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[bpt/emacs.git] / src / intervals.c
1 /* Code for doing intervals.
2 Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998 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, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
19 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
20
21
22 /* NOTES:
23
24 Have to ensure that we can't put symbol nil on a plist, or some
25 functions may work incorrectly.
26
27 An idea: Have the owner of the tree keep count of splits and/or
28 insertion lengths (in intervals), and balance after every N.
29
30 Need to call *_left_hook when buffer is killed.
31
32 Scan for zero-length, or 0-length to see notes about handling
33 zero length interval-markers.
34
35 There are comments around about freeing intervals. It might be
36 faster to explicitly free them (put them on the free list) than
37 to GC them.
38
39 */
40
41
42 #include <config.h>
43 #include "lisp.h"
44 #include "intervals.h"
45 #include "buffer.h"
46 #include "puresize.h"
47 #include "keyboard.h"
48
49 /* Test for membership, allowing for t (actually any non-cons) to mean the
50 universal set. */
51
52 #define TMEM(sym, set) (CONSP (set) ? ! NILP (Fmemq (sym, set)) : ! NILP (set))
53
54 #define min(x, y) ((x) < (y) ? (x) : (y))
55
56 Lisp_Object merge_properties_sticky ();
57 static INTERVAL reproduce_tree P_ ((INTERVAL, INTERVAL));
58 static INTERVAL reproduce_tree_obj P_ ((INTERVAL, Lisp_Object));
59 \f
60 /* Utility functions for intervals. */
61
62
63 /* Create the root interval of some object, a buffer or string. */
64
65 INTERVAL
66 create_root_interval (parent)
67 Lisp_Object parent;
68 {
69 INTERVAL new;
70
71 CHECK_IMPURE (parent);
72
73 new = make_interval ();
74
75 if (BUFFERP (parent))
76 {
77 new->total_length = (BUF_Z (XBUFFER (parent))
78 - BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (parent)));
79 BUF_INTERVALS (XBUFFER (parent)) = new;
80 new->position = 1;
81 }
82 else if (STRINGP (parent))
83 {
84 new->total_length = XSTRING (parent)->size;
85 XSTRING (parent)->intervals = new;
86 new->position = 0;
87 }
88
89 SET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (new, parent);
90
91 return new;
92 }
93
94 /* Make the interval TARGET have exactly the properties of SOURCE */
95
96 void
97 copy_properties (source, target)
98 register INTERVAL source, target;
99 {
100 if (DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (source) && DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (target))
101 return;
102
103 COPY_INTERVAL_CACHE (source, target);
104 target->plist = Fcopy_sequence (source->plist);
105 }
106
107 /* Merge the properties of interval SOURCE into the properties
108 of interval TARGET. That is to say, each property in SOURCE
109 is added to TARGET if TARGET has no such property as yet. */
110
111 static void
112 merge_properties (source, target)
113 register INTERVAL source, target;
114 {
115 register Lisp_Object o, sym, val;
116
117 if (DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (source) && DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (target))
118 return;
119
120 MERGE_INTERVAL_CACHE (source, target);
121
122 o = source->plist;
123 while (! EQ (o, Qnil))
124 {
125 sym = Fcar (o);
126 val = Fmemq (sym, target->plist);
127
128 if (NILP (val))
129 {
130 o = Fcdr (o);
131 val = Fcar (o);
132 target->plist = Fcons (sym, Fcons (val, target->plist));
133 o = Fcdr (o);
134 }
135 else
136 o = Fcdr (Fcdr (o));
137 }
138 }
139
140 /* Return 1 if the two intervals have the same properties,
141 0 otherwise. */
142
143 int
144 intervals_equal (i0, i1)
145 INTERVAL i0, i1;
146 {
147 register Lisp_Object i0_cdr, i0_sym, i1_val;
148 register int i1_len;
149
150 if (DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (i0) && DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (i1))
151 return 1;
152
153 if (DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (i0) || DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (i1))
154 return 0;
155
156 i1_len = XFASTINT (Flength (i1->plist));
157 if (i1_len & 0x1) /* Paranoia -- plists are always even */
158 abort ();
159 i1_len /= 2;
160 i0_cdr = i0->plist;
161 while (!NILP (i0_cdr))
162 {
163 /* Lengths of the two plists were unequal. */
164 if (i1_len == 0)
165 return 0;
166
167 i0_sym = Fcar (i0_cdr);
168 i1_val = Fmemq (i0_sym, i1->plist);
169
170 /* i0 has something i1 doesn't. */
171 if (EQ (i1_val, Qnil))
172 return 0;
173
174 /* i0 and i1 both have sym, but it has different values in each. */
175 i0_cdr = Fcdr (i0_cdr);
176 if (! EQ (Fcar (Fcdr (i1_val)), Fcar (i0_cdr)))
177 return 0;
178
179 i0_cdr = Fcdr (i0_cdr);
180 i1_len--;
181 }
182
183 /* Lengths of the two plists were unequal. */
184 if (i1_len > 0)
185 return 0;
186
187 return 1;
188 }
189 \f
190
191 /* Traverse an interval tree TREE, performing FUNCTION on each node.
192 Pass FUNCTION two args: an interval, and ARG. */
193
194 void
195 traverse_intervals (tree, position, depth, function, arg)
196 INTERVAL tree;
197 int position, depth;
198 void (* function) P_ ((INTERVAL, Lisp_Object));
199 Lisp_Object arg;
200 {
201 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree))
202 return;
203
204 traverse_intervals (tree->left, position, depth + 1, function, arg);
205 position += LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree);
206 tree->position = position;
207 (*function) (tree, arg);
208 position += LENGTH (tree);
209 traverse_intervals (tree->right, position, depth + 1, function, arg);
210 }
211 \f
212 #if 0
213
214 static int icount;
215 static int idepth;
216 static int zero_length;
217
218 /* These functions are temporary, for debugging purposes only. */
219
220 INTERVAL search_interval, found_interval;
221
222 void
223 check_for_interval (i)
224 register INTERVAL i;
225 {
226 if (i == search_interval)
227 {
228 found_interval = i;
229 icount++;
230 }
231 }
232
233 INTERVAL
234 search_for_interval (i, tree)
235 register INTERVAL i, tree;
236 {
237 icount = 0;
238 search_interval = i;
239 found_interval = NULL_INTERVAL;
240 traverse_intervals (tree, 1, 0, &check_for_interval, Qnil);
241 return found_interval;
242 }
243
244 static void
245 inc_interval_count (i)
246 INTERVAL i;
247 {
248 icount++;
249 if (LENGTH (i) == 0)
250 zero_length++;
251 if (depth > idepth)
252 idepth = depth;
253 }
254
255 int
256 count_intervals (i)
257 register INTERVAL i;
258 {
259 icount = 0;
260 idepth = 0;
261 zero_length = 0;
262 traverse_intervals (i, 1, 0, &inc_interval_count, Qnil);
263
264 return icount;
265 }
266
267 static INTERVAL
268 root_interval (interval)
269 INTERVAL interval;
270 {
271 register INTERVAL i = interval;
272
273 while (! ROOT_INTERVAL_P (i))
274 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
275
276 return i;
277 }
278 #endif
279 \f
280 /* Assuming that a left child exists, perform the following operation:
281
282 A B
283 / \ / \
284 B => A
285 / \ / \
286 c c
287 */
288
289 static INTERVAL
290 rotate_right (interval)
291 INTERVAL interval;
292 {
293 INTERVAL i;
294 INTERVAL B = interval->left;
295 int old_total = interval->total_length;
296
297 /* Deal with any Parent of A; make it point to B. */
298 if (! ROOT_INTERVAL_P (interval))
299 {
300 if (AM_LEFT_CHILD (interval))
301 INTERVAL_PARENT (interval)->left = B;
302 else
303 INTERVAL_PARENT (interval)->right = B;
304 }
305 COPY_INTERVAL_PARENT (B, interval);
306
307 /* Make B the parent of A */
308 i = B->right;
309 B->right = interval;
310 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (interval, B);
311
312 /* Make A point to c */
313 interval->left = i;
314 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
315 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (i, interval);
316
317 /* A's total length is decreased by the length of B and its left child. */
318 interval->total_length -= B->total_length - LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (interval);
319
320 /* B must have the same total length of A. */
321 B->total_length = old_total;
322
323 return B;
324 }
325
326 /* Assuming that a right child exists, perform the following operation:
327
328 A B
329 / \ / \
330 B => A
331 / \ / \
332 c c
333 */
334
335 static INTERVAL
336 rotate_left (interval)
337 INTERVAL interval;
338 {
339 INTERVAL i;
340 INTERVAL B = interval->right;
341 int old_total = interval->total_length;
342
343 /* Deal with any parent of A; make it point to B. */
344 if (! ROOT_INTERVAL_P (interval))
345 {
346 if (AM_LEFT_CHILD (interval))
347 INTERVAL_PARENT (interval)->left = B;
348 else
349 INTERVAL_PARENT (interval)->right = B;
350 }
351 COPY_INTERVAL_PARENT (B, interval);
352
353 /* Make B the parent of A */
354 i = B->left;
355 B->left = interval;
356 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (interval, B);
357
358 /* Make A point to c */
359 interval->right = i;
360 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
361 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (i, interval);
362
363 /* A's total length is decreased by the length of B and its right child. */
364 interval->total_length -= B->total_length - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (interval);
365
366 /* B must have the same total length of A. */
367 B->total_length = old_total;
368
369 return B;
370 }
371 \f
372 /* Balance an interval tree with the assumption that the subtrees
373 themselves are already balanced. */
374
375 static INTERVAL
376 balance_an_interval (i)
377 INTERVAL i;
378 {
379 register int old_diff, new_diff;
380
381 while (1)
382 {
383 old_diff = LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i) - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i);
384 if (old_diff > 0)
385 {
386 new_diff = i->total_length - i->left->total_length
387 + RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i->left) - LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i->left);
388 if (abs (new_diff) >= old_diff)
389 break;
390 i = rotate_right (i);
391 balance_an_interval (i->right);
392 }
393 else if (old_diff < 0)
394 {
395 new_diff = i->total_length - i->right->total_length
396 + LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i->right) - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i->right);
397 if (abs (new_diff) >= -old_diff)
398 break;
399 i = rotate_left (i);
400 balance_an_interval (i->left);
401 }
402 else
403 break;
404 }
405 return i;
406 }
407
408 /* Balance INTERVAL, potentially stuffing it back into its parent
409 Lisp Object. */
410
411 static INLINE INTERVAL
412 balance_possible_root_interval (interval)
413 register INTERVAL interval;
414 {
415 Lisp_Object parent;
416 int have_parent = 0;
417
418 if (!INTERVAL_HAS_OBJECT (interval) && !INTERVAL_HAS_PARENT (interval))
419 return interval;
420
421 if (INTERVAL_HAS_OBJECT (interval))
422 {
423 have_parent = 1;
424 GET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (parent, interval);
425 }
426 interval = balance_an_interval (interval);
427
428 if (have_parent)
429 {
430 if (BUFFERP (parent))
431 BUF_INTERVALS (XBUFFER (parent)) = interval;
432 else if (STRINGP (parent))
433 XSTRING (parent)->intervals = interval;
434 }
435
436 return interval;
437 }
438
439 /* Balance the interval tree TREE. Balancing is by weight
440 (the amount of text). */
441
442 static INTERVAL
443 balance_intervals_internal (tree)
444 register INTERVAL tree;
445 {
446 /* Balance within each side. */
447 if (tree->left)
448 balance_intervals_internal (tree->left);
449 if (tree->right)
450 balance_intervals_internal (tree->right);
451 return balance_an_interval (tree);
452 }
453
454 /* Advertised interface to balance intervals. */
455
456 INTERVAL
457 balance_intervals (tree)
458 INTERVAL tree;
459 {
460 if (tree == NULL_INTERVAL)
461 return NULL_INTERVAL;
462
463 return balance_intervals_internal (tree);
464 }
465 \f
466 /* Split INTERVAL into two pieces, starting the second piece at
467 character position OFFSET (counting from 0), relative to INTERVAL.
