Merge from origin/emacs-25

c3489d0 * lisp/w32-fns.el (set-message-beep, w32-get-locale-info) (w3...
a4d882c Correct old cell name unbinding when renaming cell.
6c12c53 Merge branch 'emacs-25' of git.sv.gnu.org:/srv/git/emacs into...
0be6725 Document problem: slow screen refresh on missing font.
853b9b9 * admin/admin.el (add-release-logs): Basic check of existing ...
5fa80cf * build-aux/gitlog-to-emacslog: Handle empty generated Change...
3c79e51 * admin/admin.el (add-release-logs): Generate ChangeLog if ne...
42275df * doc/misc/texinfo.tex: Revert previous change (Bug#23611).
3f4a9d9 * admin/authors.el (authors): First update the ChangeLog.
897fb6f ; 'Changes from the pre-25.1 API' copyedits
825ca25 Rename vc-stay-local back to vc-cvs-stay-local
4efb3e8 * doc/emacs/files.texi (Comparing Files): * doc/emacs/trouble...
b995d1e * doc/misc/eww.texi (Advanced): Fix xref.
2e589c0 Fix cross-references between manuals
f3d2ded * doc/misc/vhdl-mode.texi (Sample Init File): Rename node to ...
906c810 ; * admin/release-process: Move etc/HISTORY from here... ; * ...
bea1b65 * admin/admin.el (add-release-logs): Also update etc/HISTORY.
503e752 ; * CONTRIBUTE: Fix a typo.
fbfd478 Avoid aborting due to errors in arguments of 'set-face-attrib...
bdfbe6d ; * admin/release-process: Copyedits.
44a6aed ; * test/automated/data-tests.el: Standardize license notice.
c33ed39 ; * test/automated/viper-tests.el: Standardize license notice.
df4a14b Add automated test for viper-tests.el
c0139e3 Fix viper undo breakage from undo-boundary changes
920d76c Fix reference to obsolete fn ps-eval-switch
18a9bc1 Do not trash symlinks to init file
2671179 Don't print the "decomposition" line for control chars in wha...
869092c Bring back xterm pasting with middle mouse
5ab0830 Provide workaround for xftfont rendering problem
c9f7ec7 * lisp/desktop.el: Disable restore frameset if in non-graphic...
30989a0 Mention GTK+ problems in etc/PROBLEMS
421e3c4 * lisp/emacs-lisp/package.el (package-refresh-contents):
dadfc30 Revert "epg: Add a way to detect gpg1 executable for tests"
e41a5cb Avoid errors with Czech and Slovak input methods
d4ae6d7 epg: Add a way to detect gpg1 executable for tests
ebc3a94 * lisp/emacs-lisp/package.el: Fix free variable warnings.
6e71295 * lisp/emacs-lisp/package.el (package--with-response-buffer):
c45d9f6 Improve documentation of 'server-name'
3b5e38c Modernize ASLR advice in etc/PROBLEMS
1fe1e0a * lisp/char-fold.el: Rename from character-fold.el.
This commit is contained in:
Paul Eggert 2016-05-26 12:55:06 -07:00
commit 0bf5739b77
44 changed files with 801 additions and 642 deletions

View file

@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ intended for more-conservative changes such as bug fixes. Typically,
collective development is active on the master branch and possibly on
the current release branch. Periodically, the current release branch
is merged into the master, using the gitmerge function described in
admin/notes-git-workflow.
admin/notes/git-workflow.
If you are fixing a bug that exists in the current release, be sure to
commit it to the release branch; it will be merged to the master

View file

@ -30,6 +30,7 @@
(defun add-release-logs (root version &optional date)
"Add \"Version VERSION released.\" change log entries in ROOT.
Also update the etc/HISTORY file.
Root must be the root of an Emacs source tree.
Optional argument DATE is the release date, default today."
(interactive (list (read-directory-name "Emacs root directory: ")
@ -42,6 +43,19 @@ Optional argument DATE is the release date, default today."
(setq root (expand-file-name root))
(unless (file-exists-p (expand-file-name "src/emacs.c" root))
(user-error "%s doesn't seem to be the root of an Emacs source tree" root))
(let ((clog (expand-file-name "ChangeLog" root)))
(if (file-exists-p clog)
;; Basic check that a ChangeLog that exists is not your personal one.
;; TODO Perhaps we should move any existing file and unconditionally
;; call make ChangeLog? Or make ChangeLog CHANGELOG=temp and compare
;; with the existing?
(with-temp-buffer
(insert-file-contents clog)
(or (re-search-forward "^[ \t]*Copyright.*Free Software" nil t)
(user-error "ChangeLog looks like a personal one - remove it?")))
(or
(zerop (call-process "make" nil nil nil "-C" root "ChangeLog"))
(error "Problem generating ChangeLog"))))
(require 'add-log)
(or date (setq date (funcall add-log-time-format nil t)))
(let* ((logs (process-lines "find" root "-name" "ChangeLog"))
@ -53,7 +67,14 @@ Optional argument DATE is the release date, default today."
(dolist (log logs)
(find-file log)
(goto-char (point-min))
(insert entry))))
(insert entry)))
(let ((histfile (expand-file-name "etc/HISTORY" root)))
(unless (file-exists-p histfile)
(error "%s not present" histfile))
(find-file histfile)
(goto-char (point-max))
(search-backward " ")
(insert (format "GNU Emacs %s (%s) emacs-%s\n\n" version date version))))
(defun set-version-in-file (root file version rx)
"Subroutine of `set-version' and `set-copyright'."

View file

@ -1361,24 +1361,36 @@ and changed by AUTHOR."
(cons (list author wrote-list cowrote-list changed-list)
authors-author-list)))))
(defun authors (root)
(defun authors (root &optional nologupdate)
"Extract author information from change logs and Lisp source files.
ROOT is the root directory under which to find the files. If called
interactively, ROOT is read from the minibuffer.
Result is a buffer *Authors* containing authorship information, and a
buffer *Authors Errors* containing references to unknown files."
(interactive "DEmacs source directory: ")
ROOT is the root directory under which to find the files.
Interactively, read ROOT from the minibuffer.
Accurate author information requires up-to-date change logs, so this
first updates them, unless optional prefix argument NOLOGUPDATE is non-nil.
The result is a buffer *Authors* containing authorship information,
and a buffer *Authors Errors* containing references to unknown files."
(interactive "DEmacs source directory: \nP")
(setq root (expand-file-name root))
(unless (file-exists-p (expand-file-name "src/emacs.c" root))
(unless (y-or-n-p
(format "Not the root directory of Emacs: %s, continue? " root))
(user-error "Not the root directory")))
;; May contain your personal entries.
(or (not (file-exists-p (expand-file-name "ChangeLog" root)))
(y-or-n-p "Unversioned ChangeLog present, continue?")
(user-error "Unversioned ChangeLog may have irrelevant entries"))
(or nologupdate
;; There are likely to be things that need fixing, so we update
;; the versioned ChangeLog.N rather than the unversioned ChangeLog.
(zerop (call-process "make" nil nil nil
"-C" root "change-history-nocommit"))
(error "Problem updating ChangeLog"))
(let ((logs (process-lines find-program root "-name" "ChangeLog*"))
(table (make-hash-table :test 'equal))
(buffer-name "*Authors*")
authors-checked-files-alist
authors-invalid-file-names)
(authors-add-fixed-entries table)
(unless (file-exists-p (expand-file-name "src/emacs.c" root))
(unless (y-or-n-p
(format "Not the root directory of Emacs: %s, continue? " root))
(error "Not the root directory")))
(dolist (log logs)
(when (string-match "ChangeLog\\(.[0-9]+\\)?$" log)
(message "Scanning %s..." log)

View file

@ -37,38 +37,38 @@ General steps (for each step, check for possible errors):
M-: (require 'authors) RET
M-x authors RET
(This first updates the current versioned ChangeLog.N)
If there is an "*Authors Errors*" buffer, address the issues.
If there was a ChangeLog typo, run "make change-history" and then
fix the newest ChangeLog history file. If a file was deleted or
renamed, consider adding an appropriate entry to
authors-ignored-files, authors-valid-file-names, or
If there was a ChangeLog typo, fix the relevant entry.
If a file was deleted or renamed, consider adding an appropriate
entry to authors-ignored-files, authors-valid-file-names, or
authors-renamed-files-alist.
If necessary, repeat M-x authors after making those changes.
If necessary, repeat 'C-u M-x authors' after making those changes.
Save the "*Authors*" buffer as etc/AUTHORS.
Check the diff looks reasonable. Maybe add entries to
authors-ambiguous-files or authors-aliases, and repeat.
Commit any fixes to authors.el.
3. Set the version number (M-x load-file RET admin/admin.el RET, then
M-x set-version RET). For a release, add released ChangeLog
entries (create a ChangeLog symlink a la vc-dwim, then run M-x
add-release-logs RET, then run the shell command 'vc-dwim --commit').
For a pretest, start at version .90. After .99, use .990 (so that
it sorts).
M-x set-version RET). For a pretest, start at version .90. After
.99, use .990 (so that it sorts).
The final pretest should be a release candidate. Set the version
number to that of the actual release. Pick a date about a week
from now when you intend to make the release. Use vc-dwim and
M-x add-release-logs as described above to add commit messages
that will appear in the tarball's automatically-generated ChangeLog
file as entries for that date.
from now when you intend to make the release. Use M-x
add-release-logs to add entries to etc/HISTORY and the ChangeLog
file. It's best not to commit these files until the release is
actually made. Merge the entries from (unversioned) ChangeLog
into the top of the current versioned ChangeLog.N and commit that
along with etc/HISTORY. Then you can tag that commit as the
release.
Name the tar file as emacs-XX.Y-rc1.tar. If all goes well in the
following week, you can simply rename the file and use it for the
actual release. If you need another release candidate, remember
to adjust the ChangeLog entries.
to adjust the ChangeLog and etc/HISTORY entries.
If you need to change only a file(s) that cannot possibly affect
the build (README, ChangeLog, NEWS, etc.) then rather than doing
@ -86,8 +86,8 @@ General steps (for each step, check for possible errors):
5. Copy lisp/loaddefs.el to lisp/ldefs-boot.el.
Commit etc/AUTHORS, lisp/ldefs-boot.el, and the files changed
by M-x set-version.
Commit ChangeLog.N, etc/AUTHORS, lisp/ldefs-boot.el, and the
files changed by M-x set-version.
If someone else made a commit between step 1 and now,
you need to repeat from step 4 onwards. (You can commit the files

