Merge from emacs--devo--0
[bpt/emacs.git] / src / textprop.c
1 /* Interface code for dealing with text properties.
2 Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,
3 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
6
7 GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
10 any later version.
11
12 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
19 the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
20 Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */
21
22 #include <config.h>
23 #include "lisp.h"
24 #include "intervals.h"
25 #include "buffer.h"
26 #include "window.h"
27
28 #ifndef NULL
29 #define NULL (void *)0
30 #endif
31
32 /* Test for membership, allowing for t (actually any non-cons) to mean the
33 universal set. */
34
35 #define TMEM(sym, set) (CONSP (set) ? ! NILP (Fmemq (sym, set)) : ! NILP (set))
36 \f
37
38 /* NOTES: previous- and next- property change will have to skip
39 zero-length intervals if they are implemented. This could be done
40 inside next_interval and previous_interval.
41
42 set_properties needs to deal with the interval property cache.
43
44 It is assumed that for any interval plist, a property appears
45 only once on the list. Although some code i.e., remove_properties,
46 handles the more general case, the uniqueness of properties is
47 necessary for the system to remain consistent. This requirement
48 is enforced by the subrs installing properties onto the intervals. */
49
50 \f
51 /* Types of hooks. */
52 Lisp_Object Qmouse_left;
53 Lisp_Object Qmouse_entered;
54 Lisp_Object Qpoint_left;
55 Lisp_Object Qpoint_entered;
56 Lisp_Object Qcategory;
57 Lisp_Object Qlocal_map;
58
59 /* Visual properties text (including strings) may have. */
60 Lisp_Object Qforeground, Qbackground, Qfont, Qunderline, Qstipple;
61 Lisp_Object Qinvisible, Qread_only, Qintangible, Qmouse_face;
62
63 /* Sticky properties */
64 Lisp_Object Qfront_sticky, Qrear_nonsticky;
65
66 /* If o1 is a cons whose cdr is a cons, return non-zero and set o2 to
67 the o1's cdr. Otherwise, return zero. This is handy for
68 traversing plists. */
69 #define PLIST_ELT_P(o1, o2) (CONSP (o1) && ((o2)=XCDR (o1), CONSP (o2)))
70
71 Lisp_Object Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks;
72 Lisp_Object Vdefault_text_properties;
73 Lisp_Object Vchar_property_alias_alist;
74 Lisp_Object Vtext_property_default_nonsticky;
75
76 /* verify_interval_modification saves insertion hooks here
77 to be run later by report_interval_modification. */
78 Lisp_Object interval_insert_behind_hooks;
79 Lisp_Object interval_insert_in_front_hooks;
80
81
82 /* Signal a `text-read-only' error. This function makes it easier
83 to capture that error in GDB by putting a breakpoint on it. */
84
85 static void
86 text_read_only (propval)
87 Lisp_Object propval;
88 {
89 Fsignal (Qtext_read_only, STRINGP (propval) ? Fcons (propval, Qnil) : Qnil);
90 }
91
92
93 \f
94 /* Extract the interval at the position pointed to by BEGIN from
95 OBJECT, a string or buffer. Additionally, check that the positions
96 pointed to by BEGIN and END are within the bounds of OBJECT, and
97 reverse them if *BEGIN is greater than *END. The objects pointed
98 to by BEGIN and END may be integers or markers; if the latter, they
99 are coerced to integers.
100
101 When OBJECT is a string, we increment *BEGIN and *END
102 to make them origin-one.
103
104 Note that buffer points don't correspond to interval indices.
105 For example, point-max is 1 greater than the index of the last
106 character. This difference is handled in the caller, which uses
107 the validated points to determine a length, and operates on that.
108 Exceptions are Ftext_properties_at, Fnext_property_change, and
109 Fprevious_property_change which call this function with BEGIN == END.
110 Handle this case specially.
111
112 If FORCE is soft (0), it's OK to return NULL_INTERVAL. Otherwise,
113 create an interval tree for OBJECT if one doesn't exist, provided
114 the object actually contains text. In the current design, if there
115 is no text, there can be no text properties. */
116
117 #define soft 0
118 #define hard 1
119
120 INTERVAL
121 validate_interval_range (object, begin, end, force)
122 Lisp_Object object, *begin, *end;
123 int force;
124 {
125 register INTERVAL i;
126 int searchpos;
127
128 CHECK_STRING_OR_BUFFER (object);
129 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (*begin);
130 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (*end);
131
132 /* If we are asked for a point, but from a subr which operates
133 on a range, then return nothing. */
134 if (EQ (*begin, *end) && begin != end)
135 return NULL_INTERVAL;
136
137 if (XINT (*begin) > XINT (*end))
138 {
139 Lisp_Object n;
140 n = *begin;
141 *begin = *end;
142 *end = n;
143 }
144
145 if (BUFFERP (object))
146 {
147 register struct buffer *b = XBUFFER (object);
148
149 if (!(BUF_BEGV (b) <= XINT (*begin) && XINT (*begin) <= XINT (*end)
150 && XINT (*end) <= BUF_ZV (b)))
151 args_out_of_range (*begin, *end);
152 i = BUF_INTERVALS (b);
153
154 /* If there's no text, there are no properties. */
155 if (BUF_BEGV (b) == BUF_ZV (b))
156 return NULL_INTERVAL;
157
158 searchpos = XINT (*begin);
159 }
160 else
161 {
162 int len = SCHARS (object);
163
164 if (! (0 <= XINT (*begin) && XINT (*begin) <= XINT (*end)
165 && XINT (*end) <= len))
166 args_out_of_range (*begin, *end);
167 XSETFASTINT (*begin, XFASTINT (*begin));
168 if (begin != end)
169 XSETFASTINT (*end, XFASTINT (*end));
170 i = STRING_INTERVALS (object);
171
172 if (len == 0)
173 return NULL_INTERVAL;
174
175 searchpos = XINT (*begin);
176 }
177
178 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
179 return (force ? create_root_interval (object) : i);
180
181 return find_interval (i, searchpos);
182 }
183
184 /* Validate LIST as a property list. If LIST is not a list, then
185 make one consisting of (LIST nil). Otherwise, verify that LIST
186 is even numbered and thus suitable as a plist. */
187
188 static Lisp_Object
189 validate_plist (list)
190 Lisp_Object list;
191 {
192 if (NILP (list))
193 return Qnil;
194
195 if (CONSP (list))
196 {
197 register int i;
198 register Lisp_Object tail;
199 for (i = 0, tail = list; !NILP (tail); i++)
200 {
201 tail = Fcdr (tail);
202 QUIT;
203 }
204 if (i & 1)
205 error ("Odd length text property list");
206 return list;
207 }
208
209 return Fcons (list, Fcons (Qnil, Qnil));
210 }
211
212 /* Return nonzero if interval I has all the properties,
213 with the same values, of list PLIST. */
214
215 static int
216 interval_has_all_properties (plist, i)
217 Lisp_Object plist;
218 INTERVAL i;
219 {
220 register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym1;
221 register int found;
222
223 /* Go through each element of PLIST. */
224 for (tail1 = plist; ! NILP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail1)))
225 {
226 sym1 = Fcar (tail1);
227 found = 0;
228
229 /* Go through I's plist, looking for sym1 */
230 for (tail2 = i->plist; ! NILP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail2)))
231 if (EQ (sym1, Fcar (tail2)))
232 {
233 /* Found the same property on both lists. If the
234 values are unequal, return zero. */
235 if (! EQ (Fcar (Fcdr (tail1)), Fcar (Fcdr (tail2))))
236 return 0;
237
238 /* Property has same value on both lists; go to next one. */
239 found = 1;
240 break;
241 }
242
243 if (! found)
244 return 0;
245 }
246
247 return 1;
248 }
249
250 /* Return nonzero if the plist of interval I has any of the
251 properties of PLIST, regardless of their values. */
252
253 static INLINE int
254 interval_has_some_properties (plist, i)
255 Lisp_Object plist;
256 INTERVAL i;
257 {
258 register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym;
259
260 /* Go through each element of PLIST. */
261 for (tail1 = plist; ! NILP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail1)))
262 {
263 sym = Fcar (tail1);
264
265 /* Go through i's plist, looking for tail1 */
266 for (tail2 = i->plist; ! NILP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail2)))
267 if (EQ (sym, Fcar (tail2)))
268 return 1;
269 }
270
271 return 0;
272 }
273
274 /* Return nonzero if the plist of interval I has any of the
275 property names in LIST, regardless of their values. */
276
277 static INLINE int
278 interval_has_some_properties_list (list, i)
279 Lisp_Object list;
280 INTERVAL i;
281 {
282 register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym;
283
284 /* Go through each element of LIST. */
285 for (tail1 = list; ! NILP (tail1); tail1 = XCDR (tail1))
286 {
287 sym = Fcar (tail1);
288
289 /* Go through i's plist, looking for tail1 */
290 for (tail2 = i->plist; ! NILP (tail2); tail2 = XCDR (XCDR (tail2)))
291 if (EQ (sym, XCAR (tail2)))
292 return 1;
293 }
294
295 return 0;
296 }
297 \f
298 /* Changing the plists of individual intervals. */
299
300 /* Return the value of PROP in property-list PLIST, or Qunbound if it
301 has none. */
302 static Lisp_Object
303 property_value (plist, prop)
304 Lisp_Object plist, prop;
305 {
306 Lisp_Object value;
307
308 while (PLIST_ELT_P (plist, value))
309 if (EQ (XCAR (plist), prop))
310 return XCAR (value);
311 else
312 plist = XCDR (value);
313
314 return Qunbound;
315 }
316
317 /* Set the properties of INTERVAL to PROPERTIES,
318 and record undo info for the previous values.
