(struct PERDISPLAY): Add Vlast_event_frame.
[bpt/emacs.git] / src / lisp.h
1 /* Fundamental definitions for GNU Emacs Lisp interpreter.
2 Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,93,94,95 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
5
6 GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
9 any later version.
10
11 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14 GNU General Public License for more details.
15
16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17 along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
18 the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
19
20
21 /* These are default choices for the types to use. */
22 #ifndef EMACS_INT
23 #define EMACS_INT int
24 #endif
25 #ifndef EMACS_UINT
26 #define EMACS_UINT unsigned int
27 #endif
28
29 /* Define the fundamental Lisp data structures. */
30
31 /* This is the set of Lisp data types. */
32
33 enum Lisp_Type
34 {
35 /* Integer. XINT (obj) is the integer value. */
36 Lisp_Int,
37
38 /* Symbol. XSYMBOL (object) points to a struct Lisp_Symbol. */
39 Lisp_Symbol,
40
41 /* Miscellaneous. XMISC (object) points to a union Lisp_Misc,
42 whose first member indicates the subtype. */
43 Lisp_Misc,
44
45 /* String. XSTRING (object) points to a struct Lisp_String.
46 The length of the string, and its contents, are stored therein. */
47 Lisp_String,
48
49 /* Vector of Lisp objects, or something resembling it.
50 XVECTOR (object) points to a struct Lisp_Vector, which contains
51 the size and contents. The size field also contains the type
52 information, if it's not a real vector object. */
53 Lisp_Vectorlike,
54
55 /* Cons. XCONS (object) points to a struct Lisp_Cons. */
56 Lisp_Cons,
57
58 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
59 Lisp_Float,
60 #endif /* LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
61
62 /* This is not a type code. It is for range checking. */
63 Lisp_Type_Limit
64 };
65
66 /* This is the set of datatypes that share a common structure.
67 The first member of the structure is a type code from this set.
68 The enum values are arbitrary, but we'll use large numbers to make it
69 more likely that we'll spot the error if a random word in memory is
70 mistakenly interpreted as a Lisp_Misc. */
71 enum Lisp_Misc_Type
72 {
73 Lisp_Misc_Free = 0x5eab,
74 Lisp_Misc_Marker,
75 Lisp_Misc_Intfwd,
76 Lisp_Misc_Boolfwd,
77 Lisp_Misc_Objfwd,
78 Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Objfwd,
79 Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Local_Value,
80 Lisp_Misc_Some_Buffer_Local_Value,
81 Lisp_Misc_Overlay,
82 Lisp_Misc_Display_Objfwd,
83 /* Currently floats are not a misc type,
84 but let's define this in case we want to change that. */
85 Lisp_Misc_Float,
86 /* This is not a type code. It is for range checking. */
87 Lisp_Misc_Limit
88 };
89
90 /* These values are overridden by the m- file on some machines. */
91 #ifndef VALBITS
92 #define VALBITS 28
93 #endif
94
95 #ifndef GCTYPEBITS
96 #define GCTYPEBITS 3
97 #endif
98
99 #ifndef NO_UNION_TYPE
100
101 #ifndef WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
102
103 /* Definition of Lisp_Object for little-endian machines. */
104
105 typedef
106 union Lisp_Object
107 {
108 /* Used for comparing two Lisp_Objects;
109 also, positive integers can be accessed fast this way. */
110 int i;
111
112 struct
113 {
114 int val: VALBITS;
115 int type: GCTYPEBITS+1;
116 } s;
117 struct
118 {
119 unsigned int val: VALBITS;
120 int type: GCTYPEBITS+1;
121 } u;
122 struct
123 {
124 unsigned int val: VALBITS;
125 enum Lisp_Type type: GCTYPEBITS;
126 /* The markbit is not really part of the value of a Lisp_Object,
127 and is always zero except during garbage collection. */
128 unsigned int markbit: 1;
129 } gu;
130 }
131 Lisp_Object;
132
133 #else /* If WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN */
134
135 typedef
136 union Lisp_Object
137 {
138 /* Used for comparing two Lisp_Objects;
139 also, positive integers can be accessed fast this way. */
140 int i;
141
142 struct
143 {
144 int type: GCTYPEBITS+1;
145 int val: VALBITS;
146 } s;
147 struct
148 {
149 int type: GCTYPEBITS+1;
150 unsigned int val: VALBITS;
151 } u;
152 struct
153 {
154 /* The markbit is not really part of the value of a Lisp_Object,
155 and is always zero except during garbage collection. */
156 unsigned int markbit: 1;
157 enum Lisp_Type type: GCTYPEBITS;
158 unsigned int val: VALBITS;
159 } gu;
160 }
161 Lisp_Object;
162
163 #endif /* WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN */
164
165 #endif /* NO_UNION_TYPE */
166
167
168 /* If union type is not wanted, define Lisp_Object as just a number
169 and define the macros below to extract fields by shifting */
170
171 #ifdef NO_UNION_TYPE
172
173 #define Lisp_Object EMACS_INT
174
175 #ifndef VALMASK
176 #define VALMASK ((((EMACS_INT) 1)<<VALBITS) - 1)
177 #endif
178 #define GCTYPEMASK ((((EMACS_INT) 1)<<GCTYPEBITS) - 1)
179
180 /* Two flags that are set during GC. On some machines, these flags
181 are defined differently by the m- file. */
182
183 /* This is set in the car of a cons and in the plist slot of a symbol
184 to indicate it is marked. Likewise in the plist slot of an interval,
185 the chain slot of a marker, the type slot of a float, and the name
186 slot of a buffer.
187
188 In strings, this bit in the size field indicates that the string
189 is a "large" one, one which was separately malloc'd
190 rather than being part of a string block. */
191
192 #ifndef MARKBIT
193 #define MARKBIT (1 << (VALBITS + GCTYPEBITS))
194 #endif /*MARKBIT */
195
196 /* In the size word of a vector, this bit means the vector has been marked.
197 In the size word of a large string, likewise. */
198
199 #ifndef ARRAY_MARK_FLAG
200 #define ARRAY_MARK_FLAG ((MARKBIT >> 1) & ~MARKBIT)
201 #endif /* no ARRAY_MARK_FLAG */
202
203 /* In the size word of a struct Lisp_Vector, this bit means it's really
204 some other vector-like object. */
205 #ifndef PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG
206 #define PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG ((ARRAY_MARK_FLAG >> 1) & ~ARRAY_MARK_FLAG)
207 #endif
208
209 /* In a pseudovector, the size field actually contains a word with one
210 PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG bit set, and exactly one of the following bits to
211 indicate the actual type. */
212 enum pvec_type
213 {
214 PVEC_NORMAL_VECTOR = 0,
215 PVEC_BUFFER = 0x100,
216 PVEC_PROCESS = 0x200,
217 PVEC_FRAME = 0x400,
218 PVEC_COMPILED = 0x800,
219 PVEC_WINDOW = 0x1000,
220 PVEC_WINDOW_CONFIGURATION = 0x2000,
221 PVEC_SUBR = 0x4000,
222 PVEC_TYPE_MASK = 0x7f00,
223 PVEC_FLAG = PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG,
224 };
225
226 /* For convenience, we also store the number of elements in these bits. */
227 #define PSEUDOVECTOR_SIZE_MASK 0xff
228
229 #if ARRAY_MARK_FLAG == MARKBIT || PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG == ARRAY_MARK_FLAG || PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG == MARKBIT
230 you lose
231 #endif
232
233 #endif /* NO_UNION_TYPE */
234 \f
235 /* These macros extract various sorts of values from a Lisp_Object.
236 For example, if tem is a Lisp_Object whose type is Lisp_Cons,
237 XCONS (tem) is the struct Lisp_Cons * pointing to the memory for that cons. */
238
239 #ifdef NO_UNION_TYPE
240
241 /* One need to override this if there must be high bits set in data space
242 (doing the result of the below & ((1 << (GCTYPE + 1)) - 1) would work
243 on all machines, but would penalise machines which don't need it)
244 */
245 #ifndef XTYPE
246 #define XTYPE(a) ((enum Lisp_Type) ((a) >> VALBITS))
247 #endif
248
249 #ifndef XSETTYPE
250 #define XSETTYPE(a, b) ((a) = XUINT (a) | ((EMACS_INT)(b) << VALBITS))
251 #endif
252
253 /* For integers known to be positive, XFASTINT provides fast retrieval
254 and XSETFASTINT provides fast storage. This takes advantage of the
255 fact that Lisp_Int is 0. */
256 #define XFASTINT(a) ((a) + 0)
257 #define XSETFASTINT(a, b) ((a) = (b))
258
259 /* Extract the value of a Lisp_Object as a signed integer. */
260
261 #ifndef XINT /* Some machines need to do this differently. */
262 #define XINT(a) (((a) << (INTBITS-VALBITS)) >> (INTBITS-VALBITS))
263 #endif
264
265 /* Extract the value as an unsigned integer. This is a basis
266 for extracting it as a pointer to a structure in storage. */
267
268 #ifndef XUINT
269 #define XUINT(a) ((a) & VALMASK)
270 #endif
271
272 #ifndef XPNTR
273 #ifdef HAVE_SHM
274 /* In this representation, data is found in two widely separated segments. */
275 extern int pure_size;
276 #define XPNTR(a) \
277 (XUINT (a) | (XUINT (a) > pure_size ? DATA_SEG_BITS : PURE_SEG_BITS))
278 #else /* not HAVE_SHM */
279 #ifdef DATA_SEG_BITS
280 /* This case is used for the rt-pc.
281 In the diffs I was given, it checked for ptr = 0
282 and did not adjust it in that case.
283 But I don't think that zero should ever be found
284 in a Lisp object whose data type says it points to something. */
285 #define XPNTR(a) (XUINT (a) | DATA_SEG_BITS)
286 #else
287 #define XPNTR(a) XUINT (a)
288 #endif
289 #endif /* not HAVE_SHM */
290 #endif /* no XPNTR */
291
292 #ifndef XSET
293 #define XSET(var, type, ptr) \
294 ((var) = ((EMACS_INT)(type) << VALBITS) + ((EMACS_INT) (ptr) & VALMASK))
295 #endif
296
297 /* During garbage collection, XGCTYPE must be used for extracting types
298 so that the mark bit is ignored. XMARKBIT accesses the markbit.