View file

@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ Each release cycle will be split into two periods.
** Phase one: development
The first phase of the release schedule is the "heads-down" working
period for new features, on the 'master' branch and several feature
period for new features, on the 'master' branch and any needed feature
branches.
** Phase two: fixing and stabilizing the release branch
@ -29,47 +29,60 @@ command to do that, then commit the changes it made and push to
'master'. For major releases, also update the value of
'customize-changed-options-previous-release'.
The 2 main manuals, the User Manual and the Emacs Lisp Manual, need to
be proofread, preferably by at least 2 different persons, and any
uncovered problems fixed. This is a lot of work, so it is advisable
to divide the job between several people (see the checklist near the
end of this file).
Each chapter of the two main manuals, the User Manual and the Emacs
Lisp Manual, should be proofread, preferably by at least two people.
This job is so big that it should be considered a collective
responsibility, not fobbed off on just a few people. After each
chapter is checked, mark off the name(s) of those who checked it in
the checklist near the end of this file.
In parallel to this phase, 'master' can receive new features, to be
released in the next release cycle. From time to time, the master
branches merges bugfix commits from the "emacs-NN" branch.
See admin/gitmerge.el.
* RELEASE-CRITICAL BUGS
Emacs uses the "blocking bug(s)" feature of Debbugs for bugs need to
be addressed in the next release.
Emacs uses the "blocking" feature of Debbugs for bugs that need to be
addressed in the next release.
Currently, bug#19759 is the tracking bug for release of 25.1 and
bug#21966 is the tracking bug for release of 25.2. Say bug#123 needs
bug#21966 is the tracking bug for the next release. Say bug#123 needs
to be fixed for Emacs 25.1. Send a message to control@debbugs.gnu.org
that says:
block 19759 by 123
Change "block" to "unblock" to unblock the bug.
Change "block" to "unblock" to remove a bug from the list. Closed
bugs are not listed as blockers, so you do not need to explicitly
unblock one that has been closed. You may need to force an update of
the tracking bug with ctrl-f5/shift-reload to see the latest version.
* TO BE DONE SHORTLY BEFORE RELEASE
** Make sure the Copyright date reflects the current year in the source
files. See 'admin/notes/years' for information about maintaining
copyright years for GNU Emacs.
See 'admin/make-tarball.txt' for the details of making a release or pretest.
** Make sure the Copyright date reflects the current year in all source files.
(This should be done each January anyway, regardless of releases.)
See admin/update-copyright and admin.el's set-copyright.
For more details, see 'admin/notes/years'.
** Make sure the necessary sources and scripts for any generated files
are included in the source tarball. (They don't need to be installed,
so e.g. admin/ is fine.)
** Regenerate AUTHORS by using admin/authors.el
(The instructions are at the beginning of that file.)
so e.g. admin/ is fine.) This is important for legal compliance.
** Remove temporary +++/--- lines in NEWS.
But first make sure there are no unmarked entries, and update the
documentation (or decide no updates are necessary) for those that
aren't.
documentation (or decide no updates are necessary) for those that aren't.
** Try to reorder NEWS: most important things first, related items together.
** For a major release, add a "New in Emacs XX" section to faq.texi.
** cusver-check from admin.el can help find new defcustoms missing
:version tags.
** Manuals
Check for node names using problematic characters:
@ -85,8 +98,7 @@ For major releases, rewrite the "Antinews" appendix of the User Manual
previous version. The way to do that is read NEWS, pick up the more
significant changes and new features in the upcoming release, then
describe the "benefits" from losing those features. Be funny, use
humor. The text written for the previous major release can serve as
good example.
humor. The text written for the previous releases can serve as an example.
Check cross-references between the manuals (e.g. from emacs to elisp)
are correct. You can use something like the following in the info
@ -147,10 +159,6 @@ size that the GNU Press are going to use when they print the manuals.
I think this is different to what you get if you just use e.g. 'make
emacs.pdf' (e.g., enable "smallbook").
** Try to reorder NEWS: most important things first, related items together.
** For a major release, add a "New in Emacs XX" section to faq.texi.
** Check the keybindings in the refcards are correct, and add any new ones.
What paper size are the English versions supposed to be on?
On Debian testing, the packages texlive-lang-czechslovak and
@ -172,11 +180,6 @@ pt-br Rodrigo Real
ru Alex Ott
sk Miroslav Vaško
** cusver-check from admin.el can help find new defcustoms missing
:version tags.
** Add a line to etc/HISTORY for the release version number and date.
* BUGS
** Check for modes which bind M-s that conflicts with a new global binding M-s

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@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ test -e .git || {
--ignore-line='^; ' --format='%B' \
"$gen_origin..$new_origin" >"ChangeLog.tmp" || exit
if test -s "ChangeLog.tmp"; then
if test -e "ChangeLog.tmp"; then
# Fix up bug references.
# This would be better as eg a --transform option to gitlog-to-changelog,
@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ if test -s "ChangeLog.tmp"; then
`
start_year=
end_year=
for year in $years; do
for year in ${years:-`date +%Y`}; do
: ${start_year:=$year}
end_year=$year
done
@ -110,13 +110,19 @@ if test -s "ChangeLog.tmp"; then
year_range=$start_year-$end_year
fi
# Update gen_origin and append a proper copyright notice.
sed -n '
1i\
# Update gen_origin
if test "$gen_origin" != "$new_origin"; then
sed -n '
1i\
/^This file records repository revisions/p
s/^commit [0-9a-f]* (exclusive)/commit '"$gen_origin"' (exclusive)/p
s/^commit [0-9a-f]* (inclusive)/commit '"$new_origin"' (inclusive)/p
/^This file records repository revisions/p
s/^commit [0-9a-f]* (exclusive)/commit '"$gen_origin"' (exclusive)/p
s/^commit [0-9a-f]* (inclusive)/commit '"$new_origin"' (inclusive)/p
' <ChangeLog.$nmax >>"ChangeLog.tmp" || exit
fi
# Append a proper copyright notice.
sed -n '
/^See ChangeLog.[0-9]* for earlier/,${
s/ChangeLog\.[0-9]*/ChangeLog.'$nmax'/
s/\(Copyright[ (C)]*\)[0-9]*-[0-9]*/\1'"$year_range"'/

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@ -1281,7 +1281,7 @@ The value of @code{diff-switches} should be a string; the default is
@c Note that the actual name of the info file is diffutils.info,
@c but it adds a dir entry for diff too.
@c On older systems, only "info diff" works, not "info diffutils".
@xref{Top,, Diff, diff, Comparing and Merging Files}, for more
@xref{Top,, Diff, diffutils, Comparing and Merging Files}, for more
information about the @command{diff} program.
The output of the @code{diff} command is shown using a major mode

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@ -1634,10 +1634,17 @@ variable to @samp{emacsclient +%d %s}.}
You can run multiple Emacs servers on the same machine by giving
each one a unique @dfn{server name}, using the variable
@code{server-name}. For example, @kbd{M-x set-variable @key{RET}
server-name @key{RET} foo @key{RET}} sets the server name to
server-name @key{RET} "foo" @key{RET}} sets the server name to
@samp{foo}. The @code{emacsclient} program can specify a server by
name, using the @samp{-s} option (@pxref{emacsclient Options}).
If you want to run multiple Emacs daemons (@pxref{Initial Options}),
you can give each daemon its own server name like this:
@example
emacs --eval "(setq server-name \"foo\")" --daemon
@end example
@findex server-eval-at
If you have defined a server by a unique server name, it is possible
to connect to the server from another Emacs instance and evaluate Lisp

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@ -1264,13 +1264,13 @@ but match under character folding are known as @dfn{equivalent
character sequences}.
@kindex M-s ' @r{(Incremental Search)}
@findex isearch-toggle-character-fold
@findex isearch-toggle-char-fold
Generally, search commands in Emacs do not by default perform
character folding in order to match equivalent character sequences.
You can enable this behavior by customizing the variable
@code{search-default-mode} to @code{character-fold-to-regexp}.
@code{search-default-mode} to @code{char-fold-to-regexp}.
@xref{Search Customizations}. Within an incremental search, typing
@kbd{M-s '} (@code{isearch-toggle-character-fold}) toggles character
@kbd{M-s '} (@code{isearch-toggle-char-fold}) toggles character
folding, but only for that search. (Replace commands have a different
default, controlled by a separate option; see @ref{Replacement and Lax
Matches}.)
@ -1481,7 +1481,7 @@ replacement is done without case conversion.
(@pxref{Lax Search, character folding}) when looking for the text to
replace. To enable character folding for matching in
@code{query-replace} and @code{replace-string}, set the variable
@code{replace-character-fold} to a non-@code{nil} value. (This
@code{replace-char-fold} to a non-@code{nil} value. (This
setting does not affect the replacement text, only how Emacs finds the
text to replace. It also doesn't affect @code{replace-regexp}.)

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@ -1178,7 +1178,7 @@ see
@url{http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Change-Log-Concepts.html},
@end ifset
@xref{Change Log Concepts, Change Log Concepts,
Change Log Concepts, gnu-coding-standards, GNU Coding Standards}.
Change Log Concepts, standards, GNU Coding Standards}.
@item
When you write the fix, keep in mind that we can't install a change that