319 OBJECT is the string or buffer that INTERVAL belongs to. */
320
321 static void
322 set_properties (properties, interval, object)
323 Lisp_Object properties, object;
324 INTERVAL interval;
325 {
326 Lisp_Object sym, value;
327
328 if (BUFFERP (object))
329 {
330 /* For each property in the old plist which is missing from PROPERTIES,
331 or has a different value in PROPERTIES, make an undo record. */
332 for (sym = interval->plist;
333 PLIST_ELT_P (sym, value);
334 sym = XCDR (value))
335 if (! EQ (property_value (properties, XCAR (sym)),
336 XCAR (value)))
337 {
338 record_property_change (interval->position, LENGTH (interval),
339 XCAR (sym), XCAR (value),
340 object);
341 }
342
343 /* For each new property that has no value at all in the old plist,
344 make an undo record binding it to nil, so it will be removed. */
345 for (sym = properties;
346 PLIST_ELT_P (sym, value);
347 sym = XCDR (value))
348 if (EQ (property_value (interval->plist, XCAR (sym)), Qunbound))
349 {
350 record_property_change (interval->position, LENGTH (interval),
351 XCAR (sym), Qnil,
352 object);
353 }
354 }
355
356 /* Store new properties. */
357 interval->plist = Fcopy_sequence (properties);
358 }
359
360 /* Add the properties of PLIST to the interval I, or set
361 the value of I's property to the value of the property on PLIST
362 if they are different.
363
364 OBJECT should be the string or buffer the interval is in.
365
366 Return nonzero if this changes I (i.e., if any members of PLIST
367 are actually added to I's plist) */
368
369 static int
370 add_properties (plist, i, object)
371 Lisp_Object plist;
372 INTERVAL i;
373 Lisp_Object object;
374 {
375 Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym1, val1;
376 register int changed = 0;
377 register int found;
378 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2, gcpro3;
379
380 tail1 = plist;
381 sym1 = Qnil;
382 val1 = Qnil;
383 /* No need to protect OBJECT, because we can GC only in the case
384 where it is a buffer, and live buffers are always protected.
385 I and its plist are also protected, via OBJECT. */
386 GCPRO3 (tail1, sym1, val1);
387
388 /* Go through each element of PLIST. */
389 for (tail1 = plist; ! NILP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail1)))
390 {
391 sym1 = Fcar (tail1);
392 val1 = Fcar (Fcdr (tail1));
393 found = 0;
394
395 /* Go through I's plist, looking for sym1 */
396 for (tail2 = i->plist; ! NILP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail2)))
397 if (EQ (sym1, Fcar (tail2)))
398 {
399 /* No need to gcpro, because tail2 protects this
400 and it must be a cons cell (we get an error otherwise). */
401 register Lisp_Object this_cdr;
402
403 this_cdr = Fcdr (tail2);
404 /* Found the property. Now check its value. */
405 found = 1;
406
407 /* The properties have the same value on both lists.
408 Continue to the next property. */
409 if (EQ (val1, Fcar (this_cdr)))
410 break;
411
412 /* Record this change in the buffer, for undo purposes. */
413 if (BUFFERP (object))
414 {
415 record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i),
416 sym1, Fcar (this_cdr), object);
417 }
418
419 /* I's property has a different value -- change it */
420 Fsetcar (this_cdr, val1);
421 changed++;
422 break;
423 }
424
425 if (! found)
426 {
427 /* Record this change in the buffer, for undo purposes. */
428 if (BUFFERP (object))
429 {
430 record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i),
431 sym1, Qnil, object);
432 }
433 i->plist = Fcons (sym1, Fcons (val1, i->plist));
434 changed++;
435 }
436 }
437
438 UNGCPRO;
439
440 return changed;
441 }
442
443 /* For any members of PLIST, or LIST,
444 which are properties of I, remove them from I's plist.
445 (If PLIST is non-nil, use that, otherwise use LIST.)
446 OBJECT is the string or buffer containing I. */
447
448 static int
449 remove_properties (plist, list, i, object)
450 Lisp_Object plist, list;
451 INTERVAL i;
452 Lisp_Object object;
453 {
454 register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym, current_plist;
455 register int changed = 0;
456
457 /* Nonzero means tail1 is a plist, otherwise it is a list. */
458 int use_plist;
459
460 current_plist = i->plist;
461
462 if (! NILP (plist))
463 tail1 = plist, use_plist = 1;
464 else
465 tail1 = list, use_plist = 0;
466
467 /* Go through each element of LIST or PLIST. */
468 while (CONSP (tail1))
469 {
470 sym = XCAR (tail1);
471
472 /* First, remove the symbol if it's at the head of the list */
473 while (CONSP (current_plist) && EQ (sym, XCAR (current_plist)))
474 {
475 if (BUFFERP (object))
476 record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i),
477 sym, XCAR (XCDR (current_plist)),
478 object);
479
480 current_plist = XCDR (XCDR (current_plist));
481 changed++;
482 }
483
484 /* Go through I's plist, looking for SYM. */
485 tail2 = current_plist;
486 while (! NILP (tail2))
487 {
488 register Lisp_Object this;
489 this = XCDR (XCDR (tail2));
490 if (CONSP (this) && EQ (sym, XCAR (this)))
491 {
492 if (BUFFERP (object))
493 record_property_change (i->position, LENGTH (i),
494 sym, XCAR (XCDR (this)), object);
495
496 Fsetcdr (XCDR (tail2), XCDR (XCDR (this)));
497 changed++;
498 }
499 tail2 = this;
500 }
501
502 /* Advance thru TAIL1 one way or the other. */
503 tail1 = XCDR (tail1);
504 if (use_plist && CONSP (tail1))
505 tail1 = XCDR (tail1);
506 }
507
508 if (changed)
509 i->plist = current_plist;
510 return changed;
511 }
512
513 #if 0
514 /* Remove all properties from interval I. Return non-zero
515 if this changes the interval. */
516
517 static INLINE int
518 erase_properties (i)
519 INTERVAL i;
520 {
521 if (NILP (i->plist))
522 return 0;
523
524 i->plist = Qnil;
525 return 1;
526 }
527 #endif
528 \f
529 /* Returns the interval of POSITION in OBJECT.
530 POSITION is BEG-based. */
531
532 INTERVAL
533 interval_of (position, object)
534 int position;
535 Lisp_Object object;
536 {
537 register INTERVAL i;
538 int beg, end;
539
540 if (NILP (object))
541 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
542 else if (EQ (object, Qt))
543 return NULL_INTERVAL;
544
545 CHECK_STRING_OR_BUFFER (object);
546
547 if (BUFFERP (object))
548 {
549 register struct buffer *b = XBUFFER (object);
550
551 beg = BUF_BEGV (b);
552 end = BUF_ZV (b);
553 i = BUF_INTERVALS (b);
554 }
555 else
556 {
557 beg = 0;
558 end = SCHARS (object);
559 i = STRING_INTERVALS (object);
560 }
561
562 if (!(beg <= position && position <= end))
563 args_out_of_range (make_number (position), make_number (position));
564 if (beg == end || NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
565 return NULL_INTERVAL;
566
567 return find_interval (i, position);
568 }
569 \f
570 DEFUN ("text-properties-at", Ftext_properties_at,
571 Stext_properties_at, 1, 2, 0,
572 doc: /* Return the list of properties of the character at POSITION in OBJECT.
573 If the optional second argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
574 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
575 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
576 If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil. */)
577 (position, object)
578 Lisp_Object position, object;
579 {
580 register INTERVAL i;
581
582 if (NILP (object))
583 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
584
585 i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft);
586 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
587 return Qnil;
588 /* If POSITION is at the end of the interval,
589 it means it's the end of OBJECT.
590 There are no properties at the very end,
591 since no character follows. */
592 if (XINT (position) == LENGTH (i) + i->position)
593 return Qnil;
594
595 return i->plist;
596 }
597
598 DEFUN ("get-text-property", Fget_text_property, Sget_text_property, 2, 3, 0,
599 doc: /* Return the value of POSITION's property PROP, in OBJECT.
600 OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer.
601 If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil. */)
602 (position, prop, object)
603 Lisp_Object position, object;
604 Lisp_Object prop;
605 {
606 return textget (Ftext_properties_at (position, object), prop);
607 }
608
609 /* Return the value of char's property PROP, in OBJECT at POSITION.
610 OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer.
611 If OVERLAY is non-0, then in the case that the returned property is from
612 an overlay, the overlay found is returned in *OVERLAY, otherwise nil is
613 returned in *OVERLAY.
614 If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil.
615 If OBJECT is a buffer, then overlay properties are considered as well as
616 text properties.
