Mercurial > emacs
view src/macros.c @ 52242:f5ada28bb9f0
Patch by Michael Mauger <mmaug@yahoo.com>
Version 1.8.0 of sql-mode.
Simplify selection of SQL products to define highlighting and
interactive mode. Includes detailed instructions on adding
support for new products.
* sql.el (sql-product): New variable. Identifies SQL product for
use in highlighting and interactive mode.
(sql-interactive-product): New variable. SQL product for
sql-interactive-mode.
(sql-product-support): New variable. Specifies product-specific
parameters to drive highlighting and interactive mode.
(sql-imenu-generic-expression): Add more object types.
(sql-sqlite-options): Correct comment.
(sql-ms-program): Use "osql" rather than "isql".
(sql-prompt-regexp, sql-prompt-length): Update comment.
(sql-mode-menu): Add "Start SQLi session" entry. Replace
Highlighting submenu with Product menu. Fix Send Region entry.
(sql-mode-abbrev-table): Add abbreviations. Support of
SYSTEM-FLAG on define-abbrev. Support was removed with last
check-in; it now handles older Emacsen without the SYSTEM-FLAG.
(sql-mode-font-lock-object-name): Add font-lock pattern for object
names.
(sql-mode-ansi-font-lock-keywords): Set as default value.
(sql-mode-oracle-font-lock-keywords): Set as default value.
Support Oracle 9i keywords.
(sql-mode-postgres-font-lock-keywords): Set as default value.
(sql-mode-linter-font-lock-keywords): Set as default value.
(sql-mode-ms-font-lock-keywords): New variable. Support Microsoft
SQLServer 2000.
(sql-mode-sybase-font-lock-keywords)
(sql-mode-interbase-font-lock-keywords)
(sql-mode-sqlite-font-lock-keywords)
(sql-mode-strong-font-lock-keywords)
(sql-mode-mysql-font-lock-keywords)
(sql-mode-db2-font-lock-keywords): New variables. Default to ANSI
keywords.
(sql-mode-font-lock-defaults): Update comment.
(sql-product-feature): New function. Returns feature associated
with a product from `sql-product-support' alist.
(sql-product-font-lock): New function. Set font-lock support
based on `sql-product'.
(sql-add-product-keywords): New function. Add font-lock rules to
product-specific keyword variables.
(sql-set-product): New function. Set `sql-product' and apply
appropriate font-lock highlighting.
(sql-highlight-product): New function. Set font-lock support
based on a product. Also set mode name to include product name.
(sql-highlight-ansi-keywords, sql-highlight-oracle-keywords)
(sql-highlight-postgres-keywords, sql-highlight-linter-keywords):
Use `sql-set-product'.
(sql-highlight-ms-keywords)
(sql-highlight-sybase-keywords)
(sql-highlight-interbase-keywords)
(sql-highlight-strong-keywords)
(sql-highlight-mysql-keywords)
(sql-highlight-sqlite-keywords)
(sql-highlight-db2-keywords): New functions. Use
`sql-set-product'.
(sql-get-login): Prompt in the same order as the tokens.
(sql-mode): Uses `sql-product-highlight' and
`sql-product-font-lock'.
(sql-product-interactive): New function. Common portions of
product-specific interactive mode wrappers.
(sql-interactive-mode): Rewritten to use product features.
(sql-oracle, sql-sybase, sql-informix, sql-sqlite, sql-mysql)
(sql-solid, sql-ingres, sql-ms, sql-postgres, sql-interbase)
(sql-db2, sql-linter): Use `sql-product-interactive'.
(sql-connect-oracle, sql-connect-sybase, sql-connect-informix)
(sql-connect-sqlite, sql-connect-mysql, sql-connect-solid)
(sql-connect-ingres, sql-connect-postgres)
(sql-connect-interbase, sql-connect-db2, sql-connect-linter): New
functions. Format command line parameters and invoke comint on
the appropriate interpreter. Code was in the corresponding
`sql-xyz' function before.