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@ -584,7 +584,6 @@ Regular Expression Searches
* re-search-forward:: Very similar to @code{search-forward}.
* forward-sentence:: A straightforward example of regexp search.
* forward-paragraph:: A somewhat complex example.
* etags:: How to create your own @file{TAGS} table.
* Regexp Review::
* re-search Exercises::
@ -4583,54 +4582,21 @@ definition.
@end ignore
More generally, if you want to see a function in its original source
file, you can use the @code{find-tag} function to jump to it.
@code{find-tag} works with a wide variety of languages, not just
Lisp, and C, and it works with non-programming text as well. For
example, @code{find-tag} will jump to the various nodes in the
Texinfo source file of this document.
The @code{find-tag} function depends on @dfn{tags tables} that record
the locations of the functions, variables, and other items to which
@code{find-tag} jumps.
file, you can use the @code{xref-find-definitions} function to jump to
it. @code{xref-find-definitions} works with a wide variety of
languages, not just Lisp, and C, and it works with non-programming
text as well. For example, @code{xref-find-definitions} will jump to
the various nodes in the Texinfo source file of this document.
To use the @code{find-tag} command, type @kbd{M-.} (i.e., press the
period key while holding down the @key{META} key, or else type the
@key{ESC} key and then type the period key), and then, at the prompt,
type in the name of the function whose source code you want to see,
such as @code{mark-whole-buffer}, and then type @key{RET}. Emacs will
switch buffers and display the source code for the function on your
screen. To switch back to your current buffer, type @kbd{C-x b
@key{RET}}. (On some keyboards, the @key{META} key is labeled
@key{ALT}.)
@c !!! 22.1.1 tags table location in this paragraph
@cindex TAGS table, specifying
@findex find-tag
Depending on how the initial default values of your copy of Emacs are
set, you may also need to specify the location of your tags table,
which is a file called @file{TAGS}. For example, if you are
interested in Emacs sources, the tags table you will most likely want,
if it has already been created for you, will be in a subdirectory of
the @file{/usr/local/share/emacs/} directory; thus you would use the
@code{M-x visit-tags-table} command and specify a pathname such as
@file{/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/TAGS}. If the tags table
has not already been created, you will have to create it yourself. It
will be in a file such as @file{/usr/local/src/emacs/src/TAGS}.
@need 1250
To create a @file{TAGS} file in a specific directory, switch to that
directory in Emacs using @kbd{M-x cd} command, or list the directory
with @kbd{C-x d} (@code{dired}). Then run the compile command, with
@w{@code{etags *.el}} as the command to execute:
@smallexample
M-x compile RET etags *.el RET
@end smallexample
For more information, see @ref{etags, , Create Your Own @file{TAGS} File}.
After you become more familiar with Emacs Lisp, you will find that you will
frequently use @code{find-tag} to navigate your way around source code;
and you will create your own @file{TAGS} tables.
To use the @code{xref-find-definitions} command, type @kbd{M-.}
(i.e., press the period key while holding down the @key{META} key, or
else type the @key{ESC} key and then type the period key), and then,
at the prompt, type in the name of the function whose source code you
want to see, such as @code{mark-whole-buffer}, and then type
@key{RET}. Emacs will switch buffers and display the source code for
the function on your screen. To switch back to your current buffer,
type @kbd{C-x b @key{RET}}. (On some keyboards, the @key{META} key is
labeled @key{ALT}.)
@cindex Library, as term for ``file''
Incidentally, the files that contain Lisp code are conventionally
@ -12142,7 +12108,6 @@ introduces several new features.
* re-search-forward:: Very similar to @code{search-forward}.
* forward-sentence:: A straightforward example of regexp search.
* forward-paragraph:: A somewhat complex example.
* etags:: How to create your own @file{TAGS} table.
* Regexp Review::
* re-search Exercises::
@end menu
@ -13294,130 +13259,6 @@ key; you will be taken directly to the source. (Be sure to install
your sources! Without them, you are like a person who tries to drive
a car with his eyes shut!)
@node etags
@section Create Your Own @file{TAGS} File
@findex etags
@cindex @file{TAGS} file, create own
Besides @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}), another way to see the
source of a function is to type @kbd{M-.} (@code{find-tag}) and the
name of the function when prompted for it. This is a good habit to
get into. The @kbd{M-.} (@code{find-tag}) command takes you directly
to the source for a function, variable, or node. The function depends
on tags tables to tell it where to go.
If the @code{find-tag} function first asks you for the name of a
@file{TAGS} table, give it the name of a @file{TAGS} file such as
@file{/usr/local/src/emacs/src/TAGS}. (The exact path to your
@file{TAGS} file depends on how your copy of Emacs was installed. I
just told you the location that provides both my C and my Emacs Lisp
sources.)
You can also create your own @file{TAGS} file for directories that
lack one.
You often need to build and install tags tables yourself. They are
not built automatically. A tags table is called a @file{TAGS} file;
the name is in upper case letters.
You can create a @file{TAGS} file by calling the @code{etags} program
that comes as a part of the Emacs distribution. Usually, @code{etags}
is compiled and installed when Emacs is built. (@code{etags} is not
an Emacs Lisp function or a part of Emacs; it is a C program.)
@need 1250
To create a @file{TAGS} file, first switch to the directory in which
you want to create the file. In Emacs you can do this with the
@kbd{M-x cd} command, or by visiting a file in the directory, or by
listing the directory with @kbd{C-x d} (@code{dired}). Then run the
compile command, with @w{@code{etags *.el}} as the command to execute
@smallexample
M-x compile RET etags *.el RET
@end smallexample
@noindent
to create a @file{TAGS} file for Emacs Lisp.
For example, if you have a large number of files in your
@file{~/emacs} directory, as I do---I have 137 @file{.el} files in it,
of which I load 12---you can create a @file{TAGS} file for the Emacs
Lisp files in that directory.
@need 1250
The @code{etags} program takes all the usual shell wildcards. For
example, if you have two directories for which you want a single
@file{TAGS} file, type @w{@code{etags *.el ../elisp/*.el}}, where
@file{../elisp/} is the second directory:
@smallexample
M-x compile RET etags *.el ../elisp/*.el RET
@end smallexample
@need 1250
Type
@smallexample
M-x compile RET etags --help RET
@end smallexample
@noindent
to see a list of the options accepted by @code{etags} as well as a
list of supported languages.
The @code{etags} program handles more than 20 languages, including
Emacs Lisp, Common Lisp, Scheme, C, C++, Ada, Fortran, HTML, Java,
LaTeX, Pascal, Perl, PostScript, Python, TeX, Texinfo, makefiles, and
most assemblers. The program has no switches for specifying the
language; it recognizes the language in an input file according to its
file name and contents.
@file{etags} is very helpful when you are writing code yourself and
want to refer back to functions you have already written. Just run
@code{etags} again at intervals as you write new functions, so they
become part of the @file{TAGS} file.
If you think an appropriate @file{TAGS} file already exists for what
you want, but do not know where it is, you can use the @code{locate}
program to attempt to find it.
Type @w{@kbd{M-x locate @key{RET} TAGS @key{RET}}} and Emacs will list
for you the full path names of all your @file{TAGS} files. On my
system, this command lists 34 @file{TAGS} files. On the other hand, a
plain vanilla system I recently installed did not contain any
@file{TAGS} files.
If the tags table you want has been created, you can use the @code{M-x
visit-tags-table} command to specify it. Otherwise, you will need to
create the tag table yourself and then use @code{M-x
visit-tags-table}.
@subsubheading Building Tags in the Emacs sources
@cindex Building Tags in the Emacs sources
@cindex Tags in the Emacs sources
@findex make tags
The GNU Emacs sources come with a @file{Makefile} that contains a
sophisticated @code{etags} command that creates, collects, and merges
tags tables from all over the Emacs sources and puts the information
into one @file{TAGS} file in the @file{src/} directory. (The
@file{src/} directory is below the top level of your Emacs directory.)
@need 1250
To build this @file{TAGS} file, go to the top level of your Emacs
source directory and run the compile command @code{make tags}:
@smallexample
M-x compile RET make tags RET
@end smallexample
@noindent
(The @code{make tags} command works well with the GNU Emacs sources,
as well as with some other source packages.)
For more information, see @ref{Tags, , Tag Tables, emacs, The GNU Emacs
Manual}.
@node Regexp Review
@section Review

View file

@ -2290,7 +2290,7 @@ is actually typical for regexp syntax.)
@cindex Recursive search/replace operations
Dired mode (@kbd{M-x dired @key{RET}}, or @kbd{C-x d}) supports the
command @code{dired-do-query-replace-regexp} (@kbd{Q}), which allows
command @code{dired-do-find-regexp-and-replace} (@kbd{Q}), which allows
users to replace regular expressions in multiple files.
You can use this command to perform search/replace operations on
@ -2315,7 +2315,7 @@ To accept all replacements in each file, hit @kbd{!}.
Another way to do the same thing is to use the ``tags'' feature of
Emacs: it includes the command @code{tags-query-replace} which performs
a query-replace across all the files mentioned in the @file{TAGS} file.
@xref{Tags Search,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
@xref{Identifier Search,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
@node Documentation for etags
@section Where is the documentation for @code{etags}?

View file

@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ variables @code{shr-color-visible-distance-min} and
In addition to maintaining the history at run-time, EWW will also
save the partial state of its buffers (the URIs and the titles of the
pages visited) in the desktop file if one is used. @xref{Saving Emacs
Sessions, , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
Sessions,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
@vindex eww-desktop-remove-duplicates
EWW history may sensibly contain multiple entries for the same page

View file

@ -874,9 +874,9 @@ command, like this:
@end example
@end defun
These commands are often more accurate than the @code{find-tag}
command (@pxref{Tags,,,emacs,Emacs manual}), because the Semantic
Analyzer is context-sensitive.
These commands are often more accurate than the @code{xref-find-definitions}
command (@pxref{Looking Up Identifiers,,,emacs,Emacs manual}), because
the Semantic Analyzer is context-sensitive.
You can also use @kbd{C-c , j} (@code{semantic-complete-jump-local})
and @kbd{C-c , J} (@code{semantic-complete-jump}) to navigate tags.

View file

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
% Load plain if necessary, i.e., if running under initex.
\expandafter\ifx\csname fmtname\endcsname\relax\input plain\fi
%
\def\texinfoversion{2016-05-07.20}
\def\texinfoversion{2016-04-14.07}
%
% Copyright 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
% 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006,
@ -67,10 +67,6 @@
\everyjob{\message{[Texinfo version \texinfoversion]}%
\catcode`+=\active \catcode`\_=\active}
% LaTeX's \typeout. This ensures that the messages it is used for
% are identical in format to the corresponding ones from latex/pdflatex.
\def\typeout{\immediate\write17}%
\chardef\other=12
% We never want plain's \outer definition of \+ in Texinfo.
@ -1538,6 +1534,7 @@
%
% PDF outline support
%
\pdfmakepagedesttrue \relax
% Emulate the primitive of pdfTeX
\def\pdfdest name#1 xyz{%
\special{pdf:dest (name#1) [@thispage /XYZ @xpos @ypos]}%
@ -3273,8 +3270,8 @@
% @{ @} @lbracechar{} @rbracechar{} all generate brace characters.
% Unless we're in typewriter, use \ecfont because the CM text fonts do
% not have braces, and we don't want to switch into math.
\def\mylbrace{{\ifmonospace\char123\else\ensuremath\lbrace\fi}}
\def\myrbrace{{\ifmonospace\char125\else\ensuremath\rbrace\fi}}
\def\mylbrace{{\ifmonospace\else\ecfont\fi \char123}}
\def\myrbrace{{\ifmonospace\else\ecfont\fi \char125}}
\let\{=\mylbrace \let\lbracechar=\{
\let\}=\myrbrace \let\rbracechar=\}
\begingroup
@ -4756,7 +4753,7 @@
\def\docodeindex#1{\edef\indexname{#1}\parsearg\docodeindexxxx}
\def\docodeindexxxx #1{\doind{\indexname}{\code{#1}}}
% Used when writing an index entry out to an index file to prevent
% Used when writing an index entry out to an index file, to prevent
% expansion of Texinfo commands that can appear in an index entry.
%
\def\indexdummies{%
@ -4892,9 +4889,12 @@
%
% We want to disable all macros so that they are not expanded by \write.
\macrolist
\definedummyword\value
%
\normalturnoffactive
%
% Handle some cases of @value -- where it does not contain any
% (non-fully-expandable) commands.
\makevalueexpandable
}
% \commondummiesnofonts: common to \commondummies and \indexnofonts.
@ -5159,10 +5159,9 @@
\ifx\suffix\indexisfl\def\suffix{f1}\fi
% Open the file
\immediate\openout\csname#1indfile\endcsname \jobname.\suffix
% Using \immediate above here prevents an object entering into the current
% box, which could confound checks such as those in \safewhatsit for
% preceding skips.
\typeout{Writing index file \jobname.\suffix}%
% Using \immediate here prevents an object entering into the current box,
% which could confound checks such as those in \safewhatsit for preceding
% skips.
\fi}
\def\indexisfl{fl}
@ -5370,7 +5369,6 @@
% index. The easiest way to prevent this problem is to make sure
% there is some text.
\putwordIndexNonexistent
\typeout{No file \jobname.\indexname s.}%
\else
\catcode`\\ = 0
%
@ -6684,14 +6682,7 @@
% 1 and 2 (the page numbers aren't printed), and so are the first
% two pages of the document. Thus, we'd have two destinations named
% `1', and two named `2'.
\ifpdf
\global\pdfmakepagedesttrue
\else
\ifx\XeTeXrevision\thisisundefined
\else
\global\pdfmakepagedesttrue
\fi
\fi
\ifpdf \global\pdfmakepagedesttrue \fi
}
@ -8871,7 +8862,6 @@
% include an _ in the xref name, etc.
\indexnofonts
\turnoffactive
\def\value##1{##1}%
\expandafter\global\expandafter\let\expandafter\Xthisreftitle
\csname XR#1-title\endcsname
}%
@ -9012,14 +9002,14 @@
\fi\fi\fi
}
% \refx{NAME}{SUFFIX} - reference a cross-reference string named NAME. SUFFIX
% is output afterwards if non-empty.
% Define \refx{NAME}{SUFFIX} to reference a cross-reference string named NAME.
% If its value is nonempty, SUFFIX is output afterward.
%
\def\refx#1#2{%
\requireauxfile
{%
\indexnofonts
\otherbackslash
\def\value##1{##1}%
\expandafter\global\expandafter\let\expandafter\thisrefX
\csname XR#1\endcsname
}%
@ -9044,18 +9034,16 @@
#2% Output the suffix in any case.
}
% This is the macro invoked by entries in the aux file. Define a control
% sequence for a cross-reference target (we prepend XR to the control sequence
% name to avoid collisions). The value is the page number. If this is a float
% type, we have more work to do.
% This is the macro invoked by entries in the aux file. Usually it's
% just a \def (we prepend XR to the control sequence name to avoid
% collisions). But if this is a float type, we have more work to do.
%
\def\xrdef#1#2{%
{% Expand the node or anchor name to remove control sequences.
% \turnoffactive stops 8-bit characters being changed to commands
% like @'e. \refx does the same to retrieve the value in the definition.
{% The node name might contain 8-bit characters, which in our current
% implementation are changed to commands like @'e. Don't let these
% mess up the control sequence name.
\indexnofonts
\turnoffactive
\def\value##1{##1}%
\xdef\safexrefname{#1}%
}%
%