617 If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but
618 window-specific overlays are considered only if they are associated
619 with OBJECT. */
620 Lisp_Object
621 get_char_property_and_overlay (position, prop, object, overlay)
622 Lisp_Object position, object;
623 register Lisp_Object prop;
624 Lisp_Object *overlay;
625 {
626 struct window *w = 0;
627
628 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position);
629
630 if (NILP (object))
631 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
632
633 if (WINDOWP (object))
634 {
635 w = XWINDOW (object);
636 object = w->buffer;
637 }
638 if (BUFFERP (object))
639 {
640 int noverlays;
641 Lisp_Object *overlay_vec;
642 struct buffer *obuf = current_buffer;
643
644 set_buffer_temp (XBUFFER (object));
645
646 GET_OVERLAYS_AT (XINT (position), overlay_vec, noverlays, NULL, 0);
647 noverlays = sort_overlays (overlay_vec, noverlays, w);
648
649 set_buffer_temp (obuf);
650
651 /* Now check the overlays in order of decreasing priority. */
652 while (--noverlays >= 0)
653 {
654 Lisp_Object tem = Foverlay_get (overlay_vec[noverlays], prop);
655 if (!NILP (tem))
656 {
657 if (overlay)
658 /* Return the overlay we got the property from. */
659 *overlay = overlay_vec[noverlays];
660 return tem;
661 }
662 }
663 }
664
665 if (overlay)
666 /* Indicate that the return value is not from an overlay. */
667 *overlay = Qnil;
668
669 /* Not a buffer, or no appropriate overlay, so fall through to the
670 simpler case. */
671 return Fget_text_property (position, prop, object);
672 }
673
674 DEFUN ("get-char-property", Fget_char_property, Sget_char_property, 2, 3, 0,
675 doc: /* Return the value of POSITION's property PROP, in OBJECT.
676 Both overlay properties and text properties are checked.
677 OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer.
678 If POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, the value is nil.
679 If OBJECT is a buffer, then overlay properties are considered as well as
680 text properties.
681 If OBJECT is a window, then that window's buffer is used, but window-specific
682 overlays are considered only if they are associated with OBJECT. */)
683 (position, prop, object)
684 Lisp_Object position, object;
685 register Lisp_Object prop;
686 {
687 return get_char_property_and_overlay (position, prop, object, 0);
688 }
689
690 DEFUN ("get-char-property-and-overlay", Fget_char_property_and_overlay,
691 Sget_char_property_and_overlay, 2, 3, 0,
692 doc: /* Like `get-char-property', but with extra overlay information.
693 The value is a cons cell. Its car is the return value of `get-char-property'
694 with the same arguments--that is, the value of POSITION's property
695 PROP in OBJECT. Its cdr is the overlay in which the property was
696 found, or nil, if it was found as a text property or not found at all.
697
698 OBJECT is optional and defaults to the current buffer. OBJECT may be
699 a string, a buffer or a window. For strings, the cdr of the return
700 value is always nil, since strings do not have overlays. If OBJECT is
701 a window, then that window's buffer is used, but window-specific
702 overlays are considered only if they are associated with OBJECT. If
703 POSITION is at the end of OBJECT, both car and cdr are nil. */)
704 (position, prop, object)
705 Lisp_Object position, object;
706 register Lisp_Object prop;
707 {
708 Lisp_Object overlay;
709 Lisp_Object val
710 = get_char_property_and_overlay (position, prop, object, &overlay);
711 return Fcons(val, overlay);
712 }
713
714 \f
715 DEFUN ("next-char-property-change", Fnext_char_property_change,
716 Snext_char_property_change, 1, 2, 0,
717 doc: /* Return the position of next text property or overlay change.
718 This scans characters forward in the current buffer from POSITION till
719 it finds a change in some text property, or the beginning or end of an
720 overlay, and returns the position of that.
721 If none is found up to (point-max), the function returns (point-max).
722
723 If the optional second argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
724 past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT.
725 LIMIT is a no-op if it is greater than (point-max). */)
726 (position, limit)
727 Lisp_Object position, limit;
728 {
729 Lisp_Object temp;
730
731 temp = Fnext_overlay_change (position);
732 if (! NILP (limit))
733 {
734 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
735 if (XINT (limit) < XINT (temp))
736 temp = limit;
737 }
738 return Fnext_property_change (position, Qnil, temp);
739 }
740
741 DEFUN ("previous-char-property-change", Fprevious_char_property_change,
742 Sprevious_char_property_change, 1, 2, 0,
743 doc: /* Return the position of previous text property or overlay change.
744 Scans characters backward in the current buffer from POSITION till it
745 finds a change in some text property, or the beginning or end of an
746 overlay, and returns the position of that.
747 If none is found since (point-min), the function returns (point-min).
748
749 If the optional second argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
750 past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT.
751 LIMIT is a no-op if it is less than (point-min). */)
752 (position, limit)
753 Lisp_Object position, limit;
754 {
755 Lisp_Object temp;
756
757 temp = Fprevious_overlay_change (position);
758 if (! NILP (limit))
759 {
760 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
761 if (XINT (limit) > XINT (temp))
762 temp = limit;
763 }
764 return Fprevious_property_change (position, Qnil, temp);
765 }
766
767
768 DEFUN ("next-single-char-property-change", Fnext_single_char_property_change,
769 Snext_single_char_property_change, 2, 4, 0,
770 doc: /* Return the position of next text property or overlay change for a specific property.
771 Scans characters forward from POSITION till it finds
772 a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change.
773 If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
774 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
775 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
776
777 In a string, scan runs to the end of the string.
778 In a buffer, it runs to (point-max), and the value cannot exceed that.
779
780 The property values are compared with `eq'.
781 If the property is constant all the way to the end of OBJECT, return the
782 last valid position in OBJECT.
783 If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
784 past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */)
785 (position, prop, object, limit)
786 Lisp_Object prop, position, object, limit;
787 {
788 if (STRINGP (object))
789 {
790 position = Fnext_single_property_change (position, prop, object, limit);
791 if (NILP (position))
792 {
793 if (NILP (limit))
794 position = make_number (SCHARS (object));
795 else
796 {
797 CHECK_NUMBER (limit);
798 position = limit;
799 }
800 }
801 }
802 else
803 {
804 Lisp_Object initial_value, value;
805 int count = SPECPDL_INDEX ();
806
807 if (! NILP (object))
808 CHECK_BUFFER (object);
809
810 if (BUFFERP (object) && current_buffer != XBUFFER (object))
811 {
812 record_unwind_protect (Fset_buffer, Fcurrent_buffer ());
813 Fset_buffer (object);
814 }
815
816 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position);
817
818 initial_value = Fget_char_property (position, prop, object);
819
820 if (NILP (limit))
821 XSETFASTINT (limit, ZV);
822 else
823 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
824
825 if (XFASTINT (position) >= XFASTINT (limit))
826 {
827 position = limit;
828 if (XFASTINT (position) > ZV)
829 XSETFASTINT (position, ZV);
830 }
831 else
832 while (1)
833 {
834 position = Fnext_char_property_change (position, limit);
835 if (XFASTINT (position) >= XFASTINT (limit))
836 {
837 position = limit;
838 break;
839 }
840
841 value = Fget_char_property (position, prop, object);
842 if (!EQ (value, initial_value))
843 break;
844 }
845
846 unbind_to (count, Qnil);
847 }
848
849 return position;
850 }
851
852 DEFUN ("previous-single-char-property-change",
853 Fprevious_single_char_property_change,
854 Sprevious_single_char_property_change, 2, 4, 0,
855 doc: /* Return the position of previous text property or overlay change for a specific property.
856 Scans characters backward from POSITION till it finds
857 a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change.
858 If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
859 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
860 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
861
862 In a string, scan runs to the start of the string.
863 In a buffer, it runs to (point-min), and the value cannot be less than that.
864
865 The property values are compared with `eq'.
866 If the property is constant all the way to the start of OBJECT, return the
867 first valid position in OBJECT.
868 If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
869 back past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */)
870 (position, prop, object, limit)
871 Lisp_Object prop, position, object, limit;
872 {
873 if (STRINGP (object))
874 {
875 position = Fprevious_single_property_change (position, prop, object, limit);
876 if (NILP (position))
877 {
878 if (NILP (limit))
879 position = make_number (SCHARS (object));
880 else
881 {
882 CHECK_NUMBER (limit);
883 position = limit;
884 }
885 }
886 }
887 else
888 {
889 int count = SPECPDL_INDEX ();
890
891 if (! NILP (object))
892 CHECK_BUFFER (object);
893
894 if (BUFFERP (object) && current_buffer != XBUFFER (object))
895 {
896 record_unwind_protect (Fset_buffer, Fcurrent_buffer ());
897 Fset_buffer (object);
898 }
899
900 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (position);
901
902 if (NILP (limit))
903 XSETFASTINT (limit, BEGV);
904 else
905 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
906
907 if (XFASTINT (position) <= XFASTINT (limit))
908 {
909 position = limit;
910 if (XFASTINT (position) < BEGV)
911 XSETFASTINT (position, BEGV);
912 }
913 else
914 {
915 Lisp_Object initial_value
916 = Fget_char_property (make_number (XFASTINT (position) - 1),
917 prop, object);
918
919 while (1)
920 {
921 position = Fprevious_char_property_change (position, limit);
922
923 if (XFASTINT (position) <= XFASTINT (limit))
924 {
925 position = limit;
926 break;
927 }
928 else
929 {
930 Lisp_Object value
931 = Fget_char_property (make_number (XFASTINT (position) - 1),
932 prop, object);
933
934 if (!EQ (value, initial_value))
935 break;
936 }
937 }
938 }
939
940 unbind_to (count, Qnil);
941 }
942
943 return position;
944 }
945 \f
946 DEFUN ("next-property-change", Fnext_property_change,
947 Snext_property_change, 1, 3, 0,
948 doc: /* Return the position of next property change.