468 INTERVAL becomes the left-hand piece, and the right-hand piece
469 (second, lexicographically) is returned.
470
471 The size and position fields of the two intervals are set based upon
472 those of the original interval. The property list of the new interval
473 is reset, thus it is up to the caller to do the right thing with the
474 result.
475
476 Note that this does not change the position of INTERVAL; if it is a root,
477 it is still a root after this operation. */
478
479 INTERVAL
480 split_interval_right (interval, offset)
481 INTERVAL interval;
482 int offset;
483 {
484 INTERVAL new = make_interval ();
485 int position = interval->position;
486 int new_length = LENGTH (interval) - offset;
487
488 new->position = position + offset;
489 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (new, interval);
490
491 if (NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (interval))
492 {
493 interval->right = new;
494 new->total_length = new_length;
495 }
496 else
497 {
498 /* Insert the new node between INTERVAL and its right child. */
499 new->right = interval->right;
500 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (interval->right, new);
501 interval->right = new;
502 new->total_length = new_length + new->right->total_length;
503 balance_an_interval (new);
504 }
505
506 balance_possible_root_interval (interval);
507
508 return new;
509 }
510
511 /* Split INTERVAL into two pieces, starting the second piece at
512 character position OFFSET (counting from 0), relative to INTERVAL.
513 INTERVAL becomes the right-hand piece, and the left-hand piece
514 (first, lexicographically) is returned.
515
516 The size and position fields of the two intervals are set based upon
517 those of the original interval. The property list of the new interval
518 is reset, thus it is up to the caller to do the right thing with the
519 result.
520
521 Note that this does not change the position of INTERVAL; if it is a root,
522 it is still a root after this operation. */
523
524 INTERVAL
525 split_interval_left (interval, offset)
526 INTERVAL interval;
527 int offset;
528 {
529 INTERVAL new = make_interval ();
530 int new_length = offset;
531
532 new->position = interval->position;
533 interval->position = interval->position + offset;
534 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (new, interval);
535
536 if (NULL_LEFT_CHILD (interval))
537 {
538 interval->left = new;
539 new->total_length = new_length;
540 }
541 else
542 {
543 /* Insert the new node between INTERVAL and its left child. */
544 new->left = interval->left;
545 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (new->left, new);
546 interval->left = new;
547 new->total_length = new_length + new->left->total_length;
548 balance_an_interval (new);
549 }
550
551 balance_possible_root_interval (interval);
552
553 return new;
554 }
555 \f
556 /* Return the proper position for the first character
557 described by the interval tree SOURCE.
558 This is 1 if the parent is a buffer,
559 0 if the parent is a string or if there is no parent.
560
561 Don't use this function on an interval which is the child
562 of another interval! */
563
564 int
565 interval_start_pos (source)
566 INTERVAL source;
567 {
568 Lisp_Object parent;
569
570 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (source))
571 return 0;
572
573 if (! INTERVAL_HAS_OBJECT (source))
574 return 0;
575 GET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (parent, source);
576 if (BUFFERP (parent))
577 return BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (parent));
578 return 0;
579 }
580
581 /* Find the interval containing text position POSITION in the text
582 represented by the interval tree TREE. POSITION is a buffer
583 position (starting from 1) or a string index (starting from 0).
584 If POSITION is at the end of the buffer or string,
585 return the interval containing the last character.
586
587 The `position' field, which is a cache of an interval's position,
588 is updated in the interval found. Other functions (e.g., next_interval)
589 will update this cache based on the result of find_interval. */
590
591 INTERVAL
592 find_interval (tree, position)
593 register INTERVAL tree;
594 register int position;
595 {
596 /* The distance from the left edge of the subtree at TREE
597 to POSITION. */
598 register int relative_position;
599
600 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree))
601 return NULL_INTERVAL;
602
603 relative_position = position;
604 if (INTERVAL_HAS_OBJECT (tree))
605 {
606 Lisp_Object parent;
607 GET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (parent, tree);
608 if (BUFFERP (parent))
609 relative_position -= BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (parent));
610 }
611
612 if (relative_position > TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
613 abort (); /* Paranoia */
614
615 tree = balance_possible_root_interval (tree);
616
617 while (1)
618 {
619 if (relative_position < LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
620 {
621 tree = tree->left;
622 }
623 else if (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (tree)
624 && relative_position >= (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)
625 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)))
626 {
627 relative_position -= (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)
628 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree));
629 tree = tree->right;
630 }
631 else
632 {
633 tree->position
634 = (position - relative_position /* the left edge of *tree */
635 + LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)); /* the left edge of this interval */
636
637 return tree;
638 }
639 }
640 }
641 \f
642 /* Find the succeeding interval (lexicographically) to INTERVAL.
643 Sets the `position' field based on that of INTERVAL (see
644 find_interval). */
645
646 INTERVAL
647 next_interval (interval)
648 register INTERVAL interval;
649 {
650 register INTERVAL i = interval;
651 register int next_position;
652
653 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
654 return NULL_INTERVAL;
655 next_position = interval->position + LENGTH (interval);
656
657 if (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (i))
658 {
659 i = i->right;
660 while (! NULL_LEFT_CHILD (i))
661 i = i->left;
662
663 i->position = next_position;
664 return i;
665 }
666
667 while (! NULL_PARENT (i))
668 {
669 if (AM_LEFT_CHILD (i))
670 {
671 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
672 i->position = next_position;
673 return i;
674 }
675
676 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
677 }
678
679 return NULL_INTERVAL;
680 }
681
682 /* Find the preceding interval (lexicographically) to INTERVAL.
683 Sets the `position' field based on that of INTERVAL (see
684 find_interval). */
685
686 INTERVAL
687 previous_interval (interval)
688 register INTERVAL interval;
689 {
690 register INTERVAL i;
691
692 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (interval))
693 return NULL_INTERVAL;
694
695 if (! NULL_LEFT_CHILD (interval))
696 {
697 i = interval->left;
698 while (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (i))
699 i = i->right;
700
701 i->position = interval->position - LENGTH (i);
702 return i;
703 }
704
705 i = interval;
706 while (! NULL_PARENT (i))
707 {
708 if (AM_RIGHT_CHILD (i))
709 {
710 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
711
712 i->position = interval->position - LENGTH (i);
713 return i;
714 }
715 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
716 }
717
718 return NULL_INTERVAL;
719 }
720
721 /* Find the interval containing POS given some non-NULL INTERVAL
722 in the same tree. Note that we need to update interval->position
723 if we go down the tree. */
724 INTERVAL
725 update_interval (i, pos)
726 register INTERVAL i;
727 int pos;
728 {
729 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i))
730 return NULL_INTERVAL;
731
732 while (1)
733 {
734 if (pos < i->position)
735 {
736 /* Move left. */
737 if (pos >= i->position - TOTAL_LENGTH (i->left))
738 {
739 i->left->position = i->position - TOTAL_LENGTH (i->left)
740 + LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i->left);
741 i = i->left; /* Move to the left child */
742 }
743 else if (NULL_PARENT (i))
744 error ("Point before start of properties");
745 else
746 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
747 continue;
748 }
749 else if (pos >= INTERVAL_LAST_POS (i))
750 {
751 /* Move right. */
752 if (pos < INTERVAL_LAST_POS (i) + TOTAL_LENGTH (i->right))
753 {
754 i->right->position = INTERVAL_LAST_POS (i) +
755 LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i->right);
756 i = i->right; /* Move to the right child */
757 }
758 else if (NULL_PARENT (i))
759 error ("Point after end of properties");
760 else
761 i = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
762 continue;
763 }
764 else
765 return i;
766 }
767 }
768
769 \f
770 #if 0
771 /* Traverse a path down the interval tree TREE to the interval
772 containing POSITION, adjusting all nodes on the path for
773 an addition of LENGTH characters. Insertion between two intervals
774 (i.e., point == i->position, where i is second interval) means
775 text goes into second interval.