View file

@ -828,12 +828,12 @@ The file transfer protocol. @xref{file/ftp}.
@item ssh
@cindex ssh
The secure shell protocol. @xref{Inline Methods,,, tramp, The Tramp
The secure shell protocol. @xref{Inline methods,,, tramp, The Tramp
Manual}.
@item scp
@cindex scp
The secure file copy protocol. @xref{External Methods,,, tramp, The
The secure file copy protocol. @xref{External methods,,, tramp, The
Tramp Manual}.
@item rsync

View file

@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ modify this GNU manual.''
* Syntactic Symbols::
* Frequently Asked Questions::
* Getting the latest VHDL Mode release::
* Sample .emacs File::
* Sample Init File::
* Limitations and Known Bugs::
* Mailing Lists and Submitting Bug Reports::
* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
@ -484,7 +484,7 @@ Here's a simplified example of what you can add to your @file{.emacs}
file to make the changes described in the previous section
(@ref{Interactive Customization}) more permanent. See the Emacs
manuals for more information on customizing Emacs via hooks.
@xref{Sample .emacs File}, for a more complete sample @file{.emacs} file.
@xref{Sample Init File}, for a more complete sample @file{.emacs} file.
@example
@group
@ -600,7 +600,7 @@ optional third argument, which if non-@code{nil}, automatically
institutes the new style in the current buffer.
The sample @file{.emacs} file provides a concrete example of how a new
style can be added and automatically set. @xref{Sample .emacs File}.
style can be added and automatically set. @xref{Sample Init File}.
@node File Styles
@subsection File Styles
@ -874,7 +874,7 @@ simply add the following to the top of your @file{.emacs} file:
@end example
See the sample @file{.emacs} file @ref{Sample .emacs File} for
See the sample @file{.emacs} file @ref{Sample Init File} for
details.
@end quotation
@ -894,9 +894,9 @@ either of these lists.
The official Emacs VHDL Mode Home Page can be found at
@uref{http://www.iis.ee.ethz.ch/~zimmi/emacs/vhdl-mode.html}.
@node Sample .emacs File
@chapter Sample @file{.emacs} file
@cindex Sample @file{.emacs} file
@node Sample Init File
@chapter Sample Init File
@cindex Sample init file
Most customizations can be done using the ``Customize'' entry in the
VHDL Mode menu, which requires no editing of the .emacs file.

View file

@ -2568,7 +2568,7 @@ above block should be commented out.
Even though these commands are sometimes useful, they are no substitute for
the powerful @emph{tag table} facility of Emacs. Viper's @kbd{:tag} command
in a primitive interface to Emacs tags. @xref{Tags,Tags,Tags,emacs,
in a primitive interface to Emacs tags. @xref{Tags Tables,,,emacs,
The GNU Emacs Manual}, for more information on tags.
The following two commands are normally bound to a mouse click and are part

View file

@ -1110,11 +1110,11 @@ as many other symbols like U+249C (PARENTHESIZED LATIN SMALL LETTER
A).
Character folding is enabled by customizing 'search-default-mode' to
the value 'character-fold-to-regexp'. You can also toggle character
the value 'char-fold-to-regexp'. You can also toggle character
folding in the middle of a search by typing 'M-s ''.
'query-replace' honors character folding if the new variable
'replace-character-fold' is customized to a non-nil value.
'replace-char-fold' is customized to a non-nil value.
+++
*** New user option 'search-default-mode'.
@ -1124,9 +1124,9 @@ value, nil specifies that Isearch does literal searches (however,
as in previous Emacs versions).
+++
*** New function 'character-fold-to-regexp' can be used
*** New function 'char-fold-to-regexp' can be used
by searching commands to produce a regexp matching anything that
character-folds into STRING.
char-folds into STRING.
+++
*** The new 'M-s M-w' key binding uses eww to search the web for the

View file

@ -718,6 +718,20 @@ the following variables: tex-font-script-display (how much to
lower/raise); tex-suscript-height-ratio (how much smaller than
normal); tex-suscript-height-minimum (minimum height).
** Screen refresh is slow when there are special characters for which no suitable font is available
If the display is too slow in refreshing when you scroll to a new
region, or when you edit the buffer, it might be due to the fact that
some characters cannot be displayed in the default font, and Emacs is
spending too much time in looking for a suitable font to display them.
You can suspect this if you have several characters that are displayed
as small rectangles containing a hexadecimal code inside.
The solution is to install the appropriate fonts on your machine. For
instance if you are editing a text with a lot of math symbols, then
installing a font like 'Symbola' should solve this problem.
* Internationalization problems
** M-{ does not work on a Spanish PC keyboard.
@ -909,6 +923,21 @@ into Meta. This is because of the great importance of Meta in Emacs.
** Window-manager and toolkit-related problems
*** Emacs built with GTK+ toolkit produces corrupted display on HiDPI screen
This can happen if you set GDK_SCALE=2 in the environment or in your
'.xinitrc' file. (This setting is usually accompanied by
GDK_DPI_SCALE=0.5.) Emacs can not support these settings correctly,
as it doesn't use GTK+ exclusively. The result is that sometimes
widgets like the scroll bar are displayed incorrectly, and frames
could be displayed "cropped" to only part of the stuff that should be
displayed.
The workaround is to explicitly disable these settings when invoking
Emacs, for example (from a Posix shell prompt):
$ GDK_SCALE=1 GDK_DPI_SCALE=1 emacs
*** Metacity: Resizing Emacs or ALT-Tab causes X to be unresponsive.
This happens sometimes when using Metacity. Resizing Emacs or ALT-Tab:bing
@ -2561,51 +2590,70 @@ See <URL:http://debbugs.gnu.org/327>, <URL:http://debbugs.gnu.org/821>.
** Dumping
*** Segfault during 'make bootstrap' under the Linux kernel.
*** Segfault during 'make'
In Red Hat Linux kernels, "Exec-shield" functionality is enabled by
default, which creates a different memory layout that can break the
emacs dumper. Emacs tries to handle this at build time, but if this
fails, the following instructions may be useful.
If Emacs segfaults when 'make' executes one of these commands:
Exec-shield is enabled on your system if
LC_ALL=C ./temacs -batch -l loadup bootstrap
LC_ALL=C ./temacs -batch -l loadup dump
the problem may be due to inadequate workarounds for address space
layout randomization (ASLR), an operating system feature that
randomizes the virtual address space of a process. ASLR is commonly
enabled in Linux and NetBSD kernels, and is intended to deter exploits
of pointer-related bugs in applications. If ASLR is enabled, the
command:
cat /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space # GNU/Linux
sysctl security.pax.aslr.global # NetBSD
outputs a nonzero value.
These segfaults should not occur on most modern systems, because the
Emacs build procedure uses the command 'setfattr' or 'paxctl' to mark
the Emacs executable as requiring non-randomized address space, and
Emacs uses the 'personality' system call to disable address space
randomization when dumping. However, older kernels may not support
'setfattr', 'paxctl', or 'personality', and newer Linux kernels have a
secure computing mode (seccomp) that can be configured to disable the
'personality' call.
It may be possible to work around the 'personality' problem in a newer
Linux kernel by configuring seccomp to allow the 'personality' call.
For example, if you are building Emacs under Docker, you can run the
Docker container with a security profile that allows 'personality' by
using Docker's --security-opt option with an appropriate profile; see
<https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/seccomp/>.
To work around the ASLR problem in either an older or a newer kernel,
you can temporarily disable the feature while building Emacs. On
GNU/Linux you can do so using the following command (as root).
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space
You can re-enable the feature when you are done, by echoing the
original value back to the file. NetBSD uses a different command,
e.g., 'sysctl -w security.pax.aslr.global=0'.
Alternatively, you can try using the 'setarch' command when building
temacs like this, where -R disables address space randomization:
setarch $(uname -m) -R make
ASLR is not the only problem that can break Emacs dumping. Another
issue is that in Red Hat Linux kernels, Exec-shield is enabled by
default, and this creates a different memory layout. Emacs should
handle this at build time, but if this fails the following
instructions may be useful. Exec-shield is enabled on your system if
cat /proc/sys/kernel/exec-shield
prints a value other than 0. (Please read your system documentation
for more details on Exec-shield and associated commands.)
Additionally, Linux kernel versions since 2.6.12 randomize the virtual
address space of a process by default. If this feature is enabled on
your system, then
cat /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space
prints a value other than 0.
When these features are enabled, building Emacs may segfault during
the execution of this command:
./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
To work around this problem, you can temporarily disable these
features while building Emacs. You can do so using the following
commands (as root). Remember to re-enable them when you are done,
by echoing the original values back to the files.
prints a nonzero value. You can temporarily disable it as follows:
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/exec-shield
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space
Or, on x86, you can try using the 'setarch' command when running
temacs, like this:
setarch i386 -R ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
or
setarch i386 -R make
(The -R option disables address space randomization.)
As with randomize_va_space, you can re-enable Exec-shield when you are
done, by echoing the original value back to the file.
*** temacs prints "Pure Lisp storage exhausted".