949 Scans characters forward from POSITION in OBJECT till it finds
950 a change in some text property, then returns the position of the change.
951 If the optional second argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
952 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
953 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
954 Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the end of OBJECT.
955 If the value is non-nil, it is a position greater than POSITION, never equal.
956
957 If the optional third argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
958 past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */)
959 (position, object, limit)
960 Lisp_Object position, object, limit;
961 {
962 register INTERVAL i, next;
963
964 if (NILP (object))
965 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
966
967 if (!NILP (limit) && !EQ (limit, Qt))
968 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
969
970 i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft);
971
972 /* If LIMIT is t, return start of next interval--don't
973 bother checking further intervals. */
974 if (EQ (limit, Qt))
975 {
976 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
977 next = i;
978 else
979 next = next_interval (i);
980
981 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next))
982 XSETFASTINT (position, (STRINGP (object)
983 ? SCHARS (object)
984 : BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object))));
985 else
986 XSETFASTINT (position, next->position);
987 return position;
988 }
989
990 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
991 return limit;
992
993 next = next_interval (i);
994
995 while (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) && intervals_equal (i, next)
996 && (NILP (limit) || next->position < XFASTINT (limit)))
997 next = next_interval (next);
998
999 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next))
1000 return limit;
1001 if (NILP (limit))
1002 XSETFASTINT (limit, (STRINGP (object)
1003 ? SCHARS (object)
1004 : BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object))));
1005 if (!(next->position < XFASTINT (limit)))
1006 return limit;
1007
1008 XSETFASTINT (position, next->position);
1009 return position;
1010 }
1011
1012 /* Return 1 if there's a change in some property between BEG and END. */
1013
1014 int
1015 property_change_between_p (beg, end)
1016 int beg, end;
1017 {
1018 register INTERVAL i, next;
1019 Lisp_Object object, pos;
1020
1021 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1022 XSETFASTINT (pos, beg);
1023
1024 i = validate_interval_range (object, &pos, &pos, soft);
1025 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1026 return 0;
1027
1028 next = next_interval (i);
1029 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (next) && intervals_equal (i, next))
1030 {
1031 next = next_interval (next);
1032 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next))
1033 return 0;
1034 if (next->position >= end)
1035 return 0;
1036 }
1037
1038 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next))
1039 return 0;
1040
1041 return 1;
1042 }
1043
1044 DEFUN ("next-single-property-change", Fnext_single_property_change,
1045 Snext_single_property_change, 2, 4, 0,
1046 doc: /* Return the position of next property change for a specific property.
1047 Scans characters forward from POSITION till it finds
1048 a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change.
1049 If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1050 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
1051 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
1052 The property values are compared with `eq'.
1053 Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the end of OBJECT.
1054 If the value is non-nil, it is a position greater than POSITION, never equal.
1055
1056 If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
1057 past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found before LIMIT. */)
1058 (position, prop, object, limit)
1059 Lisp_Object position, prop, object, limit;
1060 {
1061 register INTERVAL i, next;
1062 register Lisp_Object here_val;
1063
1064 if (NILP (object))
1065 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1066
1067 if (!NILP (limit))
1068 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
1069
1070 i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft);
1071 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1072 return limit;
1073
1074 here_val = textget (i->plist, prop);
1075 next = next_interval (i);
1076 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (next)
1077 && EQ (here_val, textget (next->plist, prop))
1078 && (NILP (limit) || next->position < XFASTINT (limit)))
1079 next = next_interval (next);
1080
1081 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (next))
1082 return limit;
1083 if (NILP (limit))
1084 XSETFASTINT (limit, (STRINGP (object)
1085 ? SCHARS (object)
1086 : BUF_ZV (XBUFFER (object))));
1087 if (!(next->position < XFASTINT (limit)))
1088 return limit;
1089
1090 return make_number (next->position);
1091 }
1092
1093 DEFUN ("previous-property-change", Fprevious_property_change,
1094 Sprevious_property_change, 1, 3, 0,
1095 doc: /* Return the position of previous property change.
1096 Scans characters backwards from POSITION in OBJECT till it finds
1097 a change in some text property, then returns the position of the change.
1098 If the optional second argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1099 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
1100 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
1101 Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the start of OBJECT.
1102 If the value is non-nil, it is a position less than POSITION, never equal.
1103
1104 If the optional third argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
1105 back past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found until LIMIT. */)
1106 (position, object, limit)
1107 Lisp_Object position, object, limit;
1108 {
1109 register INTERVAL i, previous;
1110
1111 if (NILP (object))
1112 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1113
1114 if (!NILP (limit))
1115 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
1116
1117 i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft);
1118 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1119 return limit;
1120
1121 /* Start with the interval containing the char before point. */
1122 if (i->position == XFASTINT (position))
1123 i = previous_interval (i);
1124
1125 previous = previous_interval (i);
1126 while (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous) && intervals_equal (previous, i)
1127 && (NILP (limit)
1128 || (previous->position + LENGTH (previous) > XFASTINT (limit))))
1129 previous = previous_interval (previous);
1130 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous))
1131 return limit;
1132 if (NILP (limit))
1133 XSETFASTINT (limit, (STRINGP (object) ? 0 : BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object))));
1134 if (!(previous->position + LENGTH (previous) > XFASTINT (limit)))
1135 return limit;
1136
1137 return make_number (previous->position + LENGTH (previous));
1138 }
1139
1140 DEFUN ("previous-single-property-change", Fprevious_single_property_change,
1141 Sprevious_single_property_change, 2, 4, 0,
1142 doc: /* Return the position of previous property change for a specific property.
1143 Scans characters backward from POSITION till it finds
1144 a change in the PROP property, then returns the position of the change.
1145 If the optional third argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1146 the current buffer), POSITION is a buffer position (integer or marker).
1147 If OBJECT is a string, POSITION is a 0-based index into it.
1148 The property values are compared with `eq'.
1149 Return nil if the property is constant all the way to the start of OBJECT.
1150 If the value is non-nil, it is a position less than POSITION, never equal.
1151
1152 If the optional fourth argument LIMIT is non-nil, don't search
1153 back past position LIMIT; return LIMIT if nothing is found until LIMIT. */)
1154 (position, prop, object, limit)
1155 Lisp_Object position, prop, object, limit;
1156 {
1157 register INTERVAL i, previous;
1158 register Lisp_Object here_val;
1159
1160 if (NILP (object))
1161 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1162
1163 if (!NILP (limit))
1164 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (limit);
1165
1166 i = validate_interval_range (object, &position, &position, soft);
1167
1168 /* Start with the interval containing the char before point. */
1169 if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) && i->position == XFASTINT (position))
1170 i = previous_interval (i);
1171
1172 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1173 return limit;
1174
1175 here_val = textget (i->plist, prop);
1176 previous = previous_interval (i);
1177 while (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous)
1178 && EQ (here_val, textget (previous->plist, prop))
1179 && (NILP (limit)
1180 || (previous->position + LENGTH (previous) > XFASTINT (limit))))
1181 previous = previous_interval (previous);
1182 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (previous))
1183 return limit;
1184 if (NILP (limit))
1185 XSETFASTINT (limit, (STRINGP (object) ? 0 : BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (object))));
1186 if (!(previous->position + LENGTH (previous) > XFASTINT (limit)))
1187 return limit;
1188
1189 return make_number (previous->position + LENGTH (previous));
1190 }
1191 \f
1192 /* Callers note, this can GC when OBJECT is a buffer (or nil). */
1193
1194 DEFUN ("add-text-properties", Fadd_text_properties,
1195 Sadd_text_properties, 3, 4, 0,
1196 doc: /* Add properties to the text from START to END.