(sql-connect-ms): New function. Support -E argument to use
operating system credentials for authentication.
| author | Alex Schroeder <alex@gnu.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Mon, 18 Aug 2003 17:29:23 +0000 |
| parents | eabc4e7986e9 |
| children | 695cf19ef79e |
line wrap: on
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/* Keyboard macros. Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1993, 2000, 2001 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 "lisp.h" #include "macros.h" #include "commands.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "window.h" #include "keyboard.h" Lisp_Object Qexecute_kbd_macro, Qkbd_macro_termination_hook; /* Kbd macro currently being executed (a string or vector). */ Lisp_Object Vexecuting_macro; /* Index of next character to fetch from that macro. */ EMACS_INT executing_macro_index; /* Number of successful iterations so far for innermost keyboard macro. This is not bound at each level, so after an error, it describes the innermost interrupted macro. */ int executing_macro_iterations; /* This is the macro that was executing. This is not bound at each level, so after an error, it describes the innermost interrupted macro. We use it only as a kind of flag, so no need to protect it. */ Lisp_Object executing_macro; extern Lisp_Object real_this_command; Lisp_Object Fexecute_kbd_macro (); DEFUN ("start-kbd-macro", Fstart_kbd_macro, Sstart_kbd_macro, 1, 2, "P", doc: /* Record subsequent keyboard input, defining a keyboard macro. The commands are recorded even as they are executed. Use \\[end-kbd-macro] to finish recording and make the macro available. Use \\[name-last-kbd-macro] to give it a permanent name. Non-nil arg (prefix arg) means append to last macro defined; this begins by re-executing that macro as if you typed it again. If optional second arg, NO-EXEC, is non-nil, do not re-execute last macro before appending to it. */) (append, no_exec) Lisp_Object append, no_exec; { if (!NILP (current_kboard->defining_kbd_macro)) error ("Already defining kbd macro"); if (!current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer) { current_kboard->kbd_macro_bufsize = 30; current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer = (Lisp_Object *)xmalloc (30 * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); } update_mode_lines++; if (NILP (append)) { if (current_kboard->kbd_macro_bufsize > 200) { current_kboard->kbd_macro_bufsize = 30; current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer = (Lisp_Object *)xrealloc (current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer, 30 * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); } current_kboard->kbd_macro_ptr = current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer; current_kboard->kbd_macro_end = current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer; message ("Defining kbd macro..."); } else { int i, len; int cvt; /* Check the type of last-kbd-macro in case Lisp code changed it. */ if (!STRINGP (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro) && !VECTORP (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro)) current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro = wrong_type_argument (Qarrayp, current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro); len = XINT (Flength (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro)); /* Copy last-kbd-macro into the buffer, in case the Lisp code has put another macro there. */ if (current_kboard->kbd_macro_bufsize < len + 30) { current_kboard->kbd_macro_bufsize = len + 30; current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer = (Lisp_Object *)xrealloc (current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer, (len + 30) * sizeof (Lisp_Object)); } /* Must convert meta modifier when copying string to vector. */ cvt = STRINGP (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro); for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { Lisp_Object c; c = Faref (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro, make_number (i)); if (cvt && NATNUMP (c) && (XFASTINT (c) & 0x80)) XSETFASTINT (c, CHAR_META | (XFASTINT (c) & ~0x80)); current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer[i] = c; } current_kboard->kbd_macro_ptr = current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer + len; current_kboard->kbd_macro_end = current_kboard->kbd_macro_ptr; /* Re-execute the macro we are appending to, for consistency of behavior. */ if (NILP (no_exec)) Fexecute_kbd_macro (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro, make_number (1), Qnil); message ("Appending to kbd macro..."); } current_kboard->defining_kbd_macro = Qt; return Qnil; } /* Finish defining the current keyboard macro. */ void end_kbd_macro () { current_kboard->defining_kbd_macro = Qnil; update_mode_lines++; current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro = make_event_array ((current_kboard->kbd_macro_end - current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer), current_kboard->kbd_macro_buffer); } DEFUN ("end-kbd-macro", Fend_kbd_macro, Send_kbd_macro, 0, 2, "p", doc: /* Finish defining a keyboard macro. The definition was started by \\[start-kbd-macro]. The macro is now available for use via \\[call-last-kbd-macro], or it can be given a name with \\[name-last-kbd-macro] and then invoked under that name. With numeric arg, repeat macro now that many times, counting the definition just completed as the first repetition. An argument of zero means repeat until error. In Lisp, optional second arg LOOPFUNC may be a function that is called prior to each iteration of the macro. Iteration stops if LOOPFUNC returns nil. */) (repeat, loopfunc) Lisp_Object repeat, loopfunc; { if (NILP (current_kboard->defining_kbd_macro)) error ("Not defining kbd macro"); if (NILP (repeat)) XSETFASTINT (repeat, 1); else CHECK_NUMBER (repeat); if (!NILP (current_kboard->defining_kbd_macro)) { end_kbd_macro (); message ("Keyboard macro defined"); } if (XFASTINT (repeat) == 0) Fexecute_kbd_macro (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro, repeat, loopfunc); else { XSETINT (repeat, XINT (repeat)-1); if (XINT (repeat) > 0) Fexecute_kbd_macro (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro, repeat, loopfunc); } return Qnil; } /* Store character c into kbd macro being defined */ void store_kbd_macro_char (c) Lisp_Object c; { struct kboard *kb = current_kboard; if (!NILP (kb->defining_kbd_macro)) { if (kb->kbd_macro_ptr - kb->kbd_macro_buffer == kb->kbd_macro_bufsize) { int ptr_offset, end_offset, nbytes; ptr_offset = kb->kbd_macro_ptr - kb->kbd_macro_buffer; end_offset = kb->kbd_macro_end - kb->kbd_macro_buffer; kb->kbd_macro_bufsize *= 2; nbytes = kb->kbd_macro_bufsize * sizeof *kb->kbd_macro_buffer; kb->kbd_macro_buffer = (Lisp_Object *) xrealloc (kb->kbd_macro_buffer, nbytes); kb->kbd_macro_ptr = kb->kbd_macro_buffer + ptr_offset; kb->kbd_macro_end = kb->kbd_macro_buffer + end_offset; } *kb->kbd_macro_ptr++ = c; } } /* Declare that all chars stored so far in the kbd macro being defined really belong to it. This is done in between editor commands. */ void finalize_kbd_macro_chars () { current_kboard->kbd_macro_end = current_kboard->kbd_macro_ptr; } DEFUN ("cancel-kbd-macro-events", Fcancel_kbd_macro_events, Scancel_kbd_macro_events, 0, 0, 0, doc: /* Cancel the events added to a keyboard macro for this command. */) () { current_kboard->kbd_macro_ptr = current_kboard->kbd_macro_end; return Qnil; } DEFUN ("store-kbd-macro-event", Fstore_kbd_macro_event, Sstore_kbd_macro_event, 1, 1, 0, doc: /* Store EVENT into the keyboard macro being defined. */) (event) Lisp_Object event; { store_kbd_macro_char (event); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("call-last-kbd-macro", Fcall_last_kbd_macro, Scall_last_kbd_macro, 0, 2, "p", doc: /* Call the last keyboard macro that you defined with \\[start-kbd-macro]. A prefix argument serves as a repeat count. Zero means repeat until error. To make a macro permanent so you can call it even after defining others, use \\[name-last-kbd-macro]. In Lisp, optional second arg LOOPFUNC may be a function