299 Markbits are used only in particular slots of particular structure types.
300 Other markbits are always zero.
301 Outside of garbage collection, all mark bits are always zero. */
302
303 #ifndef XGCTYPE
304 #define XGCTYPE(a) ((enum Lisp_Type) (((a) >> VALBITS) & GCTYPEMASK))
305 #endif
306
307 #if VALBITS + GCTYPEBITS == INTBITS - 1
308 /* Make XMARKBIT faster if mark bit is sign bit. */
309 #ifndef XMARKBIT
310 #define XMARKBIT(a) ((a) < 0)
311 #endif
312 #endif /* markbit is sign bit */
313
314 #ifndef XMARKBIT
315 #define XMARKBIT(a) ((a) & MARKBIT)
316 #endif
317
318 #ifndef XSETMARKBIT
319 #define XSETMARKBIT(a,b) ((a) = ((a) & ~MARKBIT) | ((b) ? MARKBIT : 0))
320 #endif
321
322 #ifndef XMARK
323 #define XMARK(a) ((a) |= MARKBIT)
324 #endif
325
326 #ifndef XUNMARK
327 #define XUNMARK(a) ((a) &= ~MARKBIT)
328 #endif
329
330 #endif /* NO_UNION_TYPE */
331
332 #ifndef NO_UNION_TYPE
333
334 #define XTYPE(a) ((enum Lisp_Type) (a).u.type)
335 #define XSETTYPE(a, b) ((a).u.type = (char) (b))
336
337 /* For integers known to be positive, XFASTINT provides fast retrieval
338 and XSETFASTINT provides fast storage. This takes advantage of the
339 fact that Lisp_Int is 0. */
340 #define XFASTINT(a) ((a).i + 0)
341 #define XSETFASTINT(a, b) ((a).i = (b))
342
343 #ifdef EXPLICIT_SIGN_EXTEND
344 /* Make sure we sign-extend; compilers have been known to fail to do so. */
345 #define XINT(a) (((a).i << (INTBITS-VALBITS)) >> (INTBITS-VALBITS))
346 #else
347 #define XINT(a) ((a).s.val)
348 #endif /* EXPLICIT_SIGN_EXTEND */
349
350 #define XUINT(a) ((a).u.val)
351 #define XPNTR(a) ((a).u.val)
352
353 #define XSET(var, vartype, ptr) \
354 (((var).s.type = ((char) (vartype))), ((var).s.val = ((int) (ptr))))
355
356 /* During garbage collection, XGCTYPE must be used for extracting types
357 so that the mark bit is ignored. XMARKBIT access the markbit.
358 Markbits are used only in particular slots of particular structure types.
359 Other markbits are always zero.
360 Outside of garbage collection, all mark bits are always zero. */
361
362 #define XGCTYPE(a) ((a).gu.type)
363 #define XMARKBIT(a) ((a).gu.markbit)
364 #define XSETMARKBIT(a,b) (XMARKBIT(a) = (b))
365 #define XMARK(a) (XMARKBIT(a) = 1)
366 #define XUNMARK(a) (XMARKBIT(a) = 0)
367
368 #endif /* NO_UNION_TYPE */
369
370 /* Extract a value or address from a Lisp_Object. */
371
372 #define XCONS(a) ((struct Lisp_Cons *) XPNTR(a))
373 #define XVECTOR(a) ((struct Lisp_Vector *) XPNTR(a))
374 #define XSTRING(a) ((struct Lisp_String *) XPNTR(a))
375 #define XSYMBOL(a) ((struct Lisp_Symbol *) XPNTR(a))
376 #define XFLOAT(a) ((struct Lisp_Float *) XPNTR(a))
377
378 /* Misc types. */
379 #define XMISC(a) ((union Lisp_Misc *) XPNTR(a))
380 #define XMARKER(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_marker))
381 #define XINTFWD(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_intfwd))
382 #define XBOOLFWD(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_boolfwd))
383 #define XOBJFWD(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_objfwd))
384 #define XBUFFER_OBJFWD(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_buffer_objfwd))
385 #define XBUFFER_LOCAL_VALUE(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_buffer_local_value))
386 #define XOVERLAY(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_overlay))
387 #define XDISPLAY_OBJFWD(a) (&(XMISC(a)->u_display_objfwd))
388
389 /* Pseudovector types. */
390 #define XPROCESS(a) ((struct Lisp_Process *) XPNTR(a))
391 #define XWINDOW(a) ((struct window *) XPNTR(a))
392 #define XSUBR(a) ((struct Lisp_Subr *) XPNTR(a))
393 #define XBUFFER(a) ((struct buffer *) XPNTR(a))
394
395
396 /* Construct a Lisp_Object from a value or address. */
397
398 #define XSETINT(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_Int, b)
399 #define XSETCONS(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_Cons, b)
400 #define XSETVECTOR(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_Vectorlike, b)
401 #define XSETSTRING(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_String, b)
402 #define XSETSYMBOL(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_Symbol, b)
403 #define XSETFLOAT(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_Float, b)
404
405 /* Misc types. */
406 #define XSETMISC(a, b) XSET (a, Lisp_Misc, b)
407 #define XSETMARKER(a, b) (XSETMISC (a, b), XMISC (a)->type = Lisp_Misc_Marker)
408
409 /* Pseudovector types. */
410 #define XSETPSEUDOVECTOR(a, b, code) \
411 (XSETVECTOR (a, b), XVECTOR (a)->size |= PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG | (code))
412 #define XSETWINDOW_CONFIGURATION(a, b) \
413 (XSETPSEUDOVECTOR (a, b, PVEC_WINDOW_CONFIGURATION))
414 #define XSETPROCESS(a, b) (XSETPSEUDOVECTOR (a, b, PVEC_PROCESS))
415 #define XSETWINDOW(a, b) (XSETPSEUDOVECTOR (a, b, PVEC_WINDOW))
416 #define XSETSUBR(a, b) (XSETPSEUDOVECTOR (a, b, PVEC_SUBR))
417 #define XSETCOMPILED(a, b) (XSETPSEUDOVECTOR (a, b, PVEC_COMPILED))
418 #define XSETBUFFER(a, b) (XSETPSEUDOVECTOR (a, b, PVEC_BUFFER))
419 \f
420 #ifdef USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES
421 /* Basic data type for use of intervals. See the macros in intervals.h. */
422
423 struct interval
424 {
425 /* The first group of entries deal with the tree structure. */
426
427 unsigned int total_length; /* Length of myself and both children. */
428 unsigned int position; /* Cache of interval's character position. */
429 struct interval *left; /* Intervals which precede me. */
430 struct interval *right; /* Intervals which succeed me. */
431
432 /* Parent in the tree, or the Lisp_Object containing this interval tree.
433
434 The mark bit on the root interval of an interval tree says
435 whether we have started (and possibly finished) marking the
436 tree. If GC comes across an interval tree whose root's parent
437 field has its markbit set, it leaves the tree alone.
438
439 You'd think we could store this information in the parent object
440 somewhere (after all, that should be visited once and then
441 ignored too, right?), but strings are GC'd strangely. */
442 struct interval *parent;
443
444 /* The remaining components are `properties' of the interval.
445 The first four are duplicates for things which can be on the list,
446 for purposes of speed. */
447
448 unsigned char write_protect; /* Non-zero means can't modify. */
449 unsigned char visible; /* Zero means don't display. */
450 unsigned char front_sticky; /* Non-zero means text inserted just
451 before this interval goes into it. */
452 unsigned char rear_sticky; /* Likewise for just after it. */
453
454 /* Properties of this interval.
455 The mark bit on this field says whether this particular interval
456 tree node has been visited. Since intervals should never be
457 shared, GC aborts if it seems to have visited an interval twice. */
458 Lisp_Object plist;
459 };
460
461 typedef struct interval *INTERVAL;
462
463 /* Complain if object is not string or buffer type */
464 #define CHECK_STRING_OR_BUFFER(x, i) \
465 { if (!STRINGP ((x)) && !BUFFERP ((x))) \
466 x = wrong_type_argument (Qbuffer_or_string_p, (x)); }
467
468 /* Macro used to conditionally compile intervals into certain data
469 structures. See, e.g., struct Lisp_String below. */
470 #define DECLARE_INTERVALS INTERVAL intervals;
471
472 /* Macro used to conditionally compile interval initialization into
473 certain code. See, e.g., alloc.c. */
474 #define INITIALIZE_INTERVAL(ptr,val) ptr->intervals = val
475
476 #else /* No text properties */
477
478 /* If no intervals are used, make the above definitions go away. */
479
480 #define CHECK_STRING_OR_BUFFER(x, i)
481
482 #define INTERVAL
483 #define DECLARE_INTERVALS
484 #define INITIALIZE_INTERVAL(ptr,val)
485
486 #endif /* USE_TEXT_PROPERTIES */
487 \f
488 #define ECHOBUFSIZE 300
489 /* All of the per-display objects, packaged together in a struct. */
490 typedef struct PERDISPLAY PERDISPLAY;
491 struct PERDISPLAY
492 {
493 PERDISPLAY *next_perdisplay;
494 Lisp_Object Vprefix_arg;
495 Lisp_Object Vcurrent_prefix_arg;
496
497 #ifdef MULTI_FRAME
498 /* The frame in which the last input event occurred, or Qmacro if the
499 last event came from a macro. We use this to determine when to
500 generate switch-frame events. This may be cleared by functions
501 like Fselect_frame, to make sure that a switch-frame event is
502 generated by the next character. */
503 Lisp_Object internal_last_event_frame;
504 #endif
505
506 /* A user-visible version of the above, intended to allow users to
507 figure out where the last event came from, if the event doesn't
508 carry that information itself (i.e. if it was a character). */
509 Lisp_Object Vlast_event_frame;
510
511 /* Placeholder for future vars that will be moved here. */
512 Lisp_Object unused[20];
513
514 Lisp_Object this_command_keys;
515
516 /* Vector to GCPRO the frames and windows mentioned in kbd_buffer.