776
777 Modifications are needed to handle the hungry bits -- after simply
778 finding the interval at position (don't add length going down),
779 if it's the beginning of the interval, get the previous interval
780 and check the hungry bits of both. Then add the length going back up
781 to the root. */
782
783 static INTERVAL
784 adjust_intervals_for_insertion (tree, position, length)
785 INTERVAL tree;
786 int position, length;
787 {
788 register int relative_position;
789 register INTERVAL this;
790
791 if (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree) == 0) /* Paranoia */
792 abort ();
793
794 /* If inserting at point-max of a buffer, that position
795 will be out of range */
796 if (position > TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
797 position = TOTAL_LENGTH (tree);
798 relative_position = position;
799 this = tree;
800
801 while (1)
802 {
803 if (relative_position <= LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (this))
804 {
805 this->total_length += length;
806 this = this->left;
807 }
808 else if (relative_position > (TOTAL_LENGTH (this)
809 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (this)))
810 {
811 relative_position -= (TOTAL_LENGTH (this)
812 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (this));
813 this->total_length += length;
814 this = this->right;
815 }
816 else
817 {
818 /* If we are to use zero-length intervals as buffer pointers,
819 then this code will have to change. */
820 this->total_length += length;
821 this->position = LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (this)
822 + position - relative_position + 1;
823 return tree;
824 }
825 }
826 }
827 #endif
828
829 /* Effect an adjustment corresponding to the addition of LENGTH characters
830 of text. Do this by finding the interval containing POSITION in the
831 interval tree TREE, and then adjusting all of its ancestors by adding
832 LENGTH to them.
833
834 If POSITION is the first character of an interval, meaning that point
835 is actually between the two intervals, make the new text belong to
836 the interval which is "sticky".
837
838 If both intervals are "sticky", then make them belong to the left-most
839 interval. Another possibility would be to create a new interval for
840 this text, and make it have the merged properties of both ends. */
841
842 static INTERVAL
843 adjust_intervals_for_insertion (tree, position, length)
844 INTERVAL tree;
845 int position, length;
846 {
847 register INTERVAL i;
848 register INTERVAL temp;
849 int eobp = 0;
850 Lisp_Object parent;
851 int offset;
852
853 if (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree) == 0) /* Paranoia */
854 abort ();
855
856 GET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (parent, tree);
857 offset = (BUFFERP (parent) ? BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (parent)) : 0);
858
859 /* If inserting at point-max of a buffer, that position will be out
860 of range. Remember that buffer positions are 1-based. */
861 if (position >= TOTAL_LENGTH (tree) + offset)
862 {
863 position = TOTAL_LENGTH (tree) + offset;
864 eobp = 1;
865 }
866
867 i = find_interval (tree, position);
868
869 /* If in middle of an interval which is not sticky either way,
870 we must not just give its properties to the insertion.
871 So split this interval at the insertion point.
872
873 Originally, the if condition here was this:
874 (! (position == i->position || eobp)
875 && END_NONSTICKY_P (i)
876 && FRONT_NONSTICKY_P (i))
877 But, these macros are now unreliable because of introduction of
878 Vtext_property_default_nonsticky. So, we always check properties
879 one by one if POSITION is in middle of an interval. */
880 if (! (position == i->position || eobp))
881 {
882 Lisp_Object tail;
883 Lisp_Object front, rear;
884
885 tail = i->plist;
886
887 /* Properties font-sticky and rear-nonsticky override
888 Vtext_property_default_nonsticky. So, if they are t, we can
889 skip one by one checking of properties. */
890 rear = textget (i->plist, Qrear_nonsticky);
891 if (! CONSP (rear) && ! NILP (rear))
892 {
893 /* All properties are nonsticky. We split the interval. */
894 goto check_done;
895 }
896 front = textget (i->plist, Qfront_sticky);
897 if (! CONSP (front) && ! NILP (front))
898 {
899 /* All properties are sticky. We don't split the interval. */
900 tail = Qnil;
901 goto check_done;
902 }
903
904 /* Does any actual property pose an actual problem? We break
905 the loop if we find a nonsticky property. */
906 for (; CONSP (tail); tail = Fcdr (XCDR (tail)))
907 {
908 Lisp_Object prop, tmp;
909 prop = XCAR (tail);
910
911 /* Is this particular property front-sticky? */
912 if (CONSP (front) && ! NILP (Fmemq (prop, front)))
913 continue;
914
915 /* Is this particular property rear-nonsticky? */
916 if (CONSP (rear) && ! NILP (Fmemq (prop, rear)))
917 break;
918
919 /* Is this particular property recorded as sticky or
920 nonsticky in Vtext_property_default_nonsticky? */
921 tmp = Fassq (prop, Vtext_property_default_nonsticky);
922 if (CONSP (tmp))
923 {
924 if (NILP (tmp))
925 continue;
926 break;
927 }
928
929 /* By default, a text property is rear-sticky, thus we
930 continue the loop. */
931 }
932
933 check_done:
934 /* If any property is a real problem, split the interval. */
935 if (! NILP (tail))
936 {
937 temp = split_interval_right (i, position - i->position);
938 copy_properties (i, temp);
939 i = temp;
940 }
941 }
942
943 /* If we are positioned between intervals, check the stickiness of
944 both of them. We have to do this too, if we are at BEG or Z. */
945 if (position == i->position || eobp)
946 {
947 register INTERVAL prev;
948
949 if (position == BEG)
950 prev = 0;
951 else if (eobp)
952 {
953 prev = i;
954 i = 0;
955 }
956 else
957 prev = previous_interval (i);
958
959 /* Even if we are positioned between intervals, we default
960 to the left one if it exists. We extend it now and split
961 off a part later, if stickiness demands it. */
962 for (temp = prev ? prev : i; temp; temp = INTERVAL_PARENT_OR_NULL (temp))
963 {
964 temp->total_length += length;
965 temp = balance_possible_root_interval (temp);
966 }
967
968 /* If at least one interval has sticky properties,
969 we check the stickiness property by property.
970
971 Originally, the if condition here was this:
972 (END_NONSTICKY_P (prev) || FRONT_STICKY_P (i))
973 But, these macros are now unreliable because of introduction
974 of Vtext_property_default_nonsticky. So, we always have to
975 check stickiness of properties one by one. If cache of
976 stickiness is implemented in the future, we may be able to
977 use those macros again. */
978 if (1)
979 {
980 Lisp_Object pleft, pright;
981 struct interval newi;
982
983 pleft = NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev) ? Qnil : prev->plist;
984 pright = NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) ? Qnil : i->plist;
985 newi.plist = merge_properties_sticky (pleft, pright);
986
987 if (! prev) /* i.e. position == BEG */
988 {
989 if (! intervals_equal (i, &newi))
990 {
991 i = split_interval_left (i, length);
992 i->plist = newi.plist;
993 }
994 }
995 else if (! intervals_equal (prev, &newi))
996 {
997 prev = split_interval_right (prev,
998 position - prev->position);
999 prev->plist = newi.plist;
1000 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (i)
1001 && intervals_equal (prev, i))
1002 merge_interval_right (prev);
1003 }
1004
1005 /* We will need to update the cache here later. */
1006 }
1007 else if (! prev && ! NILP (i->plist))
1008 {
1009 /* Just split off a new interval at the left.
1010 Since I wasn't front-sticky, the empty plist is ok. */
1011 i = split_interval_left (i, length);
1012 }
1013 }
1014
1015 /* Otherwise just extend the interval. */
1016 else
1017 {
1018 for (temp = i; temp; temp = INTERVAL_PARENT_OR_NULL (temp))
1019 {
1020 temp->total_length += length;
1021 temp = balance_possible_root_interval (temp);
1022 }
1023 }
1024
1025 return tree;
1026 }
1027
1028 /* Any property might be front-sticky on the left, rear-sticky on the left,
1029 front-sticky on the right, or rear-sticky on the right; the 16 combinations
1030 can be arranged in a matrix with rows denoting the left conditions and
1031 columns denoting the right conditions:
1032 _ __ _
1033 _ FR FR FR FR
1034 FR__ 0 1 2 3
1035 _FR 4 5 6 7
1036 FR 8 9 A B
1037 FR C D E F
1038
1039 left-props = '(front-sticky (p8 p9 pa pb pc pd pe pf)
1040 rear-nonsticky (p4 p5 p6 p7 p8 p9 pa pb)
1041 p0 L p1 L p2 L p3 L p4 L p5 L p6 L p7 L
1042 p8 L p9 L pa L pb L pc L pd L pe L pf L)
1043 right-props = '(front-sticky (p2 p3 p6 p7 pa pb pe pf)
1044 rear-nonsticky (p1 p2 p5 p6 p9 pa pd pe)
1045 p0 R p1 R p2 R p3 R p4 R p5 R p6 R p7 R
1046 p8 R p9 R pa R pb R pc R pd R pe R pf R)
1047
1048 We inherit from whoever has a sticky side facing us. If both sides
1049 do (cases 2, 3, E, and F), then we inherit from whichever side has a
1050 non-nil value for the current property. If both sides do, then we take
1051 from the left.