View file

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
;;; character-fold.el --- match unicode to similar ASCII -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;;; char-fold.el --- match unicode to similar ASCII -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;; Copyright (C) 2015-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@ -22,12 +22,12 @@
;;; Code:
(eval-and-compile (put 'character-fold-table 'char-table-extra-slots 1))
(eval-and-compile (put 'char-fold-table 'char-table-extra-slots 1))
(defconst character-fold-table
(defconst char-fold-table
(eval-when-compile
(let ((equiv (make-char-table 'character-fold-table))
(equiv-multi (make-char-table 'character-fold-table))
(let ((equiv (make-char-table 'char-fold-table))
(equiv-multi (make-char-table 'char-fold-table))
(table (unicode-property-table-internal 'decomposition)))
(set-char-table-extra-slot equiv 0 equiv-multi)
@ -115,7 +115,7 @@
equiv)
equiv))
"Used for folding characters of the same group during search.
This is a char-table with the `character-fold-table' subtype.
This is a char-table with the `char-fold-table' subtype.
Let us refer to the character in question by char-x.
Each entry is either nil (meaning char-x only matches literally)
@ -136,18 +136,18 @@ For instance, the default alist for ?f includes:
Exceptionally for the space character (32), ALIST is ignored.")
(defun character-fold--make-space-string (n)
(defun char-fold--make-space-string (n)
"Return a string that matches N spaces."
(format "\\(?:%s\\|%s\\)"
(make-string n ?\s)
(apply #'concat
(make-list n (or (aref character-fold-table ?\s) " ")))))
(make-list n (or (aref char-fold-table ?\s) " ")))))
;;;###autoload
(defun character-fold-to-regexp (string &optional _lax from)
"Return a regexp matching anything that character-folds into STRING.
(defun char-fold-to-regexp (string &optional _lax from)
"Return a regexp matching anything that char-folds into STRING.
Any character in STRING that has an entry in
`character-fold-table' is replaced with that entry (which is a
`char-fold-table' is replaced with that entry (which is a
regexp) and other characters are `regexp-quote'd.
If the resulting regexp would be too long for Emacs to handle,
@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ just return the result of calling `regexp-quote' on STRING.
FROM is for internal use. It specifies an index in the STRING
from which to start."
(let* ((spaces 0)
(multi-char-table (char-table-extra-slot character-fold-table 0))
(multi-char-table (char-table-extra-slot char-fold-table 0))
(i (or from 0))
(end (length string))
(out nil))
@ -172,9 +172,9 @@ from which to start."
(pcase (aref string i)
(`?\s (setq spaces (1+ spaces)))
(c (when (> spaces 0)
(push (character-fold--make-space-string spaces) out)
(push (char-fold--make-space-string spaces) out)
(setq spaces 0))
(let ((regexp (or (aref character-fold-table c)
(let ((regexp (or (aref char-fold-table c)
(regexp-quote (string c))))
;; Long string. The regexp would probably be too long.
(alist (unless (> end 50)
@ -206,13 +206,13 @@ from which to start."
(let ((length (car entry))
(suffix-regexp (cdr entry)))
(concat suffix-regexp
(character-fold-to-regexp subs nil length))))
(char-fold-to-regexp subs nil length))))
`((0 . ,regexp) . ,matched-entries) "\\|")
"\\)"))))
out))))
(setq i (1+ i)))
(when (> spaces 0)
(push (character-fold--make-space-string spaces) out))
(push (char-fold--make-space-string spaces) out))
(let ((regexp (apply #'concat (nreverse out))))
;; Limited by `MAX_BUF_SIZE' in `regex.c'.
(if (> (length regexp) 5000)
@ -221,22 +221,22 @@ from which to start."
;;; Commands provided for completeness.
(defun character-fold-search-forward (string &optional bound noerror count)
"Search forward for a character-folded version of STRING.
STRING is converted to a regexp with `character-fold-to-regexp',
(defun char-fold-search-forward (string &optional bound noerror count)
"Search forward for a char-folded version of STRING.
STRING is converted to a regexp with `char-fold-to-regexp',
which is searched for with `re-search-forward'.
BOUND NOERROR COUNT are passed to `re-search-forward'."
(interactive "sSearch: ")
(re-search-forward (character-fold-to-regexp string) bound noerror count))
(re-search-forward (char-fold-to-regexp string) bound noerror count))
(defun character-fold-search-backward (string &optional bound noerror count)
"Search backward for a character-folded version of STRING.
STRING is converted to a regexp with `character-fold-to-regexp',
(defun char-fold-search-backward (string &optional bound noerror count)
"Search backward for a char-folded version of STRING.
STRING is converted to a regexp with `char-fold-to-regexp',
which is searched for with `re-search-backward'.
BOUND NOERROR COUNT are passed to `re-search-backward'."
(interactive "sSearch: ")
(re-search-backward (character-fold-to-regexp string) bound noerror count))
(re-search-backward (char-fold-to-regexp string) bound noerror count))
(provide 'character-fold)
(provide 'char-fold)
;;; character-fold.el ends here
;;; char-fold.el ends here

View file

@ -806,9 +806,16 @@ relevant to POS."
'describe-char-unidata-list))
'follow-link t)
(insert "\n")
(dolist (elt (if (eq describe-char-unidata-list t)
(nreverse (mapcar 'car char-code-property-alist))
describe-char-unidata-list))
(dolist (elt
(cond ((eq describe-char-unidata-list t)
(nreverse (mapcar 'car char-code-property-alist)))
((< char 32)
;; Temporary fix (2016-05-22): The
;; decomposition item for \n corrupts the
;; display on a Linux virtual terminal.
;; (Bug #23594).
(remq 'decomposition describe-char-unidata-list))
(t describe-char-unidata-list)))
(let ((val (get-char-code-property char elt))
description)
(when val

View file

@ -1163,7 +1163,7 @@ This function also sets `desktop-dirname' to nil."
"Restore the state of a set of frames.
This function depends on the value of `desktop-saved-frameset'
being set (usually, by reading it from the desktop)."
(when (desktop-restoring-frameset-p)
(when (and (display-graphic-p) (desktop-restoring-frameset-p))
(frameset-restore desktop-saved-frameset
:reuse-frames (eq desktop-restore-reuses-frames t)
:cleanup-frames (not (eq desktop-restore-reuses-frames 'keep))
@ -1634,15 +1634,8 @@ If there are no buffers left to create, kill the timer."
(setq command-line-args (delete key command-line-args))
(desktop-save-mode 0)))
(when desktop-save-mode
;; People don't expect emacs -nw, or --daemon,
;; to create graphical frames (bug#17693).
;; TODO perhaps there should be a separate value
;; for desktop-restore-frames to control this startup behavior?
(let ((desktop-restore-frames (and desktop-restore-frames
initial-window-system
(not (daemonp)))))
(desktop-read)
(setq inhibit-startup-screen t)))))
(desktop-read)
(setq inhibit-startup-screen t))))
(provide 'desktop)

View file

@ -302,10 +302,12 @@ contrast, `package-user-dir' contains packages for personal use."
:risky t
:version "24.1")
(defvar epg-gpg-program)
(declare-function epg-find-configuration "epg-config"
(protocol &optional force))
(defcustom package-check-signature
(if (progn (require 'epg-config) (executable-find epg-gpg-program))
(if (and (require 'epg-config)
(epg-find-configuration 'OpenPGP))
'allow-unsigned)
"Non-nil means to check package signatures when installing.
The value `allow-unsigned' means to still install a package even if
@ -1159,38 +1161,43 @@ errors signaled by ERROR-FORM or by BODY).
(setq body (cdr (cdr body))))
(macroexp-let2* nil ((url-1 url)
(noerror-1 noerror))
`(cl-macrolet ((unless-error (body-2 &rest before-body)
(let ((err (make-symbol "err")))
`(with-temp-buffer
(when (condition-case ,err
(progn ,@before-body t)
,(list 'error ',error-form
(list 'unless ',noerror-1
`(signal (car ,err) (cdr ,err)))))
,@body-2)))))
(if (string-match-p "\\`https?:" ,url-1)
(let* ((url (concat ,url-1 ,file))
(callback (lambda (status)
(let ((b (current-buffer)))
(require 'url-handlers)
(unless-error ,body
(when-let ((er (plist-get status :error)))
(error "Error retrieving: %s %S" url er))
(with-current-buffer b
(goto-char (point-min))
(unless (search-forward-regexp "^\r?\n\r?" nil 'noerror)
(error "Error retrieving: %s %S" url "incomprehensible buffer")))
(url-insert-buffer-contents b url)
(kill-buffer b)
(goto-char (point-min)))))))
(if ,async
(unless-error nil (url-retrieve url callback nil 'silent))
(unless-error ,body (url-insert-file-contents url))))
(unless-error ,body
(let ((url (expand-file-name ,file ,url-1)))
(unless (file-name-absolute-p url)
(error "Location %s is not a url nor an absolute file name" url))
(insert-file-contents url)))))))
(let ((url-sym (make-symbol "url"))
(b-sym (make-symbol "b-sym")))
`(cl-macrolet ((unless-error (body-2 &rest before-body)
(let ((err (make-symbol "err")))
`(with-temp-buffer
(when (condition-case ,err
(progn ,@before-body t)
,(list 'error ',error-form
(list 'unless ',noerror-1
`(signal (car ,err) (cdr ,err)))))
,@body-2)))))
(if (string-match-p "\\`https?:" ,url-1)
(let ((,url-sym (concat ,url-1 ,file)))
(if ,async
(unless-error nil
(url-retrieve ,url-sym
(lambda (status)
(let ((,b-sym (current-buffer)))
(require 'url-handlers)
(unless-error ,body
(when-let ((er (plist-get status :error)))
(error "Error retrieving: %s %S" ,url-sym er))
(with-current-buffer ,b-sym
(goto-char (point-min))
(unless (search-forward-regexp "^\r?\n\r?" nil 'noerror)
(error "Error retrieving: %s %S" ,url-sym "incomprehensible buffer")))
(url-insert-buffer-contents ,b-sym ,url-sym)
(kill-buffer ,b-sym)
(goto-char (point-min)))))
nil
'silent))
(unless-error ,body (url-insert-file-contents ,url-sym))))
(unless-error ,body
(let ((url (expand-file-name ,file ,url-1)))
(unless (file-name-absolute-p url)
(error "Location %s is not a url nor an absolute file name" url))
(insert-file-contents url))))))))
(define-error 'bad-signature "Failed to verify signature")
@ -1460,8 +1467,6 @@ taken care of by `package-initialize'."
(defvar package--downloads-in-progress nil
"List of in-progress asynchronous downloads.")
(declare-function epg-find-configuration "epg-config"
(protocol &optional force))
(declare-function epg-import-keys-from-file "epg" (context keys))
;;;###autoload
@ -1561,12 +1566,6 @@ downloads in the background."
(let ((default-keyring (expand-file-name "package-keyring.gpg"
data-directory))
(inhibit-message async))
(if (get 'package-check-signature 'saved-value)
(when package-check-signature
(epg-find-configuration 'OpenPGP))
(setq package-check-signature
(if (epg-find-configuration 'OpenPGP)
'allow-unsigned)))
(when (and package-check-signature (file-exists-p default-keyring))
(condition-case-unless-debug error
(package-import-keyring default-keyring)
@ -1874,6 +1873,7 @@ add a call to it along with some explanatory comments."
(file-readable-p user-init-file)
(file-writable-p user-init-file))
(let* ((buffer (find-buffer-visiting user-init-file))
buffer-name
(contains-init
(if buffer
(with-current-buffer buffer
@ -1889,8 +1889,12 @@ add a call to it along with some explanatory comments."
(re-search-forward "(package-initialize\\_>" nil 'noerror)))))
(unless contains-init
(with-current-buffer (or buffer
(let ((delay-mode-hooks t))
(let ((delay-mode-hooks t)
(find-file-visit-truename t))
(find-file-noselect user-init-file)))
(when buffer
(setq buffer-name (buffer-file-name))
(set-visited-file-name (file-chase-links user-init-file)))
(save-excursion
(save-restriction
(widen)
@ -1909,7 +1913,10 @@ add a call to it along with some explanatory comments."
(insert "\n"))
(let ((file-precious-flag t))
(save-buffer))
(unless buffer
(if buffer
(progn
(set-visited-file-name buffer-name)
(set-buffer-modified-p nil))
(kill-buffer (current-buffer)))))))))
(setq package--init-file-ensured t))