that is called prior to each iteration of the macro. Iteration stops if LOOPFUNC returns nil. */) (prefix, loopfunc) Lisp_Object prefix, loopfunc; { /* Don't interfere with recognition of the previous command from before this macro started. */ Vthis_command = current_kboard->Vlast_command; /* C-x z after the macro should repeat the macro. */ real_this_command = current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro; if (! NILP (current_kboard->defining_kbd_macro)) error ("Can't execute anonymous macro while defining one"); else if (NILP (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro)) error ("No kbd macro has been defined"); else Fexecute_kbd_macro (current_kboard->Vlast_kbd_macro, prefix, loopfunc); /* command_loop_1 sets this to nil before it returns; get back the last command within the macro so that it can be last, again, after we return. */ Vthis_command = current_kboard->Vlast_command; return Qnil; } /* Restore Vexecuting_macro and executing_macro_index - called when the unwind-protect in Fexecute_kbd_macro gets invoked. */ static Lisp_Object pop_kbd_macro (info) Lisp_Object info; { Lisp_Object tem; Vexecuting_macro = XCAR (info); tem = XCDR (info); executing_macro_index = XINT (XCAR (tem)); real_this_command = XCDR (tem); Frun_hooks (1, &Qkbd_macro_termination_hook); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("execute-kbd-macro", Fexecute_kbd_macro, Sexecute_kbd_macro, 1, 3, 0, doc: /* Execute MACRO as string of editor command characters. If MACRO is a symbol, its function definition is used. COUNT is a repeat count, or nil for once, or 0 for infinite loop. Optional third arg LOOPFUNC may be a function that is called prior to each iteration of the macro. Iteration stops if LOOPFUNC returns nil. */) (macro, count, loopfunc) Lisp_Object macro, count, loopfunc; { Lisp_Object final; Lisp_Object tem; int pdlcount = SPECPDL_INDEX (); int repeat = 1; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; int success_count = 0; executing_macro_iterations = 0; if (!NILP (count)) { count = Fprefix_numeric_value (count); repeat = XINT (count); } final = indirect_function (macro); if (!STRINGP (final) && !VECTORP (final)) error ("Keyboard macros must be strings or vectors"); tem = Fcons (Vexecuting_macro, Fcons (make_number (executing_macro_index), real_this_command)); record_unwind_protect (pop_kbd_macro, tem); GCPRO2 (final, loopfunc); do { Vexecuting_macro = final; executing_macro = final; executing_macro_index = 0; current_kboard->Vprefix_arg = Qnil; if (!NILP (loopfunc)) { Lisp_Object cont; cont = call0 (loopfunc); if (NILP (cont)) break; } command_loop_1 (); executing_macro_iterations = ++success_count; QUIT; } while (--repeat && (STRINGP (Vexecuting_macro) || VECTORP (Vexecuting_macro))); executing_macro = Qnil; real_this_command = Vexecuting_macro; UNGCPRO; return unbind_to (pdlcount, Qnil); } void init_macros () { Vexecuting_macro = Qnil; executing_macro = Qnil; } void syms_of_macros () { Qexecute_kbd_macro = intern ("execute-kbd-macro"); staticpro (&Qexecute_kbd_macro); Qkbd_macro_termination_hook = intern ("kbd-macro-termination-hook"); staticpro (&Qkbd_macro_termination_hook); defsubr (&Sstart_kbd_macro); defsubr (&Send_kbd_macro); defsubr (&Scall_last_kbd_macro); defsubr (&Sexecute_kbd_macro); defsubr (&Scancel_kbd_macro_events); defsubr (&Sstore_kbd_macro_event); DEFVAR_KBOARD ("defining-kbd-macro", defining_kbd_macro, doc: /* Non-nil while a keyboard macro is being defined. Don't set this! */); DEFVAR_LISP ("executing-macro", &Vexecuting_macro, doc: /* Currently executing keyboard macro (string or vector); nil if none executing. */); DEFVAR_INT ("executing-macro-index", &executing_macro_index, doc: /* Index in currently executing keyboard macro; undefined if none executing. */); DEFVAR_LISP_NOPRO ("executing-kbd-macro", &Vexecuting_macro, doc: /* Currently executing keyboard macro (string or vector); nil if none executing. */); DEFVAR_KBOARD ("last-kbd-macro", Vlast_kbd_macro, doc: /* Last kbd macro defined, as a string or vector; nil if none defined. */); }