1197 The third argument PROPERTIES is a property list
1198 specifying the property values to add. If the optional fourth argument
1199 OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means the current buffer),
1200 START and END are buffer positions (integers or markers).
1201 If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it.
1202 Return t if any property value actually changed, nil otherwise. */)
1203 (start, end, properties, object)
1204 Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object;
1205 {
1206 register INTERVAL i, unchanged;
1207 register int s, len, modified = 0;
1208 struct gcpro gcpro1;
1209
1210 properties = validate_plist (properties);
1211 if (NILP (properties))
1212 return Qnil;
1213
1214 if (NILP (object))
1215 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1216
1217 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, hard);
1218 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1219 return Qnil;
1220
1221 s = XINT (start);
1222 len = XINT (end) - s;
1223
1224 /* No need to protect OBJECT, because we GC only if it's a buffer,
1225 and live buffers are always protected. */
1226 GCPRO1 (properties);
1227
1228 /* If we're not starting on an interval boundary, we have to
1229 split this interval. */
1230 if (i->position != s)
1231 {
1232 /* If this interval already has the properties, we can
1233 skip it. */
1234 if (interval_has_all_properties (properties, i))
1235 {
1236 int got = (LENGTH (i) - (s - i->position));
1237 if (got >= len)
1238 RETURN_UNGCPRO (Qnil);
1239 len -= got;
1240 i = next_interval (i);
1241 }
1242 else
1243 {
1244 unchanged = i;
1245 i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position);
1246 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1247 }
1248 }
1249
1250 if (BUFFERP (object))
1251 modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end));
1252
1253 /* We are at the beginning of interval I, with LEN chars to scan. */
1254 for (;;)
1255 {
1256 if (i == 0)
1257 abort ();
1258
1259 if (LENGTH (i) >= len)
1260 {
1261 /* We can UNGCPRO safely here, because there will be just
1262 one more chance to gc, in the next call to add_properties,
1263 and after that we will not need PROPERTIES or OBJECT again. */
1264 UNGCPRO;
1265
1266 if (interval_has_all_properties (properties, i))
1267 {
1268 if (BUFFERP (object))
1269 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1270 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1271
1272 return modified ? Qt : Qnil;
1273 }
1274
1275 if (LENGTH (i) == len)
1276 {
1277 add_properties (properties, i, object);
1278 if (BUFFERP (object))
1279 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1280 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1281 return Qt;
1282 }
1283
1284 /* i doesn't have the properties, and goes past the change limit */
1285 unchanged = i;
1286 i = split_interval_left (unchanged, len);
1287 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1288 add_properties (properties, i, object);
1289 if (BUFFERP (object))
1290 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1291 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1292 return Qt;
1293 }
1294
1295 len -= LENGTH (i);
1296 modified += add_properties (properties, i, object);
1297 i = next_interval (i);
1298 }
1299 }
1300
1301 /* Callers note, this can GC when OBJECT is a buffer (or nil). */
1302
1303 DEFUN ("put-text-property", Fput_text_property,
1304 Sput_text_property, 4, 5, 0,
1305 doc: /* Set one property of the text from START to END.
1306 The third and fourth arguments PROPERTY and VALUE
1307 specify the property to add.
1308 If the optional fifth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1309 the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or
1310 markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. */)
1311 (start, end, property, value, object)
1312 Lisp_Object start, end, property, value, object;
1313 {
1314 Fadd_text_properties (start, end,
1315 Fcons (property, Fcons (value, Qnil)),
1316 object);
1317 return Qnil;
1318 }
1319
1320 DEFUN ("set-text-properties", Fset_text_properties,
1321 Sset_text_properties, 3, 4, 0,
1322 doc: /* Completely replace properties of text from START to END.
1323 The third argument PROPERTIES is the new property list.
1324 If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1325 the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or
1326 markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it.
1327 If PROPERTIES is nil, the effect is to remove all properties from
1328 the designated part of OBJECT. */)
1329 (start, end, properties, object)
1330 Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object;
1331 {
1332 return set_text_properties (start, end, properties, object, Qt);
1333 }
1334
1335
1336 /* Replace properties of text from START to END with new list of
1337 properties PROPERTIES. OBJECT is the buffer or string containing
1338 the text. OBJECT nil means use the current buffer.
1339 SIGNAL_AFTER_CHANGE_P nil means don't signal after changes. Value
1340 is nil if the function _detected_ that it did not replace any
1341 properties, non-nil otherwise. */
1342
1343 Lisp_Object
1344 set_text_properties (start, end, properties, object, signal_after_change_p)
1345 Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object, signal_after_change_p;
1346 {
1347 register INTERVAL i;
1348 Lisp_Object ostart, oend;
1349
1350 ostart = start;
1351 oend = end;
1352
1353 properties = validate_plist (properties);
1354
1355 if (NILP (object))
1356 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1357
1358 /* If we want no properties for a whole string,
1359 get rid of its intervals. */
1360 if (NILP (properties) && STRINGP (object)
1361 && XFASTINT (start) == 0
1362 && XFASTINT (end) == SCHARS (object))
1363 {
1364 if (! STRING_INTERVALS (object))
1365 return Qnil;
1366
1367 STRING_SET_INTERVALS (object, NULL_INTERVAL);
1368 return Qt;
1369 }
1370
1371 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft);
1372
1373 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1374 {
1375 /* If buffer has no properties, and we want none, return now. */
1376 if (NILP (properties))
1377 return Qnil;
1378
1379 /* Restore the original START and END values
1380 because validate_interval_range increments them for strings. */
1381 start = ostart;
1382 end = oend;
1383
1384 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, hard);
1385 /* This can return if start == end. */
1386 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1387 return Qnil;
1388 }
1389
1390 if (BUFFERP (object))
1391 modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end));
1392
1393 set_text_properties_1 (start, end, properties, object, i);
1394
1395 if (BUFFERP (object) && !NILP (signal_after_change_p))
1396 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1397 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1398 return Qt;
1399 }
1400
1401 /* Replace properties of text from START to END with new list of
1402 properties PROPERTIES. BUFFER is the buffer containing
1403 the text. This does not obey any hooks.
1404 You can provide the interval that START is located in as I,
1405 or pass NULL for I and this function will find it.
1406 START and END can be in any order. */
1407
1408 void
1409 set_text_properties_1 (start, end, properties, buffer, i)
1410 Lisp_Object start, end, properties, buffer;
1411 INTERVAL i;
1412 {
1413 register INTERVAL prev_changed = NULL_INTERVAL;
1414 register int s, len;
1415 INTERVAL unchanged;
1416
1417 s = XINT (start);
1418 len = XINT (end) - s;
1419 if (len == 0)
1420 return;
1421 if (len < 0)
1422 {
1423 s = s + len;
1424 len = - len;
1425 }
1426
1427 if (i == 0)
1428 i = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (XBUFFER (buffer)), s);
1429
1430 if (i->position != s)
1431 {
1432 unchanged = i;
1433 i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position);
1434
1435 if (LENGTH (i) > len)
1436 {
1437 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1438 i = split_interval_left (i, len);
1439 set_properties (properties, i, buffer);
1440 return;
1441 }
1442
1443 set_properties (properties, i, buffer);
1444
1445 if (LENGTH (i) == len)
1446 return;
1447
1448 prev_changed = i;
1449 len -= LENGTH (i);
1450 i = next_interval (i);
1451 }
1452
1453 /* We are starting at the beginning of an interval, I */
1454 while (len > 0)
1455 {
1456 if (i == 0)
1457 abort ();
1458
1459 if (LENGTH (i) >= len)
1460 {
1461 if (LENGTH (i) > len)
1462 i = split_interval_left (i, len);
1463
1464 /* We have to call set_properties even if we are going to
1465 merge the intervals, so as to make the undo records
1466 and cause redisplay to happen. */
1467 set_properties (properties, i, buffer);
1468 if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev_changed))
1469 merge_interval_left (i);
1470 return;
1471 }
1472
1473 len -= LENGTH (i);
1474
1475 /* We have to call set_properties even if we are going to
1476 merge the intervals, so as to make the undo records
1477 and cause redisplay to happen. */
1478 set_properties (properties, i, buffer);
1479 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev_changed))
1480 prev_changed = i;
1481 else
1482 prev_changed = i = merge_interval_left (i);
1483
1484 i = next_interval (i);
1485 }
1486 }
1487
1488 DEFUN ("remove-text-properties", Fremove_text_properties,
1489 Sremove_text_properties, 3, 4, 0,
1490 doc: /* Remove some properties from text from START to END.
1491 The third argument PROPERTIES is a property list
1492 whose property names specify the properties to remove.
1493 \(The values stored in PROPERTIES are ignored.)
1494 If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1495 the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or
1496 markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it.
1497 Return t if any property was actually removed, nil otherwise.
1498
1499 Use set-text-properties if you want to remove all text properties. */)
1500 (start, end, properties, object)
1501 Lisp_Object start, end, properties, object;
1502 {
1503 register INTERVAL i, unchanged;
1504 register int s, len, modified = 0;
1505
1506 if (NILP (object))
1507 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1508
1509 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft);
1510 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1511 return Qnil;
1512
1513 s = XINT (start);
1514 len = XINT (end) - s;
1515
1516 if (i->position != s)
1517 {
1518 /* No properties on this first interval -- return if
1519 it covers the entire region. */
1520 if (! interval_has_some_properties (properties, i))
1521 {
1522 int got = (LENGTH (i) - (s - i->position));
1523 if (got >= len)
1524 return Qnil;
1525 len -= got;
1526 i = next_interval (i);
1527 }
1528 /* Split away the beginning of this interval; what we don't
1529 want to modify. */
1530 else
1531 {
1532 unchanged = i;
1533 i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position);
1534 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1535 }
1536 }
1537
1538 if (BUFFERP (object))
1539 modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end));
1540
1541 /* We are at the beginning of an interval, with len to scan */
1542 for (;;)
1543 {
1544 if (i == 0)
1545 abort ();
1546
1547 if (LENGTH (i) >= len)
1548 {
1549 if (! interval_has_some_properties (properties, i))
1550 return modified ? Qt : Qnil;
1551
1552 if (LENGTH (i) == len)
1553 {
1554 remove_properties (properties, Qnil, i, object);
1555 if (BUFFERP (object))
1556 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1557 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1558 return Qt;
1559 }
1560
1561 /* i has the properties, and goes past the change limit */
1562 unchanged = i;
1563 i = split_interval_left (i, len);
1564 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1565 remove_properties (properties, Qnil, i, object);
1566 if (BUFFERP (object))
1567 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1568 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1569 return Qt;
1570 }
1571
1572 len -= LENGTH (i);
1573 modified += remove_properties (properties, Qnil, i, object);
1574 i = next_interval (i);
1575 }
1576 }
1577
1578 DEFUN ("remove-list-of-text-properties", Fremove_list_of_text_properties,
1579 Sremove_list_of_text_properties, 3, 4, 0,
1580 doc: /* Remove some properties from text from START to END.
