mirror of
https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/emacs.git
synced 2024-11-23 07:19:15 +00:00
3008 lines
116 KiB
EmacsLisp
3008 lines
116 KiB
EmacsLisp
;;; cc-langs.el --- language specific settings for CC Mode
|
||
|
||
;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
|
||
;; 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
|
||
;; Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
||
|
||
;; Authors: 2002- Alan Mackenzie
|
||
;; 1998- Martin Stjernholm
|
||
;; 1992-1999 Barry A. Warsaw
|
||
;; 1987 Dave Detlefs and Stewart Clamen
|
||
;; 1985 Richard M. Stallman
|
||
;; Maintainer: bug-cc-mode@gnu.org
|
||
;; Created: 22-Apr-1997 (split from cc-mode.el)
|
||
;; Version: See cc-mode.el
|
||
;; Keywords: c languages oop
|
||
|
||
;; 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, 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; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
|
||
;; the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
|
||
;; Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
|
||
|
||
;;; Commentary:
|
||
|
||
;; HACKERS NOTE: There's heavy macro magic here. If you need to make
|
||
;; changes in this or other files containing `c-lang-defconst' but
|
||
;; don't want to read through the longer discussion below then read
|
||
;; this:
|
||
;;
|
||
;; o A change in a `c-lang-defconst' or `c-lang-defvar' will not take
|
||
;; effect if the file containing the mode init function (typically
|
||
;; cc-mode.el) is byte compiled.
|
||
;; o To make changes show in font locking you need to reevaluate the
|
||
;; `*-font-lock-keywords-*' constants, which normally is easiest to
|
||
;; do with M-x eval-buffer in cc-fonts.el.
|
||
;; o In either case it's necessary to reinitialize the mode to make
|
||
;; the changes show in an existing buffer.
|
||
|
||
;;; Introduction to the language dependent variable system:
|
||
;;
|
||
;; This file contains all the language dependent variables, except
|
||
;; those specific for font locking which reside in cc-fonts.el. As
|
||
;; far as possible, all the differences between the languages that CC
|
||
;; Mode supports are described with these variables only, so that the
|
||
;; code can be shared.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; The language constant system (see cc-defs.el) is used to specify
|
||
;; various language dependent info at a high level, such as lists of
|
||
;; keywords, and then from them generate - at compile time - the
|
||
;; various regexps and other low-level structures actually employed in
|
||
;; the code at runtime.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; This system is also designed to make it easy for developers of
|
||
;; derived modes to customize the source constants for new language
|
||
;; variants, without having to keep up with the exact regexps etc that
|
||
;; are used in each CC Mode version. It's possible from an external
|
||
;; package to add a new language by inheriting an existing one, and
|
||
;; then change specific constants as necessary for the new language.
|
||
;; The old values for those constants (and the values of all the other
|
||
;; high-level constants) may be used to build the new ones, and those
|
||
;; new values will in turn be used by the low-level definitions here
|
||
;; to build the runtime constants appropriately for the new language
|
||
;; in the current version of CC Mode.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; Like elsewhere in CC Mode, the existence of a doc string signifies
|
||
;; that a language constant is part of the external API, and that it
|
||
;; therefore can be used with a high confidence that it will continue
|
||
;; to work with future versions of CC Mode. Even so, it's not
|
||
;; unlikely that such constants will change meaning slightly as this
|
||
;; system is refined further; a certain degree of dependence on the CC
|
||
;; Mode version is unavoidable when hooking in at this level. Also
|
||
;; note that there's still work to be done to actually use these
|
||
;; constants everywhere inside CC Mode; there are still hardcoded
|
||
;; values in many places in the code.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; Separate packages will also benefit from the compile time
|
||
;; evaluation; the byte compiled file(s) for them will contain the
|
||
;; compiled runtime constants ready for use by (the byte compiled) CC
|
||
;; Mode, and the source definitions in this file don't have to be
|
||
;; loaded then. However, if a byte compiled package is loaded that
|
||
;; has been compiled with a different version of CC Mode than the one
|
||
;; currently loaded, then the compiled-in values will be discarded and
|
||
;; new ones will be built when the mode is initialized. That will
|
||
;; automatically trig a load of the file(s) containing the source
|
||
;; definitions (i.e. this file and/or cc-fonts.el) if necessary.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; A small example of a derived mode is available at
|
||
;; <http://cc-mode.sourceforge.net/derived-mode-ex.el>. It also
|
||
;; contains some useful hints for derived mode developers.
|
||
|
||
;;; Using language variables:
|
||
;;
|
||
;; The `c-lang-defvar' forms in this file comprise the language
|
||
;; variables that CC Mode uses. It does not work to use
|
||
;; `c-lang-defvar' anywhere else (which isn't much of a limitation
|
||
;; since these variables sole purpose is to interface with the CC Mode
|
||
;; core functions). The values in these `c-lang-defvar's are not
|
||
;; evaluated right away but instead collected to a single large `setq'
|
||
;; that can be inserted for a particular language with the
|
||
;; `c-init-language-vars' macro.
|
||
|
||
;; This file is only required at compile time, or when not running
|
||
;; from byte compiled files, or when the source definitions for the
|
||
;; language constants are requested.
|
||
|
||
;;; Code:
|
||
|
||
(eval-when-compile
|
||
(let ((load-path
|
||
(if (and (boundp 'byte-compile-dest-file)
|
||
(stringp byte-compile-dest-file))
|
||
(cons (file-name-directory byte-compile-dest-file) load-path)
|
||
load-path)))
|
||
(load "cc-bytecomp" nil t)))
|
||
|
||
(cc-require 'cc-defs)
|
||
(cc-require 'cc-vars)
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; This file is not always loaded. See note above.
|
||
(cc-external-require 'cl)
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Setup for the `c-lang-defvar' system.
|
||
|
||
(eval-and-compile
|
||
;; These are used to collect the init forms from the subsequent
|
||
;; `c-lang-defvar' and `c-lang-setvar'. They are used to build the
|
||
;; lambda in `c-make-init-lang-vars-fun' below, and to build `defvar's
|
||
;; and `make-variable-buffer-local's in cc-engine and
|
||
;; `make-local-variable's in `c-init-language-vars-for'.
|
||
(defvar c-lang-variable-inits nil)
|
||
(defvar c-lang-variable-inits-tail nil)
|
||
(setq c-lang-variable-inits (list nil)
|
||
c-lang-variable-inits-tail c-lang-variable-inits)
|
||
(defvar c-emacs-variable-inits nil)
|
||
(defvar c-emacs-variable-inits-tail nil)
|
||
(setq c-emacs-variable-inits (list nil)
|
||
c-emacs-variable-inits-tail c-emacs-variable-inits))
|
||
|
||
(defmacro c-lang-defvar (var val &optional doc)
|
||
"Declares the buffer local variable VAR to get the value VAL. VAL is
|
||
evaluated and assigned at mode initialization. More precisely, VAL is
|
||
evaluated and bound to VAR when the result from the macro
|
||
`c-init-language-vars' is evaluated.
|
||
|
||
`c-lang-const' is typically used in VAL to get the right value for the
|
||
language being initialized, and such calls will be macro expanded to
|
||
the evaluated constant value at compile time."
|
||
|
||
(when (and (not doc)
|
||
(eq (car-safe val) 'c-lang-const)
|
||
(eq (nth 1 val) var)
|
||
(not (nth 2 val)))
|
||
;; Special case: If there's no docstring and the value is a
|
||
;; simple (c-lang-const foo) where foo is the same name as VAR
|
||
;; then take the docstring from the language constant foo.
|
||
(setq doc (get (intern (symbol-name (nth 1 val)) c-lang-constants)
|
||
'variable-documentation)))
|
||
(or (stringp doc)
|
||
(setq doc nil))
|
||
|
||
(let ((elem (assq var (cdr c-lang-variable-inits))))
|
||
(if elem
|
||
(setcdr elem (list val doc))
|
||
(setcdr c-lang-variable-inits-tail (list (list var val doc)))
|
||
(setq c-lang-variable-inits-tail (cdr c-lang-variable-inits-tail))))
|
||
|
||
;; Return the symbol, like the other def* forms.
|
||
`',var)
|
||
|
||
(defmacro c-lang-setvar (var val)
|
||
"Causes the variable VAR to be made buffer local and to get set to the
|
||
value VAL. VAL is evaluated and assigned at mode initialization. More
|
||
precisely, VAL is evaluated and bound to VAR when the result from the
|
||
macro `c-init-language-vars' is evaluated. VAR is typically a standard
|
||
Emacs variable like `comment-start'.
|
||
|
||
`c-lang-const' is typically used in VAL to get the right value for the
|
||
language being initialized, and such calls will be macro expanded to
|
||
the evaluated constant value at compile time."
|
||
(let ((elem (assq var (cdr c-emacs-variable-inits))))
|
||
(if elem
|
||
(setcdr elem (list val)) ; Maybe remove "list", sometime. 2006-07-19
|
||
(setcdr c-emacs-variable-inits-tail (list (list var val)))
|
||
(setq c-emacs-variable-inits-tail (cdr c-emacs-variable-inits-tail))))
|
||
|
||
;; Return the symbol, like the other def* forms.
|
||
`',var)
|
||
|
||
(put 'c-lang-defvar 'lisp-indent-function 'defun)
|
||
; (eval-after-load "edebug" ; 2006-07-09: def-edebug-spec is now in subr.el.
