisp_Object recursive_edit_unwind (), command_loop (); Lisp_Object Fthis_command_keys (); /* Address (if not 0) of EMACS_TIME to zero out if a SIGIO interrupt happens. */ EMACS_TIME *input_available_clear_time; /* Nonzero means use SIGIO interrupts; zero means use CBREAK mode. Default is 1 if INTERRUPT_INPUT is defined. */ int interrupt_input; /* Nonzero while interrupts are temporarily deferred during redisplay. */ int interrupts_deferred; /* nonzero means use ^S/^Q for flow control. */ int flow_control; /* Allow m- file to inhibit use of FIONREAD. */ #ifdef BROKEN_FIONREAD #undef FIONREAD #endif /* We are unable to use interrupts if FIONREAD is not available, so flush SIGIO so we won't try. */ #ifndef FIONREAD #ifdef SIGIO #undef SIGIO #endif #endif /* If we support X Windows, and won't get an interrupt when input arrives from the server, poll periodically so we can detect C-g. */ #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS #ifndef SIGIO #define POLL_FOR_INPUT #endif #endif /* Global variable declarations. */ /* Function for init_keyboard to call with no args (if nonzero). */ void (*keyboard_init_hook) (); static int read_avail_input (); static void get_input_pending (); /* > 0 if we are to echo keystrokes. */ static int echo_keystrokes; /* Nonzero means echo each character as typed. */ static int immediate_echo; /* The text we're echoing in the modeline - partial key sequences, usually. '\0'-terminated. This really shouldn't have a fixed size. */ static char echobuf[300]; /* Where to append more text to echobuf if we want to. */ static char *echoptr; #define min(a,b) ((a)<(b)?(a):(b)) #define max(a,b) ((a)>(b)?(a):(b)) /* Install the string STR as the beginning of the string of echoing, so that it serves as a prompt for the next character. Also start echoing. */ echo_prompt (str) char *str; { int len = strlen (str); if (len > sizeof echobuf - 4) len = sizeof echobuf - 4; bcopy (str, echobuf, len); echoptr = echobuf + len; *echoptr = '\0'; echo (); } /* Add C to the echo string, if echoing is going on. C can be a character, which is printed prettily ("M-C-x" and all that jazz), or a symbol, whose name is printed. */ echo_char (c) Lisp_Object c; { extern char *push_key_description (); if (immediate_echo) { char *ptr = echoptr; if (ptr != echobuf) *ptr++ = ' '; /* If someone has passed us a composite event, use its head symbol. */ c = EVENT_HEAD (c); if (XTYPE (c) == Lisp_Int) { if (ptr - echobuf > sizeof echobuf - 6) return; ptr = push_key_description (XINT (c), ptr); } else if (XTYPE (c) == Lisp_Symbol) { struct Lisp_String *name = XSYMBOL (c)->name; if (((ptr - echobuf) + name->size + 4) > sizeof echobuf) return; bcopy (name->data, ptr, name->size); ptr += name->size; } if (echoptr == echobuf && EQ (c, help_char)) { strcpy (ptr, " (Type ? for further options)"); ptr += strlen (ptr); } *ptr = 0; echoptr = ptr; echo (); } } /* Temporarily add a dash to the end of the echo string if it's not empty, so that it serves as a mini-prompt for the very next character. */ echo_dash () { if (!immediate_echo && echoptr == echobuf) return; /* Put a dash at the end of the buffer temporarily, but make it go away when the next character is added. */ echoptr[0] = '-'; echoptr[1] = 0; echo (); } /* Display the current echo string, and begin echoing if not already doing so. */ echo () { if (!immediate_echo) { int i; immediate_echo = 1; for (i = 0; i < this_command_key_count; i++) echo_char (XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->contents[i]); echo_dash (); } echoing = 1; message1 (echobuf); echoing = 0; if (waiting_for_input && !NILP (Vquit_flag)) quit_throw_to_read_char (); } /* Turn off echoing, for the start of a new command. */ cancel_echoing () { immediate_echo = 0; echoptr = echobuf; } /* Return the length of the current echo string. */ static int echo_length () { return echoptr - echobuf; } /* Truncate the current echo message to its first LEN chars. This and echo_char get used by read_key_sequence when the user switches frames while entering a key sequence. */ static void echo_truncate (len) int len; { echobuf[len] = '\0'; echoptr = echobuf + len; } /* Functions for manipulating this_command_keys. */ static void add_command_key (key) Lisp_Object key; { int size = XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->size; if (this_command_key_count >= size) { Lisp_Object new_keys = Fmake_vector (make_number (size * 2), Qnil); bcopy (XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->contents, XVECTOR (new_keys)->contents, size * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); this_command_keys = new_keys; } XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->contents[this_command_key_count++] = key; } Lisp_Object recursive_edit_1 () { int count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; Lisp_Object val; if (command_loop_level > 0) { specbind (Qstandard_output, Qt); specbind (Qstandard_input, Qt); } val = command_loop (); if (EQ (val, Qt)) Fsignal (Qquit, Qnil); return unbind_to (count, Qnil); } /* When an auto-save happens, record the "time", and don't do again soon. */ record_auto_save () { last_auto_save = num_nonmacro_input_chars; } DEFUN ("recursive-edit", Frecursive_edit, Srecursive_edit, 0, 0, "", "Invoke the editor command loop recursively.\n\ To get out of the recursive edit, a command can do `(throw 'exit nil)';\n\ that tells this function to return.\n\ Alternately, `(throw 'exit t)' makes this function signal an error.\n\ This function is called by the editor initialization to begin editing.") () { int count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; Lisp_Object val; command_loop_level++; update_mode_lines = 1; record_unwind_protect (recursive_edit_unwind, (command_loop_level && current_buffer != XBUFFER (XWINDOW (selected_window)->buffer)) ? Fcurrent_buffer () : Qnil); recursive_edit_1 (); return unbind_to (count, Qnil); } Lisp_Object recursive_edit_unwind (buffer) Lisp_Object buffer; { if (!NILP (buffer)) Fset_buffer (buffer); command_loop_level--; update_mode_lines = 1; return Qnil; } Lisp_Object cmd_error (data) Lisp_Object data; { Lisp_Object errmsg, tail, errname, file_error; Lisp_Object stream; struct gcpro gcpro1; int i; Vquit_flag = Qnil; Vinhibit_quit = Qt; Vstandard_output = Qt; Vstandard_input = Qt; Vexecuting_macro = Qnil; echo_area_glyphs = 0; /* If the window system or terminal frame hasn't been initialized yet, or we're not interactive, it's best to dump this message out to stderr and exit. */ if (! FRAME_MESSAGE_BUF (selected_frame) || noninteractive) stream = Qexternal_debugging_output; else { Fdiscard_input (); bitch_at_user (); stream = Qt; } errname = Fcar (data); if (EQ (errname, Qerror)) { data = Fcdr (data); if (!CONSP (data)) data = Qnil; errmsg = Fcar (data); file_error = Qnil; } else { errmsg = Fget (errname, Qerror_message); file_error = Fmemq (Qfile_error, Fget (errname, Qerror_conditions)); } /* Print an error message including the data items. This is done by printing it into a scratch buffer and then making a copy of the text in the buffer. */ if (!CONSP (data)) data = Qnil; tail = Fcdr (data); GCPRO1 (tail); /* For file-error, make error message by concatenating all the data items. They are all strings. */ if (!NILP (file_error) && !NILP (tail)) errmsg = XCONS (tail)->car, tail = XCONS (tail)->cdr; if (XTYPE (errmsg) == Lisp_String) Fprinc (errmsg, stream); else write_string_1 ("peculiar error", -1, stream); for (i = 0; CONSP (tail); tail = Fcdr (tail), i++) { write_string_1 (i ? ", " : ": ", 2, stream); if (!NILP (file_error)) Fprinc (Fcar (tail), stream); else Fprin1 (Fcar (tail), stream); } UNGCPRO; /* If the window system or terminal frame hasn't been initialized yet, or we're in -batch mode, this error should cause Emacs to exit. */ if (! FRAME_MESSAGE_BUF (selected_frame) || noninteractive) { Fterpri (stream); Fkill_emacs (make_number (-1)); } Vquit_flag = Qnil; Vinhibit_quit = Qnil; return make_number (0); } Lisp_Object command_loop_1 (); Lisp_Object command_loop_2 (); Lisp_Object top_level_1 (); /* Entry to editor-command-loop. This level has the catches for exiting/returning to editor command loop. It returns nil to exit recursive edit, t to abort it. */ Lisp_Object command_loop () { if (command_loop_level > 0 || minibuf_level > 0) { return internal_catch (Qexit, command_loop_2, Qnil); } else while (1) { internal_catch (Qtop_level, top_level_1, Qnil); internal_catch (Qtop_level, command_loop_2, Qnil); /* End of file in -batch run causes exit here. */ if (noninteractive) Fkill_emacs (Qt); } } /* Here we catch errors in execution of commands within the editing loop, and reenter the editing loop. When there is an error, cmd_error runs and returns a non-nil value to us. A value of nil means that cmd_loop_1 itself returned due to end of file (or end of kbd macro). */ Lisp_Object command_loop_2 () { register Lisp_Object val; do val = internal_condition_case (command_loop_1, Qerror, cmd_error); while (!NILP (val)); return Qnil; } Lisp_Object top_level_2 () { return Feval (Vtop_level); } Lisp_Object top_level_1 () { /* On entry to the outer level, run the startup file */ if (!NILP (Vtop_level)) internal_condition_case (top_level_2, Qerror, cmd_error); else if (!NILP (Vpurify_flag)) message ("Bare impure Emacs (standard Lisp code not loaded)"); else message ("Bare Emacs (standard Lisp code not loaded)"); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("top-level", Ftop_level, Stop_level, 0, 0, "", "Exit all recursive editing levels.") () { Fthrow (Qtop_level, Qnil); } DEFUN ("exit-recursive-edit", Fexit_recursive_edit, Sexit_recursive_edit, 0, 0, "", "Exit from the innermost recursive edit or minibuffer.") () { if (command_loop_level > 0 || minibuf_level > 0) Fthrow (Qexit, Qnil); error ("No recursive edit is in progress"); } DEFUN ("abort-recursive-edit", Fabort_recursive_edit, Sabort_recursive_edit, 0, 0, "", "Abort the command that requested this recursive edit or minibuffer input.") () { if (command_loop_level > 0 || minibuf_level > 0) Fthrow (Qexit, Qt); error ("No recursive edit is in progress"); } /* This is the actual command reading loop, sans error-handling encapsulation. */ Lisp_Object Fcommand_execute (); static int read_key_sequence (); Lisp_Object command_loop_1 () { Lisp_Object cmd; int lose; int nonundocount; Lisp_Object keybuf[30]; int i; int no_redisplay; int no_direct; int prev_modiff; struct buffer *prev_buffer; Vprefix_arg = Qnil; Vdeactivate_mark = Qnil; waiting_for_input = 0; cancel_echoing (); /* Don't clear out last_command at the beginning of a macro. */ if (XTYPE (Vexecuting_macro) != Lisp_String) last_command = Qt; nonundocount = 0; no_redisplay = 0; this_command_key_count = 0; while (1) { /* Install chars successfully executed in kbd macro. */ if (defining_kbd_macro && NILP (Vprefix_arg)) finalize_kbd_macro_chars (); /* Make sure the current window's buffer is selected. */ if (XBUFFER (XWINDOW (selected_window)->buffer) != current_buffer) set_buffer_internal (XBUFFER (XWINDOW (selected_window)->buffer)); /* Display any malloc warning that just came out. Use while because displaying one warning can cause another. */ while (pending_malloc_warning) display_malloc_warning (); no_direct = 0; Vdeactivate_mark = Qnil; /* If minibuffer on and echo area in use, wait 2 sec and redraw minibufer. */ if (minibuf_level && echo_area_glyphs) { /* Bind inhibit-quit to t so that C-g gets read in rather than quitting back to the minibuffer. */ int count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; specbind (Qinhibit_quit, Qt); Fsit_for (make_number (2), Qnil, Qnil); unbind_to (count, Qnil); echo_area_glyphs = 0; no_direct = 1; if (!NILP (Vquit_flag)) { Vquit_flag = Qnil; unread_command_events = Fcons (make_number (quit_char), Qnil); } } #ifdef C_ALLOCA alloca (0); /* Cause a garbage collection now */ /* Since we can free the most stuff here. */ #endif /* C_ALLOCA */ #if 0 #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* Select the frame that the last event came from. Usually, switch-frame events will take care of this, but if some lisp code swallows a switch-frame event, we'll fix things up here. Is this a good idea? */ if (XTYPE (internal_last_event_frame) == Lisp_Frame && XFRAME (internal_last_event_frame) != selected_frame) Fselect_frame (internal_last_event_frame, Qnil); #endif #endif /* Read next key sequence; i gets its length. */ i = read_key_sequence (keybuf, (sizeof keybuf / sizeof (keybuf[0])), 0); ++num_input_keys; /* Now we have read a key sequence of length I, or else I is 0 and we found end of file. */ if (i == 0) /* End of file -- happens only in */ return Qnil; /* a kbd macro, at the end. */ last_command_char = keybuf[i - 1]; cmd = read_key_sequence_cmd; if (!NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) { if (!NILP (Vquit_flag)) { Vexecuting_macro = Qt; QUIT; /* Make some noise. */ /* Will return since macro now empty. */ } } /* Do redisplay processing after this command except in special cases identified below that set no_redisplay to 1. */ no_redisplay = 0; prev_buffer = current_buffer; prev_modiff = MODIFF; /* Execute the command. */ this_command = cmd; if (!NILP (Vpre_command_hook)) call1 (Vrun_hooks, Qpre_command_hook); if (NILP (cmd)) { /* nil means key is undefined. */ bitch_at_user (); defining_kbd_macro = 0; update_mode_lines = 1; Vprefix_arg = Qnil; } else { if (NILP (Vprefix_arg) && ! no_direct) { /* Recognize some common commands in common situations and do them directly. */ if (EQ (cmd, Qforward_char) && point < ZV) { struct Lisp_Vector *dp = window_display_table (XWINDOW (selected_window)); lose = FETCH_CHAR (point); SET_PT (point + 1); if ((dp ? (XTYPE (DISP_CHAR_VECTOR (dp, lose)) != Lisp_Vector && XVECTOR (DISP_CHAR_VECTOR (dp, lose))->size == 1) : (lose >= 0x20 && lose < 0x7f)) && (XFASTINT (XWINDOW (selected_window)->last_modified) >= MODIFF) && (XFASTINT (XWINDOW (selected_window)->last_point) == point - 1) && !windows_or_buffers_changed && EQ (current_buffer->selective_display, Qnil) && !detect_input_pending () && NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) no_redisplay = direct_output_forward_char (1); goto directly_done; } else if (EQ (cmd, Qbackward_char) && point > BEGV) { struct Lisp_Vector *dp = window_display_table (XWINDOW (selected_window)); SET_PT (point - 1); lose = FETCH_CHAR (point); if ((dp ? (XTYPE (DISP_CHAR_VECTOR (dp, lose)) != Lisp_Vector && XVECTOR (DISP_CHAR_VECTOR (dp, lose))->size == 1) : (lose >= 0x20 && lose < 0x7f)) && (XFASTINT (XWINDOW (selected_window)->last_modified) >= MODIFF) && (XFASTINT (XWINDOW (selected_window)->last_point) == point + 1) && !windows_or_buffers_changed && EQ (current_buffer->selective_display, Qnil) && !detect_input_pending () && NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) no_redisplay = direct_output_forward_char (-1); goto directly_done; } else if (EQ (cmd, Qself_insert_command) /* Try this optimization only on ascii keystrokes. */ && XTYPE (last_command_char) == Lisp_Int) { unsigned char c = XINT (last_command_char); if (NILP (Vexecuting_macro) && !EQ (minibuf_window, selected_window)) { if (!nonundocount || nonundocount >= 20) { Fundo_boundary (); nonundocount = 0; } nonundocount++; } lose = (XFASTINT (XWINDOW (selected_window)->last_modified) < MODIFF) || (XFASTINT (XWINDOW (selected_window)->last_point) != point) || MODIFF <= current_buffer->save_modified || windows_or_buffers_changed || !EQ (current_buffer->selective_display, Qnil) || detect_input_pending () || !NILP (Vexecuting_macro); if (internal_self_insert (XINT (c), 0)) { lose = 1; nonundocount = 0; } if (!lose && (point == ZV || FETCH_CHAR (point) == '\n')) { struct Lisp_Vector *dp = window_display_table (XWINDOW (selected_window)); int lose = XINT (c); if (dp) { Lisp_Object obj = DISP_CHAR_VECTOR (dp, lose); if (XTYPE (obj) == Lisp_Vector && XVECTOR (obj)->size == 1 && (XTYPE (obj = XVECTOR (obj)->contents[0]) == Lisp_Int)) no_redisplay = direct_output_for_insert (XINT (obj)); } else { if (lose >= 0x20 && lose <= 0x7e) no_redisplay = direct_output_for_insert (lose); } } goto directly_done; } } /* Here for a command that isn't executed directly */ nonundocount = 0; if (NILP (Vprefix_arg)) Fundo_boundary (); Fcommand_execute (cmd, Qnil); } directly_done: ; if (!NILP (Vpost_command_hook)) call1 (Vrun_hooks, Qpost_command_hook); /* If there is a prefix argument, 1) We don't want last_command to be ``universal-argument'' (that would be dumb), so don't set last_command, 2) we want to leave echoing on so that the prefix will be echoed as part of this key sequence, so don't call cancel_echoing, and 3) we want to leave this_command_key_count non-zero, so that read_char will realize that it is re-reading a character, and not echo it a second time. */ if (NILP (Vprefix_arg)) { last_command = this_command; cancel_echoing (); this_command_key_count = 0; } if (!NILP (current_buffer->mark_active)) { if (!NILP (Vdeactivate_mark) && !NILP (Vtransient_mark_mode)) { current_buffer->mark_active = Qnil; call1 (Vrun_hooks, intern ("deactivate-mark-hook")); } else if (current_buffer != prev_buffer || MODIFF != prev_modiff) call1 (Vrun_hooks, intern ("activate-mark-hook")); } } } /* Number of seconds between polling for input. */ int polling_period; /* Nonzero means polling for input is temporarily suppresed. */ int poll_suppress_count; #ifdef POLL_FOR_INPUT int polling_for_input; /* Handle an alarm once each second and read pending input so as to handle a C-g if it comces in. */ SIGTYPE input_poll_signal () { #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS extern int x_input_blocked; if (x_input_blocked == 0) #endif if (!waiting_for_input) read_avail_input (0); signal (SIGALRM, input_poll_signal); alarm (polling_period); } #endif /* Begin signals to poll for input, if they are appropriate. This function is called unconditionally from various places. */ start_polling () { #ifdef POLL_FOR_INPUT if (read_socket_hook) { poll_suppress_count--; if (poll_suppress_count == 0) { signal (SIGALRM, input_poll_signal); polling_for_input = 1; alarm (polling_period); } } #endif } /* Turn off polling. */ stop_polling () { #ifdef POLL_FOR_INPUT if (read_socket_hook) { if (poll_suppress_count == 0) { polling_for_input = 0; alarm (0); } poll_suppress_count++; } #endif } /* Input of single characters from keyboard */ Lisp_Object print_help (); static Lisp_Object kbd_buffer_get_event (); /* read a character from the keyboard; call the redisplay if needed */ /* commandflag 0 means do not do auto-saving, but do do redisplay. -1 means do not do redisplay, but do do autosaving. 1 means do both. */ /* The arguments MAPS and NMAPS are for menu prompting. MAPS is an array of keymaps; NMAPS is the length of MAPS. PREV_EVENT is the previous input event, or nil if we are reading the first event of a key sequence. If USED_MOUSE_MENU is non-zero, then we set *USED_MOUSE_MENU to 1 if we used a mouse menu to read the input, or zero otherwise. If USED_MOUSE_MENU is zero, *USED_MOUSE_MENU is left alone. */ Lisp_Object read_char (commandflag, nmaps, maps, prev_event, used_mouse_menu) int commandflag; int nmaps; Lisp_Object *maps; Lisp_Object prev_event; int *used_mouse_menu; { register Lisp_Object c; int count; jmp_buf save_jump; if (CONSP (unread_command_events)) { c = XCONS (unread_command_events)->car; unread_command_events = XCONS (unread_command_events)->cdr; if (this_command_key_count == 0) goto reread_first; else goto reread; } if (unread_command_char != -1) { XSET (c, Lisp_Int, unread_command_char); unread_command_char = -1; if (this_command_key_count == 0) goto reread_first; else goto reread; } if (!NILP (Vexecuting_macro)) { #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* We set this to Qmacro; since that's not a frame, nobody will try to switch frames on us, and the selected window will remain unchanged. Since this event came from a macro, it would be misleading to leave internal_last_event_frame set to whereever the last real event came from. Normally, a switch-frame event selects internal_last_event_frame after each command is read, but events read from a macro should never cause a new frame to be selected. */ Vlast_event_frame = internal_last_event_frame = Qmacro; #endif if (executing_macro_index >= XFASTINT (Flength (Vexecuting_macro))) { XSET (c, Lisp_Int, -1); return c; } c = Faref (Vexecuting_macro, make_number (executing_macro_index)); if (XTYPE (Vexecuting_macro) == Lisp_String && (XINT (c) & 0x80)) XFASTINT (c) = CHAR_META | (XINT (c) & ~0x80); executing_macro_index++; goto from_macro; } if (!NILP (unread_switch_frame)) { c = unread_switch_frame; unread_switch_frame = Qnil; /* This event should make it into this_command_keys, and get echoed again, so we go to reread_first, rather than reread. */ goto reread_first; } /* Save outer setjmp data, in case called recursively. */ save_getcjmp (save_jump); stop_polling (); if (commandflag >= 0 && !input_pending && !detect_input_pending ()) redisplay (); if (_setjmp (getcjmp)) { XSET (c, Lisp_Int, quit_char); #ifdef MULTI_FRAME XSET (internal_last_event_frame, Lisp_Frame, selected_frame); Vlast_event_frame = internal_last_event_frame; #endif goto non_reread; } /* Message turns off echoing unless more keystrokes turn it on again. */ if (echo_area_glyphs && *echo_area_glyphs && echo_area_glyphs != echobuf) cancel_echoing (); else /* If already echoing, continue. */ echo_dash (); /* If in middle of key sequence and minibuffer not active, start echoing if enough time elapses. */ if (minibuf_level == 0 && !immediate_echo && this_command_key_count > 0 && echo_keystrokes > 0 && (echo_area_glyphs == 0 || *echo_area_glyphs == 0)) { Lisp_Object tem0; /* After a mouse event, start echoing right away. This is because we are probably about to display a menu, and we don't want to delay before doing so. */ if (EVENT_HAS_PARAMETERS (prev_event)) echo (); else { tem0 = sit_for (echo_keystrokes, 0, 1, 1); if (EQ (tem0, Qt)) echo (); } } /* Maybe auto save due to number of keystrokes or idle time. */ if (commandflag != 0 && auto_save_interval > 0 && num_nonmacro_input_chars - last_auto_save > max (auto_save_interval, 20) && !detect_input_pending ()) { jmp_buf temp; save_getcjmp (temp); Fdo_auto_save (Qnil, Qnil); restore_getcjmp (temp); } /* Try reading a character via menu prompting. Try this before the sit-for, because the sit-for would do the wrong thing if we are supposed to do menu prompting. */ c = Qnil; if (INTERACTIVE && !NILP (prev_event)) c = read_char_menu_prompt (nmaps, maps, prev_event, used_mouse_menu); /* Slow down auto saves logarithmically in size of current buffer, and garbage collect while we're at it. */ if (NILP (c)) { int delay_level, buffer_size; if (! MINI_WINDOW_P (XWINDOW (selected_window))) last_non_minibuf_size = Z - BEG; buffer_size = (last_non_minibuf_size >> 8) + 1; delay_level = 0; while (buffer_size > 64) delay_level++, buffer_size -= buffer_size >> 2; if (delay_level < 4) delay_level = 4; /* delay_level is 4 for files under around 50k, 7 at 100k, 9 at 200k, 11 at 300k, and 12 at 500k. It is 15 at 1 meg. */ /* Auto save if enough time goes by without input. */ if (commandflag != 0 && num_nonmacro_input_chars > last_auto_save && XTYPE (Vauto_save_timeout) == Lisp_Int && XINT (Vauto_save_timeout) > 0) { Lisp_Object tem0; int delay = delay_level * XFASTINT (Vauto_save_timeout) / 4; tem0 = sit_for (delay, 0, 1, 1); if (EQ (tem0, Qt)) { jmp_buf temp; save_getcjmp (temp); Fdo_auto_save (Qnil, Qnil); restore_getcjmp (temp); /* If we have auto-saved and there is still no input available, garbage collect if there has been enough consing going on to make it worthwhile. */ if (!detect_input_pending () && consing_since_gc > gc_cons_threshold / 2) Fgarbage_collect (); } } } /* Actually read a character, waiting if necessary. */ if (NILP (c)) c = kbd_buffer_get_event (); if (NILP (c)) abort (); /* Don't think this can happen. */ /* Terminate Emacs in batch mode if at eof. */ if (noninteractive && XTYPE (c) == Lisp_Int && XINT (c) < 0) Fkill_emacs (make_number (1)); /* Test for ControlMask and Mod1Mask. */ if (extra_keyboard_modifiers & 4) c &= ~0140; if (extra_keyboard_modifiers & 8) c |= 0200; non_reread: restore_getcjmp (save_jump); start_polling (); echo_area_glyphs = 0; /* Handle things that only apply to characters. */ if (XTYPE (c) == Lisp_Int) { /* If kbd_buffer_get_event gave us an EOF, return that. */ if (XINT (c) == -1) return c; if (XTYPE (Vkeyboard_translate_table) == Lisp_String && XSTRING (Vkeyboard_translate_table)->size > XFASTINT (c)) XSETINT (c, XSTRING (Vkeyboard_translate_table)->data[XFASTINT (c)]); } total_keys++; XVECTOR (recent_keys)->contents[recent_keys_index] = c; if (++recent_keys_index >= NUM_RECENT_KEYS) recent_keys_index = 0; /* Write c to the dribble file. If c is a lispy event, write the event's symbol to the dribble file, in <brackets>. Bleaugh. If you, dear reader, have a better idea, you've got the source. :-) */ if (dribble) { if (XTYPE (c) == Lisp_Int) putc (XINT (c), dribble); else { Lisp_Object dribblee = c; /* If it's a structured event, take the event header. */ dribblee = EVENT_HEAD (dribblee); if (XTYPE (dribblee) == Lisp_Symbol) { putc ('<', dribble); fwrite (XSYMBOL (dribblee)->name->data, sizeof (char), XSYMBOL (dribblee)->name->size, dribble); putc ('>', dribble); } } fflush (dribble); } store_kbd_macro_char (c); num_nonmacro_input_chars++; from_macro: reread_first: /* Record this character as part of the current key. Don't record mouse motion; it should never matter. */ if (! (EVENT_HAS_PARAMETERS (c) && EQ (EVENT_HEAD_KIND (EVENT_HEAD (c)), Qmouse_movement))) { echo_char (c); add_command_key (c); } /* Re-reading in the middle of a command */ reread: last_input_char = c; num_input_chars++; /* Process the help character specially if enabled */ if (EQ (c, help_char) && !NILP (Vhelp_form)) { Lisp_Object tem0; count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; record_unwind_protect (Fset_window_configuration, Fcurrent_window_configuration (Qnil)); tem0 = Feval (Vhelp_form); if (XTYPE (tem0) == Lisp_String) internal_with_output_to_temp_buffer ("*Help*", print_help, tem0); cancel_echoing (); c = read_char (0, 0, 0, Qnil, 0); /* Remove the help from the frame */ unbind_to (count, Qnil); redisplay (); if (EQ (c, make_number (040))) { cancel_echoing (); c = read_char (0, 0, 0, Qnil, 0); } } return c; } Lisp_Object print_help (object) Lisp_Object object; { Fprinc (object, Qnil); return Qnil; } /* Copy out or in the info on where C-g should throw to. This is used when running Lisp code from within get_char, in case get_char is called recursively. See read_process_output. */ save_getcjmp (temp) jmp_buf temp; { bcopy (getcjmp, temp, sizeof getcjmp); } restore_getcjmp (temp) jmp_buf temp; { bcopy (temp, getcjmp, sizeof getcjmp); } /* Low level keyboard/mouse input. kbd_buffer_store_event places events in kbd_buffer, and kbd_buffer_get_event retrieves them. mouse_moved indicates when the mouse has moved again, and *mouse_position_hook provides the mouse position. */ /* Set this for debugging, to have a way to get out */ int stop_character; extern int frame_garbaged; /* Return true iff there are any events in the queue that read-char would return. If this returns false, a read-char would block. */ static int readable_events () { return ! EVENT_QUEUES_EMPTY; } /* Restore mouse tracking enablement. See Ftrack_mouse for the only use of this function. */ static Lisp_Object tracking_off (old_value) Lisp_Object old_value; { if (! XFASTINT (old_value)) { do_mouse_tracking = 0; /* Redisplay may have been preempted because there was input available, and it assumes it will be called again after the input has been processed. If the only input available was the sort that we have just disabled, then we need to call redisplay. */ if (!readable_events ()) { redisplay_preserve_echo_area (); get_input_pending (&input_pending); } } } DEFUN ("track-mouse", Ftrack_mouse, Strack_mouse, 0, UNEVALLED, 0, "Evaluate BODY with mouse movement events enabled.