View file

@ -631,7 +631,7 @@
(viper-over-whitespace-line))
(indent-to-left-margin))
(viper-add-newline-at-eob-if-necessary)
(viper-adjust-undo)
(viper-complete-complex-command-for-undo)
(if (eq viper-current-state 'emacs-state)
(viper-restore-cursor-color 'after-emacs-mode)
@ -1570,7 +1570,7 @@ If the prefix argument ARG is non-nil, it is used instead of `val'."
(if (and (eolp) (not (bolp)))
(backward-char 1))
))
(viper-adjust-undo) ; take care of undo
(viper-complete-complex-command-for-undo) ; take care of undo
;; If the prev cmd was rotating the command ring, this means that `.' has
;; just executed a command from that ring. So, push it on the ring again.
;; If we are just executing previous command , then don't push viper-d-com
@ -1670,6 +1670,7 @@ invokes the command before that, etc."
(undo-start)
(undo-more 2)
(viper-complete-complex-command-for-undo)
;;(setq undo-beg-posn (or undo-beg-posn (point))
;; undo-end-posn (or undo-end-posn (point)))
;;(setq undo-beg-posn (or undo-beg-posn before-undo-pt)
@ -1709,37 +1710,17 @@ invokes the command before that, etc."
;; The following two functions are used to set up undo properly.
;; In VI, unlike Emacs, if you open a line, say, and add a bunch of lines,
;; they are undone all at once.
(defun viper-adjust-undo ()
(if viper-undo-needs-adjustment
(let ((inhibit-quit t)
tmp tmp2)
(setq viper-undo-needs-adjustment nil)
(if (listp buffer-undo-list)
(if (setq tmp (memq viper-buffer-undo-list-mark buffer-undo-list))
(progn
(setq tmp2 (cdr tmp)) ; the part after mark
;; cut tail from buffer-undo-list temporarily by direct
;; manipulation with pointers in buffer-undo-list
(setcdr tmp nil)
(setq buffer-undo-list (delq nil buffer-undo-list))
(setq buffer-undo-list
(delq viper-buffer-undo-list-mark buffer-undo-list))
;; restore tail of buffer-undo-list
(setq buffer-undo-list (nconc buffer-undo-list tmp2)))
(setq buffer-undo-list (delq nil buffer-undo-list)))))
))
(defun viper-complete-complex-command-for-undo ()
(setq undo-auto-disable-boundaries nil)
(setq viper-undo-in-complex-command nil)
(undo-boundary))
(defun viper-set-complex-command-for-undo ()
(if (listp buffer-undo-list)
(if (not viper-undo-needs-adjustment)
(let ((inhibit-quit t))
(setq buffer-undo-list
(cons viper-buffer-undo-list-mark buffer-undo-list))
(setq viper-undo-needs-adjustment t)))))
(when (not viper-undo-in-complex-command)
(setq undo-auto-disable-boundaries t)
(setq viper-undo-in-complex-command t)
(undo-boundary)))
;;; Viper's destructive Command ring utilities
@ -2607,7 +2588,7 @@ These keys are ESC, RET, and LineFeed."
(delete-char 1 t)
(insert char))
(viper-adjust-undo)
(viper-complete-complex-command-for-undo)
(backward-char arg)
))

View file

@ -370,13 +370,8 @@ Use `\\[viper-set-expert-level]' to change this.")
;; VI-style Undo
;; Used to 'undo' complex commands, such as replace and insert commands.
(viper-deflocalvar viper-undo-needs-adjustment nil)
(put 'viper-undo-needs-adjustment 'permanent-local t)
;; A mark that Viper puts on buffer-undo-list. Marks the beginning of a
;; complex command that must be undone atomically. If inserted, it is
;; erased by viper-change-state-to-vi and viper-repeat.
(defconst viper-buffer-undo-list-mark 'viper)
(viper-deflocalvar viper-undo-in-complex-command nil)
(put 'viper-undo-in-complex-command 'permanent-local t)
(defcustom viper-keep-point-on-undo nil
"Non-nil means not to move point while undoing commands.

View file

@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ It is nil if none yet.")
Default value, nil, means edit the string instead."
:type 'boolean)
(autoload 'character-fold-to-regexp "character-fold")
(autoload 'char-fold-to-regexp "char-fold")
(defcustom search-default-mode nil
"Default mode to use when starting isearch.
@ -236,7 +236,7 @@ isearch).
If a function, use that function as an `isearch-regexp-function'.
Example functions (and the keys to toggle them during isearch)
are `word-search-regexp' \(`\\[isearch-toggle-word]'), `isearch-symbol-regexp'
\(`\\[isearch-toggle-symbol]'), and `character-fold-to-regexp' \(`\\[isearch-toggle-character-fold]')."
\(`\\[isearch-toggle-symbol]'), and `char-fold-to-regexp' \(`\\[isearch-toggle-char-fold]')."
;; :type is set below by `isearch-define-mode-toggle'.
:type '(choice (const :tag "Literal search" nil)
(const :tag "Regexp search" t)
@ -510,6 +510,7 @@ This is like `describe-bindings', but displays only Isearch keys."
;; People expect to be able to paste with the mouse.
(define-key map [mouse-2] #'isearch-mouse-2)
(define-key map [down-mouse-2] nil)
(define-key map [xterm-paste] #'isearch-xterm-paste)
;; Some bindings you may want to put in your isearch-mode-hook.
;; Suggest some alternates...
@ -718,7 +719,7 @@ Type \\[isearch-toggle-invisible] to toggle search in invisible text.
Type \\[isearch-toggle-regexp] to toggle regular-expression mode.
Type \\[isearch-toggle-word] to toggle word mode.
Type \\[isearch-toggle-symbol] to toggle symbol mode.
Type \\[isearch-toggle-character-fold] to toggle character folding.
Type \\[isearch-toggle-char-fold] to toggle character folding.
Type \\[isearch-toggle-lax-whitespace] to toggle whitespace matching.
In incremental searches, a space or spaces normally matches any whitespace
@ -1546,9 +1547,9 @@ The command then executes BODY and updates the isearch prompt."
Turning on word search turns off regexp mode.")
(isearch-define-mode-toggle symbol "_" isearch-symbol-regexp "\
Turning on symbol search turns off regexp mode.")
(isearch-define-mode-toggle character-fold "'" character-fold-to-regexp "\
(isearch-define-mode-toggle char-fold "'" char-fold-to-regexp "\
Turning on character-folding turns off regexp mode.")
(put 'character-fold-to-regexp 'isearch-message-prefix "char-fold ")
(put 'char-fold-to-regexp 'isearch-message-prefix "char-fold ")
(isearch-define-mode-toggle regexp "r" nil nil
(setq isearch-regexp (not isearch-regexp))
@ -2001,6 +2002,13 @@ is bound to outside of Isearch."
(when (functionp binding)
(call-interactively binding)))))
(declare-function xterm--pasted-text "term/xterm" ())
(defun isearch-xterm-paste ()
"Pull terminal paste into search string."
(interactive)
(isearch-yank-string (xterm--pasted-text)))
(defun isearch-yank-internal (jumpform)
"Pull the text from point to the point reached by JUMPFORM.
JUMPFORM is a lambda expression that takes no arguments and returns

View file

@ -142,18 +142,7 @@
("=[" ?\[)
("=]" ?\])
("={" ?{)
("=}" ?})
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("=}" ?}))
(quail-define-package
"czech-qwerty" "Czech" "CZ" t
@ -260,18 +249,7 @@
("=[" ?\[)
("=]" ?\])
("={" ?{)
("=}" ?})
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("=}" ?}))
(quail-define-package
"czech-prog-1" "Czech" "CZ" t
@ -350,18 +328,7 @@ All other keys are the same as on standard US keyboard."
("++U" )
("+++U" )
("+Y" )
("+Z" )
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("+Z" ))
(quail-define-package
"czech-prog-2" "Czech" "CZ" t
@ -440,18 +407,7 @@ All other keys are the same as on standard US keyboard."
("++U" )
("+++U" )
("+Y" )
("+Z" )
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("+Z" ))
(quail-define-package
"czech-prog-3" "Czech" "CZ" t
@ -552,17 +508,6 @@ All other keys are the same as on standard US keyboard."
("+u" )
("+=u" )
("=y" )
("+z" )
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("+z" ))
;;; czech.el ends here

View file

@ -151,18 +151,7 @@
("+7" ?&)
("+8" ?*)
("+9" ?\()
("+0" ?\))
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("+0" ?\)))
(quail-define-package
@ -245,18 +234,7 @@ All other keys are the same as on standard US keyboard."
("[[[U" )
("[Y" )
("[Z" )
("[[Z" )
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("[[Z" ))
(quail-define-package
@ -347,18 +325,7 @@ All other keys are the same as on standard US keyboard."
("+U" )
("+=U" )
("=Y" )
("+Z" )
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("+Z" ))
(quail-define-package
@ -463,17 +430,6 @@ All other keys are the same as on standard US keyboard."
("[Y" )
("[Z" )
("[[Z" )
("]Z" )
([kp-1] ?1)
([kp-2] ?2)
([kp-3] ?3)
([kp-4] ?4)
([kp-5] ?5)
([kp-6] ?6)
([kp-7] ?7)
([kp-8] ?8)
([kp-9] ?9)
([kp-0] ?0)
([kp-add] ?+))
("]Z" ))
;;; slovak.el ends here

View file

@ -1263,7 +1263,7 @@ mail status in mode line"))
(defvar menu-bar-search-options-menu
(let ((menu (make-sparse-keymap "Search Options")))
(dolist (x '((character-fold-to-regexp "Fold Characters" "Character folding")
(dolist (x '((char-fold-to-regexp "Fold Characters" "Character folding")
(isearch-symbol-regexp "Whole Symbols" "Whole symbol")
(word-search-regexp "Whole Words" "Whole word")))
(bindings--define-key menu (vector (nth 0 x))

View file

@ -5673,7 +5673,7 @@ If menu binding was not done, calls `pr-menu-bind'."
(or (listp switches)
(error "%S should have a list of strings" mess))
(lpr-flatten-list ; dynamic evaluation
(mapcar 'ps-eval-switch switches)))
(mapcar #'lpr-eval-switch switches)))
(defun pr-ps-preview (kind n-up filename mess)