517
518 The interrupt-level event handlers will never enqueue an event on a
519 frame which is not in Vframe_list, and once an event is dequeued,
520 internal_last_event_frame or the event itself points to the frame.
521 So that's all fine.
522
523 But while the event is sitting in the queue, it's completely
524 unprotected. Suppose the user types one command which will run for
525 a while and then delete a frame, and then types another event at
526 the frame that will be deleted, before the command gets around to
527 it. Suppose there are no references to this frame elsewhere in
528 Emacs, and a GC occurs before the second event is dequeued. Now we
529 have an event referring to a freed frame, which will crash Emacs
530 when it is dequeued.
531
532 Similar things happen when an event on a scroll bar is enqueued; the
533 window may be deleted while the event is in the queue.
534
535 So, we use this vector to protect the frame_or_window field in the
536 event queue. That way, they'll be dequeued as dead frames or
537 windows, but still valid lisp objects.
538
539 If perd->kbd_buffer[i].kind != no_event, then
540 (XVECTOR (perd->kbd_buffer_frame_or_window)->contents[i]
541 == perd->kbd_buffer[i].frame_or_window. */
542 Lisp_Object kbd_buffer_frame_or_window;
543
544 /* Circular buffer for pre-read keyboard input. */
545 struct input_event *kbd_buffer;
546
547 /* Pointer to next available character in kbd_buffer.
548 If kbd_fetch_ptr == kbd_store_ptr, the buffer is empty.
549 This may be kbd_buffer + KBD_BUFFER_SIZE, meaning that the the
550 next available char is in kbd_buffer[0]. */
551 struct input_event *kbd_fetch_ptr;
552
553 /* Pointer to next place to store character in kbd_buffer. This
554 may be kbd_buffer + KBD_BUFFER_SIZE, meaning that the next
555 character should go in kbd_buffer[0]. */
556 volatile struct input_event *kbd_store_ptr;
557
558 /* The above pair of variables forms a "queue empty" flag. When we
559 enqueue a non-hook event, we increment kbd_store_ptr. When we
560 dequeue a non-hook event, we increment kbd_fetch_ptr. We say that
561 there is input available iff the two counters are not equal.
562
563 Why not just have a flag set and cleared by the enqueuing and
564 dequeuing functions? Such a flag could be screwed up by interrupts
565 at inopportune times. */
566
567 int this_command_key_count;
568
569 /* Nonzero means echo each character as typed. */
570 int immediate_echo;
571
572 /* If we have echoed a prompt string specified by the user,
573 this is its length. Otherwise this is -1. */
574 int echo_after_prompt;
575
576 /* Where to append more text to echobuf if we want to. */
577 char *echoptr;
578
579 /* The text we're echoing in the modeline - partial key sequences,
580 usually. '\0'-terminated. This really shouldn't have a fixed size. */
581 char echobuf[ECHOBUFSIZE];
582 };
583
584 #ifdef MULTI_PERDISPLAY
585 /* The perdisplay object associated with a particular frame. */
586 extern PERDISPLAY *get_perdisplay ();
587
588 /* The perdisplay object associated with the currently executing command. */
589 extern PERDISPLAY *current_perdisplay;
590
591 /* A list of all perdisplay objects, linked through next_perdisplay. */
592 extern PERDISPLAY *all_perdisplays;
593 #else
594 extern PERDISPLAY the_only_perdisplay;
595 #define get_perdisplay(f) (&the_only_perdisplay)
596 #define current_perdisplay (&the_only_perdisplay)
597 #define all_perdisplays (&the_only_perdisplay)
598 #endif
599 \f
600 /* In a cons, the markbit of the car is the gc mark bit */
601
602 struct Lisp_Cons
603 {
604 Lisp_Object car, cdr;
605 };
606
607 /* Like a cons, but records info on where the text lives that it was read from */
608 /* This is not really in use now */
609
610 struct Lisp_Buffer_Cons
611 {
612 Lisp_Object car, cdr;
613 struct buffer *buffer;
614 int bufpos;
615 };
616
617 /* In a string or vector, the sign bit of the `size' is the gc mark bit */
618
619 struct Lisp_String
620 {
621 EMACS_INT size;
622 DECLARE_INTERVALS /* `data' field must be last. */
623 unsigned char data[1];
624 };
625
626 /* If a struct is made to look like a vector, this macro returns the length
627 of that vector. */
628 #define VECSIZE(type) ((sizeof (type) - (sizeof (struct Lisp_Vector) \
629 - sizeof (Lisp_Object))) \
630 / sizeof (Lisp_Object))
631
632 struct Lisp_Vector
633 {
634 EMACS_INT size;
635 struct Lisp_Vector *next;
636 Lisp_Object contents[1];
637 };
638
639 /* In a symbol, the markbit of the plist is used as the gc mark bit */
640
641 struct Lisp_Symbol
642 {
643 struct Lisp_String *name;
644 Lisp_Object value;
645 Lisp_Object function;
646 Lisp_Object plist;
647 struct Lisp_Symbol *next; /* -> next symbol in this obarray bucket */
648 };
649
650 /* This structure describes a built-in function.
651 It is generated by the DEFUN macro only.
652 defsubr makes it into a Lisp object.
653
654 This type is treated in most respects as a pseudovector,
655 but since we never dynamically allocate or free them,
656 we don't need a next-vector field. */
657
658 struct Lisp_Subr
659 {
660 EMACS_INT size;
661 Lisp_Object (*function) ();
662 short min_args, max_args;
663 char *symbol_name;
664 char *prompt;
665 char *doc;
666 };
667 \f
668 /* These structures are used for various misc types. */
669
670 /* A miscellaneous object, when it's on the free list. */
671 struct Lisp_Free
672 {
673 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Free */
674 int spacer : 16;
675 union Lisp_Misc *chain;
676 };
677
678 /* In a marker, the markbit of the chain field is used as the gc mark bit */
679 struct Lisp_Marker
680 {
681 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Marker */
682 int spacer : 15;
683 /* 1 means normal insertion at the marker's position
684 leaves the marker after the inserted text. */
685 int insertion_type : 1;
686 struct buffer *buffer;
687 Lisp_Object chain;
688 int bufpos;
689 };
690
691 /* Forwarding pointer to an int variable.
692 This is allowed only in the value cell of a symbol,
693 and it means that the symbol's value really lives in the
694 specified int variable. */
695 struct Lisp_Intfwd
696 {
697 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Intfwd */
698 int spacer : 16;
699 int *intvar;
700 };
701
702 /* Boolean forwarding pointer to an int variable.
703 This is like Lisp_Intfwd except that the ostensible
704 "value" of the symbol is t if the int variable is nonzero,
705 nil if it is zero. */
706 struct Lisp_Boolfwd
707 {
708 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Boolfwd */
709 int spacer : 16;
710 int *boolvar;
711 };
712
713 /* Forwarding pointer to a Lisp_Object variable.
714 This is allowed only in the value cell of a symbol,
715 and it means that the symbol's value really lives in the
716 specified variable. */
717 struct Lisp_Objfwd
718 {
719 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Objfwd */
720 int spacer : 16;
721 Lisp_Object *objvar;
722 };
723
724 /* Like Lisp_Objfwd except that value lives in a slot in the
725 current buffer. Value is byte index of slot within buffer. */
726 struct Lisp_Buffer_Objfwd
727 {
728 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Objfwd */
729 int spacer : 16;
730 int offset;
731 };
732
733 /* Used in a symbol value cell when the symbol's value is per-buffer.
734 The actual contents resemble a cons cell which starts a list like this:
735 (REALVALUE BUFFER CURRENT-ALIST-ELEMENT . DEFAULT-VALUE).
736
737 The cons-like structure is for historical reasons; it might be better
738 to just put these elements into the struct, now.
739
740 BUFFER is the last buffer for which this symbol's value was
741 made up to date.
742
743 CURRENT-ALIST-ELEMENT is a pointer to an element of BUFFER's
744 local_var_alist, that being the element whose car is this
745 variable. Or it can be a pointer to the
746 (CURRENT-ALIST-ELEMENT . DEFAULT-VALUE),
747 if BUFFER does not have an element in its alist for this
748 variable (that is, if BUFFER sees the default value of this
749 variable).
750
751 If we want to examine or set the value and BUFFER is current,
752 we just examine or set REALVALUE. If BUFFER is not current, we
753 store the current REALVALUE value into CURRENT-ALIST-ELEMENT,
754 then find the appropriate alist element for the buffer now
755 current and set up CURRENT-ALIST-ELEMENT. Then we set
756 REALVALUE out of that element, and store into BUFFER.
757
758 If we are setting the variable and the current buffer does not
759 have an alist entry for this variable, an alist entry is
760 created.
761
762 Note that REALVALUE can be a forwarding pointer. Each time it
763 is examined or set, forwarding must be done. Each time we
764 switch buffers, buffer-local variables which forward into C
765 variables are swapped immediately, so the C code can assume
766 that they are always up to date.
767
768 Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Local_Value and Lisp_Misc_Some_Buffer_Local_Value
769 use the same substructure. The difference is that with the latter,
770 merely setting the variable while some buffer is current
771 does not cause that buffer to have its own local value of this variable.
772 Only make-local-variable does that. */
773 struct Lisp_Buffer_Local_Value
774 {
775 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Local_Value
776 or Lisp_Misc_Some_Buffer_Local_Value */
777 int spacer : 16;
778 Lisp_Object car, cdr;
779 };
780
781 /* In an overlay object, the mark bit of the plist is used as the GC mark.