\n\ Within a `track-mouse' form, mouse motion generates input events that\n\ you can read with `read-event'.\n\ Normally, mouse motion is ignored.") (args) Lisp_Object args; { int count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; Lisp_Object val; XSET (val, Lisp_Int, do_mouse_tracking); record_unwind_protect (tracking_off, val); do_mouse_tracking = 1; val = Fprogn (args); return unbind_to (count, val); } /* Store an event obtained at interrupt level into kbd_buffer, fifo */ void kbd_buffer_store_event (event) register struct input_event *event; { if (event->kind == no_event) abort (); if (event->kind == ascii_keystroke) { register int c = XFASTINT (event->code) & 0377; if (c == quit_char) { extern SIGTYPE interrupt_signal (); #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* If this results in a quit_char being returned to Emacs as input, set Vlast_event_frame properly. If this doesn't get returned to Emacs as an event, the next event read will set Vlast_event_frame again, so this is safe to do. */ { Lisp_Object focus = FRAME_FOCUS_FRAME (XFRAME (event->frame_or_window)); if (NILP (focus)) internal_last_event_frame = event->frame_or_window; else internal_last_event_frame = focus; Vlast_event_frame = internal_last_event_frame; } #endif last_event_timestamp = event->timestamp; interrupt_signal (); return; } if (c && c == stop_character) { sys_suspend (); return; } XSET (event->code, Lisp_Int, c); } if (kbd_store_ptr - kbd_buffer == KBD_BUFFER_SIZE) kbd_store_ptr = kbd_buffer; /* Don't let the very last slot in the buffer become full, since that would make the two pointers equal, and that is indistinguishable from an empty buffer. Discard the event if it would fill the last slot. */ if (kbd_fetch_ptr - 1 != kbd_store_ptr) { kbd_store_ptr->kind = event->kind; kbd_store_ptr->code = event->code; kbd_store_ptr->part = event->part; kbd_store_ptr->frame_or_window = event->frame_or_window; kbd_store_ptr->modifiers = event->modifiers; kbd_store_ptr->x = event->x; kbd_store_ptr->y = event->y; kbd_store_ptr->timestamp = event->timestamp; (XVECTOR (kbd_buffer_frame_or_window)->contents[kbd_store_ptr - kbd_buffer] = event->frame_or_window); kbd_store_ptr++; } } static Lisp_Object make_lispy_event (); static Lisp_Object make_lispy_movement (); static Lisp_Object modify_event_symbol (); static Lisp_Object make_lispy_switch_frame (); static Lisp_Object kbd_buffer_get_event () { register int c; Lisp_Object obj; if (noninteractive) { c = getchar (); XSET (obj, Lisp_Int, c); return obj; } /* Wait until there is input available. */ for (;;) { if (!EVENT_QUEUES_EMPTY) break; /* If the quit flag is set, then read_char will return quit_char, so that counts as "available input." */ if (!NILP (Vquit_flag)) quit_throw_to_read_char (); /* One way or another, wait until input is available; then, if interrupt handlers have not read it, read it now. */ #ifdef OLDVMS wait_for_kbd_input (); #else /* Note SIGIO has been undef'd if FIONREAD is missing. */ #ifdef SIGIO gobble_input (0); #endif /* SIGIO */ if (EVENT_QUEUES_EMPTY) { Lisp_Object minus_one; XSET (minus_one, Lisp_Int, -1); wait_reading_process_input (0, 0, minus_one, 1); if (!interrupt_input && EVENT_QUEUES_EMPTY) { read_avail_input (0); } } #endif /* not VMS */ } /* At this point, we know that there is a readable event available somewhere. If the event queue is empty, then there must be a mouse movement enabled and available. */ if (kbd_fetch_ptr != kbd_store_ptr) { struct input_event *event; event = ((kbd_fetch_ptr < kbd_buffer + KBD_BUFFER_SIZE) ? kbd_fetch_ptr : kbd_buffer); last_event_timestamp = event->timestamp; obj = Qnil; #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* If this event is on a different frame, return a switch-frame this time, and leave the event in the queue for next time. */ { Lisp_Object frame = event->frame_or_window; Lisp_Object focus; if (XTYPE (frame) == Lisp_Window) frame = WINDOW_FRAME (XWINDOW (frame)); focus = FRAME_FOCUS_FRAME (XFRAME (frame)); if (! NILP (focus)) frame = focus; if (! EQ (frame, internal_last_event_frame)) { internal_last_event_frame = frame; obj = make_lispy_switch_frame (frame); } } #endif /* If we didn't decide to make a switch-frame event, go ahead and build a real event from the queue entry. */ if (NILP (obj)) { obj = make_lispy_event (event); /* Wipe out this event, to catch bugs. */ event->kind = no_event; (XVECTOR (kbd_buffer_frame_or_window)->contents[event - kbd_buffer] = Qnil); kbd_fetch_ptr = event + 1; } } else if (do_mouse_tracking && mouse_moved) { FRAME_PTR f; Lisp_Object bar_window; enum scroll_bar_part part; Lisp_Object x, y; unsigned long time; (*mouse_position_hook) (&f, &bar_window, &part, &x, &y, &time); obj = Qnil; #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* Decide if we should generate a switch-frame event. Don't generate switch-frame events for motion outside of all Emacs frames. */ if (f) { Lisp_Object frame = FRAME_FOCUS_FRAME (f); if (NILP (frame)) XSET (frame, Lisp_Frame, f); if (! EQ (frame, internal_last_event_frame)) { XSET (internal_last_event_frame, Lisp_Frame, frame); obj = make_lispy_switch_frame (internal_last_event_frame); } } #endif /* If we didn't decide to make a switch-frame event, go ahead and return a mouse-motion event. */ if (NILP (obj)) obj = make_lispy_movement (f, bar_window, part, x, y, time); } else /* We were promised by the above while loop that there was something for us to read! */ abort (); input_pending = readable_events (); #ifdef MULTI_FRAME Vlast_event_frame = internal_last_event_frame; #endif return (obj); } /* Caches for modify_event_symbol. */ static Lisp_Object func_key_syms; static Lisp_Object mouse_syms; /* You'll notice that this table is arranged to be conveniently indexed by X Windows keysym values. */ static char *lispy_function_keys[] = { /* X Keysym value */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xff00 */ "backspace", "tab", "linefeed", "clear", 0, "return", 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xff10 */ "pause", 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "escape", 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xff20...2f */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xff30...3f */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xff40...4f */ "home", /* 0xff50 */ /* IsCursorKey */ "left", "up", "right", "down", "prior", "next", "end", "begin", 0, /* 0xff59 */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "select", /* 0xff60 */ /* IsMiscFunctionKey */ "print", "execute", "insert", 0, /* 0xff64 */ "undo", "redo", "menu", "find", "cancel", "help", "break", /* 0xff6b */ /* Here are some keys found mostly on HP keyboards. The X event handling code will strip bit 29, which flags vendor-specific keysyms. */ "reset", /* 0x1000ff6c */ "system", "user", "clearline", "insertline", "deleteline", "insertchar", "deletechar", "backtab", "kp_backtab", /* 0x1000ff75 */ 0, /* 0xff76 */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xff7f */ "kp-space", /* 0xff80 */ /* IsKeypadKey */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "kp-tab", /* 0xff89 */ 0, 0, 0, "kp-enter", /* 0xff8d */ 0, 0, 0, "kp-f1", /* 0xff91 */ "kp-f2", "kp-f3", "kp-f4", 0, /* 0xff95 */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "kp-multiply", /* 0xffaa */ "kp-add", "kp-separator", "kp-subtract", "kp-decimal", "kp-divide", /* 0xffaf */ "kp-0", /* 0xffb0 */ "kp-1", "kp-2", "kp-3", "kp-4", "kp-5", "kp-6", "kp-7", "kp-8", "kp-9", 0, /* 0xffba */ 0, 0, "kp-equal", /* 0xffbd */ "f1", /* 0xffbe */ /* IsFunctionKey */ "f2", "f3", "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", "f8", "f9", "f10", /* 0xffc0 */ "f11", "f12", "f13", "f14", "f15", "f16", "f17", "f18", "f19", "f20", "f21", "f22", "f23", "f24", "f25", "f26", /* 0xffd0 */ "f27", "f28", "f29", "f30", "f31", "f32", "f33", "f34", "f35", 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xffe0 */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0xfff0 */ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "delete" }; static char *lispy_mouse_names[] = { "mouse-1", "mouse-2", "mouse-3", "mouse-4", "mouse-5" }; /* Scroll bar parts. */ Lisp_Object Qabove_handle, Qhandle, Qbelow_handle; /* An array of scroll bar parts, indexed by an enum scroll_bar_part value. */ Lisp_Object *scroll_bar_parts[] = { &Qabove_handle, &Qhandle, &Qbelow_handle }; /* A vector, indexed by button number, giving the down-going location of currently depressed buttons, both scroll bar and non-scroll bar. The elements have the form (BUTTON-NUMBER MODIFIER-MASK . REST) where REST is the cdr of a position as it would be reported in the event. The make_lispy_event function stores positions here to tell the difference between click and drag events, and to store the starting location to be included in drag events. */ static Lisp_Object button_down_location; /* Given a struct input_event, build the lisp event which represents it. If EVENT is 0, build a mouse movement event from the mouse movement buffer, which should have a movement event in it. Note that events must be passed to this function in the order they are received; this function stores the location of button presses in order to build drag events when the button is released. */ static Lisp_Object make_lispy_event (event) struct input_event *event; { #ifdef SWITCH_ENUM_BUG switch ((int) event->kind) #else switch (event->kind) #endif { /* A simple keystroke. */ case ascii_keystroke: { int c = XFASTINT (event->code); /* Include the bits for control and shift only if the basic ASCII code can't indicate them. */ if ((event->modifiers & ctrl_modifier) && c >= 040) c |= ctrl_modifier; if (XFASTINT (event->code) < 040 && (event->modifiers & shift_modifier)) c |= shift_modifier; c |= (event->modifiers & (meta_modifier | alt_modifier | hyper_modifier | super_modifier)); return c; } /* A function key. The symbol may need to have modifier prefixes tacked onto it. */ case non_ascii_keystroke: return modify_event_symbol (XFASTINT (event->code), event->modifiers, Qfunction_key, lispy_function_keys, &func_key_syms, (sizeof (lispy_function_keys) / sizeof (lispy_function_keys[0]))); break; /* A mouse click. Figure out where it is, decide whether it's a press, click or drag, and build the appropriate structure. */ case mouse_click: case scroll_bar_click: { int button = XFASTINT (event->code); Lisp_Object position; Lisp_Object *start_pos_ptr; Lisp_Object start_pos; if (button < 0 || button >= NUM_MOUSE_BUTTONS) abort (); /* Build the position as appropriate for this mouse click. */ if (event->kind == mouse_click) { int part; struct frame *f = XFRAME (event->frame_or_window); Lisp_Object window = window_from_coordinates (f, XINT (event->x), XINT (event->y), &part); Lisp_Object posn; if (XINT (event->y) < FRAME_MENU_BAR_LINES (f)) { int hpos; Lisp_Object items; items = FRAME_MENU_BAR_ITEMS (f); for (; CONSP (items); items = XCONS (items)->cdr) { Lisp_Object pos, string; pos = Fcdr (Fcdr (Fcar (items))); string = Fcar (Fcdr (Fcar (items))); if (XINT (event->x) > XINT (pos) && XINT (event->x) <= XINT (pos) + XSTRING (string)->size) break; } position = Fcons (event->frame_or_window, Fcons (Qmenu_bar, Fcons (Fcons (event->x, event->y), Fcons (make_number (event->timestamp), Qnil)))); if (CONSP (items)) return Fcons (Fcar (Fcar (items)), Fcons (position, Qnil)); else return Fcons (Qnil, Fcons (position, Qnil)); } else if (XTYPE (window) != Lisp_Window) posn = Qnil; else { XSETINT (event->x, (XINT (event->x) - XINT (XWINDOW (window)->left))); XSETINT (event->y, (XINT (event->y) - XINT (XWINDOW (window)->top))); if (part == 1) posn = Qmode_line; else if (part == 2) posn = Qvertical_line; else XSET (posn, Lisp_Int, buffer_posn_from_coords (XWINDOW (window), XINT (event->x), XINT (event->y))); } position = Fcons (window, Fcons (posn, Fcons (Fcons (event->x, event->y), Fcons (make_number (event->timestamp), Qnil)))); } else { Lisp_Object window = event->frame_or_window; Lisp_Object portion_whole = Fcons (event->x, event->y); Lisp_Object part = *scroll_bar_parts[(int) event->part]; position = Fcons (window, Fcons (Qvertical_scroll_bar, Fcons (portion_whole, Fcons (make_number (event->timestamp), Fcons (part, Qnil))))); } start_pos_ptr = &XVECTOR (button_down_location)->contents[button]; start_pos = *start_pos_ptr; *start_pos_ptr = Qnil; /* If this is a button press, squirrel away the location, so we can decide later whether it was a click or a drag. */ if (event->modifiers & down_modifier) *start_pos_ptr = Fcopy_alist (position); /* Now we're releasing a button - check the co-ordinates to see if this was a click or a drag. */ else if (event->modifiers & up_modifier) { /* Is there a start position stored at all for this button? It would be nice if we could assume that if we're getting a button release, we must therefore have gotten a button press. Unfortunately, the X menu code thwarts this assumption, so we'll have to be more robust. We treat a button release with no stored start position as a click. */ event->modifiers &= ~up_modifier; if (XTYPE (start_pos) != Lisp_Cons) event->modifiers |= click_modifier; else { /* The third element of every position should be the (x,y) pair. */ Lisp_Object down = Fnth (make_number (2), start_pos); event->modifiers |= ((EQ (event->x, XCONS (down)->car) && EQ (event->y, XCONS (down)->cdr)) ? click_modifier : drag_modifier); } } else /* Every mouse event should either have the down_modifier or the up_modifier set. */ abort (); { /* Get the symbol we