1052
1053 When we inherit a property, we get its stickiness as well as its value.
1054 So, when we merge the above two lists, we expect to get this:
1055
1056 result = '(front-sticky (p6 p7 pa pb pc pd pe pf)
1057 rear-nonsticky (p6 pa)
1058 p0 L p1 L p2 L p3 L p6 R p7 R
1059 pa R pb R pc L pd L pe L pf L)
1060
1061 The optimizable special cases are:
1062 left rear-nonsticky = nil, right front-sticky = nil (inherit left)
1063 left rear-nonsticky = t, right front-sticky = t (inherit right)
1064 left rear-nonsticky = t, right front-sticky = nil (inherit none)
1065 */
1066
1067 Lisp_Object
1068 merge_properties_sticky (pleft, pright)
1069 Lisp_Object pleft, pright;
1070 {
1071 register Lisp_Object props, front, rear;
1072 Lisp_Object lfront, lrear, rfront, rrear;
1073 register Lisp_Object tail1, tail2, sym, lval, rval, cat;
1074 int use_left, use_right;
1075 int lpresent;
1076
1077 props = Qnil;
1078 front = Qnil;
1079 rear = Qnil;
1080 lfront = textget (pleft, Qfront_sticky);
1081 lrear = textget (pleft, Qrear_nonsticky);
1082 rfront = textget (pright, Qfront_sticky);
1083 rrear = textget (pright, Qrear_nonsticky);
1084
1085 /* Go through each element of PRIGHT. */
1086 for (tail1 = pright; CONSP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail1)))
1087 {
1088 Lisp_Object tmp;
1089
1090 sym = Fcar (tail1);
1091
1092 /* Sticky properties get special treatment. */
1093 if (EQ (sym, Qrear_nonsticky) || EQ (sym, Qfront_sticky))
1094 continue;
1095
1096 rval = Fcar (Fcdr (tail1));
1097 for (tail2 = pleft; CONSP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail2)))
1098 if (EQ (sym, Fcar (tail2)))
1099 break;
1100
1101 /* Indicate whether the property is explicitly defined on the left.
1102 (We know it is defined explicitly on the right
1103 because otherwise we don't get here.) */
1104 lpresent = ! NILP (tail2);
1105 lval = (NILP (tail2) ? Qnil : Fcar (Fcdr (tail2)));
1106
1107 /* Even if lrear or rfront say nothing about the stickiness of
1108 SYM, Vtext_property_default_nonsticky may give default
1109 stickiness to SYM. */
1110 tmp = Fassq (sym, Vtext_property_default_nonsticky);
1111 use_left = (lpresent
1112 && ! (TMEM (sym, lrear)
1113 || CONSP (tmp) && ! NILP (XCDR (tmp))));
1114 use_right = (TMEM (sym, rfront)
1115 || (CONSP (tmp) && NILP (XCDR (tmp))));
1116 if (use_left && use_right)
1117 {
1118 if (NILP (lval))
1119 use_left = 0;
1120 else if (NILP (rval))
1121 use_right = 0;
1122 }
1123 if (use_left)
1124 {
1125 /* We build props as (value sym ...) rather than (sym value ...)
1126 because we plan to nreverse it when we're done. */
1127 props = Fcons (lval, Fcons (sym, props));
1128 if (TMEM (sym, lfront))
1129 front = Fcons (sym, front);
1130 if (TMEM (sym, lrear))
1131 rear = Fcons (sym, rear);
1132 }
1133 else if (use_right)
1134 {
1135 props = Fcons (rval, Fcons (sym, props));
1136 if (TMEM (sym, rfront))
1137 front = Fcons (sym, front);
1138 if (TMEM (sym, rrear))
1139 rear = Fcons (sym, rear);
1140 }
1141 }
1142
1143 /* Now go through each element of PLEFT. */
1144 for (tail2 = pleft; CONSP (tail2); tail2 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail2)))
1145 {
1146 Lisp_Object tmp;
1147
1148 sym = Fcar (tail2);
1149
1150 /* Sticky properties get special treatment. */
1151 if (EQ (sym, Qrear_nonsticky) || EQ (sym, Qfront_sticky))
1152 continue;
1153
1154 /* If sym is in PRIGHT, we've already considered it. */
1155 for (tail1 = pright; CONSP (tail1); tail1 = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail1)))
1156 if (EQ (sym, Fcar (tail1)))
1157 break;
1158 if (! NILP (tail1))
1159 continue;
1160
1161 lval = Fcar (Fcdr (tail2));
1162
1163 /* Even if lrear or rfront say nothing about the stickiness of
1164 SYM, Vtext_property_default_nonsticky may give default
1165 stickiness to SYM. */
1166 tmp = Fassq (sym, Vtext_property_default_nonsticky);
1167
1168 /* Since rval is known to be nil in this loop, the test simplifies. */
1169 if (! (TMEM (sym, lrear) || (CONSP (tmp) && ! NILP (XCDR (tmp)))))
1170 {
1171 props = Fcons (lval, Fcons (sym, props));
1172 if (TMEM (sym, lfront))
1173 front = Fcons (sym, front);
1174 }
1175 else if (TMEM (sym, rfront) || (CONSP (tmp) && NILP (XCDR (tmp))))
1176 {
1177 /* The value is nil, but we still inherit the stickiness
1178 from the right. */
1179 front = Fcons (sym, front);
1180 if (TMEM (sym, rrear))
1181 rear = Fcons (sym, rear);
1182 }
1183 }
1184 props = Fnreverse (props);
1185 if (! NILP (rear))
1186 props = Fcons (Qrear_nonsticky, Fcons (Fnreverse (rear), props));
1187
1188 cat = textget (props, Qcategory);
1189 if (! NILP (front)
1190 &&
1191 /* If we have inherited a front-stick category property that is t,
1192 we don't need to set up a detailed one. */
1193 ! (! NILP (cat) && SYMBOLP (cat)
1194 && EQ (Fget (cat, Qfront_sticky), Qt)))
1195 props = Fcons (Qfront_sticky, Fcons (Fnreverse (front), props));
1196 return props;
1197 }
1198
1199 \f
1200 /* Delete an node I from its interval tree by merging its subtrees
1201 into one subtree which is then returned. Caller is responsible for
1202 storing the resulting subtree into its parent. */
1203
1204 static INTERVAL
1205 delete_node (i)
1206 register INTERVAL i;
1207 {
1208 register INTERVAL migrate, this;
1209 register int migrate_amt;
1210
1211 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i->left))
1212 return i->right;
1213 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i->right))
1214 return i->left;
1215
1216 migrate = i->left;
1217 migrate_amt = i->left->total_length;
1218 this = i->right;
1219 this->total_length += migrate_amt;
1220 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (this->left))
1221 {
1222 this = this->left;
1223 this->total_length += migrate_amt;
1224 }
1225 this->left = migrate;
1226 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (migrate, this);
1227
1228 return i->right;
1229 }
1230
1231 /* Delete interval I from its tree by calling `delete_node'
1232 and properly connecting the resultant subtree.
1233
1234 I is presumed to be empty; that is, no adjustments are made
1235 for the length of I. */
1236
1237 void
1238 delete_interval (i)
1239 register INTERVAL i;
1240 {
1241 register INTERVAL parent;
1242 int amt = LENGTH (i);
1243
1244 if (amt > 0) /* Only used on zero-length intervals now. */
1245 abort ();
1246
1247 if (ROOT_INTERVAL_P (i))
1248 {
1249 Lisp_Object owner;
1250 GET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (owner, i);
1251 parent = delete_node (i);
1252 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (parent))
1253 SET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (parent, owner);
1254
1255 if (BUFFERP (owner))
1256 BUF_INTERVALS (XBUFFER (owner)) = parent;
1257 else if (STRINGP (owner))
1258 XSTRING (owner)->intervals = parent;
1259 else
1260 abort ();
1261
1262 return;
1263 }
1264
1265 parent = INTERVAL_PARENT (i);
1266 if (AM_LEFT_CHILD (i))
1267 {
1268 parent->left = delete_node (i);
1269 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (parent->left))
1270 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (parent->left, parent);
1271 }
1272 else
1273 {
1274 parent->right = delete_node (i);
1275 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (parent->right))
1276 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (parent->right, parent);
1277 }
1278 }
1279 \f
1280 /* Find the interval in TREE corresponding to the relative position
1281 FROM and delete as much as possible of AMOUNT from that interval.
1282 Return the amount actually deleted, and if the interval was
1283 zeroed-out, delete that interval node from the tree.
1284
1285 Note that FROM is actually origin zero, aka relative to the
1286 leftmost edge of tree. This is appropriate since we call ourselves
1287 recursively on subtrees.