View file

@ -33,7 +33,7 @@
:type 'boolean
:group 'matching)
(defcustom replace-character-fold nil
(defcustom replace-char-fold nil
"Non-nil means replacement commands should do character folding in matches.
This means, for instance, that \\=' will match a large variety of
unicode quotes.
@ -324,7 +324,7 @@ If `replace-lax-whitespace' is non-nil, a space or spaces in the string
to be replaced will match a sequence of whitespace chars defined by the
regexp in `search-whitespace-regexp'.
If `replace-character-fold' is non-nil, matching uses character folding,
If `replace-char-fold' is non-nil, matching uses character folding,
i.e. it ignores diacritics and other differences between equivalent
character strings.
@ -383,7 +383,7 @@ If `replace-regexp-lax-whitespace' is non-nil, a space or spaces in the regexp
to be replaced will match a sequence of whitespace chars defined by the
regexp in `search-whitespace-regexp'.
This function is not affected by `replace-character-fold'.
This function is not affected by `replace-char-fold'.
Third arg DELIMITED (prefix arg if interactive), if non-nil, means replace
only matches surrounded by word boundaries. A negative prefix arg means
@ -474,7 +474,7 @@ If `replace-regexp-lax-whitespace' is non-nil, a space or spaces in the regexp
to be replaced will match a sequence of whitespace chars defined by the
regexp in `search-whitespace-regexp'.
This function is not affected by `replace-character-fold'.
This function is not affected by `replace-char-fold'.
Third arg DELIMITED (prefix arg if interactive), if non-nil, means replace
only matches that are surrounded by word boundaries.
@ -568,7 +568,7 @@ If `replace-lax-whitespace' is non-nil, a space or spaces in the string
to be replaced will match a sequence of whitespace chars defined by the
regexp in `search-whitespace-regexp'.
If `replace-character-fold' is non-nil, matching uses character folding,
If `replace-char-fold' is non-nil, matching uses character folding,
i.e. it ignores diacritics and other differences between equivalent
character strings.
@ -623,7 +623,7 @@ If `replace-regexp-lax-whitespace' is non-nil, a space or spaces in the regexp
to be replaced will match a sequence of whitespace chars defined by the
regexp in `search-whitespace-regexp'.
This function is not affected by `replace-character-fold'
This function is not affected by `replace-char-fold'
In Transient Mark mode, if the mark is active, operate on the contents
of the region. Otherwise, operate from point to the end of the buffer's
@ -2055,9 +2055,9 @@ It is called with three arguments, as if it were
;; used after `recursive-edit' might override them.
(let* ((isearch-regexp regexp-flag)
(isearch-regexp-function (or delimited-flag
(and replace-character-fold
(and replace-char-fold
(not regexp-flag)
#'character-fold-to-regexp)))
#'char-fold-to-regexp)))
(isearch-lax-whitespace
replace-lax-whitespace)
(isearch-regexp-lax-whitespace

View file

@ -3455,9 +3455,18 @@ highlighted range in the spreadsheet."
(setq cell (or cell (ses-get-cell row col))
old-name (ses-cell-symbol cell)
new-rowcol (ses-decode-cell-symbol (symbol-name new-name)))
;; when ses-rename-cell is called interactively, then 'sym' is the
;; 'cursor-intangible' property of text at cursor position, while
;; 'old-name' is the symbol stored in array cell at coordinate
;; 'rowcol' corresponding to 'ses-cell' property of symbol
;; 'sym'. Both must be the same.
(unless (eq sym old-name)
(error "Spreadsheet is broken, both symbols %S and %S refering to cell (%d,%d)" sym old-name row col))
(if new-rowcol
;; the new name is of A1 type, so we test that the coordinate
;; inferred from new name
(if (equal new-rowcol rowcol)
(put new-name 'ses-cell rowcol)
(put new-name 'ses-cell rowcol)
(error "Not a valid name for this cell location"))
(setq ses--named-cell-hashmap
(or ses--named-cell-hashmap (make-hash-table :test 'eq)))
@ -3471,7 +3480,7 @@ highlighted range in the spreadsheet."
(setf (ses-cell-formula xcell)
(ses-replace-name-in-formula
(ses-cell-formula xcell)
sym
old-name
new-name))))
;; Replace name by new name in reference list of cells to which renamed
;; cell refers to.
@ -3479,11 +3488,14 @@ highlighted range in the spreadsheet."
(let* ((x (ses-sym-rowcol ref))
(xcell (ses-get-cell (car x) (cdr x))))
(setf (ses-cell-references xcell)
(cons new-name (delq sym
(cons new-name (delq old-name
(ses-cell-references xcell))))))
(set (make-local-variable new-name) (symbol-value sym))
(setf (ses-cell--symbol cell) new-name)
(makunbound sym)
;; Unbind old name
(if (eq (get old-name 'ses-cell) :ses-named)
(ses--unbind-cell-name old-name)
(kill-local-variable old-name))
(and curcell (setq ses--curcell new-name))
(save-excursion
(or curcell (ses-goto-print row col))

View file

@ -2848,6 +2848,18 @@ buffers that were changed during the last command.")
If set to non-nil, this will effectively disable the timer.")
(defvar-local undo-auto-disable-boundaries nil
"Disable the automatic addition of boundaries.
If set to non-nil, `undo-boundary' will not be called
automatically in a buffer either at the end of a command, or as a
result of `undo-auto-current-boundary-timer'.
When this is set to non-nil, it is important to ensure that
`undo-boundary' is called frequently enough. Failure to do so
will result in user-visible warnings that the situation is
probably a bug.")
(defvar undo-auto--this-command-amalgamating nil
"Non-nil if `this-command' should be amalgamated.
This variable is set to nil by `undo-auto--boundaries' and is set
@ -2887,7 +2899,8 @@ REASON describes the reason that the boundary is being added; see
(dolist (b undo-auto--undoably-changed-buffers)
(when (buffer-live-p b)
(with-current-buffer b
(undo-auto--ensure-boundary cause))))
(unless undo-auto-disable-boundaries
(undo-auto--ensure-boundary cause)))))
(setq undo-auto--undoably-changed-buffers nil))
(defun undo-auto--boundary-timer ()
@ -2914,10 +2927,10 @@ See also `undo-auto--buffer-undoably-changed'.")
"Add an `undo-boundary' in appropriate buffers."
(undo-auto--boundaries
(let ((amal undo-auto--this-command-amalgamating))
(setq undo-auto--this-command-amalgamating nil)
(if amal
'amalgamate
'command))))
(setq undo-auto--this-command-amalgamating nil)
(if amal
'amalgamate
'command))))
(defun undo-auto-amalgamate ()
"Amalgamate undo if necessary.

View file

@ -71,28 +71,29 @@ string bytes that can be copied is 3/4 of this value."
(defconst xterm-paste-ending-sequence "\e[201~"
"Characters send by the terminal to end a bracketed paste.")
(defun xterm--pasted-text ()
"Handle the rest of a terminal paste operation.
Return the pasted text as a string."
(let ((end-marker-length (length xterm-paste-ending-sequence)))
(with-temp-buffer
(set-buffer-multibyte nil)
(while (not (search-backward xterm-paste-ending-sequence
(- (point) end-marker-length) t))
(let ((event (read-event nil nil
;; Use finite timeout to avoid glomming the
;; event onto this-command-keys.
most-positive-fixnum)))
(when (eql event ?\r)
(setf event ?\n))
(insert event)))
(let ((last-coding-system-used))
(decode-coding-region (point-min) (point) (keyboard-coding-system)
t)))))
(defun xterm-paste ()
"Handle the start of a terminal paste operation."
(interactive)
(let* ((end-marker-length (length xterm-paste-ending-sequence))
(pasted-text (with-temp-buffer
(set-buffer-multibyte nil)
(while (not (search-backward
xterm-paste-ending-sequence
(- (point) end-marker-length) t))
(let ((event (read-event
nil nil
;; Use finite timeout to avoid
;; glomming the event onto
;; this-command-keys.
most-positive-fixnum)))
(when (eql event ?\r)
(setf event ?\n))
(insert event)))
(let ((last-coding-system-used))
(decode-coding-region
(point-min) (point)
(keyboard-coding-system) t))))
(let* ((pasted-text (xterm--pasted-text))
(interprogram-paste-function (lambda () pasted-text)))
(yank)))

View file

@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ This is only meaningful if you don't use the implicit checkout model
:version "21.1"
:group 'vc-cvs)
(defcustom vc-stay-local 'only-file
(defcustom vc-cvs-stay-local 'only-file
"Non-nil means use local operations when possible for remote repositories.
This avoids slow queries over the network and instead uses heuristics
and past information to determine the current status of a file.
@ -137,11 +137,11 @@ server, but heuristics will be used to determine the status for
all other VC operations.
The value can also be a regular expression or list of regular
expressions to match against the host name of a repository; then VC
only stays local for hosts that match it. Alternatively, the value
can be a list of regular expressions where the first element is the
symbol `except'; then VC always stays local except for hosts matched
by these regular expressions."
expressions to match against the host name of a repository; then
vc-cvs only stays local for hosts that match it. Alternatively,
the value can be a list of regular expressions where the first
element is the symbol `except'; then vc-cvs always stays local
except for hosts matched by these regular expressions."
:type '(choice (const :tag "Always stay local" t)
(const :tag "Only for file operations" only-file)
(const :tag "Don't stay local" nil)
@ -795,8 +795,7 @@ If FILE is a list of files, return non-nil if any of them
individually should stay local."
(if (listp file)
(delq nil (mapcar (lambda (arg) (vc-cvs-stay-local-p arg)) file))
(let* ((sym (vc-make-backend-sym 'CVS 'stay-local))
(stay-local (if (boundp sym) (symbol-value sym) vc-stay-local)))
(let ((stay-local vc-cvs-stay-local))
(if (symbolp stay-local) stay-local
(let ((dirname (if (file-directory-p file)
(directory-file-name file)

View file

@ -552,7 +552,7 @@
;; argument, since on no system since RCS has setting the initial
;; revision been even possible, let alone sane.
;;
;; INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE: In older versions of the API, vc-diff did
;; - INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE: In older versions of the API, vc-diff did
;; not take an async-mode flag as a fourth optional argument. (This
;; change eliminated a particularly ugly global.)
;;
@ -563,12 +563,12 @@
;; SVN.)
;;
;; - INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE: The old fourth 'default-state' argument of
;; vc-dir-status-files is gone; none of the back ends actually used it.
;; dir-status-files is gone; none of the back ends actually used it.
;;
;; - vc-dir-status is no longer a public method; it has been replaced
;; by vc-dir-status-files.
;; - dir-status is no longer a public method; it has been replaced by
;; dir-status-files.
;;
;; - vc-state-heuristic is no longer a public method (the CVS backend
;; - state-heuristic is no longer a public method (the CVS backend
;; retains it as a private one).
;;
;; - the vc-mistrust-permissions configuration variable is gone; the
@ -577,8 +577,8 @@
;; only affected back ends were SCCS and RCS.
;;
;; - vc-stay-local-p and repository-hostname are no longer part
;; of the public API. The vc-stay-local configuration variable
;; remains but only affects the CVS back end.
;; of the public API. The vc-cvs-stay-local configuration variable
;; remains and only affects the CVS back end.
;;
;; - The init-revision function and the default-initial-revision
;; variable are gone. These have't made sense on anything shipped

View file

@ -31,9 +31,9 @@
;;;; Function keys
(declare-function set-message-beep "w32fns.c")
(declare-function w32-get-locale-info "w32proc.c")
(declare-function w32-get-valid-locale-ids "w32proc.c")
(declare-function set-message-beep "w32fns.c" (sound))
(declare-function w32-get-locale-info "w32proc.c" (lcid &optional longform))
(declare-function w32-get-valid-locale-ids "w32proc.c" ())
;; Map all versions of a filename (8.3, longname, mixed case) to the
;; same buffer.