should use for the mouse click. */ Lisp_Object head = modify_event_symbol (button, event->modifiers, Qmouse_click, lispy_mouse_names, &mouse_syms, (sizeof (lispy_mouse_names) / sizeof (lispy_mouse_names[0]))); if (event->modifiers & drag_modifier) return Fcons (head, Fcons (start_pos, Fcons (position, Qnil))); else return Fcons (head, Fcons (position, Qnil)); } } /* The 'kind' field of the event is something we don't recognize. */ default: abort(); } } static Lisp_Object make_lispy_movement (frame, bar_window, part, x, y, time) FRAME_PTR frame; Lisp_Object bar_window; enum scroll_bar_part part; Lisp_Object x, y; unsigned long time; { /* Is it a scroll bar movement? */ if (frame && ! NILP (bar_window)) { Lisp_Object part_sym = *scroll_bar_parts[(int) part]; return Fcons (Qscroll_bar_movement, (Fcons (Fcons (bar_window, Fcons (Qvertical_scroll_bar, Fcons (Fcons (x, y), Fcons (make_number (time), Fcons (part_sym, Qnil))))), Qnil))); } /* Or is it an ordinary mouse movement? */ else { int area; Lisp_Object window = (frame ? window_from_coordinates (frame, XINT (x), XINT (y), &area) : Qnil); Lisp_Object posn; if (XTYPE (window) == Lisp_Window) { XSETINT (x, XINT (x) - XINT (XWINDOW (window)->left)); XSETINT (y, XINT (y) - XINT (XWINDOW (window)->top)); if (area == 1) posn = Qmode_line; else if (area == 2) posn = Qvertical_line; else XSET (posn, Lisp_Int, buffer_posn_from_coords (XWINDOW (window), XINT (x), XINT (y))); } else { window = Qnil; posn = Qnil; } return Fcons (Qmouse_movement, Fcons (Fcons (window, Fcons (posn, Fcons (Fcons (x, y), Fcons (make_number (time), Qnil)))), Qnil)); } } /* Construct a switch frame event. */ static Lisp_Object make_lispy_switch_frame (frame) Lisp_Object frame; { return Fcons (Qswitch_frame, Fcons (frame, Qnil)); } /* Manipulating modifiers. */ /* Parse the name of SYMBOL, and return the set of modifiers it contains. If MODIFIER_END is non-zero, set *MODIFIER_END to the position in SYMBOL's name of the end of the modifiers; the string from this position is the unmodified symbol name. This doesn't use any caches. */ static int parse_modifiers_uncached (symbol, modifier_end) Lisp_Object symbol; int *modifier_end; { struct Lisp_String *name; int i; int modifiers; CHECK_SYMBOL (symbol, 1); modifiers = 0; name = XSYMBOL (symbol)->name; for (i = 0; i+2 <= name->size; ) switch (name->data[i]) { #define SINGLE_LETTER_MOD(bit) \ if (name->data[i+1] != '-') \ goto no_more_modifiers; \ modifiers |= bit; \ i += 2; case 'A': SINGLE_LETTER_MOD (alt_modifier); break; case 'C': SINGLE_LETTER_MOD (ctrl_modifier); break; case 'H': SINGLE_LETTER_MOD (hyper_modifier); break; case 'M': SINGLE_LETTER_MOD (meta_modifier); break; case 'S': SINGLE_LETTER_MOD (shift_modifier); break; case 's': SINGLE_LETTER_MOD (super_modifier); break; case 'd': if (i + 5 > name->size) goto no_more_modifiers; if (! strncmp (name->data + i, "drag-", 5)) { modifiers |= drag_modifier; i += 5; } else if (! strncmp (name->data + i, "down-", 5)) { modifiers |= down_modifier; i += 5; } else goto no_more_modifiers; break; default: goto no_more_modifiers; #undef SINGLE_LETTER_MOD } no_more_modifiers: /* Should we include the `click' modifier? */ if (! (modifiers & (down_modifier | drag_modifier)) && i + 7 == name->size && strncmp (name->data + i, "mouse-", 6) == 0 && ('0' <= name->data[i + 6] && name->data[i + 6] <= '9')) modifiers |= click_modifier; if (modifier_end) *modifier_end = i; return modifiers; } /* Return a symbol whose name is the modifier prefixes for MODIFIERS prepended to the string BASE[0..BASE_LEN-1]. This doesn't use any caches. */ static Lisp_Object apply_modifiers_uncached (modifiers, base, base_len) int modifiers; char *base; int base_len; { /* Since BASE could contain nulls, we can't use intern here; we have to use Fintern, which expects a genuine Lisp_String, and keeps a reference to it. */ char *new_mods = (char *) alloca (sizeof ("A-C-H-M-S-s-down-drag-")); int mod_len; { char *p = new_mods; /* Only the event queue may use the `up' modifier; it should always be turned into a click or drag event before presented to lisp code. */ if (modifiers & up_modifier) abort (); if (modifiers & alt_modifier) { *p++ = 'A'; *p++ = '-'; } if (modifiers & ctrl_modifier) { *p++ = 'C'; *p++ = '-'; } if (modifiers & hyper_modifier) { *p++ = 'H'; *p++ = '-'; } if (modifiers & meta_modifier) { *p++ = 'M'; *p++ = '-'; } if (modifiers & shift_modifier) { *p++ = 'S'; *p++ = '-'; } if (modifiers & super_modifier) { *p++ = 's'; *p++ = '-'; } if (modifiers & down_modifier) { strcpy (p, "down-"); p += 5; } if (modifiers & drag_modifier) { strcpy (p, "drag-"); p += 5; } /* The click modifier is denoted by the absence of other modifiers. */ *p = '\0'; mod_len = p - new_mods; } { Lisp_Object new_name = make_uninit_string (mod_len + base_len); bcopy (new_mods, XSTRING (new_name)->data, mod_len); bcopy (base, XSTRING (new_name)->data + mod_len, base_len); return Fintern (new_name, Qnil); } } static char *modifier_names[] = { "up", 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "down", "drag", "click", 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, "alt", "super", "hyper", "shift", "control", "meta" }; static Lisp_Object modifier_symbols; /* Return the list of modifier symbols corresponding to the mask MODIFIERS. */ static Lisp_Object lispy_modifier_list (modifiers) int modifiers; { Lisp_Object modifier_list; int i; modifier_list = Qnil; for (i = 0; (1<<i) <= modifiers; i++) if (modifiers & (1<<i)) { if (i >= XVECTOR (modifier_symbols)->size) abort (); modifier_list = Fcons (XVECTOR (modifier_symbols)->contents[i], modifier_list); } return modifier_list; } /* Parse the modifiers on SYMBOL, and return a list like (UNMODIFIED MASK), where UNMODIFIED is the unmodified form of SYMBOL, MASK is the set of modifiers present in SYMBOL's name. This is similar to parse_modifiers_uncached, but uses the cache in SYMBOL's Qevent_symbol_element_mask property, and maintains the Qevent_symbol_elements property. */ static Lisp_Object parse_modifiers (symbol) Lisp_Object symbol; { Lisp_Object elements = Fget (symbol, Qevent_symbol_element_mask); if (CONSP (elements)) return elements; else { int end; int modifiers = parse_modifiers_uncached (symbol, &end); Lisp_Object unmodified = Fintern (make_string (XSYMBOL (symbol)->name->data + end, XSYMBOL (symbol)->name->size - end), Qnil); Lisp_Object mask; XFASTINT (mask) = modifiers; elements = Fcons (unmodified, Fcons (mask, Qnil)); /* Cache the parsing results on SYMBOL. */ Fput (symbol, Qevent_symbol_element_mask, elements); Fput (symbol, Qevent_symbol_elements, Fcons (unmodified, lispy_modifier_list (modifiers))); /* Since we know that SYMBOL is modifiers applied to unmodified, it would be nice to put that in unmodified's cache. But we can't, since we're not sure that parse_modifiers is canonical. */ return elements; } } /* Apply the modifiers MODIFIERS to the symbol BASE. BASE must be unmodified. This is like apply_modifiers_uncached, but uses BASE's Qmodifier_cache property, if present. It also builds Qevent_symbol_elements properties, since it has that info anyway. apply_modifiers copies the value of BASE's Qevent_kind property to the modified symbol. */ static Lisp_Object apply_modifiers (modifiers, base) int modifiers; Lisp_Object base; { Lisp_Object cache, index, entry, new_symbol; /* The click modifier never figures into cache indices. */ cache = Fget (base, Qmodifier_cache); XFASTINT (index) = (modifiers & ~click_modifier); entry = Fassq (index, cache); if (CONSP (entry)) new_symbol = XCONS (entry)->cdr; else { /* We have to create the symbol ourselves. */ new_symbol = apply_modifiers_uncached (modifiers, XSYMBOL (base)->name->data, XSYMBOL (base)->name->size); /* Add the new symbol to the base's cache. */ entry = Fcons (index, new_symbol); Fput (base, Qmodifier_cache, Fcons (entry, cache)); /* We have the parsing info now for free, so add it to the caches. */ XFASTINT (index) = modifiers; Fput (new_symbol, Qevent_symbol_element_mask, Fcons (base, Fcons (index, Qnil))); Fput (new_symbol, Qevent_symbol_elements, Fcons (base, lispy_modifier_list (modifiers))); } /* Make sure this symbol is of the same kind as BASE. You'd think we could just set this once and for all when we intern the symbol above, but reorder_modifiers may call us when BASE's property isn't set right; we can't assume that just because we found something in the cache it must have its kind set right. */ if (NILP (Fget (new_symbol, Qevent_kind))) { Lisp_Object kind = Fget (base, Qevent_kind); if (! NILP (kind)) Fput (new_symbol, Qevent_kind, kind); } return new_symbol; } /* Given a symbol whose name begins with modifiers ("C-", "M-", etc), return a symbol with the modifiers placed in the canonical order. Canonical order is alphabetical, except for down and drag, which always come last. The 'click' modifier is never written out. Fdefine_key calls this to make sure that (for example) C-M-foo and M-C-foo end up being equivalent in the keymap. */ Lisp_Object reorder_modifiers (symbol) Lisp_Object symbol; { /* It's hopefully okay to write the code this way, since everything will soon be in caches, and no consing will be done at all. */ Lisp_Object parsed = parse_modifiers (symbol); return apply_modifiers (XCONS (XCONS (parsed)->cdr)->car, XCONS (parsed)->car); } /* For handling events, we often want to produce a symbol whose name is a series of modifier key prefixes ("M-", "C-", etcetera) attached to some base, like the name of a function key or mouse button. modify_event_symbol produces symbols of this sort. NAME_TABLE should point to an array of strings, such that NAME_TABLE[i] is the name of the i'th symbol. TABLE_SIZE is the number of elements in the table. SYMBOL_TABLE should be a pointer to a Lisp_Object whose value will persist between calls to modify_event_symbol that it can use to store a cache of the symbols it's generated for this NAME_TABLE before. SYMBOL_NUM is the number of the base name we want from NAME_TABLE. MODIFIERS is a set of modifier bits (as given in struct input_events) whose prefixes should be applied to the symbol name. SYMBOL_KIND is the value to be placed in the event_kind property of the returned symbol. The symbols we create are supposed to have an `event-symbol-elements' propery, which lists the modifiers present in the symbol's name. */ static Lisp_Object modify_event_symbol (symbol_num, modifiers, symbol_kind, name_table, symbol_table, table_size) int symbol_num; unsigned modifiers; Lisp_Object symbol_kind; char **name_table; Lisp_Object *symbol_table; int table_size; { Lisp_Object *slot; /* Is this a request for a valid symbol? */ if (symbol_num < 0 || symbol_num >= table_size) abort (); /* If *symbol_table doesn't seem to be initialized properly, fix that. *symbol_table should be a lisp vector TABLE_SIZE elements long, where the Nth element is the symbol for NAME_TABLE[N], or nil if we've never used that symbol before. */ if (XTYPE (*symbol_table) != Lisp_Vector || XVECTOR (*symbol_table)->size != table_size) { Lisp_Object size; XFASTINT (size) = table_size; *symbol_table = Fmake_vector (size, Qnil); } slot = & XVECTOR (*symbol_table)->contents[symbol_num]; /* Have we already used this symbol before? */ if (NILP (*slot)) { /* No; let's create it. */ *slot = intern (name_table[symbol_num]); /* Fill in the cache entries for this symbol; this also builds the Qevent_symbol_elements property, which the user cares about. */ apply_modifiers (modifiers & click_modifier, *slot); Fput (*slot, Qevent_kind, symbol_kind); } /* Apply modifiers to that symbol. */ return apply_modifiers (modifiers, *slot); } /* Store into *addr a value nonzero if terminal input chars are available. Serves the purpose of ioctl (0, FIONREAD, addr) but works even if FIONREAD does not exist. (In fact, this may actually read some input.) */ static void get_input_pending (addr) int *addr; { /* First of all, have we already counted some input? */ *addr = !NILP (Vquit_flag) || readable_events (); /* If input is being read as it arrives, and we have none, there is none. */ if (*addr > 0 || (interrupt_input && ! interrupts_deferred)) return; /* Try to read some input and see how much we get. */ gobble_input (0); *addr = !NILP (Vquit_flag) || readable_events (); } /* Interface to read_avail_input, blocking SIGIO if necessary. */ int gobble_input (expected) int expected; { #ifndef VMS #ifdef SIGIO if (interrupt_input) { SIGMASKTYPE mask; mask = sigblockx (SIGIO); read_avail_input (expected); sigsetmask (mask); } else #endif read_avail_input (expected); #endif } #ifndef VMS /* Read any terminal input already buffered up by the system into the kbd_buffer, but do not wait. EXPECTED should be nonzero if the caller knows there is some input. Except on VMS, all input is read by this function. If interrupt_input is nonzero, this function MUST be called only when SIGIO is blocked. Returns the number of keyboard chars read, or -1 meaning this is a bad time to try to read input. */ static int read_avail_input (expected) int expected; { struct input_event buf[KBD_BUFFER_SIZE]; register int i; int nread; if (read_socket_hook) /* No need for FIONREAD or fcntl; just say don't wait. */ nread = (*read_socket_hook) (0, buf, KBD_BUFFER_SIZE, expected, expected); else { unsigned char cbuf[KBD_BUFFER_SIZE]; #ifdef FIONREAD /* Find out how much input is available. */ if (ioctl (0, FIONREAD, &nread) < 0) /* Formerly simply reported no input, but that sometimes led to a failure of Emacs to terminate. SIGHUP seems appropriate if we can't reach the terminal. */ /* ??? Is it really right to send the signal just to this process rather than to the whole process group? Perhaps on systems with FIONREAD Emacs is alone in its group. */ kill (getpid (), SIGHUP); if (nread == 0) return 0; if (nread > sizeof cbuf) nread = sizeof cbuf; #else /* no FIONREAD */ #ifdef USG /* Read some input if available, but don't wait. */ nread = sizeof cbuf; fcntl (fileno (stdin), F_SETFL, O_NDELAY); #else you lose; #endif #endif /* Now read; for one reason or another, this will not block. */ while (1) { nread = read (fileno (stdin), cbuf, nread); #ifdef AIX /* The kernel sometimes fails to deliver SIGHUP for ptys. This looks incorrect, but it isn't, because _BSD causes O_NDELAY to be defined in fcntl.h as O_NONBLOCK, and that causes a value other than 0 when there is no input. */ if (nread == 0) kill (SIGHUP, 0); #endif /* Retry the read if it is interrupted. */ if (nread >= 0 || ! (errno == EAGAIN || errno == EFAULT #ifdef EBADSLT || errno == EBADSLT #endif )) break; } #ifndef FIONREAD #ifdef USG fcntl (fileno (stdin), F_SETFL, 0); #endif /* USG */ #endif /* no FIONREAD */ for (i = 0; i < nread; i++) { buf[i].kind = ascii_keystroke; buf[i].modifiers = 0; if (meta_key && (cbuf[i] & 0x80)) buf[i].modifiers = meta_modifier; cbuf[i] &= ~0x80; XSET (buf[i].code, Lisp_Int, cbuf[i]); #ifdef MULTI_FRAME XSET (buf[i].frame_or_window, Lisp_Frame, selected_frame); #else buf[i].frame_or_window = Qnil; #endif } } /* Scan the chars for C-g and store them in kbd_buffer. */ for (i = 0; i < nread; i++) { kbd_buffer_store_event (&buf[i]); /* Don't look at input that follows a C-g too closely. This reduces lossage due to autorepeat on C-g. */ if (buf[i].kind == ascii_keystroke && XINT(buf[i].code) == quit_char) break; } return nread; } #endif /* not VMS */ #ifdef SIGIO /* for entire page */ /* Note SIGIO has been undef'd if FIONREAD is missing. */ SIGTYPE input_available_signal (signo) int signo; { /* Must preserve main program's value of errno. */ int old_errno = errno; #ifdef BSD4_1 extern int select_alarmed; #endif #ifdef USG /* USG systems forget handlers when they are used; must reestablish each time */ signal (signo, input_available_signal); #endif /* USG */ #ifdef BSD4_1 sigisheld (SIGIO); #endif if (input_available_clear_time) EMACS_SET_SECS_USECS (*input_available_clear_time, 0, 0); while (1) { int nread; nread = read_avail_input (1); /* -1 means it's not ok to read the input now. UNBLOCK_INPUT will read it later; now, avoid infinite loop. 0 means there was no keyboard input available. */ if (nread <= 0) break; #ifdef BSD4_1 select_alarmed = 1; /* Force the select emulator back to life */ #endif } #ifdef BSD4_1 sigfree (); #endif errno = old_errno; } #endif /* SIGIO */ /* Return the prompt-string of a sparse keymap. This is the first element which is a string. Return nil if there is none. */ Lisp_Object map_prompt (map) Lisp_Object map; { while (CONSP (map)) { register Lisp_Object tem; tem = Fcar (map); if (XTYPE (tem) == Lisp_String) return tem; map = Fcdr (map); } return Qnil; } static Lisp_Object menu_bar_item (); static Lisp_Object menu_bar_one_keymap (); /* Return a list of menu items for a menu bar, appropriate to the current buffer. The elements have the form (KEY STRING . nil). */ Lisp_Object menu_bar_items () { /* The number of keymaps we're scanning right now, and the number of keymaps we have allocated space for. */ int nmaps; /* maps[0..nmaps-1] are the prefix definitions of KEYBUF[0..t-1] in the current keymaps, or nil where it is not a prefix. */ Lisp_Object *maps; Lisp_Object def, tem; Lisp_Object result; int mapno; /* Build our list of keymaps. If we recognize a function key and replace its escape sequence in keybuf with its symbol, or if the sequence starts with a mouse click and we need to switch buffers, we jump back here to rebuild the initial keymaps from the current buffer. */ { Lisp_Object *tmaps; nmaps = current_minor_maps (0, &tmaps) + 2; maps = (Lisp_Object *) alloca (nmaps * sizeof (maps[0])); bcopy (tmaps, maps, (nmaps - 2) * sizeof (maps[0])); #ifdef USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES maps[nmaps-2] = get_local_map (PT, current_buffer); #else maps[nmaps-2] = current_buffer->local_map; #endif maps[nmaps-1] = global_map; } /* Look up in each map the dummy prefix key `menu-bar'. */ result = Qnil; for (mapno = 0; mapno < nmaps; mapno++) { if (! NILP (maps[mapno])) def = get_keyelt (access_keymap (maps[mapno], Qmenu_bar, 1)); else def = Qnil; tem = Fkeymapp (def); if (!NILP (tem)) result = menu_bar_one_keymap (def, result); } return result; } /* Scan one map KEYMAP, accumulating any menu items it defines that have not yet been seen in RESULT. Return the updated RESULT. */ static Lisp_Object menu_bar_one_keymap (keymap, result) Lisp_Object keymap, result; { Lisp_Object tail, item, key, binding, item_string, table; /* Loop over all keymap entries that have menu strings. */ for (tail = keymap; XTYPE (tail) == Lisp_Cons; tail = XCONS (tail)->cdr) { item = XCONS (tail)->car; if (XTYPE (item) == Lisp_Cons) { key = XCONS (item)->car; binding = XCONS (item)->cdr; if (XTYPE (binding) == Lisp_Cons) { item_string = XCONS (binding)->car; if (XTYPE (item_string) == Lisp_String) result = menu_bar_item (key, item_string, Fcdr (binding), result); } } else if (XTYPE (item) == Lisp_Vector) { /* Loop over the char values represented in the vector. */ int len = XVECTOR (item)->size; int c; for (c = 0; c < len; c++) { Lisp_Object character; XFASTINT (character) = c; binding = XVECTOR (item)->contents[c]; if (XTYPE (binding) == Lisp_Cons) { item_string = XCONS (binding)->car; if (XTYPE (item_string) == Lisp_String) result = menu_bar_item (key, item_string, Fcdr (binding), result); } } } } return result; } static Lisp_Object menu_bar_item (key, item_string, def, result) Lisp_Object key, item_string, def, result; { Lisp_Object tem, elt; Lisp_Object enabled; /* See if this entry is enabled. */ enabled = Qt; if (XTYPE (def) == Lisp_Symbol) { /* No property, or nil, means enable. Otherwise, enable if value is not nil. */ tem = Fget (def, Qmenu_enable); if (!NILP (tem)) enabled = Feval (tem); } /* Add an entry for this key and string if there is none yet. */ elt = Fassq (key, result); if (!NILP (enabled) && NILP (elt)) result = Fcons (Fcons (key, Fcons (item_string, Qnil)), result); return result; } static int echo_flag; static int echo_now; /* Read a character like read_char but optionally prompt based on maps in the array MAPS. NMAPS is the length of MAPS. Return nil if we decided not to read a character, because there are no menu items in MAPS. PREV_EVENT is the previous input event, or nil if we are reading the first event of a key sequence. If USED_MOUSE_MENU is non-zero, then we set *USED_MOUSE_MENU to 1 if we used a mouse menu to read the input, or zero otherwise. If USED_MOUSE_MENU is zero, *USED_MOUSE_MENU is left alone. The prompting is done based on the prompt-string of the map and the strings associated with various map elements. */ Lisp_Object read_char_menu_prompt (nmaps, maps, prev_event, used_mouse_menu) int nmaps; Lisp_Object *maps; Lisp_Object prev_event; int *used_mouse_menu; { int mapno; register Lisp_Object name; int nlength; int width = FRAME_WIDTH (selected_frame) - 4; char *menu = (char *) alloca (width + 4); int idx = -1; Lisp_Object rest, vector; if (used_mouse_menu) *used_mouse_menu = 0; /* Use local over global Menu maps */ if (! menu_prompting) return Qnil; /* Get the menu name from the first map that has one (a prompt string). */ for (mapno = 0; mapno < nmaps; mapno++) { name = map_prompt (maps[mapno]); if (!NILP (name)) break; } /* If we don't have any menus, just read a character normally. */ if (mapno >= nmaps) return Qnil; #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS #ifdef HAVE_X_MENU /* If we got to this point via a mouse click, use a real menu for mouse selection. */ if (EVENT_HAS_PARAMETERS (prev_event)) { /* Display the menu and get the selection. */ Lisp_Object *realmaps = (Lisp_Object *) alloca (nmaps * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); Lisp_Object value; int nmaps1 = 0; /* Use the maps that are not nil. */ for (mapno = 0; mapno < nmaps; mapno++) if (!NILP (maps[mapno])) realmaps[nmaps1++] = maps[mapno]; value = Fx_popup_menu (prev_event, Flist (nmaps1, realmaps)); if (NILP (value)) XSET (value, Lisp_Int, quit_char); if (used_mouse_menu) *used_mouse_menu = 1; return value; } #endif /* HAVE_X_MENU */ #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ /* Prompt string always starts with map's prompt, and a space. */ strcpy (menu, XSTRING (name)->data); nlength = XSTRING (name)->size; menu[nlength++] = ':'; menu[nlength++] = ' '; menu[nlength] = 0; /* Start prompting at start of first map. */ mapno = 0; rest = maps[mapno]; /* Present the documented bindings, a line at a time. */ while (1) { int notfirst = 0; int i = nlength; Lisp_Object obj; int ch; /* Loop over elements of map. */ while (i < width) { Lisp_Object s, elt; /* If reached end of map, start at beginning of next map. */ if (NILP (rest)) { mapno++; /* At end of last map, wrap around to first map if just starting, or end this line if already have something on it. */ if (mapno == nmaps) { if (notfirst) break; else mapno = 0; } rest = maps[mapno]; } /* Look at the next element of the map. */ if (idx >= 0) elt = XVECTOR (vector)->contents[idx]; else elt = Fcar_safe (rest); if (idx < 0 && XTYPE (elt) == Lisp_Vector) { /* If we found a dense table in the keymap, advanced past it, but start scanning its contents. */ rest = Fcdr_safe (rest); vector = elt; idx = 0; } else { /* An ordinary element. */ s = Fcar_safe (Fcdr_safe (elt)); if (XTYPE (s) != Lisp_String) /* Ignore the element if it has no prompt string. */ ; /* If we have room for the prompt string, add it to this line. If this is the first on the line, always add it. */ else if (XSTRING (s)->size + i < width || !notfirst) { int thiswidth; /* Punctuate between strings. */ if (notfirst) { strcpy (menu + i, ", "); i += 2; } notfirst = 1; /* Add as much of string as fits. */ thiswidth = XSTRING (s)->size; if (thiswidth + i > width) thiswidth = width - i; bcopy (XSTRING (s)->data, menu + i, thiswidth); i += thiswidth; } else { /* If this element does not fit, end the line now, and save the element for the next line. */ strcpy (menu + i, "..."); break; } /* Move past this element. */ if (idx >= 0 && idx + 1 >= XVECTOR (rest)->size) /* Handle reaching end of dense table. */ idx = -1; if (idx >= 0) idx++; else rest = Fcdr_safe (rest); } } /* Prompt with that and read response. */ message1 (menu); obj = read_char (1, 0, 0, Qnil, 0); if (XTYPE (obj) != Lisp_Int) return obj; else ch = XINT (obj); if (! EQ (obj, menu_prompt_more_char) && (XTYPE (menu_prompt_more_char) != Lisp_Int || ! EQ (obj, make_number (Ctl (XINT (menu_prompt_more_char)))))) return obj; } } /* Reading key sequences. */ /* Follow KEY in the maps in CURRENT[0..NMAPS-1], placing its bindings in DEFS[0..NMAPS-1]. Set NEXT[i] to DEFS[i] if DEFS[i] is a keymap, or nil otherwise. Return the index of the first keymap in which KEY has any binding, or NMAPS if no map has a binding. If KEY is a meta ASCII character, treat it like meta-prefix-char followed by the corresponding non-meta character. Keymaps in CURRENT with non-prefix bindings for meta-prefix-char become nil in NEXT. When KEY is not defined in any of the keymaps, if it is an upper case letter and there are bindings for the corresponding lower-case letter, return the bindings for the lower-case letter. If KEY has no bindings in any of the CURRENT maps, NEXT is left unmodified. NEXT may == CURRENT. */ static int follow_key (key, nmaps, current, defs, next) Lisp_Object key; Lisp_Object *current, *defs, *next; int nmaps; { int i, first_binding; /* If KEY is a meta ASCII character, treat it like meta-prefix-char followed by the corresponding non-meta character. */ if (XTYPE (key) == Lisp_Int && (XINT (key) & CHAR_META)) { for (i = 0; i < nmaps; i++) if (! NILP (current[i])) { next[i] = get_keyelt (access_keymap (current[i], meta_prefix_char, 1)); /* Note that since we pass the resulting bindings through get_keymap_1, non-prefix bindings for meta-prefix-char disappear. */ next[i] = get_keymap_1 (next[i], 0, 1); } else next[i] = Qnil; current = next; XSET (key, Lisp_Int, XFASTINT (key) & ~CHAR_META); } first_binding = nmaps; for (i = nmaps - 1; i >= 0; i--) { if (! NILP (current[i])) { defs[i] = get_keyelt (access_keymap (current[i], key, 1)); if (! NILP (defs[i])) first_binding = i; } else defs[i] = Qnil; } /* When KEY is not defined in any of the keymaps, if it is an upper case letter and there are bindings for the corresponding lower-case letter, return the bindings for the lower-case letter. */ if (first_binding == nmaps && XTYPE (key) == Lisp_Int && (UPPERCASEP (XINT (key) & 0x3ffff) || (XINT (key) & shift_modifier))) { if (XINT (key) & shift_modifier) XSETINT (key, XINT (key) & ~shift_modifier); else XSETINT (key, DOWNCASE (XINT (key))); first_binding = nmaps; for (i = nmaps - 1; i >= 0; i--) { if (! NILP (current[i])) { defs[i] = get_keyelt (access_keymap (current[i], key, 1)); if (! NILP (defs[i])) first_binding = i; } else defs[i] = Qnil; } } /* Given the set of bindings we've found, produce the next set of maps. */ if (first_binding < nmaps) for (i = 0; i < nmaps; i++) next[i] = NILP (defs[i]) ? Qnil : get_keymap_1 (defs[i], 0, 1); return first_binding; } /* Read a sequence of keys that ends with a non prefix character, storing it in KEYBUF, a buffer of size BUFSIZE. Prompt with PROMPT. Return the length of the key sequence stored. Echo starting immediately unless `prompt' is 0. Where a key sequence ends depends on the currently active keymaps. These include any minor mode keymaps active in the current buffer, the current buffer's local map, and the global map. If a key sequence has no other bindings, we check Vfunction_key_map to see if some trailing subsequence might be the beginning of a function key's sequence. If so, we try to read the whole function key, and substitute its symbolic name into the key sequence. We ignore unbound `down-' mouse clicks. We turn unbound `drag-' events into similar click events, if that would make them bound. If we get a mouse click in a mode line, vertical divider, or other non-text area, we treat the click as if it were prefixed by the symbol denoting that area - `mode-line', `vertical-line', or whatever. If the sequence starts with a mouse click, we read the key sequence with respect to the buffer clicked on, not the current buffer. If the user switches frames in the midst of a key sequence, we put off the switch-frame event until later; the next call to read_char will return it. */ static int read_key_sequence (keybuf, bufsize, prompt) Lisp_Object *keybuf; int bufsize; char *prompt; { int count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; /* How many keys there are in the current key sequence. */ int t; /* The length of the echo buffer when we started reading, and the length of this_command_keys when we started reading. */ int echo_start; int keys_start; /* The number of keymaps we're scanning right now, and the number of keymaps we have allocated space for. */ int nmaps; int nmaps_allocated = 0; /* defs[0..nmaps-1] are the definitions of KEYBUF[0..t-1] in the current keymaps. */ Lisp_Object *defs; /* submaps[0..nmaps-1] are the prefix definitions of KEYBUF[0..t-1] in the current keymaps, or nil where it is not a prefix. */ Lisp_Object *submaps; /* The index in defs[] of the first keymap that has a binding for this key sequence. In other words, the lowest i such that defs[i] is non-nil. */ int first_binding; /* If t < mock_input, then KEYBUF[t] should be read as the next input key. We use this to recover after recognizing a function key. Once we realize that a suffix of the current key sequence is actually a function key's escape sequence, we replace the suffix with the function key's binding from Vfunction_key_map. Now keybuf contains a new and different key sequence, so the echo area, this_command_keys, and the submaps and defs arrays are wrong. In this situation, we set mock_input to t, set t to 0, and jump to restart_sequence; the loop will read keys from keybuf up until mock_input, thus rebuilding the state; and then it will resume reading characters from the keyboard. */ int mock_input = 0; /* If the sequence is unbound in submaps[], then keybuf[fkey_start..fkey_end-1] is a prefix in Vfunction_key_map, and fkey_map is its binding. These might be > t, indicating that all function key scanning should hold off until t reaches them. We do this when we've just recognized a function key, to avoid searching for the function key's again in Vfunction_key_map. */ int fkey_start = 0, fkey_end = 0; Lisp_Object fkey_map = Vfunction_key_map; /* If we receive a ``switch-frame'' event in the middle of a key sequence, we put it off for later. While we're reading, we keep the event here. */ Lisp_Object delayed_switch_frame = Qnil; /* If there is no function key map, turn off function key scanning. */ if (NILP (Fkeymapp (Vfunction_key_map))) fkey_start = fkey_end = bufsize + 1; /* We need to save the current buffer in case we switch buffers to find the right binding for a mouse click. Note that we can't use save_excursion_{save,restore} here, because they save point as well as the current buffer; we don't want to save point, because redisplay may change it, to accomodate a Fset_window_start or something. */ record_unwind_protect (Fset_buffer, Fcurrent_buffer ()); last_nonmenu_event = Qnil; if (INTERACTIVE) { if (prompt) echo_prompt (prompt); else if (cursor_in_echo_area) /* This doesn't put in a dash if the echo buffer is empty, so you don't always see a dash hanging out in the minibuffer. */ echo_dash (); } /* Record the initial state of the echo area and this_command_keys; we will need to restore them if we replay a key sequence. */ if (INTERACTIVE) echo_start = echo_length (); keys_start = this_command_key_count; /* We jump here when the key sequence has been thoroughly changed, and we need to rescan it starting from the beginning. When we jump here, keybuf[0..mock_input] holds the sequence we should reread. */ replay_sequence: /* Build our list of keymaps. If we recognize a function key and replace its escape sequence in keybuf with its symbol, or if the sequence starts with a mouse click and we need to switch buffers, we jump back here to rebuild the initial keymaps from the current buffer. */ { Lisp_Object *maps; nmaps = current_minor_maps (0, &maps) + 2; if (nmaps > nmaps_allocated) { submaps = (Lisp_Object *) alloca (nmaps * sizeof (submaps[0])); defs = (Lisp_Object *) alloca (nmaps * sizeof (defs[0])); nmaps_allocated = nmaps; } bcopy (maps, submaps, (nmaps - 2) * sizeof (submaps[0])); #ifdef USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES submaps[nmaps-2] = get_local_map (PT, current_buffer); #else submaps[nmaps-2] = current_buffer->local_map; #endif submaps[nmaps-1] = global_map; } /* Find an accurate initial value for first_binding. */ for (first_binding = 0; first_binding < nmaps; first_binding++) if (! NILP (submaps[first_binding])) break; /* We jump here when a function key substitution has forced us to reprocess the current key sequence. keybuf[0..mock_input] is the sequence we want to reread. */ t = 0; /* These are no-ops the first time through, but if we restart, they revert the echo area and this_command_keys to their original state. */ this_command_key_count = keys_start; if (INTERACTIVE) echo_truncate (echo_start); /* If the best binding for the current key sequence is a keymap, or we may be looking at a function key's escape sequence, keep on reading. */ while ((first_binding < nmaps && ! NILP (submaps[first_binding])) || (first_binding >= nmaps && fkey_start < t)) { Lisp_Object key; int used_mouse_menu = 0; /* Where the last real key started. If we need to throw away a key that has expanded into more than one element of keybuf (say, a mouse click on the mode line which is being treated as [mode-line (mouse-...)], then we backtrack to this point of keybuf. */ int last_real_key_start; /* These variables are analogous to echo_start and keys_start; while those allow us to restart the entire key sequence, echo_local_start and keys_local_start allow us to throw away just one key. */ int echo_local_start, keys_local_start, local_first_binding; if (t >= bufsize) error ("key sequence too long"); if (INTERACTIVE) echo_local_start = echo_length (); keys_local_start = this_command_key_count; local_first_binding = first_binding; replay_key: /* These are no-ops, unless we throw away a keystroke below and jumped back up to replay_key; in that case, these restore the variables to their original state, allowing us to replay the loop. */ if (INTERACTIVE) echo_truncate (echo_local_start); this_command_key_count = keys_local_start; first_binding = local_first_binding; /* Does mock_input indicate that we are re-reading a key sequence? */ if (t < mock_input) { key = keybuf[t]; add_command_key (key); echo_char (key); } /* If not, we should actually read a character. */ else { last_real_key_start = t; key = read_char (!prompt, nmaps, submaps, last_nonmenu_event, &used_mouse_menu); /* read_char returns -1 at the end of a macro. Emacs 18 handles this by returning immediately with a zero, so that's what we'll do. */ if (XTYPE (key) == Lisp_Int && XINT (key) == -1) { t = 0; goto done; } Vquit_flag = Qnil; /* Clicks in non-text areas get prefixed by the symbol in their CHAR-ADDRESS field. For example, a click on the mode line is prefixed by the symbol `mode-line'. Furthermore, key sequences beginning with mouse clicks are read using the keymaps of the buffer clicked on, not the current buffer. So we may have to switch the buffer here. */ if (EVENT_HAS_PARAMETERS (key)) { Lisp_Object kind = EVENT_HEAD_KIND (EVENT_HEAD (key)); if (EQ (kind, Qmouse_click)) { Lisp_Object window = POSN_WINDOW (EVENT_START (key)); Lisp_Object posn = POSN_BUFFER_POSN (EVENT_START (key)); /* Key sequences beginning with mouse clicks are read using the keymaps in the buffer clicked on, not the current buffer. If we're at the beginning of a key sequence, switch buffers. */ if (t == 0 && XTYPE (window) == Lisp_Window && XTYPE (XWINDOW (window)->buffer) == Lisp_Buffer && XBUFFER (XWINDOW (window)->buffer) != current_buffer) { if (XTYPE (posn) == Lisp_Symbol) { if (t + 1 >= bufsize) error ("key sequence too long"); keybuf[t] = posn; keybuf[t+1] = key; mock_input = t + 2; } else { keybuf[t] = key; mock_input = t + 1; } set_buffer_internal (XBUFFER (XWINDOW (window)->buffer)); goto replay_sequence; } else if (XTYPE (posn) == Lisp_Symbol) { if (t + 1 >= bufsize) error ("key sequence too long"); keybuf[t] = posn; keybuf[t+1] = key; mock_input = t + 2; goto replay_key; } } else if (EQ (kind, Qswitch_frame)) { /* If we're at the beginning of a key sequence, go ahead and return this event. If we're in the midst of a key sequence, delay it until the end. */ if (t > 0) { delayed_switch_frame = key; goto replay_key; } } else { Lisp_Object posn = POSN_BUFFER_POSN (EVENT_START (key)); /* Handle menu-bar events: insert the dummy prefix char `menu-bar'. */ if (EQ (posn, Qmenu_bar)) { if (t + 1 >= bufsize) error ("key sequence too long"); keybuf[t] = posn; keybuf[t+1] = key; mock_input = t + 2; goto replay_sequence; } } } } /* We have finally decided that KEY is something we might want to look up. */ first_binding = (follow_key (key, nmaps - first_binding, submaps + first_binding, defs + first_binding, submaps + first_binding) + first_binding); /* If KEY wasn't bound, we'll try some fallbacks. */ if (first_binding >= nmaps) { Lisp_Object head = EVENT_HEAD (key); if (XTYPE (head) == Lisp_Symbol) { Lisp_Object breakdown = parse_modifiers (head); Lisp_Object modifiers = XINT (XCONS (XCONS (breakdown)->cdr)->car); /* We drop unbound `down-' events altogether. */ if (modifiers & down_modifier) { /* Dispose of this event by simply jumping back to replay_key, to get another event. Note that if this event came from mock input, then just jumping back to replay_key will just hand it to us again. So we have to wipe out any mock input. We could delete keybuf[t] and shift everything after that to the left by one spot, but we'd also have to fix up any variable that points into keybuf, and shifting isn't really necessary anyway. Adding prefixes for non-textual mouse clicks creates two characters of mock input, and both must be thrown away. If we're only looking at the prefix now, we can just jump back to replay_key. On the other hand, if we've already processed the prefix, and now the actual click itself is giving us trouble, then we've lost the state of the keymaps we want to backtrack to, and we need to replay the whole sequence to rebuild it. Beyond that, only function key expansion could create more than two keys, but that should never generate mouse events, so it's okay to zero mock_input in that case too. Isn't this just the most wonderful code ever? */ if (t == last_real_key_start) { mock_input = 0; goto replay_key; } else { mock_input = last_real_key_start; goto replay_sequence; } } /* We turn unbound `drag-' events into `click-' events, if the click would be bound. */ else if (modifiers & drag_modifier) { Lisp_Object new_head = apply_modifiers (modifiers & ~drag_modifier, XCONS (breakdown)->car); Lisp_Object new_click = Fcons (new_head, Fcons (EVENT_START (key), Qnil)); /* Look for a binding for this new key. follow_key promises that it didn't munge submaps the last time we called it, since key was unbound. */ first_binding = (follow_key (new_click, nmaps - local_first_binding, submaps + local_first_binding, defs + local_first_binding, submaps + local_first_binding) + local_first_binding); /* If that click is bound, go for it. */ if (first_binding < nmaps) key = new_click; /* Otherwise, we'll leave key set to the drag event. */ } } } keybuf[t++] = key; /* Normally, last_nonmenu_event gets the previous key we read. But when a mouse popup menu is being used, we don't update last_nonmenu_event; it continues to hold the mouse event that preceded the first level of menu. */ if (!used_mouse_menu) last_nonmenu_event = key; /* If the sequence is unbound, see if we can hang a function key off the end of it. We only want to scan real keyboard input for function key sequences, so if mock_input says that we're re-reading old events, don't examine it. */ if (first_binding >= nmaps && t >= mock_input) { Lisp_Object fkey_next; /* Scan from fkey_end until we find a bound suffix. */ while (fkey_end < t) { Lisp_Object key; key = keybuf[fkey_end++]; /* Look up meta-characters by prefixing them with meta_prefix_char. I hate this. */ if (XTYPE (key) == Lisp_Int && XINT (key) & meta_modifier) { fkey_next = get_keymap_1 (get_keyelt (access_keymap (fkey_map, meta_prefix_char, 1)), 0, 1); XFASTINT (key) = XFASTINT (key) & ~meta_modifier; } else fkey_next = fkey_map; fkey_next = get_keyelt (access_keymap (fkey_next, key, 1)); /* If keybuf[fkey_start..fkey_end] is bound in the function key map and it's a suffix of the current sequence (i.e. fkey_end == t), replace it with the binding and restart with fkey_start at the end. */ if (XTYPE (fkey_next) == Lisp_Vector && fkey_end == t) { t = fkey_start + XVECTOR (fkey_next)->size; if (t >= bufsize) error ("key sequence too long"); bcopy (XVECTOR (fkey_next)->contents, keybuf + fkey_start, (t - fkey_start) * sizeof (keybuf[0])); mock_input = t; fkey_start = fkey_end = t; goto replay_sequence; } fkey_map = get_keymap_1 (fkey_next, 0, 1); /* If we no longer have a bound suffix, try a new positions for fkey_start. */ if (NILP (fkey_map)) { fkey_end = ++fkey_start; fkey_map = Vfunction_key_map; } } } } read_key_sequence_cmd = (first_binding < nmaps ? defs[first_binding] : Qnil); done: unread_switch_frame = delayed_switch_frame; unbind_to (count, Qnil); return t; } DEFUN ("read-key-sequence", Fread_key_sequence, Sread_key_sequence, 1, 2, 0, "Read a sequence of keystrokes and return as a string or vector.