782 START and END are markers in the overlay's buffer, and
783 PLIST is the overlay's property list. */
784 struct Lisp_Overlay
785 {
786 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Overlay */
787 int spacer : 16;
788 Lisp_Object start, end, plist;
789 };
790
791 /* Like Lisp_Objfwd except that value lives in a slot in the
792 current perdisplay. */
793 struct Lisp_Display_Objfwd
794 {
795 int type : 16; /* = Lisp_Misc_Display_Objfwd */
796 int spacer : 16;
797 int offset;
798 };
799
800
801 union Lisp_Misc
802 {
803 int type : 16;
804 struct Lisp_Free u_free;
805 struct Lisp_Marker u_marker;
806 struct Lisp_Intfwd u_intfwd;
807 struct Lisp_Boolfwd u_boolfwd;
808 struct Lisp_Objfwd u_objfwd;
809 struct Lisp_Buffer_Objfwd u_buffer_objfwd;
810 struct Lisp_Buffer_Local_Value u_buffer_local_value;
811 struct Lisp_Overlay u_overlay;
812 struct Lisp_Display_Objfwd u_display_objfwd;
813 };
814 \f
815 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
816 /* Optional Lisp floating point type */
817 struct Lisp_Float
818 {
819 Lisp_Object type; /* essentially used for mark-bit
820 and chaining when on free-list */
821 double data;
822 };
823 #endif /* LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
824
825 /* A character, declared with the following typedef, is a member
826 of some character set associated with the current buffer. */
827 #ifndef _UCHAR_T /* Protect against something in ctab.h on AIX. */
828 #define _UCHAR_T
829 typedef unsigned char UCHAR;
830 #endif
831
832 /* Meanings of slots in a Lisp_Compiled: */
833
834 #define COMPILED_ARGLIST 0
835 #define COMPILED_BYTECODE 1
836 #define COMPILED_CONSTANTS 2
837 #define COMPILED_STACK_DEPTH 3
838 #define COMPILED_DOC_STRING 4
839 #define COMPILED_INTERACTIVE 5
840
841 /* Flag bits in a character. These also get used in termhooks.h.
842 Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu> thinks that MULE
843 (MUlti-Lingual Emacs) might need 22 bits for the character value
844 itself, so we probably shouldn't use any bits lower than 0x0400000. */
845 #define CHAR_ALT (0x0400000)
846 #define CHAR_SUPER (0x0800000)
847 #define CHAR_HYPER (0x1000000)
848 #define CHAR_SHIFT (0x2000000)
849 #define CHAR_CTL (0x4000000)
850 #define CHAR_META (0x8000000)
851
852 #ifdef USE_X_TOOLKIT
853 #ifdef NO_UNION_TYPE
854 /* Use this for turning a (void *) into a Lisp_Object, as when the
855 Lisp_Object is passed into a toolkit callback function. */
856 #define VOID_TO_LISP(larg,varg) \
857 do { ((larg) = ((Lisp_Object) (varg))); } while (0)
858 #define CVOID_TO_LISP VOID_TO_LISP
859
860 /* Use this for turning a Lisp_Object into a (void *), as when the
861 Lisp_Object is passed into a toolkit callback function. */
862 #define LISP_TO_VOID(larg) ((void *) (larg))
863 #define LISP_TO_CVOID(varg) ((const void *) (larg))
864
865 #else /* not NO_UNION_TYPE */
866 /* Use this for turning a (void *) into a Lisp_Object, as when the
867 Lisp_Object is passed into a toolkit callback function. */
868 #define VOID_TO_LISP(larg,varg) \
869 do { ((larg).v = (void *) (varg)); } while (0)
870 #define CVOID_TO_LISP(larg,varg) \
871 do { ((larg).cv = (const void *) (varg)); } while (0)
872
873 /* Use this for turning a Lisp_Object into a (void *), as when the
874 Lisp_Object is passed into a toolkit callback function. */
875 #define LISP_TO_VOID(larg) ((larg).v)
876 #define LISP_TO_CVOID(larg) ((larg).cv)
877 #endif /* not NO_UNION_TYPE */
878 #endif /* USE_X_TOOLKIT */
879
880 \f
881 /* The glyph datatype, used to represent characters on the display. */
882
883 /* The low eight bits are the character code, and the bits above them
884 are the numeric face ID. If FID is the face ID of a glyph on a
885 frame F, then F->display.x->faces[FID] contains the description of
886 that face. This is an int instead of a short, so we can support a
887 good bunch of face ID's; given that we have no mechanism for
888 tossing unused frame face ID's yet, we'll probably run out of 255
889 pretty quickly. */
890 #define GLYPH unsigned int
891
892 #ifdef HAVE_FACES
893 /* The FAST macros assume that we already know we're in an X window. */
894
895 /* Given a character code and a face ID, return the appropriate glyph. */
896 #define FAST_MAKE_GLYPH(char, face) ((char) | ((face) << 8))
897
898 /* Return a glyph's character code. */
899 #define FAST_GLYPH_CHAR(glyph) ((glyph) & 0xff)
900
901 /* Return a glyph's face ID. */
902 #define FAST_GLYPH_FACE(glyph) (((glyph) >> 8) & ((1 << 24) - 1))
903
904 /* Slower versions that test the frame type first. */
905 #define MAKE_GLYPH(f, char, face) (FRAME_TERMCAP_P (f) ? (char) \
906 : FAST_MAKE_GLYPH (char, face))
907 #define GLYPH_CHAR(f, g) (FRAME_TERMCAP_P (f) ? (g) : FAST_GLYPH_CHAR (g))
908 #define GLYPH_FACE(f, g) (FRAME_TERMCAP_P (f) ? (0) : FAST_GLYPH_FACE (g))
909 #else /* not HAVE_FACES */
910 #define MAKE_GLYPH(f, char, face) (char)
911 #define GLYPH_CHAR(f, g) (g)
912 #define GLYPH_FACE(f, g) (g)
913 #endif /* not HAVE_FACES */
914
915 /* The ID of the mode line highlighting face. */
916 #define GLYPH_MODE_LINE_FACE 1
917 \f
918 /* Data type checking */
919
920 #define NILP(x) (XFASTINT (x) == XFASTINT (Qnil))
921 #define GC_NILP(x) GC_EQ (x, Qnil)
922
923 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
924 #define NUMBERP(x) (INTEGERP (x) || FLOATP (x))
925 #define GC_NUMBERP(x) (GC_INTEGERP (x) || GC_FLOATP (x))
926 #else
927 #define NUMBERP(x) (INTEGERP (x))
928 #define GC_NUMBERP(x) (GC_INTEGERP (x))
929 #endif
930 #define NATNUMP(x) (INTEGERP (x) && XINT (x) >= 0)
931 #define GC_NATNUMP(x) (GC_INTEGERP (x) && XINT (x) >= 0)
932
933 #define INTEGERP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Int)
934 #define GC_INTEGERP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Int)
935 #define SYMBOLP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Symbol)
936 #define GC_SYMBOLP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Symbol)
937 #define MISCP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Misc)
938 #define GC_MISCP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Misc)
939 #define VECTORLIKEP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Vectorlike)
940 #define GC_VECTORLIKEP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Vectorlike)
941 #define STRINGP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_String)
942 #define GC_STRINGP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_String)
943 #define CONSP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Cons)
944 #define GC_CONSP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Cons)
945
946 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
947 #define FLOATP(x) (XTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Float)
948 #define GC_FLOATP(x) (XGCTYPE ((x)) == Lisp_Float)
949 #else
950 #define FLOATP(x) (0)
951 #define GC_FLOATP(x) (0)
952 #endif
953 #define VECTORP(x) (VECTORLIKEP (x) && !(XVECTOR (x)->size & PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG))
954 #define GC_VECTORP(x) (GC_VECTORLIKEP (x) && !(XVECTOR (x)->size & PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG))
955 #define OVERLAYP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Overlay)
956 #define GC_OVERLAYP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Overlay)
957 #define MARKERP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Marker)
958 #define GC_MARKERP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Marker)
959 #define INTFWDP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Intfwd)
960 #define GC_INTFWDP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Intfwd)
961 #define BOOLFWDP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Boolfwd)
962 #define GC_BOOLFWDP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Boolfwd)
963 #define OBJFWDP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Objfwd)
964 #define GC_OBJFWDP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Objfwd)
965 #define BUFFER_OBJFWDP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Objfwd)
966 #define GC_BUFFER_OBJFWDP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Objfwd)
967 #define BUFFER_LOCAL_VALUEP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Local_Value)
968 #define GC_BUFFER_LOCAL_VALUEP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Buffer_Local_Value)
969 #define SOME_BUFFER_LOCAL_VALUEP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Some_Buffer_Local_Value)
970 #define GC_SOME_BUFFER_LOCAL_VALUEP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Some_Buffer_Local_Value)
971 #define DISPLAY_OBJFWDP(x) (MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Display_Objfwd)
972 #define GC_DISPLAY_OBJFWDP(x) (GC_MISCP (x) && XMISC (x)->type == Lisp_Misc_Display_Objfwd)
973
974
975 /* True if object X is a pseudovector whose code is CODE. */
976 #define PSEUDOVECTORP(x, code) \
977 (VECTORLIKEP (x) \
978 && (((XVECTOR (x)->size & (PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG | (code)))) \
979 == (PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG | (code))))
980
981 /* True if object X is a pseudovector whose code is CODE.