View file

@ -2677,9 +2677,10 @@ FRAME 0 means change the face on all frames, and change the default
{
if (NILP (frame))
frame = selected_frame;
f = XFRAME (frame);
CHECK_LIVE_FRAME (frame);
f = XFRAME (frame);
lface = lface_from_face_name (f, face, false);
/* If a frame-local face doesn't exist yet, create one. */

View file

@ -395,6 +395,24 @@ xftfont_open (struct frame *f, Lisp_Object entity, int pixel_size)
font->ascent = xftfont->ascent;
font->descent = xftfont->descent;
/* The following workaround is unnecessary on most systems, and
causes annoying differences in glyph height between regular and
bold fonts (see bug#22383). However, with some fonts, such as
monaco, removing the workaround results in overlapping vertical
space of a line, see bug#23360. As long as the way to reconcile
these opposites is not known, we provide a user option to work
around the problem. */
if (pixel_size >= 5
&& xft_font_ascent_descent_override)
{
/* The above condition is a dirty workaround because
XftTextExtents8 behaves strangely for some fonts
(e.g. "Dejavu Sans Mono") when pixel_size is less than 5. */
if (font->ascent < extents.y)
font->ascent = extents.y;
if (font->descent < extents.height - extents.y)
font->descent = extents.height - extents.y;
}
font->height = font->ascent + font->descent;
if (XINT (AREF (entity, FONT_SIZE_INDEX)) == 0)
@ -733,6 +751,12 @@ syms_of_xftfont (void)
DEFSYM (QCembolden, ":embolden");
DEFSYM (QClcdfilter, ":lcdfilter");
DEFVAR_BOOL ("xft-font-ascent-descent-override",
xft_font_ascent_descent_override,
doc: /* Non-nil means override the ascent and descent values for Xft font driver.
This is needed with some fonts to correct vertical overlap of glyphs. */);
xft_font_ascent_descent_override = 0;
ascii_printable[0] = 0;
xftfont_driver = ftfont_driver;

View file

@ -0,0 +1,160 @@
;;; viper-tests.el --- tests for viper.
;; Copyright (C) 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary:
;;; Code:
(require 'viper)
(defun viper-test-undo-kmacro (kmacro)
"In a clean viper buffer, run KMACRO and return `buffer-string'.
This function makes as many attempts as possible to clean up
after itself, although it will leave a buffer called
*viper-test-buffer* if it fails (this is deliberate!)."
(let (
;; Viper just turns itself off during batch use.
(noninteractive nil)
;; Switch off start up message or it will chew the key presses
(viper-inhibit-startup-message 't)
;; Select an expert-level for the same reason.
(viper-expert-level 5)
;; viper loads this even with -q so make sure it's empty!
(viper-custom-file-name (make-temp-file "viper-tests"))
(before-buffer (current-buffer)))
(unwind-protect
(progn
;; viper-mode is essentially global, so set it here
(viper-mode)
;; We must switch to buffer because we are using a keyboard macro
;; which appears to not go to the current-buffer but what ever is
;; currently taking keyboard events. We use a named buffer because
;; then we can see what it in it if it all goes wrong.
(switch-to-buffer
(get-buffer-create
"*viper-test-buffer*"))
(erase-buffer)
;; The new buffer fails to enter vi state so set it.
(viper-change-state-to-vi)
;; Run the macro
(execute-kbd-macro kmacro)
(let ((rtn
(buffer-substring-no-properties
(point-min)
(point-max))))
;; Kill the buffer iff the macro succeeds
(kill-buffer)
rtn))
;; switch everthing off and restore the buffer
(toggle-viper-mode)
(switch-to-buffer before-buffer))))
(ert-deftest viper-test-go ()
"Test that this file is running."
(should t))
(ert-deftest viper-test-fix ()
"Test that the viper kmacro fixture is working."
(should
(viper-test-undo-kmacro [])))
(ert-deftest viper-test-undo-1 ()
"Test for VI like undo behaviour.
Insert 1, then 2 on consecutive lines, followed by undo. This
should leave just 1 in the buffer.
Test for Bug #22295"
(should
(equal
"1\n"
(viper-test-undo-kmacro
[
?a
?1
escape
?o
?2
escape
?u
]
))))
(ert-deftest viper-test-undo-2 ()
"Test for VI like undo behaviour.
Insert \"1 2 3 4 5\" then delete the 2, then the 4, and undo.
Should restore the 4, but leave the 2 deleted.
Test for Bug #22295"
(should
(equal
"1 3 4 5\n"
(viper-test-undo-kmacro
[
?i
?1 ? ?2 ? ?3 ? ?4 ? ?5
escape
?F ?2 ?d ?w
?w ?d ?w
?u
]))))
(ert-deftest viper-test-undo-3 ()
"Test for VI like undo behaviour.
Insert \"1 2 3 4 5 6\", delete the 2, then the 3 4 and 5.
Should restore the 3 4 and 5 but not the 2.
Test for Bug #22295"
(should
(equal
"1 3 4 5 6\n"
(viper-test-undo-kmacro
[
;; Insert this lot.
?i ?1 ? ?2 ? ?3 ? ?4 ? ?5 ? ?6
escape
;; Start of line.
?0
;; Move to 2, delete
?w ?d ?w
;; Delete 3 4 5
?. ?. ?.
;; Undo del 5, then
?u ?. ?.
]))))
(ert-deftest viper-test-undo-4()
(should
(equal
""
(viper-test-undo-kmacro
[
?i ?1 escape
?o ?2 escape
?o ?3 escape
?u ?. ?.
])
)))
;;; viper-tests.el ends here

View file

@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
;;; char-fold-tests.el --- Tests for char-fold.el -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;; Copyright (C) 2013-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Artur Malabarba <bruce.connor.am@gmail.com>
;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Code:
(require 'ert)
(require 'char-fold)
(defun char-fold--random-word (n)
(mapconcat (lambda (_) (string (+ 9 (random 117))))
(make-list n nil) ""))
(defun char-fold--test-search-with-contents (contents string)
(with-temp-buffer
(insert contents)
(goto-char (point-min))
(should (search-forward-regexp (char-fold-to-regexp string) nil 'noerror))
(goto-char (point-min))
(should (char-fold-search-forward string nil 'noerror))
(should (char-fold-search-backward string nil 'noerror))))
(ert-deftest char-fold--test-consistency ()
(dotimes (n 30)
(let ((w (char-fold--random-word n)))
;; A folded string should always match the original string.
(char-fold--test-search-with-contents w w))))
(ert-deftest char-fold--test-lax-whitespace ()
(dotimes (n 40)
(let ((w1 (char-fold--random-word n))
(w2 (char-fold--random-word n))
(search-spaces-regexp "\\s-+"))
(char-fold--test-search-with-contents
(concat w1 "\s\n\s\t\f\t\n\r\t" w2)
(concat w1 " " w2))
(char-fold--test-search-with-contents
(concat w1 "\s\n\s\t\f\t\n\r\t" w2)
(concat w1 (make-string 10 ?\s) w2)))))
(defun char-fold--test-match-exactly (string &rest strings-to-match)
(let ((re (concat "\\`" (char-fold-to-regexp string) "\\'")))
(dolist (it strings-to-match)
(should (string-match re it)))
;; Case folding
(let ((case-fold-search t))
(dolist (it strings-to-match)
(should (string-match (upcase re) (downcase it)))
(should (string-match (downcase re) (upcase it)))))))
(ert-deftest char-fold--test-some-defaults ()
(dolist (it '(("ffl" . "") ("ffi" . "")
("fi" . "") ("ff" . "")
("" . "ä")))
(char-fold--test-search-with-contents (cdr it) (car it))
(let ((multi (char-table-extra-slot char-fold-table 0))
(char-fold-table (make-char-table 'char-fold-table)))
(set-char-table-extra-slot char-fold-table 0 multi)
(char-fold--test-match-exactly (car it) (cdr it)))))
(ert-deftest char-fold--test-fold-to-regexp ()
(let ((char-fold-table (make-char-table 'char-fold-table))
(multi (make-char-table 'char-fold-table)))
(set-char-table-extra-slot char-fold-table 0 multi)
(aset char-fold-table ?a "xx")
(aset char-fold-table ?1 "44")
(aset char-fold-table ?\s "-!-")
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a1a1" "xx44xx44")
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a1 a 1" "xx44-!--!-xx-!-44")
(aset multi ?a '(("1" . "99")
("2" . "88")
("12" . "77")))
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a" "xx")
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a1" "xx44" "99")
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a12" "77" "xx442" "992")
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a2" "88")
(aset multi ?1 '(("2" . "yy")))
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a1" "xx44" "99")
(char-fold--test-match-exactly "a12" "77" "xx442" "992")
;; Support for this case is disabled. See function definition or:
;; https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2015-11/msg02562.html
;; (char-fold--test-match-exactly "a12" "xxyy")
))
(ert-deftest char-fold--speed-test ()
(dolist (string (append '("tty-set-up-initial-frame-face"
"tty-set-up-initial-frame-face-frame-faceframe-faceframe-faceframe-face")
(mapcar #'char-fold--random-word '(10 50 100
50 100))))
(message "Testing %s" string)
;; Make sure we didn't just fallback on the trivial search.
(should-not (string= (regexp-quote string)
(char-fold-to-regexp string)))
(with-temp-buffer
(save-excursion (insert string))
(let ((time (time-to-seconds (current-time))))
;; Our initial implementation of case-folding in char-folding
;; created a lot of redundant paths in the regexp. Because of
;; that, if a really long string "almost" matches, the regexp
;; engine took a long time to realize that it doesn't match.
(should-not (char-fold-search-forward (concat string "c") nil 'noerror))
;; Ensure it took less than a second.
(should (< (- (time-to-seconds (current-time))
time)
1))))))
(provide 'char-fold-tests)
;;; char-fold-tests.el ends here

View file

@ -475,8 +475,15 @@ Must called from within a `tar-mode' buffer."
(package-initialize)
(package-import-keyring keyring)
(package-refresh-contents)
(should (package-install 'signed-good))
(should-error (package-install 'signed-bad))
(let ((package-check-signature 'allow-unsigned))
(should (package-install 'signed-good))
(should-error (package-install 'signed-bad)))
(let ((package-check-signature t))
(should (package-install 'signed-good))
(should-error (package-install 'signed-bad)))
(let ((package-check-signature nil))
(should (package-install 'signed-good))
(should (package-install 'signed-bad)))
;; Check if the installed package status is updated.
(let ((buf (package-list-packages)))
(package-menu-refresh)

View file

@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or
;; modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
;; published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the
;; License, or (at your option) any later version.
;;
;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
;; General Public License for more details.
;;
;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with this program. If not, see `http://www.gnu.org/licenses/'.
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary: