Mercurial > emacs
changeset 32506:a85522b7799c
(Fstring_to_syntax): New function extracted from Fmodify_syntax_entry.
(Fmodify_syntax_entry): Use it and document the ! and | fences.
(skip_chars, Fforward_comment): Remove unused variables.
(syms_of_syntax): Add defsubr for string-to-syntax.
author | Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 15 Oct 2000 21:42:41 +0000 |
parents | 22fab84e28a0 |
children | 5151dde2a183 |
files | src/syntax.c |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 77 insertions(+), 69 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/src/syntax.c Sun Oct 15 17:29:48 2000 +0000 +++ b/src/syntax.c Sun Oct 15 21:42:41 2000 +0000 @@ -894,86 +894,35 @@ return Qnil; } -/* This comment supplies the doc string for modify-syntax-entry, - for make-docfile to see. We cannot put this in the real DEFUN - due to limits in the Unix cpp. - -DEFUN ("modify-syntax-entry", foo, bar, 2, 3, 0, - "Set syntax for character CHAR according to string S.\n\ -The syntax is changed only for table TABLE, which defaults to\n\ - the current buffer's syntax table.\n\ -The first character of S should be one of the following:\n\ - Space or - whitespace syntax. w word constituent.\n\ - _ symbol constituent. . punctuation.\n\ - ( open-parenthesis. ) close-parenthesis.\n\ - \" string quote. \\ escape.\n\ - $ paired delimiter. ' expression quote or prefix operator.\n\ - < comment starter. > comment ender.\n\ - / character-quote. @ inherit from `standard-syntax-table'.\n\ -\n\ -Only single-character comment start and end sequences are represented thus.\n\ -Two-character sequences are represented as described below.\n\ -The second character of S is the matching parenthesis,\n\ - used only if the first character is `(' or `)'.\n\ -Any additional characters are flags.\n\ -Defined flags are the characters 1, 2, 3, 4, b, p, and n.\n\ - 1 means CHAR is the start of a two-char comment start sequence.\n\ - 2 means CHAR is the second character of such a sequence.\n\ - 3 means CHAR is the start of a two-char comment end sequence.\n\ - 4 means CHAR is the second character of such a sequence.\n\ -\n\ -There can be up to two orthogonal comment sequences. This is to support\n\ -language modes such as C++. By default, all comment sequences are of style\n\ -a, but you can set the comment sequence style to b (on the second character\n\ -of a comment-start, or the first character of a comment-end sequence) using\n\ -this flag:\n\ - b means CHAR is part of comment sequence b.\n\ - n means CHAR is part of a nestable comment sequence.\n\ -\n\ - p means CHAR is a prefix character for `backward-prefix-chars';\n\ - such characters are treated as whitespace when they occur\n\ - between expressions.") - (char, s, table) -*/ - -DEFUN ("modify-syntax-entry", Fmodify_syntax_entry, Smodify_syntax_entry, 2, 3, - /* I really don't know why this is interactive - help-form should at least be made useful whilst reading the second arg - */ - "cSet syntax for character: \nsSet syntax for %s to: ", - 0 /* See immediately above */) - (c, newentry, syntax_table) - Lisp_Object c, newentry, syntax_table; +DEFUN ("string-to-syntax", Fstring_to_syntax, Sstring_to_syntax, 1, 1, 0, + "Convert a syntax specification STRING into syntax cell form.\n\ +STRING should be a string as it is allowed as argument of\n\ +`modify-syntax-entry'. Value is the equivalent cons cell\n\ +\(CODE . MATCHING-CHAR) that can be used as value of a `syntax-table'\n\ +text property.") + (string) + Lisp_Object string; { register unsigned char *p; register enum syntaxcode code; int val; Lisp_Object match; - CHECK_NUMBER (c, 0); - CHECK_STRING (newentry, 1); + CHECK_STRING (string, 0); - if (NILP (syntax_table)) - syntax_table = current_buffer->syntax_table; - else - check_syntax_table (syntax_table); - - p = XSTRING (newentry)->data; + p = XSTRING (string)->data; code = (enum syntaxcode) syntax_spec_code[*p++]; if (((int) code & 0377) == 0377) error ("invalid syntax description letter: %c", p[-1]); if (code == Sinherit) - { - SET_RAW_SYNTAX_ENTRY (syntax_table, XINT (c), Qnil); - return Qnil; - } + return Qnil; if (*p) { int len; int character = (STRING_CHAR_AND_LENGTH - (p, STRING_BYTES (XSTRING (newentry)) - 1, len)); + (p, STRING_BYTES (XSTRING (string)) - 1, len)); XSETINT (match, character); if (XFASTINT (match) == ' ') match = Qnil; @@ -1016,13 +965,72 @@ } if (val < XVECTOR (Vsyntax_code_object)->size && NILP (match)) - newentry = XVECTOR (Vsyntax_code_object)->contents[val]; + return XVECTOR (Vsyntax_code_object)->contents[val]; else /* Since we can't use a shared object, let's make a new one. */ - newentry = Fcons (make_number (val), match); - - SET_RAW_SYNTAX_ENTRY (syntax_table, XINT (c), newentry); + return Fcons (make_number (val), match); +} + +/* This comment supplies the doc string for modify-syntax-entry, + for make-docfile to see. We cannot put this in the real DEFUN + due to limits in the Unix cpp. +DEFUN ("modify-syntax-entry", foo, bar, 2, 3, 0, + "Set syntax for character CHAR according to string S.\n\ +The syntax is changed only for table TABLE, which defaults to\n\ + the current buffer's syntax table.\n\ +The first character of S should be one of the following:\n\ + Space or - whitespace syntax. w word constituent.\n\ + _ symbol constituent. . punctuation.\n\ + ( open-parenthesis. ) close-parenthesis.\n\ + \" string quote. \\ escape.\n\ + $ paired delimiter. ' expression quote or prefix operator.\n\ + < comment starter. > comment ender.\n\ + / character-quote. @ inherit from `standard-syntax-table'.\n\ + | generic string fence. ! generic comment fence.\n\ +\n\ +Only single-character comment start and end sequences are represented thus.\n\ +Two-character sequences are represented as described below.\n\ +The second character of S is the matching parenthesis,\n\ + used only if the first character is `(' or `)'.\n\ +Any additional characters are flags.\n\ +Defined flags are the characters 1, 2, 3, 4, b, p, and n.\n\ + 1 means CHAR is the start of a two-char comment start sequence.\n\ + 2 means CHAR is the second character of such a sequence.\n\ + 3 means CHAR is the start of a two-char comment end sequence.\n\ + 4 means CHAR is the second character of such a sequence.\n\ +\n\ +There can be up to two orthogonal comment sequences. This is to support\n\ +language modes such as C++. By default, all comment sequences are of style\n\ +a, but you can set the comment sequence style to b (on the second character\n\ +of a comment-start, or the first character of a comment-end sequence) using\n\ +this flag:\n\ + b means CHAR is part of comment sequence b.\n\ + n means CHAR is part of a nestable comment sequence.\n\ +\n\ + p means CHAR is a prefix character for `backward-prefix-chars';\n\ + such characters are treated as whitespace when they occur\n\ + between expressions.") + (char, s, table) +*/ + +DEFUN ("modify-syntax-entry", Fmodify_syntax_entry, Smodify_syntax_entry, 2, 3, + /* I really don't know why this is interactive + help-form should at least be made useful whilst reading the second arg + */ + "cSet syntax for character: \nsSet syntax for %s to: ", + 0 /* See immediately above */) + (c, newentry, syntax_table) + Lisp_Object c, newentry, syntax_table; +{ + CHECK_NUMBER (c, 0); + + if (NILP (syntax_table)) + syntax_table = current_buffer->syntax_table; + else + check_syntax_table (syntax_table); + + SET_RAW_SYNTAX_ENTRY (syntax_table, XINT (c), Fstring_to_syntax (newentry)); return Qnil; } @@ -1382,7 +1390,6 @@ Lisp_Object string, lim; { register unsigned int c; - register int ch; unsigned char fastmap[0400]; /* If SYNTAXP is 0, STRING may contain multi-byte form of characters of which codes don't fit in FASTMAP. In that case, set the @@ -1897,7 +1904,7 @@ { while (1) { - int quoted, comstart_second; + int quoted; if (from <= stop) { @@ -3035,6 +3042,7 @@ defsubr (&Sset_syntax_table); defsubr (&Schar_syntax); defsubr (&Smatching_paren); + defsubr (&Sstring_to_syntax); defsubr (&Smodify_syntax_entry); defsubr (&Sdescribe_syntax);