1581 The third argument LIST-OF-PROPERTIES is a list of property names to remove.
1582 If the optional fourth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1583 the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or
1584 markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it.
1585 Return t if any property was actually removed, nil otherwise. */)
1586 (start, end, list_of_properties, object)
1587 Lisp_Object start, end, list_of_properties, object;
1588 {
1589 register INTERVAL i, unchanged;
1590 register int s, len, modified = 0;
1591 Lisp_Object properties;
1592 properties = list_of_properties;
1593
1594 if (NILP (object))
1595 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1596
1597 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft);
1598 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1599 return Qnil;
1600
1601 s = XINT (start);
1602 len = XINT (end) - s;
1603
1604 if (i->position != s)
1605 {
1606 /* No properties on this first interval -- return if
1607 it covers the entire region. */
1608 if (! interval_has_some_properties_list (properties, i))
1609 {
1610 int got = (LENGTH (i) - (s - i->position));
1611 if (got >= len)
1612 return Qnil;
1613 len -= got;
1614 i = next_interval (i);
1615 }
1616 /* Split away the beginning of this interval; what we don't
1617 want to modify. */
1618 else
1619 {
1620 unchanged = i;
1621 i = split_interval_right (unchanged, s - unchanged->position);
1622 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1623 }
1624 }
1625
1626 /* We are at the beginning of an interval, with len to scan.
1627 The flag `modified' records if changes have been made.
1628 When object is a buffer, we must call modify_region before changes are
1629 made and signal_after_change when we are done.
1630 We call modify_region before calling remove_properties iff modified == 0,
1631 and we call signal_after_change before returning iff modified != 0. */
1632 for (;;)
1633 {
1634 if (i == 0)
1635 abort ();
1636
1637 if (LENGTH (i) >= len)
1638 {
1639 if (! interval_has_some_properties_list (properties, i))
1640 if (modified)
1641 {
1642 if (BUFFERP (object))
1643 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1644 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1645 return Qt;
1646 }
1647 else
1648 return Qnil;
1649
1650 if (LENGTH (i) == len)
1651 {
1652 if (!modified && BUFFERP (object))
1653 modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end));
1654 remove_properties (Qnil, properties, i, object);
1655 if (BUFFERP (object))
1656 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1657 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1658 return Qt;
1659 }
1660
1661 /* i has the properties, and goes past the change limit */
1662 unchanged = i;
1663 i = split_interval_left (i, len);
1664 copy_properties (unchanged, i);
1665 if (!modified && BUFFERP (object))
1666 modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end));
1667 remove_properties (Qnil, properties, i, object);
1668 if (BUFFERP (object))
1669 signal_after_change (XINT (start), XINT (end) - XINT (start),
1670 XINT (end) - XINT (start));
1671 return Qt;
1672 }
1673
1674 if (interval_has_some_properties_list (properties, i))
1675 {
1676 if (!modified && BUFFERP (object))
1677 modify_region (XBUFFER (object), XINT (start), XINT (end));
1678 remove_properties (Qnil, properties, i, object);
1679 modified = 1;
1680 }
1681 len -= LENGTH (i);
1682 i = next_interval (i);
1683 }
1684 }
1685 \f
1686 DEFUN ("text-property-any", Ftext_property_any,
1687 Stext_property_any, 4, 5, 0,
1688 doc: /* Check text from START to END for property PROPERTY equalling VALUE.
1689 If so, return the position of the first character whose property PROPERTY
1690 is `eq' to VALUE. Otherwise return nil.
1691 If the optional fifth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1692 the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or
1693 markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. */)
1694 (start, end, property, value, object)
1695 Lisp_Object start, end, property, value, object;
1696 {
1697 register INTERVAL i;
1698 register int e, pos;
1699
1700 if (NILP (object))
1701 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1702 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft);
1703 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1704 return (!NILP (value) || EQ (start, end) ? Qnil : start);
1705 e = XINT (end);
1706
1707 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1708 {
1709 if (i->position >= e)
1710 break;
1711 if (EQ (textget (i->plist, property), value))
1712 {
1713 pos = i->position;
1714 if (pos < XINT (start))
1715 pos = XINT (start);
1716 return make_number (pos);
1717 }
1718 i = next_interval (i);
1719 }
1720 return Qnil;
1721 }
1722
1723 DEFUN ("text-property-not-all", Ftext_property_not_all,
1724 Stext_property_not_all, 4, 5, 0,
1725 doc: /* Check text from START to END for property PROPERTY not equalling VALUE.
1726 If so, return the position of the first character whose property PROPERTY
1727 is not `eq' to VALUE. Otherwise, return nil.
1728 If the optional fifth argument OBJECT is a buffer (or nil, which means
1729 the current buffer), START and END are buffer positions (integers or
1730 markers). If OBJECT is a string, START and END are 0-based indices into it. */)
1731 (start, end, property, value, object)
1732 Lisp_Object start, end, property, value, object;
1733 {
1734 register INTERVAL i;
1735 register int s, e;
1736
1737 if (NILP (object))
1738 XSETBUFFER (object, current_buffer);
1739 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft);
1740 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1741 return (NILP (value) || EQ (start, end)) ? Qnil : start;
1742 s = XINT (start);
1743 e = XINT (end);
1744
1745 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1746 {
1747 if (i->position >= e)
1748 break;
1749 if (! EQ (textget (i->plist, property), value))
1750 {
1751 if (i->position > s)
1752 s = i->position;
1753 return make_number (s);
1754 }
1755 i = next_interval (i);
1756 }
1757 return Qnil;
1758 }
1759
1760 \f
1761 /* Return the direction from which the text-property PROP would be
1762 inherited by any new text inserted at POS: 1 if it would be
1763 inherited from the char after POS, -1 if it would be inherited from
1764 the char before POS, and 0 if from neither.
1765 BUFFER can be either a buffer or nil (meaning current buffer). */
1766
1767 int
1768 text_property_stickiness (prop, pos, buffer)
1769 Lisp_Object prop, pos, buffer;
1770 {
1771 Lisp_Object prev_pos, front_sticky;
1772 int is_rear_sticky = 1, is_front_sticky = 0; /* defaults */
1773
1774 if (NILP (buffer))
1775 XSETBUFFER (buffer, current_buffer);
1776
1777 if (XINT (pos) > BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (buffer)))
1778 /* Consider previous character. */
1779 {
1780 Lisp_Object rear_non_sticky;
1781
1782 prev_pos = make_number (XINT (pos) - 1);
1783 rear_non_sticky = Fget_text_property (prev_pos, Qrear_nonsticky, buffer);
1784
1785 if (!NILP (CONSP (rear_non_sticky)
1786 ? Fmemq (prop, rear_non_sticky)
1787 : rear_non_sticky))
1788 /* PROP is rear-non-sticky. */
1789 is_rear_sticky = 0;
1790 }
1791 else
1792 return 0;
1793
1794 /* Consider following character. */
1795 /* This signals an arg-out-of-range error if pos is outside the
1796 buffer's accessible range. */
1797 front_sticky = Fget_text_property (pos, Qfront_sticky, buffer);
1798
1799 if (EQ (front_sticky, Qt)
1800 || (CONSP (front_sticky)
1801 && !NILP (Fmemq (prop, front_sticky))))
1802 /* PROP is inherited from after. */
1803 is_front_sticky = 1;
1804
1805 /* Simple cases, where the properties are consistent. */
1806 if (is_rear_sticky && !is_front_sticky)
1807 return -1;
1808 else if (!is_rear_sticky && is_front_sticky)
1809 return 1;
1810 else if (!is_rear_sticky && !is_front_sticky)
1811 return 0;
1812
1813 /* The stickiness properties are inconsistent, so we have to
1814 disambiguate. Basically, rear-sticky wins, _except_ if the
1815 property that would be inherited has a value of nil, in which case
1816 front-sticky wins. */
1817 if (XINT (pos) == BUF_BEGV (XBUFFER (buffer))
1818 || NILP (Fget_text_property (prev_pos, prop, buffer)))
1819 return 1;
1820 else
1821 return -1;
1822 }
1823
1824 \f
1825 /* I don't think this is the right interface to export; how often do you
1826 want to do something like this, other than when you're copying objects
1827 around?
1828
1829 I think it would be better to have a pair of functions, one which
1830 returns the text properties of a region as a list of ranges and
1831 plists, and another which applies such a list to another object. */
1832
1833 /* Add properties from SRC to SRC of SRC, starting at POS in DEST.
