Mercurial > emacs
view src/doprnt.c @ 24310:e76bade08723
Added keywords from `finder-by-keyword'.
Set version to 1.3.2
(sql-solid-program): Added support for solid.
(sql-help): Doc mentions sql-solid.
(sql-solid): Entry function for Solid.
(sql-buffer): Doc explains the use of the variable and how to change it.
(sql-mode-menu): Included entries for sql-show-sqli-buffer and
sql-change-sqli-buffer; sql-send-region and sql-send-buffer are
disabled if sql-buffer doesn't have a process; sql-send-paragraph is new.
(sql-show-sqli-buffer): New function to display the value of sql-buffer.
(sql-change-sqli-buffer): New function to change sql-buffer.
(sql-mode): Doc explains how to change sql-buffer.
(sql-send-paragraph): New function to send a paragraph.
(sql-mode-map): Added keybinding for sql-send-paragraph.
(sql-mysql): Doc corrected.
(sql-ms): Doc corrected.
(sql-server): Doc fix.
(sql-mysql): Added the use of sql-server to specify the host,
sql-database now specifies database instead of host.
(sql-mode-menu): Send... menu items are only active if sql-buffer
is non-nil.
(sql-help): Changed tag of entry functions a bit.
(sql-mode): Made sql-buffer a local variable, changed the
documentation: removed instructions to add *.sql files to
auto-mode-alist, added documentation for having mutliple SQL
buffers sending their stuff to different SQLi buffers, each
running a different process.
(sql-postgres): Quoted *SQL* in doc string.
(sql-ms): Likewise.
(sql-ingres): Likewise.
(sql-ingres): Quoted *SQL* in doc string, added references to
sql-user and sql-password used during login.
(sql-sybase): Quoted *SQL* in doc string, added comma.
(sql-oracle): Likewise.
(sql-interactive-mode): Added extensive documentation for having
mutliple SQL buffers sending their stuff to different SQLi
buffers, each running a different process.
(sql-buffer): Changed doc from *SQL* to SQLi.
(sql-get-login): Doc fix.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 13 Feb 1999 12:04:00 +0000 |
parents | c68a115303f7 |
children | 5bc0a96405db |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Output like sprintf to a buffer of specified size. Also takes args differently: pass one pointer to an array of strings in addition to the format string which is separate. Copyright (C) 1985 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #include <config.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <ctype.h> #ifdef STDC_HEADERS #include <float.h> #endif #include "lisp.h" #ifndef DBL_MAX_10_EXP #define DBL_MAX_10_EXP 308 /* IEEE double */ #endif /* Since we use the macro CHAR_HEAD_P, we have to include this, but don't have to include others because CHAR_HEAD_P does not contains another macro. */ #include "charset.h" extern long *xmalloc (), *xrealloc (); static int doprnt1 (); /* Generate output from a format-spec FORMAT, terminated at position FORMAT_END. Output goes in BUFFER, which has room for BUFSIZE chars. If the output does not fit, truncate it to fit. Returns the number of characters stored into BUFFER. ARGS points to the vector of arguments, and NARGS says how many. A double counts as two arguments. String arguments are passed as C strings. Integers are passed as C integers. */ int doprnt (buffer, bufsize, format, format_end, nargs, args) char *buffer; register int bufsize; char *format; char *format_end; int nargs; char **args; { return doprnt1 (0, buffer, bufsize, format, format_end, nargs, args); } /* Like doprnt except that strings in ARGS are passed as Lisp_Object. */ int doprnt_lisp (buffer, bufsize, format, format_end, nargs, args) char *buffer; register int bufsize; char *format; char *format_end; int nargs; char **args; { return doprnt1 (1, buffer, bufsize, format, format_end, nargs, args); } static int doprnt1 (lispstrings, buffer, bufsize, format, format_end, nargs, args) int lispstrings; char *buffer; register int bufsize; char *format; char *format_end; int nargs; char **args; { int cnt = 0; /* Number of arg to gobble next */ register char *fmt = format; /* Pointer into format string */ register char *bufptr = buffer; /* Pointer into output buffer.. */ /* Use this for sprintf unless we need something really big. */ char tembuf[DBL_MAX_10_EXP + 100]; /* Size of sprintf_buffer. */ int size_allocated = sizeof (tembuf); /* Buffer to use for sprintf. Either tembuf or same as BIG_BUFFER. */ char *sprintf_buffer = tembuf; /* Buffer we have got with malloc. */ char *big_buffer = 0; register int tem; unsigned char *string; char fixed_buffer[20]; /* Default buffer for small formatting. */ char *fmtcpy; int minlen; int size; /* Field width factor; e.g., %90d */ unsigned char charbuf[5]; /* Used for %c. */ if (format_end == 0) format_end = format + strlen (format); if ((format_end - format + 1) < sizeof (fixed_buffer)) fmtcpy = fixed_buffer; else fmtcpy = (char *) alloca (format_end - format + 1); bufsize--; /* Loop until end of format string or buffer full. */ while (fmt != format_end && bufsize > 0) { if (*fmt == '%') /* Check for a '%' character */ { int size_bound = 0; int width; /* Columns occupied by STRING. */ fmt++; /* Copy this one %-spec into fmtcpy. */ string = (unsigned char *)fmtcpy; *string++ = '%'; while (1) { *string++ = *fmt; if ('0' <= *fmt && *fmt <= '9') { /* Get an idea of how much space we might need. This might be a field width or a precision; e.g. %1.1000f and %1000.1f both might need 1000+ bytes. Parse the width or precision, checking for overflow. */ int n = *fmt - '0'; while ('0' <= fmt[1] && fmt[1] <= '9') { if (n * 10 / 10 != n || (n = n * 10 + (fmt[1] - '0')) < 0) error ("Format width or precision too large"); *string++ = *++fmt; } if (size_bound < n) size_bound = n; } else if (*fmt == '-' || *fmt == ' ' || *fmt == '.') ; else break; fmt++; } *string = 0; /* Make the size bound large enough to handle floating point formats with large numbers. */ size_bound += DBL_MAX_10_EXP + 50; if (size_bound < 0) error ("Format width or precision too large"); /* Make sure we have that much. */ if (size_bound > size_allocated) { if (big_buffer) big_buffer = (char *) xrealloc (big_buffer, size_bound); else big_buffer = (char *) xmalloc (size_bound); sprintf_buffer = big_buffer; size_allocated = size_bound; } minlen = 0; switch (*fmt++) { default: error ("Invalid format operation %%%c", fmt[-1]); /* case 'b': */ case 'd': case 'o': case 'x': if (cnt == nargs) error ("Not enough arguments for format string"); if (sizeof (int) == sizeof (EMACS_INT)) ; else if (sizeof (long) == sizeof (EMACS_INT)) /* Insert an `l' the right place. */ string[1] = string[0], string[0] = string[-1], string[-1] = 'l', string++; else abort (); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, args[cnt++]); /* Now copy into final output, truncating as nec. */ string = (unsigned char *)sprintf_buffer; goto doit; case 'f': case 'e': case 'g': { union { double d; char *half[2]; } u; if (cnt + 1 == nargs) error ("not enough arguments for format string"); u.half[0] = args[cnt++]; u.half[1] = args[cnt++]; sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, u.d); /* Now copy into final output, truncating as nec. */ string = (unsigned char *)sprintf_buffer; goto doit; } case 'S': string[-1] = 's'; case 's': if (cnt == nargs) error ("not enough arguments for format string"); if (fmtcpy[1] != 's') minlen = atoi (&fmtcpy[1]); if (lispstrings) { string = ((struct Lisp_String *)args[cnt])->data; tem = ((struct Lisp_String *)args[cnt])->size; cnt++; } else { string = (unsigned char *)args[cnt++]; tem = strlen (string); } width = strwidth (string, tem); goto doit1; /* Copy string into final output, truncating if no room. */ doit: /* Coming here means STRING contains ASCII only. */ width = tem = strlen (string); doit1: /* We have already calculated: TEM -- length of STRING, WIDTH -- columns occupied by STRING when displayed, and MINLEN -- minimum columns of the output. */ if (minlen > 0) { while (minlen > width && bufsize > 0) { *bufptr++ = ' '; bufsize--; minlen--; } minlen = 0; } if (tem > bufsize) { /* Truncate the string at character boundary. */ tem = bufsize; while (!CHAR_HEAD_P (string[tem - 1])) tem--; bcopy (string, bufptr, tem); /* We must calculate WIDTH again. */ width = strwidth (bufptr, tem); } else bcopy (string, bufptr, tem); bufptr += tem; bufsize -= tem; if (minlen < 0) { while (minlen < - width && bufsize > 0) { *bufptr++ = ' '; bufsize--; minlen++; } minlen = 0; } continue; case 'c': if (cnt == nargs) error ("not enough arguments for format string"); tem = CHAR_STRING ((int) (EMACS_INT) args[cnt], charbuf, string); cnt++; string[tem] = 0; width = strwidth (string, tem); if (fmtcpy[1] != 'c') minlen = atoi (&fmtcpy[1]); goto doit1; case '%': fmt--; /* Drop thru and this % will be treated as normal */ } } { /* Just some character; Copy it if the whole multi-byte form fit in the buffer. */ char *save_bufptr = bufptr; do { *bufptr++ = *fmt++; } while (--bufsize > 0 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (*fmt)); if (!CHAR_HEAD_P (*fmt)) { bufptr = save_bufptr; break; } } }; /* If we had to malloc something, free it. */ if (big_buffer) xfree (big_buffer); *bufptr = 0; /* Make sure our string end with a '\0' */ return bufptr - buffer; }