\n\ The sequence is sufficient to specify a non-prefix command in the\n\ current local and global maps.\n\ \n\ First arg PROMPT is a prompt string. If nil, do not prompt specially.\n\ Second (optional) arg CONTINUE-ECHO, if non-nil, means this key echos\n\ as a continuation of the previous key.\n\ \n\ A C-g typed while in this function is treated like any other character,\n\ and `quit-flag' is not set.\n\ \n\ If the key sequence starts with a mouse click, then the sequence is read\n\ using the keymaps of the buffer of the window clicked in, not the buffer\n\ of the selected window as normal.\n\ \n\ `read-key-sequence' drops unbound button-down events, since you normally\n\ only care about the click or drag events which follow them. If a drag\n\ event is unbound, but the corresponding click event would be bound,\n\ `read-key-sequence' turns the drag event into a click event at the\n\ drag's starting position. This means that you don't have to distinguish\n\ between click and drag events unless you want to.\n\ \n\ `read-key-sequence' prefixes mouse events on mode lines, the vertical\n\ lines separating windows, and scroll bars with imaginary keys\n\ `mode-line', `vertical-line', and `vertical-scroll-bar'.\n\ \n\ If the user switches frames in the middle of a key sequence, the\n\ frame-switch event is put off until after the current key sequence.\n\ \n\ `read-key-sequence' checks `function-key-map' for function key\n\ sequences, where they wouldn't conflict with ordinary bindings. See\n\ `function-key-map' for more details.") (prompt, continue_echo) Lisp_Object prompt, continue_echo; { Lisp_Object keybuf[30]; register int i; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; if (!NILP (prompt)) CHECK_STRING (prompt, 0); QUIT; bzero (keybuf, sizeof keybuf); GCPRO1 (keybuf[0]); gcpro1.nvars = (sizeof keybuf/sizeof (keybuf[0])); if (NILP (continue_echo)) this_command_key_count = 0; i = read_key_sequence (keybuf, (sizeof keybuf/sizeof (keybuf[0])), NILP (prompt) ? 0 : XSTRING (prompt)->data); UNGCPRO; return make_event_array (i, keybuf); } DEFUN ("command-execute", Fcommand_execute, Scommand_execute, 1, 2, 0, "Execute CMD as an editor command.\n\ CMD must be a symbol that satisfies the `commandp' predicate.\n\ Optional second arg RECORD-FLAG non-nil\n\ means unconditionally put this command in `command-history'.\n\ Otherwise, that is done only if an arg is read using the minibuffer.") (cmd, record) Lisp_Object cmd, record; { register Lisp_Object final; register Lisp_Object tem; Lisp_Object prefixarg; struct backtrace backtrace; extern int debug_on_next_call; prefixarg = Vprefix_arg, Vprefix_arg = Qnil; Vcurrent_prefix_arg = prefixarg; debug_on_next_call = 0; if (XTYPE (cmd) == Lisp_Symbol) { tem = Fget (cmd, Qdisabled); if (!NILP (tem)) return call1 (Vrun_hooks, Vdisabled_command_hook); } while (1) { final = Findirect_function (cmd); if (CONSP (final) && (tem = Fcar (final), EQ (tem, Qautoload))) do_autoload (final, cmd); else break; } if (XTYPE (final) == Lisp_String || XTYPE (final) == Lisp_Vector) { /* If requested, place the macro in the command history. For other sorts of commands, call-interactively takes care of this. */ if (!NILP (record)) Vcommand_history = Fcons (Fcons (Qexecute_kbd_macro, Fcons (final, Fcons (prefixarg, Qnil))), Vcommand_history); return Fexecute_kbd_macro (final, prefixarg); } if (CONSP (final) || XTYPE (final) == Lisp_Subr || XTYPE (final) == Lisp_Compiled) { backtrace.next = backtrace_list; backtrace_list = &backtrace; backtrace.function = &Qcall_interactively; backtrace.args = &cmd; backtrace.nargs = 1; backtrace.evalargs = 0; tem = Fcall_interactively (cmd, record); backtrace_list = backtrace.next; return tem; } return Qnil; } DEFUN ("execute-extended-command", Fexecute_extended_command, Sexecute_extended_command, 1, 1, "P", "Read function name, then read its arguments and call it.") (prefixarg) Lisp_Object prefixarg; { Lisp_Object function; char buf[40]; Lisp_Object saved_keys; struct gcpro gcpro1; saved_keys = Fthis_command_keys (); buf[0] = 0; GCPRO1 (saved_keys); if (EQ (prefixarg, Qminus)) strcpy (buf, "- "); else if (CONSP (prefixarg) && XINT (XCONS (prefixarg)->car) == 4) strcpy (buf, "C-u "); else if (CONSP (prefixarg) && XTYPE (XCONS (prefixarg)->car) == Lisp_Int) sprintf (buf, "%d ", XINT (XCONS (prefixarg)->car)); else if (XTYPE (prefixarg) == Lisp_Int) sprintf (buf, "%d ", XINT (prefixarg)); /* This isn't strictly correct if execute-extended-command is bound to anything else. Perhaps it should use this_command_keys? */ strcat (buf, "M-x "); /* Prompt with buf, and then read a string, completing from and restricting to the set of all defined commands. Don't provide any initial input. The last Qnil says not to perform a peculiar hack on the initial input. */ function = Fcompleting_read (build_string (buf), Vobarray, Qcommandp, Qt, Qnil, Qnil); /* Set this_command_keys to the concatenation of saved_keys and function, followed by a RET. */ { struct Lisp_String *str; int i; Lisp_Object tem; this_command_key_count = 0; str = XSTRING (saved_keys); for (i = 0; i < str->size; i++) { XFASTINT (tem) = str->data[i]; add_command_key (tem); } str = XSTRING (function); for (i = 0; i < str->size; i++) { XFASTINT (tem) = str->data[i]; add_command_key (tem); } XFASTINT (tem) = '\015'; add_command_key (tem); } UNGCPRO; function = Fintern (function, Qnil); Vprefix_arg = prefixarg; this_command = function; return Fcommand_execute (function, Qt); } detect_input_pending () { if (!input_pending) get_input_pending (&input_pending); return input_pending; } /* This is called in some cases before a possible quit. It cases the next call to detect_input_pending to recompute input_pending. So calling this function unnecessarily can't do any harm. */ clear_input_pending () { input_pending = 0; } DEFUN ("input-pending-p", Finput_pending_p, Sinput_pending_p, 0, 0, 0, "T if command input is currently available with no waiting.\n\ Actually, the value is nil only if we can be sure that no input is available.") () { if (!NILP (unread_command_events) || unread_command_char != -1) return (Qt); return detect_input_pending () ? Qt : Qnil; } DEFUN ("recent-keys", Frecent_keys, Srecent_keys, 0, 0, 0, "Return vector of last 100 events, not counting those from keyboard macros.") () { Lisp_Object *keys = XVECTOR (recent_keys)->contents; Lisp_Object val; if (total_keys < NUM_RECENT_KEYS) return Fvector (total_keys, keys); else { val = Fvector (NUM_RECENT_KEYS, keys); bcopy (keys + recent_keys_index, XVECTOR (val)->contents, (NUM_RECENT_KEYS - recent_keys_index) * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); bcopy (keys, XVECTOR (val)->contents + NUM_RECENT_KEYS - recent_keys_index, recent_keys_index * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); return val; } } DEFUN ("this-command-keys", Fthis_command_keys, Sthis_command_keys, 0, 0, 0, "Return string of the keystrokes that invoked this command.") () { return make_event_array (this_command_key_count, XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->contents); } DEFUN ("recursion-depth", Frecursion_depth, Srecursion_depth, 0, 0, 0, "Return the current depth in recursive edits.") () { Lisp_Object temp; XFASTINT (temp) = command_loop_level + minibuf_level; return temp; } DEFUN ("open-dribble-file", Fopen_dribble_file, Sopen_dribble_file, 1, 1, "FOpen dribble file: ", "Start writing all keyboard characters to a dribble file called FILE.\n\ If FILE is nil, close any open dribble file.") (file) Lisp_Object file; { if (NILP (file)) { fclose (dribble); dribble = 0; } else { file = Fexpand_file_name (file, Qnil); dribble = fopen (XSTRING (file)->data, "w"); } return Qnil; } DEFUN ("discard-input", Fdiscard_input, Sdiscard_input, 0, 0, 0, "Discard the contents of the terminal input buffer.\n\ Also cancel any kbd macro being defined.") () { defining_kbd_macro = 0; update_mode_lines++; unread_command_events = Qnil; unread_command_char = -1; discard_tty_input (); /* Without the cast, GCC complains that this assignment loses the volatile qualifier of kbd_store_ptr. Is there anything wrong with that? */ kbd_fetch_ptr = (struct input_event *) kbd_store_ptr; Ffillarray (kbd_buffer_frame_or_window, Qnil); input_pending = 0; return Qnil; } DEFUN ("suspend-emacs", Fsuspend_emacs, Ssuspend_emacs, 0, 1, "", "Stop Emacs and return to superior process. You can resume later.\n\ On systems that don't have job control, run a subshell instead.\n\n\ If optional arg STUFFSTRING is non-nil, its characters are stuffed\n\ to be read as terminal input by Emacs's parent, after suspension.\n\ \n\ Before suspending, call the functions in `suspend-hooks' with no args.\n\ If any of them returns nil, don't call the rest and don't suspend.\n\ Otherwise, suspend normally and after resumption run the normal hook\n\ `suspend-resume-hook' if that is bound and non-nil.\n\ \n\ Some operating systems cannot stop the Emacs process and resume it later.\n\ On such systems, Emacs starts a subshell instead of suspending.") (stuffstring) Lisp_Object stuffstring; { Lisp_Object tem; int count = specpdl_ptr - specpdl; int old_height, old_width; int width, height; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; extern init_sys_modes (); if (!NILP (stuffstring)) CHECK_STRING (stuffstring, 0); /* Run the functions in suspend-hooks. */ tem = Fsymbol_value (intern ("suspend-hooks")); while (CONSP (tem)) { Lisp_Object val; GCPRO2 (stuffstring, tem); val = call0 (Fcar (tem)); UNGCPRO; tem = Fcdr (tem); if (!EQ (val, Qnil)) return Qnil; } GCPRO1 (stuffstring); get_frame_size (&old_width, &old_height); reset_sys_modes (); /* sys_suspend can get an error if it tries to fork a subshell and the system resources aren't available for that. */ record_unwind_protect (init_sys_modes, 0); stuff_buffered_input (stuffstring); sys_suspend (); unbind_to (count, Qnil); /* Check if terminal/window size has changed. Note that this is not useful when we are running directly with a window system; but suspend should be disabled in that case. */ get_frame_size (&width, &height); if (width != old_width || height != old_height) change_frame_size (0, height, width, 0, 0); /* Call value of suspend-resume-hook if it is bound and value is non-nil. */ if (!NILP (Vrun_hooks)) call1 (Vrun_hooks, intern ("suspend-resume-hook")); UNGCPRO; return Qnil; } /* If STUFFSTRING is a string, stuff its contents as pending terminal input. Then in any case stuff anthing Emacs has read ahead and not used. */ stuff_buffered_input (stuffstring) Lisp_Object stuffstring; { register unsigned char *p; /* stuff_char works only in BSD, versions 4.2 and up. */ #ifdef BSD #ifndef BSD4_1 if (XTYPE (stuffstring) == Lisp_String) { register int count; p = XSTRING (stuffstring)->data; count = XSTRING (stuffstring)->size; while (count-- > 0) stuff_char (*p++); stuff_char ('\n'); } /* Anything we have read ahead, put back for the shell to read. */ while (kbd_fetch_ptr != kbd_store_ptr) { if (kbd_fetch_ptr == kbd_buffer + KBD_BUFFER_SIZE) kbd_fetch_ptr = kbd_buffer; if (kbd_fetch_ptr->kind == ascii_keystroke) stuff_char (XINT (kbd_fetch_ptr->code)); kbd_fetch_ptr->kind = no_event; (XVECTOR (kbd_buffer_frame_or_window)->contents[kbd_fetch_ptr - kbd_buffer] = Qnil); kbd_fetch_ptr++; } input_pending = 0; #endif #endif /* BSD and not BSD4_1 */ } set_waiting_for_input (time_to_clear) EMACS_TIME *time_to_clear; { input_available_clear_time = time_to_clear; /* Tell interrupt_signal to throw back to read_char, */ waiting_for_input = 1; /* If interrupt_signal was called before and buffered a C-g, make it run again now, to avoid timing error. */ if (!NILP (Vquit_flag)) quit_throw_to_read_char (); /* If alarm has gone off already, echo now. */ if (echo_flag) { echo (); echo_flag = 0; } } clear_waiting_for_input () { /* Tell interrupt_signal not to throw back to read_char, */ waiting_for_input = 0; input_available_clear_time = 0; } /* This routine is called at interrupt level in response to C-G. If interrupt_input, this is the handler for SIGINT. Otherwise, it is called from kbd_buffer_store_event, in handling SIGIO or SIGTINT. If `waiting_for_input' is non zero, then unless `echoing' is nonzero, immediately throw back to read_char. Otherwise it sets the Lisp variable quit-flag not-nil. This causes eval to throw, when it gets a chance. If quit-flag is already non-nil, it stops the job right away. */ SIGTYPE interrupt_signal () { char c; /* Must preserve main program's value of errno. */ int old_errno = errno; extern Lisp_Object Vwindow_system; #ifdef USG /* USG systems forget handlers when they are used; must reestablish each time */ signal (SIGINT, interrupt_signal); signal (SIGQUIT, interrupt_signal); #endif /* USG */ cancel_echoing (); if (!NILP (Vquit_flag) && FRAME_TERMCAP_P (selected_frame)) { fflush (stdout); reset_sys_modes (); sigfree (); #ifdef SIGTSTP /* Support possible in later USG versions */ /* * On systems which can suspend the current process and return to the original * shell, this command causes the user to end up back at the shell. * The "Auto-save" and "Abort" questions are not asked until * the user elects to return to emacs, at which point he can save the current * job and either dump core or continue. */ sys_suspend (); #else #ifdef VMS if (sys_suspend () == -1) { printf ("Not running as a subprocess;\n"); printf ("you can continue or abort.\n"); } #else /* not VMS */ /* Perhaps should really fork an inferior shell? But that would not provide any way to get back to the original shell, ever. */ printf ("No support for stopping a process on this operating system;\n"); printf ("you can continue or abort.