1834 SRC and DEST may each refer to strings or buffers.
1835 Optional sixth argument PROP causes only that property to be copied.
1836 Properties are copied to DEST as if by `add-text-properties'.
1837 Return t if any property value actually changed, nil otherwise. */
1838
1839 /* Note this can GC when DEST is a buffer. */
1840
1841 Lisp_Object
1842 copy_text_properties (start, end, src, pos, dest, prop)
1843 Lisp_Object start, end, src, pos, dest, prop;
1844 {
1845 INTERVAL i;
1846 Lisp_Object res;
1847 Lisp_Object stuff;
1848 Lisp_Object plist;
1849 int s, e, e2, p, len, modified = 0;
1850 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2;
1851
1852 i = validate_interval_range (src, &start, &end, soft);
1853 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1854 return Qnil;
1855
1856 CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER (pos);
1857 {
1858 Lisp_Object dest_start, dest_end;
1859
1860 dest_start = pos;
1861 XSETFASTINT (dest_end, XINT (dest_start) + (XINT (end) - XINT (start)));
1862 /* Apply this to a copy of pos; it will try to increment its arguments,
1863 which we don't want. */
1864 validate_interval_range (dest, &dest_start, &dest_end, soft);
1865 }
1866
1867 s = XINT (start);
1868 e = XINT (end);
1869 p = XINT (pos);
1870
1871 stuff = Qnil;
1872
1873 while (s < e)
1874 {
1875 e2 = i->position + LENGTH (i);
1876 if (e2 > e)
1877 e2 = e;
1878 len = e2 - s;
1879
1880 plist = i->plist;
1881 if (! NILP (prop))
1882 while (! NILP (plist))
1883 {
1884 if (EQ (Fcar (plist), prop))
1885 {
1886 plist = Fcons (prop, Fcons (Fcar (Fcdr (plist)), Qnil));
1887 break;
1888 }
1889 plist = Fcdr (Fcdr (plist));
1890 }
1891 if (! NILP (plist))
1892 {
1893 /* Must defer modifications to the interval tree in case src
1894 and dest refer to the same string or buffer. */
1895 stuff = Fcons (Fcons (make_number (p),
1896 Fcons (make_number (p + len),
1897 Fcons (plist, Qnil))),
1898 stuff);
1899 }
1900
1901 i = next_interval (i);
1902 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1903 break;
1904
1905 p += len;
1906 s = i->position;
1907 }
1908
1909 GCPRO2 (stuff, dest);
1910
1911 while (! NILP (stuff))
1912 {
1913 res = Fcar (stuff);
1914 res = Fadd_text_properties (Fcar (res), Fcar (Fcdr (res)),
1915 Fcar (Fcdr (Fcdr (res))), dest);
1916 if (! NILP (res))
1917 modified++;
1918 stuff = Fcdr (stuff);
1919 }
1920
1921 UNGCPRO;
1922
1923 return modified ? Qt : Qnil;
1924 }
1925
1926
1927 /* Return a list representing the text properties of OBJECT between
1928 START and END. if PROP is non-nil, report only on that property.
1929 Each result list element has the form (S E PLIST), where S and E
1930 are positions in OBJECT and PLIST is a property list containing the
1931 text properties of OBJECT between S and E. Value is nil if OBJECT
1932 doesn't contain text properties between START and END. */
1933
1934 Lisp_Object
1935 text_property_list (object, start, end, prop)
1936 Lisp_Object object, start, end, prop;
1937 {
1938 struct interval *i;
1939 Lisp_Object result;
1940
1941 result = Qnil;
1942
1943 i = validate_interval_range (object, &start, &end, soft);
1944 if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1945 {
1946 int s = XINT (start);
1947 int e = XINT (end);
1948
1949 while (s < e)
1950 {
1951 int interval_end, len;
1952 Lisp_Object plist;
1953
1954 interval_end = i->position + LENGTH (i);
1955 if (interval_end > e)
1956 interval_end = e;
1957 len = interval_end - s;
1958
1959 plist = i->plist;
1960
1961 if (!NILP (prop))
1962 for (; !NILP (plist); plist = Fcdr (Fcdr (plist)))
1963 if (EQ (Fcar (plist), prop))
1964 {
1965 plist = Fcons (prop, Fcons (Fcar (Fcdr (plist)), Qnil));
1966 break;
1967 }
1968
1969 if (!NILP (plist))
1970 result = Fcons (Fcons (make_number (s),
1971 Fcons (make_number (s + len),
1972 Fcons (plist, Qnil))),
1973 result);
1974
1975 i = next_interval (i);
1976 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
1977 break;
1978 s = i->position;
1979 }
1980 }
1981
1982 return result;
1983 }
1984
1985
1986 /* Add text properties to OBJECT from LIST. LIST is a list of triples
1987 (START END PLIST), where START and END are positions and PLIST is a
1988 property list containing the text properties to add. Adjust START
1989 and END positions by DELTA before adding properties. Value is
1990 non-zero if OBJECT was modified. */
1991
1992 int
1993 add_text_properties_from_list (object, list, delta)
1994 Lisp_Object object, list, delta;
1995 {
1996 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2;
1997 int modified_p = 0;
1998
1999 GCPRO2 (list, object);
2000
2001 for (; CONSP (list); list = XCDR (list))
2002 {
2003 Lisp_Object item, start, end, plist, tem;
2004
2005 item = XCAR (list);
2006 start = make_number (XINT (XCAR (item)) + XINT (delta));
2007 end = make_number (XINT (XCAR (XCDR (item))) + XINT (delta));
2008 plist = XCAR (XCDR (XCDR (item)));
2009
2010 tem = Fadd_text_properties (start, end, plist, object);
2011 if (!NILP (tem))
2012 modified_p = 1;
2013 }
2014
2015 UNGCPRO;
2016 return modified_p;
2017 }
2018
2019
2020
2021 /* Modify end-points of ranges in LIST destructively. LIST is a list
2022 as returned from text_property_list. Change end-points equal to
2023 OLD_END to NEW_END. */
2024
2025 void
2026 extend_property_ranges (list, old_end, new_end)
2027 Lisp_Object list, old_end, new_end;
2028 {
2029 for (; CONSP (list); list = XCDR (list))
2030 {
2031 Lisp_Object item, end;
2032
2033 item = XCAR (list);
2034 end = XCAR (XCDR (item));
2035
2036 if (EQ (end, old_end))
2037 XSETCAR (XCDR (item), new_end);
2038 }
2039 }
2040
2041
2042 \f
2043 /* Call the modification hook functions in LIST, each with START and END. */
2044
2045 static void
2046 call_mod_hooks (list, start, end)
2047 Lisp_Object list, start, end;
2048 {
2049 struct gcpro gcpro1;
2050 GCPRO1 (list);
2051 while (!NILP (list))
2052 {
2053 call2 (Fcar (list), start, end);
2054 list = Fcdr (list);
2055 }
2056 UNGCPRO;
2057 }
2058
2059 /* Check for read-only intervals between character positions START ... END,
2060 in BUF, and signal an error if we find one.
2061
2062 Then check for any modification hooks in the range.
2063 Create a list of all these hooks in lexicographic order,
2064 eliminating consecutive extra copies of the same hook. Then call
2065 those hooks in order, with START and END - 1 as arguments. */
2066
2067 void
2068 verify_interval_modification (buf, start, end)
2069 struct buffer *buf;
2070 int start, end;
2071 {
2072 register INTERVAL intervals = BUF_INTERVALS (buf);
2073 register INTERVAL i;
2074 Lisp_Object hooks;
2075 register Lisp_Object prev_mod_hooks;
2076 Lisp_Object mod_hooks;
2077 struct gcpro gcpro1;
2078
2079 hooks = Qnil;
2080 prev_mod_hooks = Qnil;
2081 mod_hooks = Qnil;
2082
2083 interval_insert_behind_hooks = Qnil;
2084 interval_insert_in_front_hooks = Qnil;
2085
2086 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (intervals))
2087 return;
2088
2089 if (start > end)
2090 {
2091 int temp = start;
2092 start = end;
2093 end = temp;
2094 }
2095
2096 /* For an insert operation, check the two chars around the position. */
2097 if (start == end)
2098 {
2099 INTERVAL prev = NULL;
2100 Lisp_Object before, after;
2101
2102 /* Set I to the interval containing the char after START,
2103 and PREV to the interval containing the char before START.
2104 Either one may be null. They may be equal. */
2105 i = find_interval (intervals, start);
2106
2107 if (start == BUF_BEGV (buf))
2108 prev = 0;
2109 else if (i->position == start)
2110 prev = previous_interval (i);
2111 else if (i->position < start)
2112 prev = i;
2113 if (start == BUF_ZV (buf))
2114 i = 0;
2115
2116 /* If Vinhibit_read_only is set and is not a list, we can
2117 skip the read_only checks. */
2118 if (NILP (Vinhibit_read_only) || CONSP (Vinhibit_read_only))
2119 {
2120 /* If I and PREV differ we need to check for the read-only
2121 property together with its stickiness. If either I or
2122 PREV are 0, this check is all we need.
2123 We have to take special care, since read-only may be
2124 indirectly defined via the category property. */
2125 if (i != prev)
2126 {
2127 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
2128 {
2129 after = textget (i->plist, Qread_only);
2130
2131 /* If interval I is read-only and read-only is
2132 front-sticky, inhibit insertion.