1288
1289 Do this by recursing down TREE to the interval in question, and
1290 deleting the appropriate amount of text. */
1291
1292 static int
1293 interval_deletion_adjustment (tree, from, amount)
1294 register INTERVAL tree;
1295 register int from, amount;
1296 {
1297 register int relative_position = from;
1298
1299 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree))
1300 return 0;
1301
1302 /* Left branch */
1303 if (relative_position < LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
1304 {
1305 int subtract = interval_deletion_adjustment (tree->left,
1306 relative_position,
1307 amount);
1308 tree->total_length -= subtract;
1309 return subtract;
1310 }
1311 /* Right branch */
1312 else if (relative_position >= (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)
1313 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)))
1314 {
1315 int subtract;
1316
1317 relative_position -= (tree->total_length
1318 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree));
1319 subtract = interval_deletion_adjustment (tree->right,
1320 relative_position,
1321 amount);
1322 tree->total_length -= subtract;
1323 return subtract;
1324 }
1325 /* Here -- this node. */
1326 else
1327 {
1328 /* How much can we delete from this interval? */
1329 int my_amount = ((tree->total_length
1330 - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
1331 - relative_position);
1332
1333 if (amount > my_amount)
1334 amount = my_amount;
1335
1336 tree->total_length -= amount;
1337 if (LENGTH (tree) == 0)
1338 delete_interval (tree);
1339
1340 return amount;
1341 }
1342
1343 /* Never reach here. */
1344 }
1345
1346 /* Effect the adjustments necessary to the interval tree of BUFFER to
1347 correspond to the deletion of LENGTH characters from that buffer
1348 text. The deletion is effected at position START (which is a
1349 buffer position, i.e. origin 1). */
1350
1351 static void
1352 adjust_intervals_for_deletion (buffer, start, length)
1353 struct buffer *buffer;
1354 int start, length;
1355 {
1356 register int left_to_delete = length;
1357 register INTERVAL tree = BUF_INTERVALS (buffer);
1358 Lisp_Object parent;
1359 int offset;
1360
1361 GET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (parent, tree);
1362 offset = (BUFFERP (parent) ? BUF_BEG (XBUFFER (parent)) : 0);
1363
1364 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree))
1365 return;
1366
1367 if (start > offset + TOTAL_LENGTH (tree)
1368 || start + length > offset + TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
1369 abort ();
1370
1371 if (length == TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
1372 {
1373 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer) = NULL_INTERVAL;
1374 return;
1375 }
1376
1377 if (ONLY_INTERVAL_P (tree))
1378 {
1379 tree->total_length -= length;
1380 return;
1381 }
1382
1383 if (start > offset + TOTAL_LENGTH (tree))
1384 start = offset + TOTAL_LENGTH (tree);
1385 while (left_to_delete > 0)
1386 {
1387 left_to_delete -= interval_deletion_adjustment (tree, start - offset,
1388 left_to_delete);
1389 tree = BUF_INTERVALS (buffer);
1390 if (left_to_delete == tree->total_length)
1391 {
1392 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer) = NULL_INTERVAL;
1393 return;
1394 }
1395 }
1396 }
1397 \f
1398 /* Make the adjustments necessary to the interval tree of BUFFER to
1399 represent an addition or deletion of LENGTH characters starting
1400 at position START. Addition or deletion is indicated by the sign
1401 of LENGTH. */
1402
1403 INLINE void
1404 offset_intervals (buffer, start, length)
1405 struct buffer *buffer;
1406 int start, length;
1407 {
1408 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer)) || length == 0)
1409 return;
1410
1411 if (length > 0)
1412 adjust_intervals_for_insertion (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer), start, length);
1413 else
1414 adjust_intervals_for_deletion (buffer, start, -length);
1415 }
1416 \f
1417 /* Merge interval I with its lexicographic successor. The resulting
1418 interval is returned, and has the properties of the original
1419 successor. The properties of I are lost. I is removed from the
1420 interval tree.
1421
1422 IMPORTANT:
1423 The caller must verify that this is not the last (rightmost)
1424 interval. */
1425
1426 INTERVAL
1427 merge_interval_right (i)
1428 register INTERVAL i;
1429 {
1430 register int absorb = LENGTH (i);
1431 register INTERVAL successor;
1432
1433 /* Zero out this interval. */
1434 i->total_length -= absorb;
1435
1436 /* Find the succeeding interval. */
1437 if (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (i)) /* It's below us. Add absorb
1438 as we descend. */
1439 {
1440 successor = i->right;
1441 while (! NULL_LEFT_CHILD (successor))
1442 {
1443 successor->total_length += absorb;
1444 successor = successor->left;
1445 }
1446
1447 successor->total_length += absorb;
1448 delete_interval (i);
1449 return successor;
1450 }
1451
1452 successor = i;
1453 while (! NULL_PARENT (successor)) /* It's above us. Subtract as
1454 we ascend. */
1455 {
1456 if (AM_LEFT_CHILD (successor))
1457 {
1458 successor = INTERVAL_PARENT (successor);
1459 delete_interval (i);
1460 return successor;
1461 }
1462
1463 successor = INTERVAL_PARENT (successor);
1464 successor->total_length -= absorb;
1465 }
1466
1467 /* This must be the rightmost or last interval and cannot
1468 be merged right. The caller should have known. */
1469 abort ();
1470 }
1471 \f
1472 /* Merge interval I with its lexicographic predecessor. The resulting
1473 interval is returned, and has the properties of the original predecessor.
1474 The properties of I are lost. Interval node I is removed from the tree.
1475
1476 IMPORTANT:
1477 The caller must verify that this is not the first (leftmost) interval. */
1478
1479 INTERVAL
1480 merge_interval_left (i)
1481 register INTERVAL i;
1482 {
1483 register int absorb = LENGTH (i);
1484 register INTERVAL predecessor;
1485
1486 /* Zero out this interval. */
1487 i->total_length -= absorb;
1488
1489 /* Find the preceding interval. */
1490 if (! NULL_LEFT_CHILD (i)) /* It's below us. Go down,
1491 adding ABSORB as we go. */
1492 {
1493 predecessor = i->left;
1494 while (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (predecessor))
1495 {
1496 predecessor->total_length += absorb;
1497 predecessor = predecessor->right;
1498 }
1499
1500 predecessor->total_length += absorb;
1501 delete_interval (i);
1502 return predecessor;
1503 }
1504
1505 predecessor = i;
1506 while (! NULL_PARENT (predecessor)) /* It's above us. Go up,
1507 subtracting ABSORB. */
1508 {
1509 if (AM_RIGHT_CHILD (predecessor))
1510 {
1511 predecessor = INTERVAL_PARENT (predecessor);
1512 delete_interval (i);
1513 return predecessor;
1514 }
1515
1516 predecessor = INTERVAL_PARENT (predecessor);
1517 predecessor->total_length -= absorb;
1518 }
1519
1520 /* This must be the leftmost or first interval and cannot
1521 be merged left. The caller should have known. */
1522 abort ();
1523 }
1524 \f
1525 /* Make an exact copy of interval tree SOURCE which descends from
1526 PARENT. This is done by recursing through SOURCE, copying
1527 the current interval and its properties, and then adjusting
1528 the pointers of the copy. */
1529
1530 static INTERVAL
1531 reproduce_tree (source, parent)
1532 INTERVAL source, parent;
1533 {
1534 register INTERVAL t = make_interval ();
1535
1536 bcopy (source, t, INTERVAL_SIZE);
1537 copy_properties (source, t);
1538 SET_INTERVAL_PARENT (t, parent);
1539 if (! NULL_LEFT_CHILD (source))
1540 t->left = reproduce_tree (source->left, t);
1541 if (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (source))
1542 t->right = reproduce_tree (source->right, t);
1543
1544 return t;
1545 }
1546
1547 static INTERVAL
1548 reproduce_tree_obj (source, parent)
1549 INTERVAL source;
1550 Lisp_Object parent;
1551 {
1552 register INTERVAL t = make_interval ();
1553
1554 bcopy (source, t, INTERVAL_SIZE);
1555 copy_properties (source, t);
1556 SET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (t, parent);
1557 if (! NULL_LEFT_CHILD (source))
1558 t->left = reproduce_tree (source->left, t);
1559 if (! NULL_RIGHT_CHILD (source))
1560 t->right = reproduce_tree (source->right, t);
1561
1562 return t;
1563 }
1564
1565 #if 0
1566 /* Nobody calls this. Perhaps it's a vestige of an earlier design. */
1567
1568 /* Make a new interval of length LENGTH starting at START in the
1569 group of intervals INTERVALS, which is actually an interval tree.
1570 Returns the new interval.
1571
1572 Generate an error if the new positions would overlap an existing
1573 interval. */
1574
1575 static INTERVAL
1576 make_new_interval (intervals, start, length)
1577 INTERVAL intervals;
1578 int start, length;
1579 {
1580 INTERVAL slot;
1581
1582 slot = find_interval (intervals, start);
1583 if (start + length > slot->position + LENGTH (slot))
1584 error ("Interval would overlap");
1585
1586 if (start == slot->position && length == LENGTH (slot))
1587 return slot;
1588
1589 if (slot->position == start)
1590 {
1591 /* New right node. */
1592 split_interval_right (slot, length);
1593 return slot;
1594 }
1595
1596 if (slot->position + LENGTH (slot) == start + length)
1597 {
1598 /* New left node. */
1599 split_interval_left (slot, LENGTH (slot) - length);
1600 return slot;
1601 }
1602
1603 /* Convert interval SLOT into three intervals. */
1604 split_interval_left (slot, start - slot->position);
1605 split_interval_right (slot, length);
1606 return slot;
1607 }
1608 #endif
1609 \f
1610 /* Insert the intervals of SOURCE into BUFFER at POSITION.