\n"); #endif /* not VMS */ #endif /* not SIGTSTP */ printf ("Auto-save? (y or n) "); fflush (stdout); if (((c = getchar ()) & ~040) == 'Y') Fdo_auto_save (Qnil, Qnil); while (c != '\n') c = getchar (); #ifdef VMS printf ("Abort (and enter debugger)? (y or n) "); #else /* not VMS */ printf ("Abort (and dump core)? (y or n) "); #endif /* not VMS */ fflush (stdout); if (((c = getchar ()) & ~040) == 'Y') abort (); while (c != '\n') c = getchar (); printf ("Continuing...\n"); fflush (stdout); init_sys_modes (); } else { /* If executing a function that wants to be interrupted out of and the user has not deferred quitting by binding `inhibit-quit' then quit right away. */ if (immediate_quit && NILP (Vinhibit_quit)) { immediate_quit = 0; sigfree (); Fsignal (Qquit, Qnil); } else /* Else request quit when it's safe */ Vquit_flag = Qt; } if (waiting_for_input && !echoing) quit_throw_to_read_char (); errno = old_errno; } /* Handle a C-g by making read_char return C-g. */ quit_throw_to_read_char () { quit_error_check (); sigfree (); /* Prevent another signal from doing this before we finish. */ clear_waiting_for_input (); input_pending = 0; unread_command_events = Qnil; unread_command_char = -1; _longjmp (getcjmp, 1); } DEFUN ("set-input-mode", Fset_input_mode, Sset_input_mode, 3, 4, 0, "Set mode of reading keyboard input.\n\ First arg INTERRUPT non-nil means use input interrupts;\n\ nil means use CBREAK mode.\n\ Second arg FLOW non-nil means use ^S/^Q flow control for output to terminal\n\ (no effect except in CBREAK mode).\n\ Third arg META non-nil means accept 8-bit input (for a Meta key).\n\ Otherwise, the top bit is ignored, on the assumption it is parity.\n\ Optional fourth arg QUIT if non-nil specifies character to use for quitting.") (interrupt, flow, meta, quit) Lisp_Object interrupt, flow, meta, quit; { if (!NILP (quit) && (XTYPE (quit) != Lisp_Int || XINT (quit) < 0 || XINT (quit) > 0400)) error ("set-input-mode: QUIT must be an ASCII character."); reset_sys_modes (); #ifdef SIGIO /* Note SIGIO has been undef'd if FIONREAD is missing. */ #ifdef NO_SOCK_SIGIO if (read_socket_hook) interrupt_input = 0; /* No interrupts if reading from a socket. */ else #endif /* NO_SOCK_SIGIO */ interrupt_input = !NILP (interrupt); #else /* not SIGIO */ interrupt_input = 0; #endif /* not SIGIO */ /* Our VMS input only works by interrupts, as of now. */ #ifdef VMS interrupt_input = 1; #endif flow_control = !NILP (flow); meta_key = !NILP (meta); if (!NILP (quit)) /* Don't let this value be out of range. */ quit_char = XINT (quit) & (meta_key ? 0377 : 0177); init_sys_modes (); return Qnil; } init_keyboard () { /* This is correct before outermost invocation of the editor loop */ command_loop_level = -1; immediate_quit = 0; quit_char = Ctl ('g'); unread_command_events = Qnil; unread_command_char = -1; total_keys = 0; recent_keys_index = 0; kbd_fetch_ptr = kbd_buffer; kbd_store_ptr = kbd_buffer; do_mouse_tracking = 0; input_pending = 0; #ifdef MULTI_FRAME /* This means that command_loop_1 won't try to select anything the first time through. */ internal_last_event_frame = Qnil; Vlast_event_frame = internal_last_event_frame; #endif /* If we're running a dumped Emacs, we need to clear out kbd_buffer_frame_or_window, in case some events got into it before we dumped. If we're running an undumped Emacs, it hasn't been initialized by syms_of_keyboard yet. */ if (initialized) Ffillarray (kbd_buffer_frame_or_window, Qnil); if (!noninteractive) { signal (SIGINT, interrupt_signal); #if defined (HAVE_TERMIO) || defined (HAVE_TERMIOS) /* For systems with SysV TERMIO, C-g is set up for both SIGINT and SIGQUIT and we can't tell which one it will give us. */ signal (SIGQUIT, interrupt_signal); #endif /* HAVE_TERMIO */ /* Note SIGIO has been undef'd if FIONREAD is missing. */ #ifdef SIGIO signal (SIGIO, input_available_signal); #endif /* SIGIO */ } /* Use interrupt input by default, if it works and noninterrupt input has deficiencies. */ #ifdef INTERRUPT_INPUT interrupt_input = 1; #else interrupt_input = 0; #endif /* Our VMS input only works by interrupts, as of now. */ #ifdef VMS interrupt_input = 1; #endif sigfree (); dribble = 0; if (keyboard_init_hook) (*keyboard_init_hook) (); #ifdef POLL_FOR_INPUT poll_suppress_count = 1; start_polling (); #endif } /* This type's only use is in syms_of_keyboard, to initialize the event header symbols and put properties on them. */ struct event_head { Lisp_Object *var; char *name; Lisp_Object *kind; }; struct event_head head_table[] = { &Qmouse_movement, "mouse-movement", &Qmouse_movement, &Qscroll_bar_movement, "scroll-bar-movement", &Qmouse_movement, &Qswitch_frame, "switch-frame", &Qswitch_frame, }; syms_of_keyboard () { Qself_insert_command = intern ("self-insert-command"); staticpro (&Qself_insert_command); Qforward_char = intern ("forward-char"); staticpro (&Qforward_char); Qbackward_char = intern ("backward-char"); staticpro (&Qbackward_char); Qdisabled = intern ("disabled"); staticpro (&Qdisabled); Qpre_command_hook = intern ("pre-command-hook"); staticpro (&Qpre_command_hook); Qpost_command_hook = intern ("post-command-hook"); staticpro (&Qpost_command_hook); Qfunction_key = intern ("function-key"); staticpro (&Qfunction_key); Qmouse_click = intern ("mouse-click"); staticpro (&Qmouse_click); Qmode_line = intern ("mode-line"); staticpro (&Qmode_line); Qvertical_line = intern ("vertical-line"); staticpro (&Qvertical_line); Qvertical_scroll_bar = intern ("vertical-scroll-bar"); staticpro (&Qvertical_scroll_bar); Qmenu_bar = intern ("menu-bar"); staticpro (&Qmenu_bar); Qabove_handle = intern ("above-handle"); staticpro (&Qabove_handle); Qhandle = intern ("handle"); staticpro (&Qhandle); Qbelow_handle = intern ("below-handle"); staticpro (&Qbelow_handle); Qevent_kind = intern ("event-kind"); staticpro (&Qevent_kind); Qevent_symbol_elements = intern ("event-symbol-elements"); staticpro (&Qevent_symbol_elements); Qevent_symbol_element_mask = intern ("event-symbol-element-mask"); staticpro (&Qevent_symbol_element_mask); Qmodifier_cache = intern ("modifier-cache"); staticpro (&Qmodifier_cache); { struct event_head *p; for (p = head_table; p < head_table + (sizeof (head_table) / sizeof (head_table[0])); p++) { *p->var = intern (p->name); staticpro (p->var); Fput (*p->var, Qevent_kind, *p->kind); Fput (*p->var, Qevent_symbol_elements, Fcons (*p->var, Qnil)); } } button_down_location = Fmake_vector (make_number (NUM_MOUSE_BUTTONS), Qnil); staticpro (&button_down_location); { int i; int len = sizeof (modifier_names) / sizeof (modifier_names[0]); modifier_symbols = Fmake_vector (make_number (len), Qnil); for (i = 0; i < len; i++) if (modifier_names[i]) XVECTOR (modifier_symbols)->contents[i] = intern (modifier_names[i]); staticpro (&modifier_symbols); } recent_keys = Fmake_vector (make_number (NUM_RECENT_KEYS), Qnil); staticpro (&recent_keys); this_command_keys = Fmake_vector (make_number (40), Qnil); staticpro (&this_command_keys); kbd_buffer_frame_or_window = Fmake_vector (make_number (KBD_BUFFER_SIZE), Qnil); staticpro (&kbd_buffer_frame_or_window); func_key_syms = Qnil; staticpro (&func_key_syms); mouse_syms = Qnil; staticpro (&mouse_syms); unread_switch_frame = Qnil; staticpro (&unread_switch_frame); defsubr (&Sread_key_sequence); defsubr (&Srecursive_edit); defsubr (&Strack_mouse); defsubr (&Sinput_pending_p); defsubr (&Scommand_execute); defsubr (&Srecent_keys); defsubr (&Sthis_command_keys); defsubr (&Ssuspend_emacs); defsubr (&Sabort_recursive_edit); defsubr (&Sexit_recursive_edit); defsubr (&Srecursion_depth); defsubr (&Stop_level); defsubr (&Sdiscard_input); defsubr (&Sopen_dribble_file); defsubr (&Sset_input_mode); defsubr (&Sexecute_extended_command); DEFVAR_LISP ("disabled-command-hook", &Vdisabled_command_hook, "Value is called instead of any command that is disabled\n\ \(has a non-nil `disabled' property)."); DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command-char", &last_command_char, "Last input event that was part of a command."); DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command-event", &last_command_char, "Last input event that was part of a command."); DEFVAR_LISP ("last-nonmenu-event", &last_nonmenu_event, "Last input event in a command, except for mouse menu events.\n\ Mouse menus give back keys that don't look like mouse events;\n\ this variable holds the actual mouse event that led to the menu,\n\ so that you can determine whether the command was run by mouse or not."); DEFVAR_LISP ("last-input-char", &last_input_char, "Last input event."); DEFVAR_LISP ("last-input-event", &last_input_char, "Last input event."); DEFVAR_LISP ("unread-command-events", &unread_command_events, "List of objects to be read as next command input events."); DEFVAR_INT ("unread-command-char", &unread_command_char, "If not -1, an object to be read as next command input event."); DEFVAR_LISP ("meta-prefix-char", &meta_prefix_char, "Meta-prefix character code. Meta-foo as command input\n\ turns into this character followed by foo."); XSET (meta_prefix_char, Lisp_Int, 033); DEFVAR_LISP ("last-command", &last_command, "The last command executed. Normally a symbol with a function definition,\n\ but can be whatever was found in the keymap, or whatever the variable\n\ `this-command' was set to by that command."); last_command = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("this-command", &this_command, "The command now being executed.\n\ The command can set this variable; whatever is put here\n\ will be in `last-command' during the following command."); this_command = Qnil; DEFVAR_INT ("auto-save-interval", &auto_save_interval, "*Number of keyboard input characters between auto-saves.\n\ Zero means disable autosaving due to number of characters typed."); auto_save_interval = 300; DEFVAR_LISP ("auto-save-timeout", &Vauto_save_timeout, "*Number of seconds idle time before auto-save.\n\ Zero or nil means disable auto-saving due to idleness.\n\ After auto-saving due to this many seconds of idle time,\n\ Emacs also does a garbage collection if that seems to be warranted."); XFASTINT (Vauto_save_timeout) = 30; DEFVAR_INT ("echo-keystrokes", &echo_keystrokes, "*Nonzero means echo unfinished commands after this many seconds of pause."); echo_keystrokes = 1; DEFVAR_INT ("polling-period", &polling_period, "*Interval between polling for input during Lisp execution.\n\ The reason for polling is to make C-g work to stop a running program.\n\ Polling is needed only when using X windows and SIGIO does not work.\n\ Polling is automatically disabled in all other cases."); polling_period = 2; DEFVAR_INT ("num-input-keys", &num_input_keys, "*Number of complete keys read from the keyboard so far."); num_input_keys = 0; #ifdef MULTI_FRAME DEFVAR_LISP ("last-event-frame", &Vlast_event_frame, "*The frame in which the most recently read event occurred.\n\ If the last event came from a keyboard macro, this is set to `macro'."); Vlast_event_frame = Qnil; #endif DEFVAR_LISP ("help-char", &help_char, "Character to recognize as meaning Help.\n\ When it is read, do `(eval help-form)', and display result if it's a string.\n\ If the value of `help-form' is nil, this char can be read normally."); XSET (help_char, Lisp_Int, Ctl ('H')); DEFVAR_LISP ("help-form", &Vhelp_form, "Form to execute when character help-char is read.\n\ If the form returns a string, that string is displayed.\n\ If `help-form' is nil, the help char is not recognized."); Vhelp_form = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("top-level", &Vtop_level, "Form to evaluate when Emacs starts up.\n\ Useful to set before you dump a modified Emacs."); Vtop_level = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("keyboard-translate-table", &Vkeyboard_translate_table, "String used as translate table for keyboard input, or nil.\n\ Each character is looked up in this string and the contents used instead.\n\ If string is of length N, character codes N and up are untranslated."); Vkeyboard_translate_table = Qnil; DEFVAR_BOOL ("menu-prompting", &menu_prompting, "Non-nil means prompt with menus when appropriate.\n\ This is done when reading from a keymap that has a prompt string,\n\ for elements that have prompt strings.\n\ The menu is displayed on the screen\n\ if X menus were enabled at configuration\n\ time and the previous event was a mouse click prefix key.\n\ Otherwise, menu prompting uses the echo area."); menu_prompting = 1; DEFVAR_LISP ("menu-prompt-more-char", &menu_prompt_more_char, "Character to see next line of menu prompt.\n\ Type this character while in a menu prompt to rotate around the lines of it."); XSET (menu_prompt_more_char, Lisp_Int, ' '); DEFVAR_INT ("extra-keyboard-modifiers", &extra_keyboard_modifiers, "A mask of additional modifier keys to use with every keyboard character.\n\ These bits follow the convention for X windows,\n\ but the control and meta bits work even when you are not using X:\n\ 1 -- shift bit 2 -- lock bit\n\ 4 -- control bit 8 -- meta bit."); extra_keyboard_modifiers = 0; DEFVAR_LISP ("deactivate-mark", &Vdeactivate_mark, "If an editing command sets this to t, deactivate the mark afterward.\n\ The command loop sets this to nil before each command,\n\ and tests the value when the command returns.\n\ Buffer modification stores t in this variable."); Vdeactivate_mark = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("pre-command-hook", &Vpre_command_hook, "Normal hook run before each command is executed."); Vpre_command_hook = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("post-command-hook", &Vpost_command_hook, "Normal hook run before each command is executed."); Vpost_command_hook = Qnil; } keys_of_keyboard () { initial_define_key (global_map, Ctl ('Z'), "suspend-emacs"); initial_define_key (control_x_map, Ctl ('Z'), "suspend-emacs"); initial_define_key (meta_map, Ctl ('C'), "exit-recursive-edit"); initial_define_key (global_map, Ctl (']'), "abort-recursive-edit"); initial_define_key (meta_map, 'x', "execute-extended-command"); }