982 This one works during GC. */
983 #define GC_PSEUDOVECTORP(x, code) \
984 (GC_VECTORLIKEP (x) \
985 && (((XVECTOR (x)->size & (PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG | (code)))) \
986 == (PSEUDOVECTOR_FLAG | (code))))
987
988 /* Test for specific pseudovector types. */
989 #define WINDOW_CONFIGURATIONP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_WINDOW_CONFIGURATION)
990 #define GC_WINDOW_CONFIGURATIONP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_WINDOW_CONFIGURATION)
991 #define PROCESSP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_PROCESS)
992 #define GC_PROCESSP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_PROCESS)
993 #define WINDOWP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_WINDOW)
994 #define GC_WINDOWP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_WINDOW)
995 #define SUBRP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_SUBR)
996 #define GC_SUBRP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_SUBR)
997 #define COMPILEDP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_COMPILED)
998 #define GC_COMPILEDP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_COMPILED)
999 #define BUFFERP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_BUFFER)
1000 #define GC_BUFFERP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_BUFFER)
1001
1002 #ifdef MULTI_FRAME
1003 #define FRAMEP(x) PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_FRAME)
1004 #define GC_FRAMEP(x) GC_PSEUDOVECTORP (x, PVEC_FRAME)
1005 #else
1006 #ifdef HAVE_MOUSE
1007 /* We could use this in the !HAVE_MOUSE case also, but we prefer a compile-time
1008 error message in case FRAMEP is used. */
1009 #define FRAMEP(x) (EQ (x, Fselected_frame ()))
1010 #define GC_FRAMEP(x) (GC_EQ (x, Fselected_frame ()))
1011 #endif
1012 #endif
1013
1014 \f
1015 #define EQ(x, y) (XFASTINT (x) == XFASTINT (y))
1016 #define GC_EQ(x, y) (XGCTYPE (x) == XGCTYPE (y) && XPNTR (x) == XPNTR (y))
1017
1018 #define CHECK_LIST(x, i) \
1019 do { if (!CONSP ((x)) && !NILP (x)) x = wrong_type_argument (Qlistp, (x)); } while (0)
1020
1021 #define CHECK_STRING(x, i) \
1022 do { if (!STRINGP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qstringp, (x)); } while (0)
1023
1024 #define CHECK_CONS(x, i) \
1025 do { if (!CONSP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qconsp, (x)); } while (0)
1026
1027 #define CHECK_SYMBOL(x, i) \
1028 do { if (!SYMBOLP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qsymbolp, (x)); } while (0)
1029
1030 #define CHECK_VECTOR(x, i) \
1031 do { if (!VECTORP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qvectorp, (x)); } while (0)
1032
1033 #define CHECK_BUFFER(x, i) \
1034 do { if (!BUFFERP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qbufferp, (x)); } while (0)
1035
1036 #define CHECK_WINDOW(x, i) \
1037 do { if (!WINDOWP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qwindowp, (x)); } while (0)
1038
1039 /* This macro rejects windows on the interior of the window tree as
1040 "dead", which is what we want; this is an argument-checking macro, and
1041 the user should never get access to interior windows.
1042
1043 A window of any sort, leaf or interior, is dead iff the buffer,
1044 vchild, and hchild members are all nil. */
1045
1046 #define CHECK_LIVE_WINDOW(x, i) \
1047 do { \
1048 if (!WINDOWP ((x)) \
1049 || NILP (XWINDOW ((x))->buffer)) \
1050 x = wrong_type_argument (Qwindow_live_p, (x)); \
1051 } while (0)
1052
1053 #define CHECK_PROCESS(x, i) \
1054 do { if (!PROCESSP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qprocessp, (x)); } while (0)
1055
1056 #define CHECK_NUMBER(x, i) \
1057 do { if (!INTEGERP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qintegerp, (x)); } while (0)
1058
1059 #define CHECK_NATNUM(x, i) \
1060 do { if (!NATNUMP (x)) x = wrong_type_argument (Qwholenump, (x)); } while (0)
1061
1062 #define CHECK_MARKER(x, i) \
1063 do { if (!MARKERP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qmarkerp, (x)); } while (0)
1064
1065 #define CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER(x, i) \
1066 do { if (MARKERP ((x))) XSETFASTINT (x, marker_position (x)); \
1067 else if (!INTEGERP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qinteger_or_marker_p, (x)); } while (0)
1068
1069 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
1070
1071 #ifndef DBL_DIG
1072 #define DBL_DIG 20
1073 #endif
1074
1075 #define XFLOATINT(n) extract_float((n))
1076
1077 #define CHECK_FLOAT(x, i) \
1078 do { if (!FLOATP (x)) \
1079 x = wrong_type_argument (Qfloatp, (x)); } while (0)
1080
1081 #define CHECK_NUMBER_OR_FLOAT(x, i) \
1082 do { if (!FLOATP (x) && !INTEGERP (x)) \
1083 x = wrong_type_argument (Qnumberp, (x)); } while (0)
1084
1085 #define CHECK_NUMBER_OR_FLOAT_COERCE_MARKER(x, i) \
1086 do { if (MARKERP (x)) XSETFASTINT (x, marker_position (x)); \
1087 else if (!INTEGERP (x) && !FLOATP (x)) \
1088 x = wrong_type_argument (Qnumber_or_marker_p, (x)); } while (0)
1089
1090 #else /* Not LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
1091
1092 #define CHECK_NUMBER_OR_FLOAT CHECK_NUMBER
1093
1094 #define CHECK_NUMBER_OR_FLOAT_COERCE_MARKER CHECK_NUMBER_COERCE_MARKER
1095
1096 #define XFLOATINT(n) XINT((n))
1097 #endif /* LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
1098
1099 #define CHECK_OVERLAY(x, i) \
1100 do { if (!OVERLAYP ((x))) x = wrong_type_argument (Qoverlayp, (x));} while (0)
1101
1102 /* Cast pointers to this type to compare them. Some machines want int. */
1103 #ifndef PNTR_COMPARISON_TYPE
1104 #define PNTR_COMPARISON_TYPE unsigned int
1105 #endif
1106 \f
1107 /* Define a built-in function for calling from Lisp.
1108 `lname' should be the name to give the function in Lisp,
1109 as a null-terminated C string.
1110 `fnname' should be the name of the function in C.
1111 By convention, it starts with F.
1112 `sname' should be the name for the C constant structure
1113 that records information on this function for internal use.
1114 By convention, it should be the same as `fnname' but with S instead of F.
1115 It's too bad that C macros can't compute this from `fnname'.
1116 `minargs' should be a number, the minimum number of arguments allowed.
1117 `maxargs' should be a number, the maximum number of arguments allowed,
1118 or else MANY or UNEVALLED.
1119 MANY means pass a vector of evaluated arguments,
1120 in the form of an integer number-of-arguments
1121 followed by the address of a vector of Lisp_Objects
1122 which contains the argument values.
1123 UNEVALLED means pass the list of unevaluated arguments
1124 `prompt' says how to read arguments for an interactive call.
1125 See the doc string for `interactive'.
1126 A null string means call interactively with no arguments.
1127 `doc' is documentation for the user. */
1128
1129 #if !defined (__STDC__) || defined (USE_NONANSI_DEFUN)
1130 #define DEFUN(lname, fnname, sname, minargs, maxargs, prompt, doc) \
1131 Lisp_Object fnname (); \
1132 struct Lisp_Subr sname = \
1133 { PVEC_SUBR | (sizeof (struct Lisp_Subr) / sizeof (EMACS_INT)), \
1134 fnname, minargs, maxargs, lname, prompt, 0}; \
1135 Lisp_Object fnname
1136
1137 #else
1138
1139 /* This version of DEFUN declares a function prototype with the right
1140 arguments, so we can catch errors with maxargs at compile-time. */
1141 #define DEFUN(lname, fnname, sname, minargs, maxargs, prompt, doc) \
1142 Lisp_Object fnname DEFUN_ARGS_ ## maxargs ; \
1143 struct Lisp_Subr sname = \
1144 { PVEC_SUBR | (sizeof (struct Lisp_Subr) / sizeof (EMACS_INT)), \
1145 fnname, minargs, maxargs, lname, prompt, 0}; \
1146 Lisp_Object fnname
1147
1148 /* Note that the weird token-substitution semantics of ANSI C makes
1149 this work for MANY and UNEVALLED. */
1150 #define DEFUN_ARGS_MANY (int, Lisp_Object *)
1151 #define DEFUN_ARGS_UNEVALLED (Lisp_Object)
1152 #define DEFUN_ARGS_0 (void)
1153 #define DEFUN_ARGS_1 (Lisp_Object)
1154 #define DEFUN_ARGS_2 (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object)
1155 #define DEFUN_ARGS_3 (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object)
1156 #define DEFUN_ARGS_4 (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object)
1157 #define DEFUN_ARGS_5 (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, \
1158 Lisp_Object)
1159 #define DEFUN_ARGS_6 (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, \
1160 Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object)
1161 #define DEFUN_ARGS_7 (Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, \
1162 Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object, Lisp_Object)
1163 #endif
1164
1165 /* defsubr (Sname);
1166 is how we define the symbol for function `name' at start-up time. */
1167 extern void defsubr ();
1168
1169 #define MANY -2
1170 #define UNEVALLED -1
1171
1172 extern void defvar_lisp ();
1173 extern void defvar_bool ();
1174 extern void defvar_int ();
1175 extern void defvar_display ();
1176
1177 /* Macros we use to define forwarded Lisp variables.
1178 These are used in the syms_of_FILENAME functions. */
1179
1180 #define DEFVAR_LISP(lname, vname, doc) defvar_lisp (lname, vname)
1181 #define DEFVAR_LISP_NOPRO(lname, vname, doc) defvar_lisp_nopro (lname, vname)
1182 #define DEFVAR_BOOL(lname, vname, doc) defvar_bool (lname, vname)
1183 #define DEFVAR_INT(lname, vname, doc) defvar_int (lname, vname)
1184 #define DEFVAR_PER_BUFFER(lname, vname, type, doc) \
1185 defvar_per_buffer (lname, vname, type, 0)
1186 #define DEFVAR_DISPLAY(lname, vname, doc) \
1187 defvar_display (lname, \
1188 (int)((char *)(&current_perdisplay->vname) \
1189 - (char *)current_perdisplay))
1190 \f
1191 /* Structure for recording Lisp call stack for backtrace purposes. */
1192
1193 /* The special binding stack holds the outer values of variables while
1194 they are bound by a function application or a let form, stores the
1195 code to be executed for Lisp unwind-protect forms, and stores the C
1196 functions to be called for record_unwind_protect.
1197
1198 If func is non-zero, undoing this binding applies func to old_value;
1199 This implements record_unwind_protect.
1200 If func is zero and symbol is nil, undoing this binding evaluates
1201 the list of forms in old_value; this implements Lisp's unwind-protect
1202 form.
1203 Otherwise, undoing this binding stores old_value as symbol's value; this
1204 undoes the bindings made by a let form or function call. */
1205 struct specbinding
1206 {
1207 Lisp_Object symbol, old_value;
1208 Lisp_Object (*func) ();
1209 Lisp_Object unused; /* Dividing by 16 is faster than by 12 */
1210 };
1211
1212 extern struct specbinding *specpdl;
1213 extern struct specbinding *specpdl_ptr;
1214 extern int specpdl_size;
1215
1216 /* Everything needed to describe an active condition case. */
1217 struct handler
1218 {
1219 /* The handler clauses and variable from the condition-case form. */
1220 Lisp_Object handler;
1221 Lisp_Object var;
1222 /* Fsignal stores here the condition-case clause that applies,
1223 and Fcondition_case thus knows which clause to run. */
1224 Lisp_Object chosen_clause;
1225
1226 /* Used to effect the longjump out to the handler. */
1227 struct catchtag *tag;
1228
1229 /* The next enclosing handler. */
1230 struct handler *next;
1231 };
1232
1233 extern struct handler *handlerlist;
1234
1235 extern struct catchtag *catchlist;
1236 extern struct backtrace *backtrace_list;
1237
1238 extern Lisp_Object memory_signal_data;
1239
1240 /* An address near the bottom of the stack.
1241 Tells GC how to save a copy of the stack. */
1242 extern char *stack_bottom;
1243
1244 /* Check quit-flag and quit if it is non-nil. */
1245
1246 #define QUIT \
1247 if (!NILP (Vquit_flag) && NILP (Vinhibit_quit)) \
1248 { Vquit_flag = Qnil; Fsignal (Qquit, Qnil); }
1249
1250 /* Nonzero if ought to quit now. */
1251
1252 #define QUITP (!NILP (Vquit_flag) && NILP (Vinhibit_quit))
1253 \f
1254 /* 1 if CH is upper case. */
1255
1256 #define UPPERCASEP(CH) \
1257 (XSTRING (current_buffer->downcase_table)->data[CH] != (CH))
1258
1259 /* 1 if CH is lower case. */
1260
1261 #define LOWERCASEP(CH) \
1262 (!UPPERCASEP (CH) \
1263 && XSTRING (current_buffer->upcase_table)->data[CH] != (CH))
1264
1265 /* 1 if CH is neither upper nor lower case. */
1266
1267 #define NOCASEP(CH) (XSTRING (current_buffer->upcase_table)->data[CH] == (CH))
1268
1269 /* Upcase a character, or make no change if that cannot be done. */
1270
1271 #define UPCASE(CH) \
1272 (XSTRING (current_buffer->downcase_table)->data[CH] == (CH) \
1273 ? UPCASE1 (CH) : (CH))
1274
1275 /* Upcase a character known to be not upper case. */
1276
1277 #define UPCASE1(CH) (XSTRING (current_buffer->upcase_table)->data[CH])
1278
1279 /* Downcase a character, or make no change if that cannot be done. */
1280
1281 #define DOWNCASE(CH) (XSTRING (current_buffer->downcase_table)->data[CH])
1282
1283 /* Current buffer's map from characters to lower-case characters. */
1284
1285 #define DOWNCASE_TABLE XSTRING (current_buffer->downcase_table)->data
1286
1287 /* Table mapping each char to the next char with the same lowercase version.
1288 This mapping is a no-op only for characters that don't have case. */
1289 #define UPCASE_TABLE XSTRING (current_buffer->upcase_table)->data
1290
1291 extern Lisp_Object Vascii_downcase_table, Vascii_upcase_table;
1292 extern Lisp_Object Vascii_canon_table, Vascii_eqv_table;
1293 \f
1294 /* Number of bytes of structure consed since last GC. */
1295
1296 extern int consing_since_gc;
1297
1298 /* Threshold for doing another gc. */
1299
1300 extern int gc_cons_threshold;
1301
1302 /* Structure for recording stack slots that need marking. */
1303
1304 /* This is a chain of structures, each of which points at a Lisp_Object variable
1305 whose value should be marked in garbage collection.
1306 Normally every link of the chain is an automatic variable of a function,
1307 and its `val' points to some argument or local variable of the function.
1308 On exit to the function, the chain is set back to the value it had on entry.
1309 This way, no link remains in the chain when the stack frame containing the
1310 link disappears.
1311
1312 Every function that can call Feval must protect in this fashion all
1313 Lisp_Object variables whose contents will be used again. */
1314
1315 extern struct gcpro *gcprolist;
1316
1317 struct gcpro
1318 {
1319 struct gcpro *next;
1320 Lisp_Object *var; /* Address of first protected variable */
1321 int nvars; /* Number of consecutive protected variables */
1322 };
1323
1324 #define GCPRO1(varname) \
1325 {gcpro1.next = gcprolist; gcpro1.var = &varname; gcpro1.nvars = 1; \
1326 gcprolist = &gcpro1; }
1327
1328 #define GCPRO2(varname1, varname2) \
1329 {gcpro1.next = gcprolist; gcpro1.var = &varname1; gcpro1.nvars = 1; \
1330 gcpro2.next = &gcpro1; gcpro2.var = &varname2; gcpro2.nvars = 1; \
1331 gcprolist = &gcpro2; }
1332
1333 #define GCPRO3(varname1, varname2, varname3) \
1334 {gcpro1.next = gcprolist; gcpro1.var = &varname1; gcpro1.nvars = 1; \
1335 gcpro2.next = &gcpro1; gcpro2.var = &varname2; gcpro2.nvars = 1; \
1336 gcpro3.next = &gcpro2; gcpro3.var = &varname3; gcpro3.nvars = 1; \
1337 gcprolist = &gcpro3; }
1338
1339 #define GCPRO4(varname1, varname2, varname3, varname4) \
1340 {gcpro1.next = gcprolist; gcpro1.var = &varname1; gcpro1.nvars = 1; \
1341 gcpro2.next = &gcpro1; gcpro2.var = &varname2; gcpro2.nvars = 1; \
1342 gcpro3.next = &gcpro2; gcpro3.var = &varname3; gcpro3.nvars = 1; \
1343 gcpro4.next = &gcpro3; gcpro4.var = &varname4; gcpro4.nvars = 1; \
1344 gcprolist = &gcpro4; }
1345
1346 #define GCPRO5(varname1, varname2, varname3, varname4, varname5) \
1347 {gcpro1.next = gcprolist; gcpro1.var = &varname1; gcpro1.nvars = 1; \
1348 gcpro2.next = &gcpro1; gcpro2.var = &varname2; gcpro2.nvars = 1; \
1349 gcpro3.next = &gcpro2; gcpro3.var = &varname3; gcpro3.nvars = 1; \
1350 gcpro4.next = &gcpro3; gcpro4.var = &varname4; gcpro4.nvars = 1; \
1351 gcpro5.next = &gcpro4; gcpro5.var = &varname5; gcpro5.nvars = 1; \
1352 gcprolist = &gcpro5; }
1353
1354 /* Call staticpro (&var) to protect static variable `var'. */
1355
1356 void staticpro();
1357
1358 #define UNGCPRO (gcprolist = gcpro1.next)
1359
1360 /* Evaluate expr, UNGCPRO, and then return the value of expr. */
1361 #define RETURN_UNGCPRO(expr) \
1362 if (1) \
1363 { \
1364 Lisp_Object ret_ungc_val; \
1365 ret_ungc_val = (expr); \
1366 UNGCPRO; \
1367 return ret_ungc_val; \
1368 } \
1369 else
1370 \f
1371 /* Defined in data.c */
1372 extern Lisp_Object Qnil, Qt, Qquote, Qlambda, Qsubr, Qunbound;
1373 extern Lisp_Object Qerror_conditions, Qerror_message, Qtop_level;
1374 extern Lisp_Object Qerror, Qquit, Qwrong_type_argument, Qargs_out_of_range;
1375 extern Lisp_Object Qvoid_variable, Qvoid_function;
1376 extern Lisp_Object Qsetting_constant, Qinvalid_read_syntax;
1377 extern Lisp_Object Qinvalid_function, Qwrong_number_of_arguments, Qno_catch;
1378 extern Lisp_Object Qend_of_file, Qarith_error;
1379 extern Lisp_Object Qbeginning_of_buffer, Qend_of_buffer, Qbuffer_read_only;
1380 extern Lisp_Object Qmark_inactive;
1381
1382 extern Lisp_Object Qrange_error, Qdomain_error, Qsingularity_error;
1383 extern Lisp_Object Qoverflow_error, Qunderflow_error;
1384
1385 extern Lisp_Object Qintegerp, Qnumberp, Qnatnump, Qwholenump;
1386 extern Lisp_Object Qsymbolp, Qlistp, Qconsp;
1387 extern Lisp_Object Qstringp, Qarrayp, Qsequencep, Qbufferp;
1388 extern Lisp_Object Qchar_or_string_p, Qmarkerp, Qvectorp;
1389 extern Lisp_Object Qinteger_or_marker_p, Qnumber_or_marker_p;
1390 extern Lisp_Object Qboundp, Qfboundp;
1391 extern Lisp_Object Qbuffer_or_string_p;
1392 extern Lisp_Object Qcdr;
1393
1394 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
1395 extern Lisp_Object Qfloatp, Qinteger_or_floatp, Qinteger_or_float_or_marker_p;
1396 #endif /* LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
1397
1398 extern Lisp_Object Qframep;
1399
1400 extern Lisp_Object Feq (), Fnull (), Flistp (), Fconsp (), Fatom (), Fnlistp ();
1401 extern Lisp_Object Fintegerp (), Fnatnump (), Fsymbolp ();
1402 extern Lisp_Object Fvectorp (), Fstringp (), Farrayp (), Fsequencep ();
1403 extern Lisp_Object Fbufferp (), Fmarkerp (), Fsubrp (), Fchar_or_string_p ();
1404 extern Lisp_Object Finteger_or_marker_p ();
1405 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
1406 extern Lisp_Object Ffloatp(), Finteger_or_floatp();
1407 extern Lisp_Object Finteger_or_float_or_marker_p(), Ftruncate();
1408 #endif /* LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
1409
1410 extern Lisp_Object Fcar (), Fcar_safe(), Fcdr (), Fcdr_safe();
1411 extern Lisp_Object Fsetcar (), Fsetcdr ();
1412 extern Lisp_Object Fboundp (), Ffboundp (), Fmakunbound (), Ffmakunbound ();
1413 extern Lisp_Object Fsymbol_function (), Fsymbol_plist (), Fsymbol_name ();
1414 extern Lisp_Object indirect_function (), Findirect_function ();
1415 extern Lisp_Object Ffset (), Fsetplist ();
1416 extern Lisp_Object Fsymbol_value (), find_symbol_value (), Fset ();
1417 extern Lisp_Object Fdefault_value (), Fset_default (), Fdefault_boundp ();
1418
1419 extern Lisp_Object Faref (), Faset ();
1420
1421 extern Lisp_Object Fstring_to_number (), Fnumber_to_string ();
1422 extern Lisp_Object Feqlsign (), Fgtr (), Flss (), Fgeq (), Fleq ();
1423 extern Lisp_Object Fneq (), Fzerop ();
1424 extern Lisp_Object Fplus (), Fminus (), Ftimes (), Fquo (), Frem ();
1425 extern Lisp_Object Fmax (), Fmin ();
1426 extern Lisp_Object Flogand (), Flogior (), Flogxor (), Flognot ();
1427 extern Lisp_Object Flsh (), Fash ();
1428
1429 extern Lisp_Object Fadd1 (), Fsub1 ();
1430
1431 extern Lisp_Object make_number ();
1432 extern Lisp_Object long_to_cons ();
1433 extern unsigned long cons_to_long ();
1434 extern void args_out_of_range ();
1435 extern void args_out_of_range_3 ();
1436 extern Lisp_Object wrong_type_argument ();
1437 extern void store_symval_forwarding ();
1438 #ifdef LISP_FLOAT_TYPE
1439 extern Lisp_Object Ffloat_to_int(), Fint_to_float();
1440 extern double extract_float();
1441 extern Lisp_Object make_float ();
1442 extern Lisp_Object Ffloat ();
1443 #endif /* LISP_FLOAT_TYPE */
1444
1445 /* Defined in fns.c */
1446 extern Lisp_Object Qstring_lessp;
1447 extern Lisp_Object Vfeatures;
1448 extern Lisp_Object Fidentity (), Frandom ();
1449 extern Lisp_Object Flength ();
1450 extern Lisp_Object Fappend (), Fconcat (), Fvconcat (), Fcopy_sequence ();
1451 extern Lisp_Object Fsubstring ();
1452 extern Lisp_Object Fnth (), Fnthcdr (), Fmemq (), Fassq (), Fassoc ();
1453 extern Lisp_Object Fmember (), Frassq (), Fdelq (), Fsort ();
1454 extern Lisp_Object Freverse (), Fnreverse (), Fget (), Fput (), Fequal ();
1455 extern Lisp_Object Ffillarray (), Fnconc (), Fmapcar (), Fmapconcat ();
1456 extern Lisp_Object Fy_or_n_p (), do_yes_or_no_p ();
1457 extern Lisp_Object Ffeaturep (), Frequire () , Fprovide ();
1458 extern Lisp_Object concat2 (), nconc2 ();
1459 extern Lisp_Object assq_no_quit ();
1460 extern Lisp_Object Fcopy_alist ();
1461
1462 /* Defined in insdel.c */
1463 extern void move_gap ();
1464 extern void make_gap ();
1465 extern void insert ();
1466 extern void insert_and_inherit ();
1467 extern void insert_1 ();
1468 extern void insert_from_string ();
1469 extern void insert_from_buffer ();
1470 extern void insert_char ();
1471 extern void insert_string ();
1472 extern void insert_before_markers ();
1473 extern void insert_before_markers_and_inherit ();
1474 extern void insert_from_string_before_markers ();
1475 extern void del_range ();
1476 extern void del_range_1 ();
1477 extern void modify_region ();
1478 extern void prepare_to_modify_buffer ();
1479 extern void signal_before_change ();
1480 extern void signal_after_change ();
1481
1482 /* Defined in xdisp.c */
1483 extern void message ();
1484 extern void message1 ();
1485 extern void message1_nolog ();
1486 extern void message2 ();
1487 extern void message2_nolog ();
1488 extern void message_dolog ();
1489 extern void message_log_maybe_newline ();
1490
1491 /* Defined in alloc.c */
1492 extern Lisp_Object Vpurify_flag;
1493 extern Lisp_Object Fcons (), Flist(), Fmake_list (), allocate_misc ();
1494 extern Lisp_Object Fmake_vector (), Fvector (), Fmake_symbol (), Fmake_marker ();
1495 extern Lisp_Object Fmake_string (), build_string (), make_string ();
1496 extern Lisp_Object make_event_array (), make_uninit_string ();
1497 extern Lisp_Object Fpurecopy (), make_pure_string ();
1498 extern Lisp_Object pure_cons (), make_pure_vector ();
1499 extern Lisp_Object Fgarbage_collect ();
1500 extern Lisp_Object Fmake_byte_code ();
1501 extern struct Lisp_Vector *allocate_vectorlike ();
1502 extern int gc_in_progress;
1503
1504 /* Defined in print.c */
1505 extern Lisp_Object Vprin1_to_string_buffer;
1506 extern Lisp_Object Fprin1 (), Fprin1_to_string (), Fprinc ();
1507 extern Lisp_Object Fterpri (), Fprint ();
1508 extern Lisp_Object Vstandard_output, Qstandard_output;
1509 extern Lisp_Object Qexternal_debugging_output;
1510 extern void temp_output_buffer_setup (), temp_output_buffer_show ();
1511 extern int print_level, print_escape_newlines;
1512 extern Lisp_Object Qprint_escape_newlines;
1513
1514 /* Defined in lread.c */
1515 extern Lisp_Object Qvariable_documentation, Qstandard_input;
1516 extern Lisp_Object Vobarray, Vstandard_input;
1517 extern Lisp_Object Fread (), Fread_from_string ();
1518 extern Lisp_Object Fintern (), Fintern_soft (), Fload ();
1519 extern Lisp_Object Fget_file_char (), Fread_char ();
1520 extern Lisp_Object read_filtered_event ();
1521 extern Lisp_Object Feval_current_buffer (), Feval_region ();
1522 extern Lisp_Object intern (), oblookup ();
1523 #define LOADHIST_ATTACH(x) \
1524 if (initialized) Vcurrent_load_list = Fcons (x, Vcurrent_load_list)
1525 extern Lisp_Object Vcurrent_load_list;
1526 extern Lisp_Object Vload_history;
1527
1528 /* Defined in eval.c */
1529 extern Lisp_Object Qautoload, Qexit, Qinteractive, Qcommandp, Qdefun, Qmacro;
1530 extern Lisp_Object Vinhibit_quit, Qinhibit_quit, Vquit_flag;
1531 extern Lisp_Object Vmocklisp_arguments, Qmocklisp, Qmocklisp_arguments;
1532 extern Lisp_Object Vautoload_queue;
1533 extern Lisp_Object Vdebug_on_error;
1534 /* To run a normal hook, do
1535 if (!NILP (Vrun_hooks))
1536 call1 (Vrun_hooks, Qmy_funny_hook); */
1537 extern Lisp_Object Vrun_hooks;
1538 extern Lisp_Object Fand (), For (), Fif (), Fprogn (), Fprog1 (), Fprog2 ();
1539 extern Lisp_Object Fsetq (), Fquote ();
1540 extern Lisp_Object Fuser_variable_p (), Finteractive_p ();
1541 extern Lisp_Object Fdefun (), Flet (), FletX (), Fwhile ();
1542 extern Lisp_Object Fcatch (), Fthrow (), Funwind_protect ();
1543 extern Lisp_Object Fcondition_case (), Fsignal ();
1544 extern Lisp_Object Ffunction_type (), Fautoload (), Fcommandp ();
1545 extern Lisp_Object Feval (), Fapply (), Ffuncall ();
1546 extern Lisp_Object Fglobal_set (), Fglobal_value (), Fbacktrace ();
1547 extern Lisp_Object apply1 (), call0 (), call1 (), call2 (), call3 ();
1548 extern Lisp_Object call4 (), call5 (), call6 ();
1549 extern Lisp_Object Fkill_emacs (), Fkey_binding (), Fsit_for ();
1550 extern Lisp_Object Fdo_auto_save (), Fset_marker ();
1551 extern Lisp_Object apply_lambda ();
1552 extern Lisp_Object internal_catch ();
1553 extern Lisp_Object internal_condition_case ();
1554 extern Lisp_Object internal_condition_case_1 ();
1555 extern Lisp_Object unbind_to ();
1556 extern void error ();
1557 extern Lisp_Object un_autoload ();
1558
1559 /* Defined in editfns.c */
1560 extern Lisp_Object Fgoto_char ();
1561 extern Lisp_Object Fpoint_min_marker (), Fpoint_max_marker ();
1562 extern Lisp_Object Fpoint_min (), Fpoint_max ();
1563 extern Lisp_Object Fpoint (), Fpoint_marker (), Fmark_marker ();
1564 extern Lisp_Object Ffollowing_char (), Fprevious_char (), Fchar_after ();
1565 extern Lisp_Object Finsert ();
1566 extern Lisp_Object Feolp (), Feobp (), Fbolp (), Fbobp ();
1567 extern Lisp_Object Fformat (), format1 ();
1568 extern Lisp_Object make_buffer_string (), Fbuffer_substring ();
1569 extern Lisp_Object Fbuffer_string ();
1570 extern Lisp_Object Fstring_equal (), Fstring_lessp (), Fbuffer_substring_lessp ();
1571 extern Lisp_Object save_excursion_save (), save_restriction_save ();
1572 extern Lisp_Object save_excursion_restore (), save_restriction_restore ();
1573 extern Lisp_Object Fchar_to_string ();
1574
1575 /* defined in buffer.c */
1576 extern Lisp_Object Vbuffer_alist, Vinhibit_read_only;
1577 extern Lisp_Object Fget_buffer (), Fget_buffer_create (), Fset_buffer ();
1578 extern Lisp_Object Fbarf_if_buffer_read_only ();
1579 extern Lisp_Object Fcurrent_buffer (), Fswitch_to_buffer (), Fpop_to_buffer ();