1611 LENGTH is the length of the text in SOURCE.
1612
1613 The `position' field of the SOURCE intervals is assumed to be
1614 consistent with its parent; therefore, SOURCE must be an
1615 interval tree made with copy_interval or must be the whole
1616 tree of a buffer or a string.
1617
1618 This is used in insdel.c when inserting Lisp_Strings into the
1619 buffer. The text corresponding to SOURCE is already in the buffer
1620 when this is called. The intervals of new tree are a copy of those
1621 belonging to the string being inserted; intervals are never
1622 shared.
1623
1624 If the inserted text had no intervals associated, and we don't
1625 want to inherit the surrounding text's properties, this function
1626 simply returns -- offset_intervals should handle placing the
1627 text in the correct interval, depending on the sticky bits.
1628
1629 If the inserted text had properties (intervals), then there are two
1630 cases -- either insertion happened in the middle of some interval,
1631 or between two intervals.
1632
1633 If the text goes into the middle of an interval, then new
1634 intervals are created in the middle with only the properties of
1635 the new text, *unless* the macro MERGE_INSERTIONS is true, in
1636 which case the new text has the union of its properties and those
1637 of the text into which it was inserted.
1638
1639 If the text goes between two intervals, then if neither interval
1640 had its appropriate sticky property set (front_sticky, rear_sticky),
1641 the new text has only its properties. If one of the sticky properties
1642 is set, then the new text "sticks" to that region and its properties
1643 depend on merging as above. If both the preceding and succeeding
1644 intervals to the new text are "sticky", then the new text retains
1645 only its properties, as if neither sticky property were set. Perhaps
1646 we should consider merging all three sets of properties onto the new
1647 text... */
1648
1649 void
1650 graft_intervals_into_buffer (source, position, length, buffer, inherit)
1651 INTERVAL source;
1652 int position, length;
1653 struct buffer *buffer;
1654 int inherit;
1655 {
1656 register INTERVAL under, over, this, prev;
1657 register INTERVAL tree;
1658 int middle;
1659
1660 tree = BUF_INTERVALS (buffer);
1661
1662 /* If the new text has no properties, it becomes part of whatever
1663 interval it was inserted into. */
1664 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (source))
1665 {
1666 Lisp_Object buf;
1667 if (!inherit && ! NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree))
1668 {
1669 int saved_inhibit_modification_hooks = inhibit_modification_hooks;
1670 XSETBUFFER (buf, buffer);
1671 inhibit_modification_hooks = 1;
1672 Fset_text_properties (make_number (position),
1673 make_number (position + length),
1674 Qnil, buf);
1675 inhibit_modification_hooks = saved_inhibit_modification_hooks;
1676 }
1677 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer)))
1678 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer) = balance_an_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer));
1679 return;
1680 }
1681
1682 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree))
1683 {
1684 /* The inserted text constitutes the whole buffer, so
1685 simply copy over the interval structure. */
1686 if ((BUF_Z (buffer) - BUF_BEG (buffer)) == TOTAL_LENGTH (source))
1687 {
1688 Lisp_Object buf;
1689 XSETBUFFER (buf, buffer);
1690 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer) = reproduce_tree_obj (source, buf);
1691 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer)->position = 1;
1692
1693 /* Explicitly free the old tree here? */
1694
1695 return;
1696 }
1697
1698 /* Create an interval tree in which to place a copy
1699 of the intervals of the inserted string. */
1700 {
1701 Lisp_Object buf;
1702 XSETBUFFER (buf, buffer);
1703 tree = create_root_interval (buf);
1704 }
1705 }
1706 else if (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree) == TOTAL_LENGTH (source))
1707 /* If the buffer contains only the new string, but
1708 there was already some interval tree there, then it may be
1709 some zero length intervals. Eventually, do something clever
1710 about inserting properly. For now, just waste the old intervals. */
1711 {
1712 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer) = reproduce_tree (source, INTERVAL_PARENT (tree));
1713 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer)->position = 1;
1714 /* Explicitly free the old tree here. */
1715
1716 return;
1717 }
1718 /* Paranoia -- the text has already been added, so this buffer
1719 should be of non-zero length. */
1720 else if (TOTAL_LENGTH (tree) == 0)
1721 abort ();
1722
1723 this = under = find_interval (tree, position);
1724 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (under)) /* Paranoia */
1725 abort ();
1726 over = find_interval (source, interval_start_pos (source));
1727
1728 /* Here for insertion in the middle of an interval.
1729 Split off an equivalent interval to the right,
1730 then don't bother with it any more. */
1731
1732 if (position > under->position)
1733 {
1734 INTERVAL end_unchanged
1735 = split_interval_left (this, position - under->position);
1736 copy_properties (under, end_unchanged);
1737 under->position = position;
1738 #if 0
1739 /* This code has no effect. */
1740 prev = 0;
1741 middle = 1;
1742 #endif /* 0 */
1743 }
1744 else
1745 {
1746 /* This call may have some effect because previous_interval may
1747 update `position' fields of intervals. Thus, don't ignore it
1748 for the moment. Someone please tell me the truth (K.Handa). */
1749 prev = previous_interval (under);
1750 #if 0
1751 /* But, this code surely has no effect. And, anyway,
1752 END_NONSTICKY_P is unreliable now. */
1753 if (prev && !END_NONSTICKY_P (prev))
1754 prev = 0;
1755 #endif /* 0 */
1756 }
1757
1758 /* Insertion is now at beginning of UNDER. */
1759
1760 /* The inserted text "sticks" to the interval `under',
1761 which means it gets those properties.
1762 The properties of under are the result of
1763 adjust_intervals_for_insertion, so stickiness has
1764 already been taken care of. */
1765
1766 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (over))
1767 {
1768 if (LENGTH (over) < LENGTH (under))
1769 {
1770 this = split_interval_left (under, LENGTH (over));
1771 copy_properties (under, this);
1772 }
1773 else
1774 this = under;
1775 copy_properties (over, this);
1776 if (inherit)
1777 merge_properties (over, this);
1778 else
1779 copy_properties (over, this);
1780 over = next_interval (over);
1781 }
1782
1783 if (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer)))
1784 BUF_INTERVALS (buffer) = balance_an_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer));
1785 return;
1786 }
1787
1788 /* Get the value of property PROP from PLIST,
1789 which is the plist of an interval.
1790 We check for direct properties, for categories with property PROP,
1791 and for PROP appearing on the default-text-properties list. */
1792
1793 Lisp_Object
1794 textget (plist, prop)
1795 Lisp_Object plist;
1796 register Lisp_Object prop;
1797 {
1798 register Lisp_Object tail, fallback;
1799 fallback = Qnil;
1800
1801 for (tail = plist; !NILP (tail); tail = Fcdr (Fcdr (tail)))
1802 {
1803 register Lisp_Object tem;
1804 tem = Fcar (tail);
1805 if (EQ (prop, tem))
1806 return Fcar (Fcdr (tail));
1807 if (EQ (tem, Qcategory))
1808 {
1809 tem = Fcar (Fcdr (tail));
1810 if (SYMBOLP (tem))
1811 fallback = Fget (tem, prop);
1812 }
1813 }
1814
1815 if (! NILP (fallback))
1816 return fallback;
1817 if (CONSP (Vdefault_text_properties))
1818 return Fplist_get (Vdefault_text_properties, prop);
1819 return Qnil;
1820 }
1821
1822 \f
1823 /* Set point "temporarily", without checking any text properties. */
1824
1825 INLINE void
1826 temp_set_point (buffer, charpos)
1827 struct buffer *buffer;
1828 int charpos;
1829 {
1830 temp_set_point_both (buffer, charpos,
1831 buf_charpos_to_bytepos (buffer, charpos));
1832 }
1833
1834 /* Set point in BUFFER "temporarily" to CHARPOS, which corresponds to
1835 byte position BYTEPOS. */
1836
1837 INLINE void
1838 temp_set_point_both (buffer, charpos, bytepos)
1839 int charpos, bytepos;
1840 struct buffer *buffer;
1841 {
1842 /* In a single-byte buffer, the two positions must be equal. */
1843 if (BUF_ZV (buffer) == BUF_ZV_BYTE (buffer)
1844 && charpos != bytepos)
1845 abort ();
1846
1847 if (charpos > bytepos)
1848 abort ();
1849
1850 if (charpos > BUF_ZV (buffer) || charpos < BUF_BEGV (buffer))
1851 abort ();
1852
1853 BUF_PT_BYTE (buffer) = bytepos;
1854 BUF_PT (buffer) = charpos;
1855 }
1856
1857 /* Set point in BUFFER to CHARPOS. If the target position is
1858 before an intangible character, move to an ok place. */
1859
1860 void
1861 set_point (buffer, charpos)
1862 register struct buffer *buffer;
1863 register int charpos;
1864 {
1865 set_point_both (buffer, charpos, buf_charpos_to_bytepos (buffer, charpos));
1866 }
1867
1868 /* Set point in BUFFER to CHARPOS, which corresponds to byte
1869 position BYTEPOS. If the target position is
1870 before an intangible character, move to an ok place. */
1871
1872 void
1873 set_point_both (buffer, charpos, bytepos)
1874 register struct buffer *buffer;
1875 register int charpos, bytepos;
1876 {
1877 register INTERVAL to, from, toprev, fromprev;
1878 int buffer_point;
1879 int old_position = BUF_PT (buffer);
1880 int backwards = (charpos < old_position ? 1 : 0);
1881 int have_overlays;
1882 int original_position;
1883
1884 buffer->point_before_scroll = Qnil;
1885
1886 if (charpos == BUF_PT (buffer))
1887 return;
1888
1889 /* In a single-byte buffer, the two positions must be equal. */
1890 if (BUF_ZV (buffer) == BUF_ZV_BYTE (buffer)
1891 && charpos != bytepos)
1892 abort ();
1893
1894 /* Check this now, before checking if the buffer has any intervals.
1895 That way, we can catch conditions which break this sanity check
1896 whether or not there are intervals in the buffer. */
1897 if (charpos > BUF_ZV (buffer) || charpos < BUF_BEGV (buffer))
1898 abort ();
1899
1900 have_overlays = (! NILP (buffer->overlays_before)
1901 || ! NILP (buffer->overlays_after));
1902
1903 /* If we have no text properties and overlays,
1904 then we can do it quickly. */
1905 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer)) && ! have_overlays)
1906 {
1907 temp_set_point_both (buffer, charpos, bytepos);
1908 return;
1909 }
1910
1911 /* Set TO to the interval containing the char after CHARPOS,
1912 and TOPREV to the interval containing the char before CHARPOS.
1913 Either one may be null. They may be equal. */
1914 to = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer), charpos);
1915 if (charpos == BUF_BEGV (buffer))
1916 toprev = 0;
1917 else if (to && to->position == charpos)
1918 toprev = previous_interval (to);
1919 else
1920 toprev = to;
1921
1922 buffer_point = (BUF_PT (buffer) == BUF_ZV (buffer)
1923 ? BUF_ZV (buffer) - 1
1924 : BUF_PT (buffer));
1925
1926 /* Set FROM to the interval containing the char after PT,
1927 and FROMPREV to the interval containing the char before PT.
1928 Either one may be null. They may be equal. */
1929 /* We could cache this and save time. */
1930 from = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer), buffer_point);
1931 if (buffer_point == BUF_BEGV (buffer))
1932 fromprev = 0;
1933 else if (from && from->position == BUF_PT (buffer))
1934 fromprev = previous_interval (from);
1935 else if (buffer_point != BUF_PT (buffer))
1936 fromprev = from, from = 0;
1937 else
1938 fromprev = from;
1939
1940 /* Moving within an interval. */
1941 if (to == from && toprev == fromprev && INTERVAL_VISIBLE_P (to)
1942 && ! have_overlays)
1943 {
1944 temp_set_point_both (buffer, charpos, bytepos);
1945 return;
1946 }
1947
1948 original_position = charpos;
1949
1950 /* If the new position is between two intangible characters
1951 with the same intangible property value,
1952 move forward or backward until a change in that property. */
1953 if (NILP (Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks)
1954 && ((! NULL_INTERVAL_P (to) && ! NULL_INTERVAL_P (toprev))
1955 || have_overlays)
1956 /* Intangibility never stops us from positioning at the beginning
1957 or end of the buffer, so don't bother checking in that case. */
1958 && charpos != BEGV && charpos != ZV)
1959 {
1960 Lisp_Object intangible_propval;
1961 Lisp_Object pos;
1962
1963 XSETINT (pos, charpos);
1964
1965 if (backwards)
1966 {
1967 intangible_propval = Fget_char_property (make_number (charpos),
1968 Qintangible, Qnil);
1969
1970 /* If following char is intangible,
1971 skip back over all chars with matching intangible property. */
1972 if (! NILP (intangible_propval))
1973 while (XINT (pos) > BUF_BEGV (buffer)
1974 && EQ (Fget_char_property (make_number (XINT (pos) - 1),
1975 Qintangible, Qnil),
1976 intangible_propval))
1977 pos = Fprevious_char_property_change (pos, Qnil);
1978 }
1979 else
1980 {
1981 intangible_propval = Fget_char_property (make_number (charpos - 1),
1982 Qintangible, Qnil);
1983
1984 /* If following char is intangible,
1985 skip forward over all chars with matching intangible property. */
1986 if (! NILP (intangible_propval))
1987 while (XINT (pos) < BUF_ZV (buffer)
1988 && EQ (Fget_char_property (pos, Qintangible, Qnil),
1989 intangible_propval))
1990 pos = Fnext_char_property_change (pos, Qnil);
1991
1992 }
1993
1994 charpos = XINT (pos);
1995 bytepos = buf_charpos_to_bytepos (buffer, charpos);
1996 }
1997
1998 if (charpos != original_position)
1999 {
2000 /* Set TO to the interval containing the char after CHARPOS,
2001 and TOPREV to the interval containing the char before CHARPOS.
2002 Either one may be null. They may be equal. */
2003 to = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer), charpos);
2004 if (charpos == BUF_BEGV (buffer))
2005 toprev = 0;
2006 else if (to && to->position == charpos)
2007 toprev = previous_interval (to);
2008 else
2009 toprev = to;
2010 }
2011
2012 /* Here TO is the interval after the stopping point
2013 and TOPREV is the interval before the stopping point.
2014 One or the other may be null. */
2015
2016 temp_set_point_both (buffer, charpos, bytepos);
2017
2018 /* We run point-left and point-entered hooks here, iff the
2019 two intervals are not equivalent. These hooks take
2020 (old_point, new_point) as arguments. */
2021 if (NILP (Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks)
2022 && (! intervals_equal (from, to)
2023 || ! intervals_equal (fromprev, toprev)))
2024 {
2025 Lisp_Object leave_after, leave_before, enter_after, enter_before;
2026
2027 if (fromprev)
2028 leave_after = textget (fromprev->plist, Qpoint_left);
2029 else
2030 leave_after = Qnil;
2031 if (from)
2032 leave_before = textget (from->plist, Qpoint_left);
2033 else
2034 leave_before = Qnil;
2035
2036 if (toprev)
2037 enter_after = textget (toprev->plist, Qpoint_entered);
2038 else
2039 enter_after = Qnil;
2040 if (to)
2041 enter_before = textget (to->plist, Qpoint_entered);
2042 else
2043 enter_before = Qnil;
2044
2045 if (! EQ (leave_before, enter_before) && !NILP (leave_before))
2046 call2 (leave_before, make_number (old_position),
2047 make_number (charpos));
2048 if (! EQ (leave_after, enter_after) && !NILP (leave_after))
2049 call2 (leave_after, make_number (old_position),
2050 make_number (charpos));
2051
2052 if (! EQ (enter_before, leave_before) && !NILP (enter_before))
2053 call2 (enter_before, make_number (old_position),
2054 make_number (charpos));
2055 if (! EQ (enter_after, leave_after) && !NILP (enter_after))
2056 call2 (enter_after, make_number (old_position),
2057 make_number (charpos));
2058 }
2059 }
2060 \f
2061 /* Move point to POSITION, unless POSITION is inside an intangible
2062 segment that reaches all the way to point. */
2063
2064 void
2065 move_if_not_intangible (position)
2066 int position;
2067 {
2068 Lisp_Object pos;
2069 Lisp_Object intangible_propval;
2070
2071 XSETINT (pos, position);
2072
2073 if (! NILP (Vinhibit_point_motion_hooks))
2074 /* If intangible is inhibited, always move point to POSITION. */
2075 ;
2076 else if (PT < position && XINT (pos) < ZV)
2077 {
2078 /* We want to move forward, so check the text before POSITION. */
2079
2080 intangible_propval = Fget_char_property (pos,
2081 Qintangible, Qnil);
2082
2083 /* If following char is intangible,
2084 skip back over all chars with matching intangible property. */
2085 if (! NILP (intangible_propval))
2086 while (XINT (pos) > BEGV
2087 && EQ (Fget_char_property (make_number (XINT (pos) - 1),
2088 Qintangible, Qnil),
2089 intangible_propval))
2090 pos = Fprevious_char_property_change (pos, Qnil);
2091 }
2092 else if (XINT (pos) > BEGV)
2093 {
2094 /* We want to move backward, so check the text after POSITION. */
2095
2096 intangible_propval = Fget_char_property (make_number (XINT (pos) - 1),
2097 Qintangible, Qnil);
2098
2099 /* If following char is intangible,
2100 skip forward over all chars with matching intangible property. */
2101 if (! NILP (intangible_propval))
2102 while (XINT (pos) < ZV
2103 && EQ (Fget_char_property (pos, Qintangible, Qnil),
2104 intangible_propval))
2105 pos = Fnext_char_property_change (pos, Qnil);
2106
2107 }
2108
2109 /* If the whole stretch between PT and POSITION isn't intangible,
2110 try moving to POSITION (which means we actually move farther
2111 if POSITION is inside of intangible text). */
2112
2113 if (XINT (pos) != PT)
2114 SET_PT (position);
2115 }
2116 \f
2117 /* If text at position POS has property PROP, set *VAL to the property
2118 value, *START and *END to the beginning and end of a region that
2119 has the same property, and return 1. Otherwise return 0.
