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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/lisp/international/mule.el


From: Dave Love
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/lisp/international/mule.el
Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2001 07:38:39 -0500

Index: emacs/lisp/international/mule.el
diff -u emacs/lisp/international/mule.el:1.135 
emacs/lisp/international/mule.el:1.136
--- emacs/lisp/international/mule.el:1.135      Thu Nov  8 06:33:31 2001
+++ emacs/lisp/international/mule.el    Thu Nov 29 07:38:39 2001
@@ -269,7 +269,11 @@
 them and you don't supply CODE1, return the character of the smallest
 code in CHARSET.
 
-If CODE1 or CODE2 are invalid (out of range), this function signals an error."
+If CODE1 or CODE2 are invalid (out of range), this function signals an
+error.  However, the eighth bit of both CODE1 and CODE2 is zeroed
+before they are used to index CHARSET.  Thus you may use, say, the
+actual ISO 8859 character code rather than subtracting 128, as you
+would need to index the corresponding Emacs charset."
   (make-char-internal (charset-id charset) code1 code2))
 
 (put 'make-char 'byte-compile
@@ -536,21 +540,77 @@
          (setq tail (cdr tail)))))
     codings))
 
+(defun map-charset-chars (func charset)
+  "Use FUNC to map over all characters in CHARSET for side effects.
+FUNC is a function of two args, the start and end (inclusive) of a
+character code range.  Thus FUNC should iterate over [START, END]."
+  (let* ((dim (charset-dimension charset))
+        (chars (charset-chars charset))
+        (start (if (= chars 94)
+                   33
+                 32)))
+    (if (= dim 1)
+       (funcall func
+                (make-char charset start)
+                (make-char charset (+ start chars -1)))
+      (dotimes (i chars)
+       (funcall func
+                (make-char charset (+ i start) start)
+                (make-char charset (+ i start) (+ start chars -1)))))))
+
 (defun register-char-codings (coding-system safe-chars)
-  (let ((general (char-table-extra-slot char-coding-system-table 0)))
+  "Add entries for CODING-SYSTEM to `char-coding-system-table'.
+If SAFE-CHARS is a char-table, its non-nil entries specify characters
+which CODING-SYSTEM encodes safely.  If SAFE-CHARS is t, register
+CODING-SYSTEM as a general one which can encode all characters."
+  (let ((general (char-table-extra-slot char-coding-system-table 0))
+       ;; Charsets which have some members in the table, but not all
+       ;; of them (i.e. not just a generic character):
+       (partials (char-table-extra-slot char-coding-system-table 1)))
     (if (eq safe-chars t)
        (or (memq coding-system general)
            (set-char-table-extra-slot char-coding-system-table 0
                                       (cons coding-system general)))
       (map-char-table
-       (function
-       (lambda (key val)
-         (if (and (>= key 128) val)
-             (let ((codings (aref char-coding-system-table key)))
-               (or (memq coding-system codings)
-                   (aset char-coding-system-table key
-                         (cons coding-system codings)))))))
-       safe-chars))))
+       (lambda (key val)
+        (if (and (>= key 128) val)
+            (let ((codings (aref char-coding-system-table key))
+                  (charset (char-charset key)))
+              (unless (memq coding-system codings)
+                (if (and (generic-char-p key)
+                         (memq charset partials))
+                    ;; The generic char would clobber individual
+                    ;; entries already in the table.  First save the
+                    ;; separate existing entries for all chars of the
+                    ;; charset (with the generic entry added, if
+                    ;; necessary).
+                    (let (entry existing)
+                      (map-charset-chars
+                       (lambda (start end)
+                         (while (<= start end)
+                           (setq entry (aref char-coding-system-table start))
+                           (when entry
+                             (push (cons
+                                    start
+                                    (if (memq coding-system entry)
+                                        entry
+                                      (cons coding-system entry)))
+                                   existing))
+                           (setq start (1+ start))))
+                       charset)
+                      ;; Update the generic entry.
+                      (aset char-coding-system-table key
+                            (cons coding-system codings))
+                      ;; Override with the saved entries.
+                      (dolist (elt existing)
+                        (aset char-coding-system-table (car elt) (cdr elt))))
+                  (aset char-coding-system-table key
+                        (cons coding-system codings))
+                  (unless (or (memq charset partials)
+                              (generic-char-p key))
+                    (push charset partials)))))))
+       safe-chars)
+      (set-char-table-extra-slot char-coding-system-table 1 partials))))
 
 
 (defun make-subsidiary-coding-system (coding-system)
@@ -770,7 +830,7 @@
   The value is a list to indicate valid byte ranges of the encoded
   file.  Each element of the list is an integer or a cons of integer.
   In the former case, the integer value is a valid byte code.  In the
-  latter case, the integers specifies the range of valid byte codes.
+  latter case, the integers specify the range of valid byte codes.
 
 These properties are set in PLIST, a property list.  This function
 also sets properties `coding-category' and `alias-coding-systems'
@@ -1330,8 +1390,8 @@
          (if (and pos
                   (= (char-after head-start) ?#)
                   (= (char-after (1+ head-start)) ?!))
-            ;; If the file begins with "#!" (exec interpreter magic),
-         ;; look for coding frobs in the first two lines.  You cannot
+             ;; If the file begins with "#!" (exec interpreter magic),
+             ;; look for coding frobs in the first two lines.  You cannot
              ;; necessarily put them in the first line of such a file
              ;; without screwing up the interpreter invocation.
              (setq pos (search-forward "\n" head-end t)))



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