1580 extern Lisp_Object Fother_buffer ();
1581 extern Lisp_Object Foverlay_get ();
1582 extern Lisp_Object Qoverlayp;
1583 extern struct buffer *all_buffers;
1584
1585 /* defined in marker.c */
1586
1587 extern Lisp_Object Fmarker_position (), Fmarker_buffer ();
1588 extern Lisp_Object Fcopy_marker ();
1589
1590 /* Defined in fileio.c */
1591
1592 extern Lisp_Object Qfile_error;
1593 extern Lisp_Object Ffind_file_name_handler ();
1594 extern Lisp_Object Ffile_name_as_directory ();
1595 extern Lisp_Object Fexpand_file_name (), Ffile_name_nondirectory ();
1596 extern Lisp_Object Fsubstitute_in_file_name ();
1597 extern Lisp_Object Ffile_symlink_p ();
1598 extern Lisp_Object Fverify_visited_file_modtime ();
1599 extern Lisp_Object Ffile_exists_p ();
1600 extern Lisp_Object Fdirectory_file_name ();
1601 extern Lisp_Object Ffile_name_directory ();
1602 extern Lisp_Object expand_and_dir_to_file ();
1603 extern Lisp_Object Ffile_accessible_directory_p ();
1604 extern Lisp_Object Funhandled_file_name_directory ();
1605
1606 /* Defined in abbrev.c */
1607
1608 extern Lisp_Object Vfundamental_mode_abbrev_table;
1609
1610 /* defined in search.c */
1611 extern Lisp_Object Fstring_match ();
1612 extern Lisp_Object Fscan_buffer ();
1613 extern void restore_match_data ();
1614
1615 /* defined in minibuf.c */
1616
1617 extern Lisp_Object last_minibuf_string;
1618 extern Lisp_Object read_minibuf (), Fcompleting_read ();
1619 extern Lisp_Object Fread_from_minibuffer ();
1620 extern Lisp_Object Fread_variable (), Fread_buffer (), Fread_key_sequence ();
1621 extern Lisp_Object Fread_minibuffer (), Feval_minibuffer ();
1622 extern Lisp_Object Fread_string (), Fread_file_name ();
1623 extern Lisp_Object Fread_no_blanks_input ();
1624
1625 /* Defined in callint.c */
1626
1627 extern Lisp_Object Qminus, Qplus;
1628 extern Lisp_Object Vcommand_history;
1629 extern Lisp_Object Qcall_interactively;
1630 extern Lisp_Object Fcall_interactively ();
1631 extern Lisp_Object Fprefix_numeric_value ();
1632
1633 /* defined in casefiddle.c */
1634
1635 extern Lisp_Object Fdowncase (), Fupcase (), Fcapitalize ();
1636
1637 /* defined in keyboard.c */
1638
1639 extern Lisp_Object Qdisabled;
1640 extern Lisp_Object Vhelp_form, Vtop_level;
1641 extern Lisp_Object Fdiscard_input (), Frecursive_edit ();
1642 extern Lisp_Object Fcommand_execute (), Finput_pending_p ();
1643 extern Lisp_Object Qvertical_scroll_bar;
1644
1645 /* defined in keymap.c */
1646
1647 extern Lisp_Object Qkeymap, Qmenu_bar;
1648 extern Lisp_Object current_global_map;
1649 extern Lisp_Object Fkey_description (), Fsingle_key_description ();
1650 extern Lisp_Object Fwhere_is_internal ();
1651 extern Lisp_Object access_keymap (), store_in_keymap ();
1652 extern Lisp_Object get_keyelt (), get_keymap();
1653
1654 /* defined in indent.c */
1655 extern Lisp_Object Fvertical_motion (), Findent_to (), Fcurrent_column ();
1656
1657 /* defined in window.c */
1658 extern Lisp_Object Qwindowp, Qwindow_live_p;
1659 extern Lisp_Object Fget_buffer_window ();
1660 extern Lisp_Object Fsave_window_excursion ();
1661 extern Lisp_Object Fset_window_configuration (), Fcurrent_window_configuration ();
1662 extern Lisp_Object Fcoordinates_in_window_p ();
1663 extern Lisp_Object Fwindow_at ();
1664 extern int window_internal_height (), window_internal_width ();
1665
1666 /* defined in frame.c */
1667 extern Lisp_Object Qvisible;
1668 extern Lisp_Object Fframep ();
1669 extern Lisp_Object Fselect_frame ();
1670 extern Lisp_Object Ffocus_frame ();
1671 extern Lisp_Object Funfocus_frame ();
1672 extern Lisp_Object Fselected_frame ();
1673 extern Lisp_Object Fwindow_frame ();
1674 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_root_window ();
1675 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_selected_window ();
1676 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_list ();
1677 extern Lisp_Object Fnext_frame ();
1678 extern Lisp_Object Fdelete_frame ();
1679 extern Lisp_Object Fread_mouse_position ();
1680 extern Lisp_Object Fset_mouse_position ();
1681 extern Lisp_Object Fmake_frame_visible ();
1682 extern Lisp_Object Fmake_frame_invisible ();
1683 extern Lisp_Object Ficonify_frame ();
1684 extern Lisp_Object Fdeiconify_frame ();
1685 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_visible_p ();
1686 extern Lisp_Object Fvisible_frame_list ();
1687 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_parameters ();
1688 extern Lisp_Object Fmodify_frame_parameters ();
1689 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_pixel_size ();
1690 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_height ();
1691 extern Lisp_Object Fframe_width ();
1692 extern Lisp_Object Fset_frame_height ();
1693 extern Lisp_Object Fset_frame_width ();
1694 extern Lisp_Object Fset_frame_size ();
1695 extern Lisp_Object Fset_frame_position ();
1696 #ifndef HAVE_X11
1697 extern Lisp_Object Frubber_band_rectangle ();
1698 #endif /* HAVE_X11 */
1699
1700 /* defined in emacs.c */
1701 extern Lisp_Object decode_env_path ();
1702 extern Lisp_Object Vinvocation_name, Vinvocation_directory;
1703 extern Lisp_Object Vinstallation_directory;
1704 void shut_down_emacs ( /* int signal, int no_x, Lisp_Object stuff */ );
1705 /* Nonzero means don't do interactive redisplay and don't change tty modes */
1706 extern int noninteractive;
1707 /* Nonzero means don't do use window-system-specific display code */
1708 extern int inhibit_window_system;
1709 /* Nonzero means that a filter or a sentinel is running. */
1710 extern int running_asynch_code;
1711
1712 /* defined in process.c */
1713 extern Lisp_Object Fget_process (), Fget_buffer_process (), Fprocessp ();
1714 extern Lisp_Object Fprocess_status (), Fkill_process ();
1715 extern Lisp_Object Fprocess_send_eof ();
1716
1717 /* defined in callproc.c */
1718 extern Lisp_Object Vexec_path, Vexec_directory, Vdata_directory;
1719 extern Lisp_Object Vdoc_directory;
1720
1721 /* defined in doc.c */
1722 extern Lisp_Object Vdoc_file_name;
1723 extern Lisp_Object Fsubstitute_command_keys ();
1724 extern Lisp_Object Fdocumentation (), Fdocumentation_property ();
1725
1726 /* defined in bytecode.c */
1727 extern Lisp_Object Qbytecode;
1728 extern Lisp_Object Fbyte_code ();
1729
1730 /* defined in macros.c */
1731 extern Lisp_Object Qexecute_kbd_macro;
1732 extern Lisp_Object Fexecute_kbd_macro ();
1733
1734 /* defined in undo.c */
1735 extern Lisp_Object Fundo_boundary ();
1736 extern Lisp_Object truncate_undo_list ();
1737
1738 /* defined in textprop.c */
1739 extern Lisp_Object Qmodification_hooks;
1740 extern Lisp_Object Qrear_nonsticky;
1741 extern Lisp_Object Qinsert_in_front_hooks, Qinsert_behind_hooks;
1742 extern Lisp_Object Fnext_property_change ();
1743 extern Lisp_Object Fnext_single_property_change ();
1744
1745 /* Nonzero means Emacs has already been initialized.
1746 Used during startup to detect startup of dumped Emacs. */
1747 extern int initialized;
1748
1749 extern int immediate_quit; /* Nonzero means ^G can quit instantly */
1750
1751 extern void debugger ();
1752
1753 extern char *getenv (), *ctime (), *getwd ();
1754 extern long *xmalloc (), *xrealloc ();
1755 extern void xfree ();
1756
1757 extern char *egetenv ();
1758
1759 /* Set up the name of the machine we're running on. */
1760 extern void init_system_name ();
1761
1762 /* Some systems (e.g., NT) use a different path separator than Unix,
1763 in addition to a device separator. Default the path separator
1764 to '/', and don't test for a device separator in IS_ANY_SEP. */
1765
1766 #ifndef DIRECTORY_SEP
1767 #define DIRECTORY_SEP '/'
1768 #endif
1769 #ifndef IS_DIRECTORY_SEP
1770 #define IS_DIRECTORY_SEP(_c_) ((_c_) == DIRECTORY_SEP)
1771 #endif
1772 #ifndef IS_DEVICE_SEP
1773 #ifndef DEVICE_SEP
1774 #define IS_DEVICE_SEP(_c_) 0
1775 #else
1776 #define IS_DEVICE_SEP(_c_) ((_c_) == DEVICE_SEP)
1777 #endif
1778 #endif
1779 #ifndef IS_ANY_SEP
1780 #define IS_ANY_SEP(_c_) (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (_c_))
1781 #endif
1782
1783 #ifdef SWITCH_ENUM_BUG
1784 #define SWITCH_ENUM_CAST(x) ((int)(x))
1785 #else
1786 #define SWITCH_ENUM_CAST(x) (x)
1787 #endif