2120
2121 OBJECT is the string or buffer to look for the property in;
2122 nil means the current buffer. */
2123
2124 int
2125 get_property_and_range (pos, prop, val, start, end, object)
2126 int pos;
2127 Lisp_Object prop, *val;
2128 int *start, *end;
2129 Lisp_Object object;
2130 {
2131 INTERVAL i, prev, next;
2132
2133 if (NILP (object))
2134 i = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer), pos);
2135 else if (BUFFERP (object))
2136 i = find_interval (BUF_INTERVALS (XBUFFER (object)), pos);
2137 else if (STRINGP (object))
2138 i = find_interval (XSTRING (object)->intervals, pos);
2139 else
2140 abort ();
2141
2142 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) || (i->position + LENGTH (i) <= pos))
2143 return 0;
2144 *val = textget (i->plist, prop);
2145 if (NILP (*val))
2146 return 0;
2147
2148 next = i; /* remember it in advance */
2149 prev = previous_interval (i);
2150 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (prev)
2151 && EQ (*val, textget (prev->plist, prop)))
2152 i = prev, prev = previous_interval (prev);
2153 *start = i->position;
2154
2155 next = next_interval (i);
2156 while (! NULL_INTERVAL_P (next)
2157 && EQ (*val, textget (next->plist, prop)))
2158 i = next, next = next_interval (next);
2159 *end = i->position + LENGTH (i);
2160
2161 return 1;
2162 }
2163 \f
2164 /* If TYPE is `keymap', return the map specified by the `keymap'
2165 property at POSITION in BUFFER or nil.
2166
2167 Otherwise return the proper local map for position POSITION in
2168 BUFFER. Use the map specified by the local-map property, if any.
2169 Otherwise, use BUFFER's local map. */
2170
2171 Lisp_Object
2172 get_local_map (position, buffer, type)
2173 register int position;
2174 register struct buffer *buffer;
2175 enum map_property type;
2176 {
2177 Lisp_Object prop, tem, lispy_position, lispy_buffer;
2178 int old_begv, old_zv, old_begv_byte, old_zv_byte;
2179
2180 /* Perhaps we should just change `position' to the limit. */
2181 if (position > BUF_Z (buffer) || position < BUF_BEG (buffer))
2182 abort ();
2183
2184 /* Ignore narrowing, so that a local map continues to be valid even if
2185 the visible region contains no characters and hence no properties. */
2186 old_begv = BUF_BEGV (buffer);
2187 old_zv = BUF_ZV (buffer);
2188 old_begv_byte = BUF_BEGV_BYTE (buffer);
2189 old_zv_byte = BUF_ZV_BYTE (buffer);
2190 BUF_BEGV (buffer) = BUF_BEG (buffer);
2191 BUF_ZV (buffer) = BUF_Z (buffer);
2192 BUF_BEGV_BYTE (buffer) = BUF_BEG_BYTE (buffer);
2193 BUF_ZV_BYTE (buffer) = BUF_Z_BYTE (buffer);
2194
2195 /* There are no properties at the end of the buffer, so in that case
2196 check for a local map on the last character of the buffer instead. */
2197 if (position == BUF_Z (buffer) && BUF_Z (buffer) > BUF_BEG (buffer))
2198 --position;
2199 XSETFASTINT (lispy_position, position);
2200 XSETBUFFER (lispy_buffer, buffer);
2201 prop = Fget_char_property (lispy_position,
2202 type == keymap ? Qkeymap : Qlocal_map,
2203 lispy_buffer);
2204
2205 BUF_BEGV (buffer) = old_begv;
2206 BUF_ZV (buffer) = old_zv;
2207 BUF_BEGV_BYTE (buffer) = old_begv_byte;
2208 BUF_ZV_BYTE (buffer) = old_zv_byte;
2209
2210 /* Use the local map only if it is valid. */
2211 prop = get_keymap (prop, 0, 0);
2212 if (CONSP (prop))
2213 return prop;
2214
2215 if (type == keymap)
2216 return Qnil;
2217 else
2218 return buffer->keymap;
2219 }
2220 \f
2221 /* Produce an interval tree reflecting the intervals in
2222 TREE from START to START + LENGTH.
2223 The new interval tree has no parent and has a starting-position of 0. */
2224
2225 INTERVAL
2226 copy_intervals (tree, start, length)
2227 INTERVAL tree;
2228 int start, length;
2229 {
2230 register INTERVAL i, new, t;
2231 register int got, prevlen;
2232
2233 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (tree) || length <= 0)
2234 return NULL_INTERVAL;
2235
2236 i = find_interval (tree, start);
2237 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (i) || LENGTH (i) == 0)
2238 abort ();
2239
2240 /* If there is only one interval and it's the default, return nil. */
2241 if ((start - i->position + 1 + length) < LENGTH (i)
2242 && DEFAULT_INTERVAL_P (i))
2243 return NULL_INTERVAL;
2244
2245 new = make_interval ();
2246 new->position = 0;
2247 got = (LENGTH (i) - (start - i->position));
2248 new->total_length = length;
2249 copy_properties (i, new);
2250
2251 t = new;
2252 prevlen = got;
2253 while (got < length)
2254 {
2255 i = next_interval (i);
2256 t = split_interval_right (t, prevlen);
2257 copy_properties (i, t);
2258 prevlen = LENGTH (i);
2259 got += prevlen;
2260 }
2261
2262 return balance_an_interval (new);
2263 }
2264
2265 /* Give STRING the properties of BUFFER from POSITION to LENGTH. */
2266
2267 INLINE void
2268 copy_intervals_to_string (string, buffer, position, length)
2269 Lisp_Object string;
2270 struct buffer *buffer;
2271 int position, length;
2272 {
2273 INTERVAL interval_copy = copy_intervals (BUF_INTERVALS (buffer),
2274 position, length);
2275 if (NULL_INTERVAL_P (interval_copy))
2276 return;
2277
2278 SET_INTERVAL_OBJECT (interval_copy, string);
2279 XSTRING (string)->intervals = interval_copy;
2280 }
2281 \f
2282 /* Return 1 if strings S1 and S2 have identical properties; 0 otherwise.
2283 Assume they have identical characters. */
2284
2285 int
2286 compare_string_intervals (s1, s2)
2287 Lisp_Object s1, s2;
2288 {
2289 INTERVAL i1, i2;
2290 int pos = 0;
2291 int end = XSTRING (s1)->size;
2292
2293 i1 = find_interval (XSTRING (s1)->intervals, 0);
2294 i2 = find_interval (XSTRING (s2)->intervals, 0);
2295
2296 while (pos < end)
2297 {
2298 /* Determine how far we can go before we reach the end of I1 or I2. */
2299 int len1 = (i1 != 0 ? INTERVAL_LAST_POS (i1) : end) - pos;
2300 int len2 = (i2 != 0 ? INTERVAL_LAST_POS (i2) : end) - pos;
2301 int distance = min (len1, len2);
2302
2303 /* If we ever find a mismatch between the strings,
2304 they differ. */
2305 if (! intervals_equal (i1, i2))
2306 return 0;
2307
2308 /* Advance POS till the end of the shorter interval,
2309 and advance one or both interval pointers for the new position. */
2310 pos += distance;
2311 if (len1 == distance)
2312 i1 = next_interval (i1);
2313 if (len2 == distance)
2314 i2 = next_interval (i2);
2315 }
2316 return 1;
2317 }
2318 \f
2319 /* Recursively adjust interval I in the current buffer
2320 for setting enable_multibyte_characters to MULTI_FLAG.
2321 The range of interval I is START ... END in characters,
2322 START_BYTE ... END_BYTE in bytes. */
2323
2324 static void
2325 set_intervals_multibyte_1 (i, multi_flag, start, start_byte, end, end_byte)
2326 INTERVAL i;
2327 int multi_flag;
2328 int start, start_byte, end, end_byte;
2329 {
2330 /* Fix the length of this interval. */
2331 if (multi_flag)
2332 i->total_length = end - start;
2333 else
2334 i->total_length = end_byte - start_byte;
2335
2336 /* Recursively fix the length of the subintervals. */
2337 if (i->left)
2338 {
2339 int left_end, left_end_byte;
2340
2341 if (multi_flag)
2342 {
2343 left_end_byte = start_byte + LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i);
2344 left_end = BYTE_TO_CHAR (left_end_byte);
2345 }
2346 else
2347 {
2348 left_end = start + LEFT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i);
2349 left_end_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (left_end);
2350 }
2351
2352 set_intervals_multibyte_1 (i->left, multi_flag, start, start_byte,
2353 left_end, left_end_byte);
2354 }
2355 if (i->right)
2356 {
2357 int right_start_byte, right_start;
2358
2359 if (multi_flag)
2360 {
2361 right_start_byte = end_byte - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i);
2362 right_start = BYTE_TO_CHAR (right_start_byte);
2363 }
2364 else
2365 {
2366 right_start = end - RIGHT_TOTAL_LENGTH (i);
2367 right_start_byte = CHAR_TO_BYTE (right_start);
2368 }
2369
2370 set_intervals_multibyte_1 (i->right, multi_flag,
2371 right_start, right_start_byte,
2372 end, end_byte);
2373 }
2374 }
2375
2376 /* Update the intervals of the current buffer
2377 to fit the contents as multibyte (if MULTI_FLAG is 1)
2378 or to fit them as non-multibyte (if MULTI_FLAG is 0). */
2379
2380 void
2381 set_intervals_multibyte (multi_flag)
2382 int multi_flag;
2383 {
2384 if (BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer))
2385 set_intervals_multibyte_1 (BUF_INTERVALS (current_buffer), multi_flag,
2386 BEG, BEG_BYTE, Z, Z_BYTE);
2387 }