2133 Check for read-only as well as category. */
2134 if (! NILP (after)
2135 && NILP (Fmemq (after, Vinhibit_read_only)))
2136 {
2137 Lisp_Object tem;
2138
2139 tem = textget (i->plist, Qfront_sticky);
2140 if (TMEM (Qread_only, tem)
2141 || (NILP (Fplist_get (i->plist, Qread_only))
2142 && TMEM (Qcategory, tem)))
2143 text_read_only (after);
2144 }
2145 }
2146
2147 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev))
2148 {
2149 before = textget (prev->plist, Qread_only);
2150
2151 /* If interval PREV is read-only and read-only isn't
2152 rear-nonsticky, inhibit insertion.
2153 Check for read-only as well as category. */
2154 if (! NILP (before)
2155 && NILP (Fmemq (before, Vinhibit_read_only)))
2156 {
2157 Lisp_Object tem;
2158
2159 tem = textget (prev->plist, Qrear_nonsticky);
2160 if (! TMEM (Qread_only, tem)
2161 && (! NILP (Fplist_get (prev->plist,Qread_only))
2162 || ! TMEM (Qcategory, tem)))
2163 text_read_only (before);
2164 }
2165 }
2166 }
2167 else if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
2168 {
2169 after = textget (i->plist, Qread_only);
2170
2171 /* If interval I is read-only and read-only is
2172 front-sticky, inhibit insertion.
2173 Check for read-only as well as category. */
2174 if (! NILP (after) && NILP (Fmemq (after, Vinhibit_read_only)))
2175 {
2176 Lisp_Object tem;
2177
2178 tem = textget (i->plist, Qfront_sticky);
2179 if (TMEM (Qread_only, tem)
2180 || (NILP (Fplist_get (i->plist, Qread_only))
2181 && TMEM (Qcategory, tem)))
2182 text_read_only (after);
2183
2184 tem = textget (prev->plist, Qrear_nonsticky);
2185 if (! TMEM (Qread_only, tem)
2186 && (! NILP (Fplist_get (prev->plist, Qread_only))
2187 || ! TMEM (Qcategory, tem)))
2188 text_read_only (after);
2189 }
2190 }
2191 }
2192
2193 /* Run both insert hooks (just once if they're the same). */
2194 if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev))
2195 interval_insert_behind_hooks
2196 = textget (prev->plist, Qinsert_behind_hooks);
2197 if (!NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
2198 interval_insert_in_front_hooks
2199 = textget (i->plist, Qinsert_in_front_hooks);
2200 }
2201 else
2202 {
2203 /* Loop over intervals on or next to START...END,
2204 collecting their hooks. */
2205
2206 i = find_interval (intervals, start);
2207 do
2208 {
2209 if (! INTERVAL_WRITABLE_P (i))
2210 text_read_only (textget (i->plist, Qread_only));
2211
2212 if (!inhibit_modification_hooks)
2213 {
2214 mod_hooks = textget (i->plist, Qmodification_hooks);
2215 if (! NILP (mod_hooks) && ! EQ (mod_hooks, prev_mod_hooks))
2216 {
2217 hooks = Fcons (mod_hooks, hooks);
2218 prev_mod_hooks = mod_hooks;
2219 }
2220 }
2221
2222 i = next_interval (i);
2223 }
2224 /* Keep going thru the interval containing the char before END. */
2225 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) && i->position < end);
2226
2227 if (!inhibit_modification_hooks)
2228 {
2229 GCPRO1 (hooks);
2230 hooks = Fnreverse (hooks);
2231 while (! EQ (hooks, Qnil))
2232 {
2233 call_mod_hooks (Fcar (hooks), make_number (start),
2234 make_number (end));
2235 hooks = Fcdr (hooks);
2236 }
2237 UNGCPRO;
2238 }
2239 }
2240 }
2241
2242 /* Run the interval hooks for an insertion on character range START ... END.
2243 verify_interval_modification chose which hooks to run;
2244 this function is called after the insertion happens
2245 so it can indicate the range of inserted text. */
2246
2247 void
2248 report_interval_modification (start, end)
2249 Lisp_Object start, end;
2250 {
2251 if (! NILP (interval_insert_behind_hooks))
2252 call_mod_hooks (interval_insert_behind_hooks, start, end);
2253 if (! NILP (interval_insert_in_front_hooks)
2254 && ! EQ (interval_insert_in_front_hooks,
2255 interval_insert_behind_hooks))
2256 call_mod_hooks (interval_insert_in_front_hooks, start, end);
2257 }
2258 \f
2259 void
2260 syms_of_textprop ()
2261 {
2262 DEFVAR_LISP ("default-text-properties", &Vdefault_text_properties,
2263 doc: /* Property-list used as default values.
2264 The value of a property in this list is seen as the value for every
2265 character that does not have its own value for that property. */);
2266 Vdefault_text_properties = Qnil;
2267
2268 DEFVAR_LISP ("char-property-alias-alist", &Vchar_property_alias_alist,
2269 doc: /* Alist of alternative properties for properties without a value.
2270 Each element should look like (PROPERTY ALTERNATIVE1 ALTERNATIVE2...).
2271 If a piece of text has no direct value for a particular property, then
2272 this alist is consulted. If that property appears in the alist, then
2273 the first non-nil value from the associated alternative properties is
2274 returned. */);
2275 Vchar_property_alias_alist = Qnil;
2276
2277 DEFVAR_LISP ("inhibit-point-motion-hooks", &Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks,
2278 doc: /* If non-nil, don't run `point-left' and `point-entered' text properties.
2279 This also inhibits the use of the `intangible' text property. */);
2280 Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks = Qnil;
2281
2282 DEFVAR_LISP ("text-property-default-nonsticky",
2283 &Vtext_property_default_nonsticky,
2284 doc: /* Alist of properties vs the corresponding non-stickinesses.
2285 Each element has the form (PROPERTY . NONSTICKINESS).
2286
2287 If a character in a buffer has PROPERTY, new text inserted adjacent to
2288 the character doesn't inherit PROPERTY if NONSTICKINESS is non-nil,
2289 inherits it if NONSTICKINESS is nil. The front-sticky and
2290 rear-nonsticky properties of the character overrides NONSTICKINESS. */);
2291 /* Text property `syntax-table' should be nonsticky by default. */
2292 Vtext_property_default_nonsticky
2293 = Fcons (Fcons (intern ("syntax-table"), Qt), Qnil);
2294
2295 staticpro (&interval_insert_behind_hooks);
2296 staticpro (&interval_insert_in_front_hooks);
2297 interval_insert_behind_hooks = Qnil;
2298 interval_insert_in_front_hooks = Qnil;
2299
2300
2301 /* Common attributes one might give text */
2302
2303 staticpro (&Qforeground);
2304 Qforeground = intern ("foreground");
2305 staticpro (&Qbackground);
2306 Qbackground = intern ("background");
2307 staticpro (&Qfont);
2308 Qfont = intern ("font");
2309 staticpro (&Qstipple);
2310 Qstipple = intern ("stipple");
2311 staticpro (&Qunderline);
2312 Qunderline = intern ("underline");
2313 staticpro (&Qread_only);
2314 Qread_only = intern ("read-only");
2315 staticpro (&Qinvisible);
2316 Qinvisible = intern ("invisible");
2317 staticpro (&Qintangible);
2318 Qintangible = intern ("intangible");
2319 staticpro (&Qcategory);
2320 Qcategory = intern ("category");
2321 staticpro (&Qlocal_map);
2322 Qlocal_map = intern ("local-map");
2323 staticpro (&Qfront_sticky);
2324 Qfront_sticky = intern ("front-sticky");
2325 staticpro (&Qrear_nonsticky);
2326 Qrear_nonsticky = intern ("rear-nonsticky");
2327 staticpro (&Qmouse_face);
2328 Qmouse_face = intern ("mouse-face");
2329
2330 /* Properties that text might use to specify certain actions */
2331
2332 staticpro (&Qmouse_left);
2333 Qmouse_left = intern ("mouse-left");
2334 staticpro (&Qmouse_entered);
2335 Qmouse_entered = intern ("mouse-entered");
2336 staticpro (&Qpoint_left);
2337 Qpoint_left = intern ("point-left");
2338 staticpro (&Qpoint_entered);
2339 Qpoint_entered = intern ("point-entered");
2340
2341 defsubr (&Stext_properties_at);
2342 defsubr (&Sget_text_property);
2343 defsubr (&Sget_char_property);
2344 defsubr (&Sget_char_property_and_overlay);
2345 defsubr (&Snext_char_property_change);
2346 defsubr (&Sprevious_char_property_change);
2347 defsubr (&Snext_single_char_property_change);
2348 defsubr (&Sprevious_single_char_property_change);
2349 defsubr (&Snext_property_change);
2350 defsubr (&Snext_single_property_change);
2351 defsubr (&Sprevious_property_change);
2352 defsubr (&Sprevious_single_property_change);
2353 defsubr (&Sadd_text_properties);
2354 defsubr (&Sput_text_property);
2355 defsubr (&Sset_text_properties);
2356 defsubr (&Sremove_text_properties);
2357 defsubr (&Sremove_list_of_text_properties);
2358 defsubr (&Stext_property_any);
2359 defsubr (&Stext_property_not_all);
2360 /* defsubr (&Serase_text_properties); */
2361 /* defsubr (&Scopy_text_properties); */
2362 }
2363
2364 /* arch-tag: 454cdde8-5f86-4faa-a078-101e3625d479
2365 (do not change this comment) */