Mercurial > emacs
view src/textprop.c @ 104755:bd9100bc8627
(diary-button-face): Mark this face alias as obsolete.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
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date | Mon, 31 Aug 2009 01:33:58 +0000 |
parents | e038c1a8307c |
children | 68dd71358159 |
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/* Interface code for dealing with text properties. Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "intervals.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "window.h" #ifndef NULL #define NULL (void *)0 #endif /* Test for membership, allowing for t (actually any non-cons) to mean the universal set. */ #define TMEM(sym, set) (CONSP (set) ? ! NILP (Fmemq (sym, set)) : ! NILP (set)) /* NOTES: previous- and next- property change will have to skip zero-length intervals if they are implemented. This could be done inside next_interval and previous_interval. set_properties needs to deal with the interval property cache. It is assumed that for any interval plist, a property appears only once on the list. Although some code i.e., remove_properties, handles the more general case, the uniqueness of properties is necessary for the system to remain consistent. This requirement is enforced by the subrs installing properties onto the intervals. */ /* Types of hooks. */ Lisp_Object Qmouse_left; Lisp_Object Qmouse_entered; Lisp_Object Qpoint_left; Lisp_Object Qpoint_entered; Lisp_Object Qcategory; Lisp_Object Qlocal_map; /* Visual properties text (including strings) may have. */ Lisp_Object Qforeground, Qbackground, Qfont, Qunderline, Qstipple; Lisp_Object Qinvisible, Qread_only, Qintangible, Qmouse_face; Lisp_Object Qminibuffer_prompt; /* Sticky properties */ Lisp_Object Qfront_sticky, Qrear_nonsticky; /* If o1 is a cons whose cdr is a cons, return non-zero and set o2 to the o1's cdr. Otherwise, return zero. This is handy for traversing plists. */ #define PLIST_ELT_P(o1, o2) (CONSP (o1) && ((o2)=XCDR (o1), CONSP (o2))) Lisp_Object Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks; Lisp_Object Vdefault_text_properties; Lisp_Object Vchar_property_alias_alist; Lisp_Object Vtext_property_default_nonsticky; /* verify_interval_modification saves insertion hooks here to be run later by report_interval_modification. */ Lisp_Object interval_insert_behind_hooks; Lisp_Object interval_insert_in_front_hooks; static void text_read_only P_ ((Lisp_Object)) NO_RETURN; /* Signal a `text-read-only' error. This function makes it easier to capture that error in GDB by putting a breakpoint on it. */ static void text_read_only (propval) Lisp_Object propval; { if (STRINGP (propval)) xsignal1 (Qtext_read_only, propval); xsignal0 (Qtext_read_only); } /* Extract the interval at the position pointed to by BEGIN from OBJECT, a string or buffer. Additionally, check that the positions pointed to by BEGIN and END are within the bounds of OBJECT, and reverse them if *BEGIN is greater than *END. The objects pointed to by BEGIN and END may be integers or markers; if the latter, they are coerced to integers. When OBJECT is a string, we increment *BEGIN and *END to make them origin-one. Note that buffer points don't correspond to interval indices. For example, point-max is 1 greater than the index of the last character. This difference is handled in the caller, which uses the validated points to determine a length, and operates on that. Exceptions are Ftext_properties_at, Fnext_property_change, and Fprevious_property_change which call this function with BEGIN == END. Handle this case specially. If FORCE is soft (0), it's OK to return NULL_INTERVAL. Otherwise, create an interval tree for OBJECT if one doesn't exist, provided the object actually contains text. In the current design, if there is no text, there can be no text properties. */ #define soft 0 #define hard 1 INTERVAL validate_interval_range (object, begin, end, force) Lisp_Object object, *begin, *end; int force; { register INTERVAL i; int searchpos; CHECK_STRING_OR_BUFFER (object); CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (*begin); CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (*end); /* If we are asked for a point, but from a subr which operates on a range, then return nothing. */ if (EQ (*begin, *end) && begin != end) return NULL_INTERVAL; if (XINT (*begin) > XINT (*end)) { Lisp_Object n; n = *begin; *begin = *end; *end = n; } if (BUFFERP (object)) { register struct buffer *b = XBUFFER (object); if (!(BUF_BEGV (b) <= XINT (*begin) && XINT (*begin) <= XINT (*end) && XINT (*end) <= BUF_ZV (b))) args_out_of_range (*begin, *end); i = BUF_INTERVALS (b); /* If there's no text, there are no properties. */ if (BUF_BEGV (b) == BUF_ZV (b)) return NULL_INTERVAL; searchpos = XINT (*begin); } else { int len = SCHARS (object); if (! (0 <= XINT (*begin) && XINT (*begin) <= XINT (*end) && XINT (*end) <= len)) args_out_of_range (*begin, *end); XSETFASTINT (*begin, XFASTINT (*begin)); if (begin != end) XSETFASTINT (*end, XFASTINT (*end)); i = STRING_INTERVALS (object); if (len == 0) return NULL_INTERVAL; searchpos = XINT (*begin); } if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return (force ? create_root_interval (object) : i); return find_interval (i, searchpos); } /* Validate LIST as a property list. If LIST is not a list, then make one consisting of (LIST nil). Otherwise, verify that LIST is even numbered and thus suitable as a plist. */ static Lisp_Object validate_plist (list) Lisp_Object list; { if (NILP (list)) return Qnil; if (CONSP (list)) { register int i; register Lisp_Object tail; for (i = 0, tail = list; CONSP (tail); i++) { tail = XCDR (tail); QUIT; } if (i & 1) error ("Odd length text property list"); return list; } return Fcons (list, Fcons (Qnil, Qnil)); } /* Return nonzero if interval I has all the properties, with the same values, of list PLIST. */ static int interval_has_all_properties (plist, i) Lisp_Object plist; INTERVAL i; { register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym1; register int found; /* Go through each element of PLIST. */ for (tail1 = plist; CONSP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (XCDR (tail1))) { sym1 = XCAR (tail1); found = 0; /* Go through I's plist, looking for sym1 */ for (tail2 = i->plist; CONSP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (XCDR (tail2))) if (EQ (sym1, XCAR (tail2))) { /* Found the same property on both lists. If the values are unequal, return zero. */ if (! EQ (Fcar (XCDR (tail1)), Fcar (XCDR (tail2)))) return 0; /* Property has same value on both lists; go to next one. */ found = 1; break; } if (! found) return 0; } return 1; } /* Return nonzero if the plist of interval I has any of the properties of PLIST, regardless of their values. */ static INLINE int interval_has_some_properties (plist, i) Lisp_Object plist; INTERVAL i; { register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym; /* Go through each element of PLIST. */ for (tail1 = plist; CONSP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (XCDR (tail1))) { sym = XCAR (tail1); /* Go through i's plist, looking for tail1 */ for (tail2 = i->plist; CONSP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (XCDR (tail2))) if (EQ (sym, XCAR (tail2))) return 1; } return 0; } /* Return nonzero if the plist of interval I has any of the property names in LIST, regardless of their values. */ static INLINE int interval_has_some_properties_list (list, i) Lisp_Object list; INTERVAL i; { register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym; /* Go through each element of LIST. */ for (tail1 = list; CONSP (tail1); tail1 = XCDR (tail1)) { sym = Fcar (tail1); /* Go through i's plist, looking for tail1 */ for (tail2 = i->plist; CONSP (tail2); tail2 = XCDR (XCDR (tail2))) if (EQ (sym, XCAR (tail2))) return 1; } return 0; } /* Changing the plists of individual intervals. */ /* Return the value of PROP in property-list PLIST, or Qunbound if it has none. */ static Lisp_Object property_value (plist, prop) Lisp_Object plist, prop; { Lisp_Object value; while (PLIST_ELT_P (plist, value)) if (EQ (XCAR (plist), prop)) return XCAR (value); else plist = XCDR (value); return Qunbound; } /* Set the properties of INTERVAL to PROPERTIES, and record undo info for the previous values. OBJECT is the string or buffer that INTERVAL belongs to. */ static void set_properties (properties, interval, object) Lisp_Object properties, object; INTERVAL interval; { Lisp_Object sym, value; if (BUFFERP (object)) { /* For each property in the old plist which is missing from PROPERTIES, or has a different value in PROPERTIES, make an undo record. */ for (sym = interval->plist; PLIST_ELT_P (sym, value); sym = XCDR (value)) if (! EQ (property_value (properties, XCAR (sym)), XCAR (value))) { record_property_change (interval->position, LENGTH (interval), XCAR (sym), XCAR (value), object); } /* For each new property that has no value at all in the old plist, make an undo record binding it to nil, so it will be removed. */ for (sym = properties; PLIST_ELT_P (sym, value); sym = XCDR (value)) if (EQ (property_value (interval->plist, XCAR (sym)), Qunbound)) { record_property_change (interval->position, LENGTH (interval), XCAR (sym), Qnil, object); } } /* Store new properties. */ interval->plist = Fcopy_sequence (properties); } /* Add the properties of PLIST to the interval I, or set the value of I's property to the value of the property on PLIST if they are different. OBJECT should be the string or buffer the interval is in. Return nonzero if this changes I (i.e., if any members of PLIST are actually added to I's plist) */ static int add_properties (plist, i, object) Lisp_Object plist; INTERVAL i; Lisp_Object object; { Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym1, val1; register int changed = 0; register int found; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2, gcpro3; tail1 = plist; sym1 = Qnil; val1 = Qnil; /* No need to protect OBJECT, because we can GC only in the case where it is a buffer, and live buffers are always protected. I and its plist are also protected, via OBJECT. */ GCPRO3 (tail1, sym1, val1); /* Go through each element of PLIST. */ for (tail1 = plist; CONSP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (XCDR (tail1))) { sym1 = XCAR (tail1); val1 = Fcar (XCDR (tail1)); found = 0; /* Go through I's plist, looking for sym1 */ for (tail2 = i->plist; CONSP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (XCDR (tail2))) if (EQ (sym1, XCAR (tail2))) { /* No need to gcpro, because tail2 protects this and it must be a cons cell (we get an error otherwise). */ register Lisp_Object this_cdr; this_cdr = XCDR (tail2); /* Found the property. Now check its value. */ found = 1; /* The properties have the same value on both lists. Continue to the next property. */ if (EQ (val1, Fcar (this_cdr))) break; /* Record this change in the buffer, for undo purposes. */ if (BUFFERP (object)) { record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i), sym1, Fcar (this_cdr), object); } /* I's property has a different value -- change it */ Fsetcar (this_cdr, val1); changed++; break; } if (! found) { /* Record this change in the buffer, for undo purposes. */ if (BUFFERP (object)) { record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i), sym1, Qnil, object); } i->plist = Fcons (sym1, Fcons (val1, i->plist)); changed++; } } UNGCPRO; return changed; } /* For any members of PLIST, or LIST, which are properties of I, remove them from I's plist. (If PLIST is non-nil, use that, otherwise use LIST.) OBJECT is the string or buffer containing I. */ static int remove_properties (plist, list, i, object) Lisp_Object plist, list; INTERVAL i; Lisp_Object object; { register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym, current_plist; register int changed = 0; /* Nonzero means tail1 is a plist, otherwise it is a list. */ int use_plist; current_plist = i->plist; if (! NILP (plist)) tail1 = plist, use_plist = 1; else tail1 = list, use_plist = 0; /* Go through each element of LIST or PLIST. */ while (CONSP (tail1)) { sym = XCAR (tail1); /* First, remove the symbol if it's at the head of the list */ while (CONSP (current_plist) && EQ (sym, XCAR (current_plist))) { if (BUFFERP (object)) record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i), sym, XCAR (XCDR (current_plist)), object); current_plist = XCDR (XCDR (current_plist)); changed++; } /* Go through I's plist, looking for SYM. */ tail2 = current_plist; while (! NILP (tail2)) { register Lisp_Object this; this = XCDR (XCDR (tail2)); if (CONSP (this) && EQ (sym, XCAR (this))) { if (BUFFERP (object)) record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i), sym, XCAR (XCDR (this)), object); Fsetcdr (XCDR (tail2), XCDR (XCDR (this))); changed++; } tail2 = this; } /* Advance thru TAIL1 one way or the other. */ tail1 = XCDR (tail1); if (use_plist && CONSP (tail1)) tail1 = XCDR (tail1); } if (changed) i->plist = current_plist; return changed; } #if 0 /* Remove all properties from interval I. Return non-zero if this changes the interval. */ static INLINE int erase_properties (i) INTERVAL i; { if (NILP (i->plist)) return 0; i->plist = Qnil; return 1; } #endif /* Returns the interval of POSITION in OBJECT. POSITION is BEG-based. */ INTERVAL interval_of (position, object) int position; Lisp_Object object; { register INTERVAL i; int beg, end; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); else if (EQ (object, Qt)) return NULL_INTERVAL; CHECK_STRING_OR_BUFFER (object); if (BUFFERP (object)) { register struct buffer *b = XBUFFER (object); beg = BUF_BEGV (b); end = BUF_ZV (b); i = BUF_INTERVALS (b); } else { beg = 0; end = SCHARS (object); i = STRING_INTERVALS (object); } if (!(beg <= position && position <= end)) args_out_of_range (make_number (position), make_number (position)); if (beg == end || NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return NULL_INTERVAL; return find_interval (i, position); } DEFUN ("text-properties-at", Ftext_properties_at, Stext_properties_at, 1, 2, 0, doc: /* Return the list of properties of the character at POSITION in OBJECT. If the optional second argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil. */) (position, object) Lisp_Object position, object; { register INTERVAL i; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return Qnil; /* If POSITION is at the end of the interval, it means it's the end of OBJECT. There are no properties at the very end, since no character follows. */ if (XINT (position) == LENGTH (i) + i->position) return Qnil; return i->plist; } DEFUN ("get-text-property", Fget_text_property, Sget_text_property, 2, 3, 0, doc: /* Return the value of POSITION's property PROP, in OBJECT. OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer. If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil. */) (position, prop, object) Lisp_Object position, object; Lisp_Object prop; { return textget (Ftext_properties_at (position, object), prop); } /* Return the value of char's property PROP, in OBJECT at POSITION. OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer. If OVERLAY is non-0, then in the case that the returned property is from an overlay, the overlay found is returned in *OVERLAY, otherwise nil is returned in *OVERLAY. If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil. If OBJECT is a buffer, then overlay properties are considered as well as text properties. If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but window-specific overlays are considered only if they are associated with OBJECT. */ Lisp_Object get_char_property_and_overlay (position, prop, object, overlay) Lisp_Object position, object; register Lisp_Object prop; Lisp_Object *overlay; { struct window *w = 0; CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position); if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); if (WINDOWP (object)) { w = XWINDOW (object); object = w->buffer; } if (BUFFERP (object)) { int noverlays; Lisp_Object *overlay_vec; struct buffer *obuf = current_buffer; if (XINT (position) < BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object)) || XINT (position) > BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object))) xsignal1 (Qargs_out_of_range, position); set_buffer_temp (XBUFFER (object)); GET_OVERLAYS_AT (XINT (position), overlay_vec, noverlays, NULL, 0); noverlays = sort_overlays (overlay_vec, noverlays, w); set_buffer_temp (obuf); /* Now check the overlays in order of decreasing priority. */ while (--noverlays >= 0) { Lisp_Object tem = Foverlay_get (overlay_vec[noverlays], prop); if (!NILP (tem)) { if (overlay) /* Return the overlay we got the property from. */ *overlay = overlay_vec[noverlays]; return tem; } } } if (overlay) /* Indicate that the return value is not from an overlay. */ *overlay = Qnil; /* Not a buffer, or no appropriate overlay, so fall through to the simpler case. */ return Fget_text_property (position, prop, object); } DEFUN ("get-char-property", Fget_char_property, Sget_char_property, 2, 3, 0, doc: /* Return the value of POSITION's property PROP, in OBJECT. Both overlay properties and text properties are checked. OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer. If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil. If OBJECT is a buffer, then overlay properties are considered as well as text properties. If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but window-specific overlays are considered only if they are associated with OBJECT. */) (position, prop, object) Lisp_Object position, object; register Lisp_Object prop; { return get_char_property_and_overlay (position, prop, object, 0); } DEFUN ("get-char-property-and-overlay", Fget_char_property_and_overlay, Sget_char_property_and_overlay, 2, 3, 0, doc: /* Like `get-char-property', but with extra overlay information. The value is a cons cell. Its car is the return value of `get-char-property' with the same arguments--that is, the value of POSITION's property PROP in OBJECT. Its cdr is the overlay in which the property was found, or nil, if it was found as a text property or not found at all. OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer. OBJECT may be a string, a buffer or a window. For strings, the cdr of the return value is always nil, since strings do not have overlays. If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but window-specific overlays are considered only if they are associated with OBJECT. If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, both car and cdr are nil. */) (position, prop, object) Lisp_Object position, object; register Lisp_Object prop; { Lisp_Object overlay; Lisp_Object val = get_char_property_and_overlay (position, prop, object, &overlay); return Fcons (val, overlay); } DEFUN ("next-char-property-change", Fnext_char_property_change, Snext_char_property_change, 1, 2, 0, doc: /* Return the position of next text property or overlay change. This scans characters forward in the current buffer from POSITION till it finds a change in some text property, or the beginning or end of an overlay, and returns the position of that. If none is found up to (point-max), the function returns (point-max). If the optional second argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. LIMIT is a no-op if it is greater than (point-max). */) (position, limit) Lisp_Object position, limit; { Lisp_Object temp; temp = Fnext_overlay_change (position); if (! NILP (limit)) { CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); if (XINT (limit) < XINT (temp)) temp = limit; } return Fnext_property_change (position, Qnil, temp); } DEFUN ("previous-char-property-change", Fprevious_char_property_change, Sprevious_char_property_change, 1, 2, 0, doc: /* Return the position of previous text property or overlay change. Scans characters backward in the current buffer from POSITION till it finds a change in some text property, or the beginning or end of an overlay, and returns the position of that. If none is found since (point-min), the function returns (point-min). If the optional second argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. LIMIT is a no-op if it is less than (point-min). */) (position, limit) Lisp_Object position, limit; { Lisp_Object temp; temp = Fprevious_overlay_change (position); if (! NILP (limit)) { CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); if (XINT (limit) > XINT (temp)) temp = limit; } return Fprevious_property_change (position, Qnil, temp); } DEFUN ("next-single-char-property-change", Fnext_single_char_property_change, Snext_single_char_property_change, 2, 4, 0, doc: /* Return the position of next text property or overlay change for a specific property. Scans characters forward from POSITION till it finds a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change. If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. In a string, scan runs to the end of the string. In a buffer, it runs to (point-max), and the value cannot exceed that. The property values are compared with `eq'. If the property is constant all the way to the end of OBJECT, return the last valid position in OBJECT. If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */) (position, prop, object, limit) Lisp_Object prop, position, object, limit; { if (STRINGP (object)) { position = Fnext_single_property_change (position, prop, object, limit); if (NILP (position)) { if (NILP (limit)) position = make_number (SCHARS (object)); else { CHECK_NUMBER (limit); position = limit; } } } else { Lisp_Object initial_value, value; int count = SPECPDL_INDEX (); if (! NILP (object)) CHECK_BUFFER (object); if (BUFFERP (object) && current_buffer != XBUFFER (object)) { record_unwind_protect (Fset_buffer, Fcurrent_buffer ()); Fset_buffer (object); } CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position); initial_value = Fget_char_property (position, prop, object); if (NILP (limit)) XSETFASTINT (limit, ZV); else CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); if (XFASTINT (position) >= XFASTINT (limit)) { position = limit; if (XFASTINT (position) > ZV) XSETFASTINT (position, ZV); } else while (1) { position = Fnext_char_property_change (position, limit); if (XFASTINT (position) >= XFASTINT (limit)) { position = limit; break; } value = Fget_char_property (position, prop, object); if (!EQ (value, initial_value)) break; } unbind_to (count, Qnil); } return position; } DEFUN ("previous-single-char-property-change", Fprevious_single_char_property_change, Sprevious_single_char_property_change, 2, 4, 0, doc: /* Return the position of previous text property or overlay change for a specific property. Scans characters backward from POSITION till it finds a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change. If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. In a string, scan runs to the start of the string. In a buffer, it runs to (point-min), and the value cannot be less than that. The property values are compared with `eq'. If the property is constant all the way to the start of OBJECT, return the first valid position in OBJECT. If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search back past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */) (position, prop, object, limit) Lisp_Object prop, position, object, limit; { if (STRINGP (object)) { position = Fprevious_single_property_change (position, prop, object, limit); if (NILP (position)) { if (NILP (limit)) position = make_number (0); else { CHECK_NUMBER (limit); position = limit; } } } else { int count = SPECPDL_INDEX (); if (! NILP (object)) CHECK_BUFFER (object); if (BUFFERP (object) && current_buffer != XBUFFER (object)) { record_unwind_protect (Fset_buffer, Fcurrent_buffer ()); Fset_buffer (object); } CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position); if (NILP (limit)) XSETFASTINT (limit, BEGV); else CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); if (XFASTINT (position) <= XFASTINT (limit)) { position = limit; if (XFASTINT (position) < BEGV) XSETFASTINT (position, BEGV); } else { Lisp_Object initial_value = Fget_char_property (make_number (XFASTINT (position) - 1), prop, object); while (1) { position = Fprevious_char_property_change (position, limit); if (XFASTINT (position) <= XFASTINT (limit)) { position = limit; break; } else { Lisp_Object value = Fget_char_property (make_number (XFASTINT (position) - 1), prop, object); if (!EQ (value, initial_value)) break; } } } unbind_to (count, Qnil); } return position; } DEFUN ("next-property-change", Fnext_property_change, Snext_property_change, 1, 3, 0, doc: /* Return the position of next property change. Scans characters forward from POSITION in OBJECT till it finds a change in some text property, then returns the position of the change. If the optional second argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the end of OBJECT. If the value is non-nil, it is a position greater than POSITION, never equal. If the optional third argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */) (position, object, limit) Lisp_Object position, object, limit; { register INTERVAL i, next; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); if (!NILP (limit) && !EQ (limit, Qt)) CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft); /* If LIMIT is t, return start of next interval--don't bother checking further intervals. */ if (EQ (limit, Qt)) { if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) next = i; else next = next_interval (i); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next)) XSETFASTINT (position, (STRINGP (object) ? SCHARS (object) : BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object)))); else XSETFASTINT (position, next->position); return position; } if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return limit; next = next_interval (i); while (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) && intervals_equal (i, next) && (NILP (limit) || next->position < XFASTINT (limit))) next = next_interval (next); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) || (next->position >= (INTEGERP (limit) ? XFASTINT (limit) : (STRINGP (object) ? SCHARS (object) : BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object)))))) return limit; else return make_number (next->position); } /* Return 1 if there's a change in some property between BEG and END. */ int property_change_between_p (beg, end) int beg, end; { register INTERVAL i, next; Lisp_Object object, pos; XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); XSETFASTINT (pos, beg); i = validate_interval_range (object, &pos, &pos, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return 0; next = next_interval (i); while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) && intervals_equal (i, next)) { next = next_interval (next); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next)) return 0; if (next->position >= end) return 0; } if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next)) return 0; return 1; } DEFUN ("next-single-property-change", Fnext_single_property_change, Snext_single_property_change, 2, 4, 0, doc: /* Return the position of next property change for a specific property. Scans characters forward from POSITION till it finds a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change. If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. The property values are compared with `eq'. Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the end of OBJECT. If the value is non-nil, it is a position greater than POSITION, never equal. If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */) (position, prop, object, limit) Lisp_Object position, prop, object, limit; { register INTERVAL i, next; register Lisp_Object here_val; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); if (!NILP (limit)) CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return limit; here_val = textget (i->plist, prop); next = next_interval (i); while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) && EQ (here_val, textget (next->plist, prop)) && (NILP (limit) || next->position < XFASTINT (limit))) next = next_interval (next); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) || (next->position >= (INTEGERP (limit) ? XFASTINT (limit) : (STRINGP (object) ? SCHARS (object) : BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object)))))) return limit; else return make_number (next->position); } DEFUN ("previous-property-change", Fprevious_property_change, Sprevious_property_change, 1, 3, 0, doc: /* Return the position of previous property change. Scans characters backwards from POSITION in OBJECT till it finds a change in some text property, then returns the position of the change. If the optional second argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the start of OBJECT. If the value is non-nil, it is a position less than POSITION, never equal. If the optional third argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search back past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found until LIMIT. */) (position, object, limit) Lisp_Object position, object, limit; { register INTERVAL i, previous; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); if (!NILP (limit)) CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return limit; /* Start with the interval containing the char before point. */ if (i->position == XFASTINT (position)) i = previous_interval (i); previous = previous_interval (i); while (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous) && intervals_equal (previous, i) && (NILP (limit) || (previous->position + LENGTH (previous) > XFASTINT (limit)))) previous = previous_interval (previous); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous) || (previous->position + LENGTH (previous) <= (INTEGERP (limit) ? XFASTINT (limit) : (STRINGP (object) ? 0 : BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object)))))) return limit; else return make_number (previous->position + LENGTH (previous)); } DEFUN ("previous-single-property-change", Fprevious_single_property_change, Sprevious_single_property_change, 2, 4, 0, doc: /* Return the position of previous property change for a specific property. Scans characters backward from POSITION till it finds a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change. If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker). If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it. The property values are compared with `eq'. Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the start of OBJECT. If the value is non-nil, it is a position less than POSITION, never equal. If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search back past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found until LIMIT. */) (position, prop, object, limit) Lisp_Object position, prop, object, limit; { register INTERVAL i, previous; register Lisp_Object here_val; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); if (!NILP (limit)) CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit); i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft); /* Start with the interval containing the char before point. */ if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) && i->position == XFASTINT (position)) i = previous_interval (i); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return limit; here_val = textget (i->plist, prop); previous = previous_interval (i); while (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous) && EQ (here_val, textget (previous->plist, prop)) && (NILP (limit) || (previous->position + LENGTH (previous) > XFASTINT (limit)))) previous = previous_interval (previous); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous) || (previous->position + LENGTH (previous) <= (INTEGERP (limit) ? XFASTINT (limit) : (STRINGP (object) ? 0 : BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object)))))) return limit; else return make_number (previous->position + LENGTH (previous)); } /* Callers note, this can GC when OBJECT is a buffer (or nil). */ DEFUN ("add-text-properties", Fadd_text_properties, Sadd_text_properties, 3, 4, 0, doc: /* Add properties to the text from START to END. The third argument PROPERTIES is a property list specifying the property values to add. If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. Return t if any property value actually changed, nil otherwise. */) (start, end, properties, object) Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object; { register INTERVAL i, unchanged; register int s, len, modified = 0; struct gcpro gcpro1; properties = validate_plist (properties); if (NILP (properties)) return Qnil; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, hard); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return Qnil; s = XINT (start); len = XINT (end) - s; /* No need to protect OBJECT, because we GC only if it's a buffer, and live buffers are always protected. */ GCPRO1 (properties); /* If we're not starting on an interval boundary, we have to split this interval. */ if (i->position != s) { /* If this interval already has the properties, we can skip it. */ if (interval_has_all_properties (properties, i)) { int got = (LENGTH (i) - (s - i->position)); if (got >= len) RETURN_UNGCPRO (Qnil); len -= got; i = next_interval (i); } else { unchanged = i; i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position); copy_properties (unchanged, i); } } if (BUFFERP (object)) modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end), 1); /* We are at the beginning of interval I, with LEN chars to scan. */ for (;;) { if (i == 0) abort (); if (LENGTH (i) >= len) { /* We can UNGCPRO safely here, because there will be just one more chance to gc, in the next call to add_properties, and after that we will not need PROPERTIES or OBJECT again. */ UNGCPRO; if (interval_has_all_properties (properties, i)) { if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return modified ? Qt : Qnil; } if (LENGTH (i) == len) { add_properties (properties, i, object); if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } /* i doesn't have the properties, and goes past the change limit */ unchanged = i; i = split_interval_left (unchanged, len); copy_properties (unchanged, i); add_properties (properties, i, object); if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } len -= LENGTH (i); modified += add_properties (properties, i, object); i = next_interval (i); } } /* Callers note, this can GC when OBJECT is a buffer (or nil). */ DEFUN ("put-text-property", Fput_text_property, Sput_text_property, 4, 5, 0, doc: /* Set one property of the text from START to END. The third and fourth arguments PROPERTY and VALUE specify the property to add. If the optional fifth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. */) (start, end, property, value, object) Lisp_Object start, end, property, value, object; { Fadd_text_properties (start, end, Fcons (property, Fcons (value, Qnil)), object); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("set-text-properties", Fset_text_properties, Sset_text_properties, 3, 4, 0, doc: /* Completely replace properties of text from START to END. The third argument PROPERTIES is the new property list. If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. If PROPERTIES is nil, the effect is to remove all properties from the designated part of OBJECT. */) (start, end, properties, object) Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object; { return set_text_properties (start, end, properties, object, Qt); } /* Replace properties of text from START to END with new list of properties PROPERTIES. OBJECT is the buffer or string containing the text. OBJECT nil means use the current buffer. SIGNAL_AFTER_CHANGE_P nil means don't signal after changes. Value is nil if the function _detected_ that it did not replace any properties, non-nil otherwise. */ Lisp_Object set_text_properties (start, end, properties, object, signal_after_change_p) Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object, signal_after_change_p; { register INTERVAL i; Lisp_Object ostart, oend; ostart = start; oend = end; properties = validate_plist (properties); if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); /* If we want no properties for a whole string, get rid of its intervals. */ if (NILP (properties) && STRINGP (object) && XFASTINT (start) == 0 && XFASTINT (end) == SCHARS (object)) { if (! STRING_INTERVALS (object)) return Qnil; STRING_SET_INTERVALS (object, NULL_INTERVAL); return Qt; } i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) { /* If buffer has no properties, and we want none, return now. */ if (NILP (properties)) return Qnil; /* Restore the original START and END values because validate_interval_range increments them for strings. */ start = ostart; end = oend; i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, hard); /* This can return if start == end. */ if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return Qnil; } if (BUFFERP (object)) modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end), 1); set_text_properties_1 (start, end, properties, object, i); if (BUFFERP (object) && !NILP (signal_after_change_p)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } /* Replace properties of text from START to END with new list of properties PROPERTIES. BUFFER is the buffer containing the text. This does not obey any hooks. You can provide the interval that START is located in as I, or pass NULL for I and this function will find it. START and END can be in any order. */ void set_text_properties_1 (start, end, properties, buffer, i) Lisp_Object start, end, properties, buffer; INTERVAL i; { register INTERVAL prev_changed = NULL_INTERVAL; register int s, len; INTERVAL unchanged; s = XINT (start); len = XINT (end) - s; if (len == 0) return; if (len < 0) { s = s + len; len = - len; } if (i == 0) i = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (XBUFFER (buffer)), s); if (i->position != s) { unchanged = i; i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position); if (LENGTH (i) > len) { copy_properties (unchanged, i); i = split_interval_left (i, len); set_properties (properties, i, buffer); return; } set_properties (properties, i, buffer); if (LENGTH (i) == len) return; prev_changed = i; len -= LENGTH (i); i = next_interval (i); } /* We are starting at the beginning of an interval, I */ while (len > 0) { if (i == 0) abort (); if (LENGTH (i) >= len) { if (LENGTH (i) > len) i = split_interval_left (i, len); /* We have to call set_properties even if we are going to merge the intervals, so as to make the undo records and cause redisplay to happen. */ set_properties (properties, i, buffer); if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev_changed)) merge_interval_left (i); return; } len -= LENGTH (i); /* We have to call set_properties even if we are going to merge the intervals, so as to make the undo records and cause redisplay to happen. */ set_properties (properties, i, buffer); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev_changed)) prev_changed = i; else prev_changed = i = merge_interval_left (i); i = next_interval (i); } } DEFUN ("remove-text-properties", Fremove_text_properties, Sremove_text_properties, 3, 4, 0, doc: /* Remove some properties from text from START to END. The third argument PROPERTIES is a property list whose property names specify the properties to remove. \(The values stored in PROPERTIES are ignored.) If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. Return t if any property was actually removed, nil otherwise. Use `set-text-properties' if you want to remove all text properties. */) (start, end, properties, object) Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object; { register INTERVAL i, unchanged; register int s, len, modified = 0; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return Qnil; s = XINT (start); len = XINT (end) - s; if (i->position != s) { /* No properties on this first interval -- return if it covers the entire region. */ if (! interval_has_some_properties (properties, i)) { int got = (LENGTH (i) - (s - i->position)); if (got >= len) return Qnil; len -= got; i = next_interval (i); } /* Split away the beginning of this interval; what we don't want to modify. */ else { unchanged = i; i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position); copy_properties (unchanged, i); } } if (BUFFERP (object)) modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end), 1); /* We are at the beginning of an interval, with len to scan */ for (;;) { if (i == 0) abort (); if (LENGTH (i) >= len) { if (! interval_has_some_properties (properties, i)) return modified ? Qt : Qnil; if (LENGTH (i) == len) { remove_properties (properties, Qnil, i, object); if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } /* i has the properties, and goes past the change limit */ unchanged = i; i = split_interval_left (i, len); copy_properties (unchanged, i); remove_properties (properties, Qnil, i, object); if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } len -= LENGTH (i); modified += remove_properties (properties, Qnil, i, object); i = next_interval (i); } } DEFUN ("remove-list-of-text-properties", Fremove_list_of_text_properties, Sremove_list_of_text_properties, 3, 4, 0, doc: /* Remove some properties from text from START to END. The third argument LIST-OF-PROPERTIES is a list of property names to remove. If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. Return t if any property was actually removed, nil otherwise. */) (start, end, list_of_properties, object) Lisp_Object start, end, list_of_properties, object; { register INTERVAL i, unchanged; register int s, len, modified = 0; Lisp_Object properties; properties = list_of_properties; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return Qnil; s = XINT (start); len = XINT (end) - s; if (i->position != s) { /* No properties on this first interval -- return if it covers the entire region. */ if (! interval_has_some_properties_list (properties, i)) { int got = (LENGTH (i) - (s - i->position)); if (got >= len) return Qnil; len -= got; i = next_interval (i); } /* Split away the beginning of this interval; what we don't want to modify. */ else { unchanged = i; i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position); copy_properties (unchanged, i); } } /* We are at the beginning of an interval, with len to scan. The flag `modified' records if changes have been made. When object is a buffer, we must call modify_region before changes are made and signal_after_change when we are done. We call modify_region before calling remove_properties if modified == 0, and we call signal_after_change before returning if modified != 0. */ for (;;) { if (i == 0) abort (); if (LENGTH (i) >= len) { if (! interval_has_some_properties_list (properties, i)) if (modified) { if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } else return Qnil; if (LENGTH (i) == len) { if (!modified && BUFFERP (object)) modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end), 1); remove_properties (Qnil, properties, i, object); if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } /* i has the properties, and goes past the change limit */ unchanged = i; i = split_interval_left (i, len); copy_properties (unchanged, i); if (!modified && BUFFERP (object)) modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end), 1); remove_properties (Qnil, properties, i, object); if (BUFFERP (object)) signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start)); return Qt; } if (interval_has_some_properties_list (properties, i)) { if (!modified && BUFFERP (object)) modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end), 1); remove_properties (Qnil, properties, i, object); modified = 1; } len -= LENGTH (i); i = next_interval (i); } } DEFUN ("text-property-any", Ftext_property_any, Stext_property_any, 4, 5, 0, doc: /* Check text from START to END for property PROPERTY equalling VALUE. If so, return the position of the first character whose property PROPERTY is `eq' to VALUE. Otherwise return nil. If the optional fifth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. */) (start, end, property, value, object) Lisp_Object start, end, property, value, object; { register INTERVAL i; register int e, pos; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return (!NILP (value) || EQ (start, end) ? Qnil : start); e = XINT (end); while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) { if (i->position >= e) break; if (EQ (textget (i->plist, property), value)) { pos = i->position; if (pos < XINT (start)) pos = XINT (start); return make_number (pos); } i = next_interval (i); } return Qnil; } DEFUN ("text-property-not-all", Ftext_property_not_all, Stext_property_not_all, 4, 5, 0, doc: /* Check text from START to END for property PROPERTY not equalling VALUE. If so, return the position of the first character whose property PROPERTY is not `eq' to VALUE. Otherwise, return nil. If the optional fifth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. */) (start, end, property, value, object) Lisp_Object start, end, property, value, object; { register INTERVAL i; register int s, e; if (NILP (object)) XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer); i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return (NILP (value) || EQ (start, end)) ? Qnil : start; s = XINT (start); e = XINT (end); while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) { if (i->position >= e) break; if (! EQ (textget (i->plist, property), value)) { if (i->position > s) s = i->position; return make_number (s); } i = next_interval (i); } return Qnil; } /* Return the direction from which the text-property PROP would be inherited by any new text inserted at POS: 1 if it would be inherited from the char after POS, -1 if it would be inherited from the char before POS, and 0 if from neither. BUFFER can be either a buffer or nil (meaning current buffer). */ int text_property_stickiness (prop, pos, buffer) Lisp_Object prop, pos, buffer; { Lisp_Object prev_pos, front_sticky; int is_rear_sticky = 1, is_front_sticky = 0; /* defaults */ if (NILP (buffer)) XSETBUFFER (buffer, current_buffer); if (XINT (pos) > BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (buffer))) /* Consider previous character. */ { Lisp_Object rear_non_sticky; prev_pos = make_number (XINT (pos) - 1); rear_non_sticky = Fget_text_property (prev_pos, Qrear_nonsticky, buffer); if (!NILP (CONSP (rear_non_sticky) ? Fmemq (prop, rear_non_sticky) : rear_non_sticky)) /* PROP is rear-non-sticky. */ is_rear_sticky = 0; } else return 0; /* Consider following character. */ /* This signals an arg-out-of-range error if pos is outside the buffer's accessible range. */ front_sticky = Fget_text_property (pos, Qfront_sticky, buffer); if (EQ (front_sticky, Qt) || (CONSP (front_sticky) && !NILP (Fmemq (prop, front_sticky)))) /* PROP is inherited from after. */ is_front_sticky = 1; /* Simple cases, where the properties are consistent. */ if (is_rear_sticky && !is_front_sticky) return -1; else if (!is_rear_sticky && is_front_sticky) return 1; else if (!is_rear_sticky && !is_front_sticky) return 0; /* The stickiness properties are inconsistent, so we have to disambiguate. Basically, rear-sticky wins, _except_ if the property that would be inherited has a value of nil, in which case front-sticky wins. */ if (XINT (pos) == BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (buffer)) || NILP (Fget_text_property (prev_pos, prop, buffer))) return 1; else return -1; } /* I don't think this is the right interface to export; how often do you want to do something like this, other than when you're copying objects around? I think it would be better to have a pair of functions, one which returns the text properties of a region as a list of ranges and plists, and another which applies such a list to another object. */ /* Add properties from SRC to SRC of SRC, starting at POS in DEST. SRC and DEST may each refer to strings or buffers. Optional sixth argument PROP causes only that property to be copied. Properties are copied to DEST as if by `add-text-properties'. Return t if any property value actually changed, nil otherwise. */ /* Note this can GC when DEST is a buffer. */ Lisp_Object copy_text_properties (start, end, src, pos, dest, prop) Lisp_Object start, end, src, pos, dest, prop; { INTERVAL i; Lisp_Object res; Lisp_Object stuff; Lisp_Object plist; int s, e, e2, p, len, modified = 0; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; i = validate_interval_range (src, &start, &end, soft); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) return Qnil; CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos); { Lisp_Object dest_start, dest_end; dest_start = pos; XSETFASTINT (dest_end, XINT (dest_start) + (XINT (end) - XINT (start))); /* Apply this to a copy of pos; it will try to increment its arguments, which we don't want. */ validate_interval_range (dest, &dest_start, &dest_end, soft); } s = XINT (start); e = XINT (end); p = XINT (pos); stuff = Qnil; while (s < e) { e2 = i->position + LENGTH (i); if (e2 > e) e2 = e; len = e2 - s; plist = i->plist; if (! NILP (prop)) while (! NILP (plist)) { if (EQ (Fcar (plist), prop)) { plist = Fcons (prop, Fcons (Fcar (Fcdr (plist)), Qnil)); break; } plist = Fcdr (Fcdr (plist)); } if (! NILP (plist)) { /* Must defer modifications to the interval tree in case src and dest refer to the same string or buffer. */ stuff = Fcons (Fcons (make_number (p), Fcons (make_number (p + len), Fcons (plist, Qnil))), stuff); } i = next_interval (i); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) break; p += len; s = i->position; } GCPRO2 (stuff, dest); while (! NILP (stuff)) { res = Fcar (stuff); res = Fadd_text_properties (Fcar (res), Fcar (Fcdr (res)), Fcar (Fcdr (Fcdr (res))), dest); if (! NILP (res)) modified++; stuff = Fcdr (stuff); } UNGCPRO; return modified ? Qt : Qnil; } /* Return a list representing the text properties of OBJECT between START and END. if PROP is non-nil, report only on that property. Each result list element has the form (S E PLIST), where S and E are positions in OBJECT and PLIST is a property list containing the text properties of OBJECT between S and E. Value is nil if OBJECT doesn't contain text properties between START and END. */ Lisp_Object text_property_list (object, start, end, prop) Lisp_Object object, start, end, prop; { struct interval *i; Lisp_Object result; result = Qnil; i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft); if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) { int s = XINT (start); int e = XINT (end); while (s < e) { int interval_end, len; Lisp_Object plist; interval_end = i->position + LENGTH (i); if (interval_end > e) interval_end = e; len = interval_end - s; plist = i->plist; if (!NILP (prop)) for (; CONSP (plist); plist = Fcdr (XCDR (plist))) if (EQ (XCAR (plist), prop)) { plist = Fcons (prop, Fcons (Fcar (XCDR (plist)), Qnil)); break; } if (!NILP (plist)) result = Fcons (Fcons (make_number (s), Fcons (make_number (s + len), Fcons (plist, Qnil))), result); i = next_interval (i); if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) break; s = i->position; } } return result; } /* Add text properties to OBJECT from LIST. LIST is a list of triples (START END PLIST), where START and END are positions and PLIST is a property list containing the text properties to add. Adjust START and END positions by DELTA before adding properties. Value is non-zero if OBJECT was modified. */ int add_text_properties_from_list (object, list, delta) Lisp_Object object, list, delta; { struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; int modified_p = 0; GCPRO2 (list, object); for (; CONSP (list); list = XCDR (list)) { Lisp_Object item, start, end, plist, tem; item = XCAR (list); start = make_number (XINT (XCAR (item)) + XINT (delta)); end = make_number (XINT (XCAR (XCDR (item))) + XINT (delta)); plist = XCAR (XCDR (XCDR (item))); tem = Fadd_text_properties (start, end, plist, object); if (!NILP (tem)) modified_p = 1; } UNGCPRO; return modified_p; } /* Modify end-points of ranges in LIST destructively. LIST is a list as returned from text_property_list. Change end-points equal to OLD_END to NEW_END. */ void extend_property_ranges (list, old_end, new_end) Lisp_Object list, old_end, new_end; { for (; CONSP (list); list = XCDR (list)) { Lisp_Object item, end; item = XCAR (list); end = XCAR (XCDR (item)); if (EQ (end, old_end)) XSETCAR (XCDR (item), new_end); } } /* Call the modification hook functions in LIST, each with START and END. */ static void call_mod_hooks (list, start, end) Lisp_Object list, start, end; { struct gcpro gcpro1; GCPRO1 (list); while (!NILP (list)) { call2 (Fcar (list), start, end); list = Fcdr (list); } UNGCPRO; } /* Check for read-only intervals between character positions START ... END, in BUF, and signal an error if we find one. Then check for any modification hooks in the range. Create a list of all these hooks in lexicographic order, eliminating consecutive extra copies of the same hook. Then call those hooks in order, with START and END - 1 as arguments. */ void verify_interval_modification (buf, start, end) struct buffer *buf; int start, end; { register INTERVAL intervals = BUF_INTERVALS (buf); register INTERVAL i; Lisp_Object hooks; register Lisp_Object prev_mod_hooks; Lisp_Object mod_hooks; struct gcpro gcpro1; hooks = Qnil; prev_mod_hooks = Qnil; mod_hooks = Qnil; interval_insert_behind_hooks = Qnil; interval_insert_in_front_hooks = Qnil; if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (intervals)) return; if (start > end) { int temp = start; start = end; end = temp; } /* For an insert operation, check the two chars around the position. */ if (start == end) { INTERVAL prev = NULL; Lisp_Object before, after; /* Set I to the interval containing the char after START, and PREV to the interval containing the char before START. Either one may be null. They may be equal. */ i = find_interval (intervals, start); if (start == BUF_BEGV (buf)) prev = 0; else if (i->position == start) prev = previous_interval (i); else if (i->position < start) prev = i; if (start == BUF_ZV (buf)) i = 0; /* If Vinhibit_read_only is set and is not a list, we can skip the read_only checks. */ if (NILP (Vinhibit_read_only) || CONSP (Vinhibit_read_only)) { /* If I and PREV differ we need to check for the read-only property together with its stickiness. If either I or PREV are 0, this check is all we need. We have to take special care, since read-only may be indirectly defined via the category property. */ if (i != prev) { if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) { after = textget (i->plist, Qread_only); /* If interval I is read-only and read-only is front-sticky, inhibit insertion. Check for read-only as well as category. */ if (! NILP (after) && NILP (Fmemq (after, Vinhibit_read_only))) { Lisp_Object tem; tem = textget (i->plist, Qfront_sticky); if (TMEM (Qread_only, tem) || (NILP (Fplist_get (i->plist, Qread_only)) && TMEM (Qcategory, tem))) text_read_only (after); } } if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev)) { before = textget (prev->plist, Qread_only); /* If interval PREV is read-only and read-only isn't rear-nonsticky, inhibit insertion. Check for read-only as well as category. */ if (! NILP (before) && NILP (Fmemq (before, Vinhibit_read_only))) { Lisp_Object tem; tem = textget (prev->plist, Qrear_nonsticky); if (! TMEM (Qread_only, tem) && (! NILP (Fplist_get (prev->plist,Qread_only)) || ! TMEM (Qcategory, tem))) text_read_only (before); } } } else if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) { after = textget (i->plist, Qread_only); /* If interval I is read-only and read-only is front-sticky, inhibit insertion. Check for read-only as well as category. */ if (! NILP (after) && NILP (Fmemq (after, Vinhibit_read_only))) { Lisp_Object tem; tem = textget (i->plist, Qfront_sticky); if (TMEM (Qread_only, tem) || (NILP (Fplist_get (i->plist, Qread_only)) && TMEM (Qcategory, tem))) text_read_only (after); tem = textget (prev->plist, Qrear_nonsticky); if (! TMEM (Qread_only, tem) && (! NILP (Fplist_get (prev->plist, Qread_only)) || ! TMEM (Qcategory, tem))) text_read_only (after); } } } /* Run both insert hooks (just once if they're the same). */ if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev)) interval_insert_behind_hooks = textget (prev->plist, Qinsert_behind_hooks); if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)) interval_insert_in_front_hooks = textget (i->plist, Qinsert_in_front_hooks); } else { /* Loop over intervals on or next to START...END, collecting their hooks. */ i = find_interval (intervals, start); do { if (! INTERVAL_WRITABLE_P (i)) text_read_only (textget (i->plist, Qread_only)); if (!inhibit_modification_hooks) { mod_hooks = textget (i->plist, Qmodification_hooks); if (! NILP (mod_hooks) && ! EQ (mod_hooks, prev_mod_hooks)) { hooks = Fcons (mod_hooks, hooks); prev_mod_hooks = mod_hooks; } } i = next_interval (i); } /* Keep going thru the interval containing the char before END. */ while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) && i->position < end); if (!inhibit_modification_hooks) { GCPRO1 (hooks); hooks = Fnreverse (hooks); while (! EQ (hooks, Qnil)) { call_mod_hooks (Fcar (hooks), make_number (start), make_number (end)); hooks = Fcdr (hooks); } UNGCPRO; } } } /* Run the interval hooks for an insertion on character range START ... END. verify_interval_modification chose which hooks to run; this function is called after the insertion happens so it can indicate the range of inserted text. */ void report_interval_modification (start, end) Lisp_Object start, end; { if (! NILP (interval_insert_behind_hooks)) call_mod_hooks (interval_insert_behind_hooks, start, end); if (! NILP (interval_insert_in_front_hooks) && ! EQ (interval_insert_in_front_hooks, interval_insert_behind_hooks)) call_mod_hooks (interval_insert_in_front_hooks, start, end); } void syms_of_textprop () { DEFVAR_LISP ("default-text-properties", &Vdefault_text_properties, doc: /* Property-list used as default values. The value of a property in this list is seen as the value for every character that does not have its own value for that property. */); Vdefault_text_properties = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("char-property-alias-alist", &Vchar_property_alias_alist, doc: /* Alist of alternative properties for properties without a value. Each element should look like (PROPERTY ALTERNATIVE1 ALTERNATIVE2...). If a piece of text has no direct value for a particular property, then this alist is consulted. If that property appears in the alist, then the first non-nil value from the associated alternative properties is returned. */); Vchar_property_alias_alist = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("inhibit-point-motion-hooks", &Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks, doc: /* If non-nil, don't run `point-left' and `point-entered' text properties. This also inhibits the use of the `intangible' text property. */); Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("text-property-default-nonsticky", &Vtext_property_default_nonsticky, doc: /* Alist of properties vs the corresponding non-stickinesses. Each element has the form (PROPERTY . NONSTICKINESS). If a character in a buffer has PROPERTY, new text inserted adjacent to the character doesn't inherit PROPERTY if NONSTICKINESS is non-nil, inherits it if NONSTICKINESS is nil. The `front-sticky' and `rear-nonsticky' properties of the character override NONSTICKINESS. */); /* Text property `syntax-table' should be nonsticky by default. */ Vtext_property_default_nonsticky = Fcons (Fcons (intern ("syntax-table"), Qt), Qnil); staticpro (&interval_insert_behind_hooks); staticpro (&interval_insert_in_front_hooks); interval_insert_behind_hooks = Qnil; interval_insert_in_front_hooks = Qnil; /* Common attributes one might give text */ staticpro (&Qforeground); Qforeground = intern ("foreground"); staticpro (&Qbackground); Qbackground = intern ("background"); staticpro (&Qfont); Qfont = intern ("font"); staticpro (&Qstipple); Qstipple = intern ("stipple"); staticpro (&Qunderline); Qunderline = intern ("underline"); staticpro (&Qread_only); Qread_only = intern ("read-only"); staticpro (&Qinvisible); Qinvisible = intern ("invisible"); staticpro (&Qintangible); Qintangible = intern ("intangible"); staticpro (&Qcategory); Qcategory = intern ("category"); staticpro (&Qlocal_map); Qlocal_map = intern ("local-map"); staticpro (&Qfront_sticky); Qfront_sticky = intern ("front-sticky"); staticpro (&Qrear_nonsticky); Qrear_nonsticky = intern ("rear-nonsticky"); staticpro (&Qmouse_face); Qmouse_face = intern ("mouse-face"); staticpro (&Qminibuffer_prompt); Qminibuffer_prompt = intern ("minibuffer-prompt"); /* Properties that text might use to specify certain actions */ staticpro (&Qmouse_left); Qmouse_left = intern ("mouse-left"); staticpro (&Qmouse_entered); Qmouse_entered = intern ("mouse-entered"); staticpro (&Qpoint_left); Qpoint_left = intern ("point-left"); staticpro (&Qpoint_entered); Qpoint_entered = intern ("point-entered"); defsubr (&Stext_properties_at); defsubr (&Sget_text_property); defsubr (&Sget_char_property); defsubr (&Sget_char_property_and_overlay); defsubr (&Snext_char_property_change); defsubr (&Sprevious_char_property_change); defsubr (&Snext_single_char_property_change); defsubr (&Sprevious_single_char_property_change); defsubr (&Snext_property_change); defsubr (&Snext_single_property_change); defsubr (&Sprevious_property_change); defsubr (&Sprevious_single_property_change); defsubr (&Sadd_text_properties); defsubr (&Sput_text_property); defsubr (&Sset_text_properties); defsubr (&Sremove_text_properties); defsubr (&Sremove_list_of_text_properties); defsubr (&Stext_property_any); defsubr (&Stext_property_not_all); /* defsubr (&Serase_text_properties); */ /* defsubr (&Scopy_text_properties); */ } /* arch-tag: 454cdde8-5f86-4faa-a078-101e3625d479 (do not change this comment) */