|
||
; '
|
||
(def-edebug-spec c-lang-defvar
|
||
(&define name def-form &optional stringp)) ;)
|
||
|
||
(eval-and-compile
|
||
;; Some helper functions used when building the language constants.
|
||
|
||
(defun c-filter-ops (ops opgroup-filter op-filter &optional xlate)
|
||
;; Extract a subset of the operators in the list OPS in a DWIM:ey
|
||
;; way. The return value is a plain list of operators:
|
||
;;
|
||
;; OPS either has the structure of `c-operators', is a single
|
||
;; group in `c-operators', or is a plain list of operators.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; OPGROUP-FILTER specifies how to select the operator groups. It
|
||
;; can be t to choose all groups, a list of group type symbols
|
||
;; (such as 'prefix) to accept, or a function which will be called
|
||
;; with the group symbol for each group and should return non-nil
|
||
;; if that group is to be included.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; If XLATE is given, it's a function which is called for each
|
||
;; matching operator and its return value is collected instead.
|
||
;; If it returns a list, the elements are spliced directly into
|
||
;; the final result, which is returned as a list with duplicates
|
||
;; removed using `equal'.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; `c-mode-syntax-table' for the current mode is in effect during
|
||
;; the whole procedure.
|
||
(unless (listp (car-safe ops))
|
||
(setq ops (list ops)))
|
||
(cond ((eq opgroup-filter t)
|
||
(setq opgroup-filter (lambda (opgroup) t)))
|
||
((not (functionp opgroup-filter))
|
||
(setq opgroup-filter `(lambda (opgroup)
|
||
(memq opgroup ',opgroup-filter)))))
|
||
(cond ((eq op-filter t)
|
||
(setq op-filter (lambda (op) t)))
|
||
((stringp op-filter)
|
||
(setq op-filter `(lambda (op)
|
||
(string-match ,op-filter op)))))
|
||
(unless xlate
|
||
(setq xlate 'identity))
|
||
(c-with-syntax-table (c-lang-const c-mode-syntax-table)
|
||
(delete-duplicates
|
||
(mapcan (lambda (opgroup)
|
||
(when (if (symbolp (car opgroup))
|
||
(when (funcall opgroup-filter (car opgroup))
|
||
(setq opgroup (cdr opgroup))
|
||
t)
|
||
t)
|
||
(mapcan (lambda (op)
|
||
(when (funcall op-filter op)
|
||
(let ((res (funcall xlate op)))
|
||
(if (listp res) res (list res)))))
|
||
opgroup)))
|
||
ops)
|
||
:test 'equal))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Various mode specific values that aren't language related.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-mode-menu
|
||
;; The definition for the mode menu. The menu title is prepended to
|
||
;; this before it's fed to `easy-menu-define'.
|
||
t `(["Comment Out Region" comment-region
|
||
(c-fn-region-is-active-p)]
|
||
["Uncomment Region" (comment-region (region-beginning)
|
||
(region-end) '(4))
|
||
(c-fn-region-is-active-p)]
|
||
["Indent Expression" c-indent-exp
|
||
(memq (char-after) '(?\( ?\[ ?\{))]
|
||
["Indent Line or Region" c-indent-line-or-region t]
|
||
["Fill Comment Paragraph" c-fill-paragraph t]
|
||
"----"
|
||
["Backward Statement" c-beginning-of-statement t]
|
||
["Forward Statement" c-end-of-statement t]
|
||
,@(when (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
;; Only applicable if there's a cpp preprocessor.
|
||
`(["Up Conditional" c-up-conditional t]
|
||
["Backward Conditional" c-backward-conditional t]
|
||
["Forward Conditional" c-forward-conditional t]
|
||
"----"
|
||
["Macro Expand Region" c-macro-expand
|
||
(c-fn-region-is-active-p)]
|
||
["Backslashify" c-backslash-region
|
||
(c-fn-region-is-active-p)]))
|
||
"----"
|
||
("Toggle..."
|
||
["Syntactic indentation" c-toggle-syntactic-indentation
|
||
:style toggle :selected c-syntactic-indentation]
|
||
["Electric mode" c-toggle-electric-state
|
||
:style toggle :selected c-electric-flag]
|
||
["Auto newline" c-toggle-auto-newline
|
||
:style toggle :selected c-auto-newline]
|
||
["Hungry delete" c-toggle-hungry-state
|
||
:style toggle :selected c-hungry-delete-key]
|
||
["Subword mode" c-subword-mode
|
||
:style toggle :selected (and (boundp 'c-subword-mode)
|
||
c-subword-mode)])))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Syntax tables.
|
||
|
||
(defun c-populate-syntax-table (table)
|
||
"Populate the given syntax table as necessary for a C-like language.
|
||
This includes setting ' and \" as string delimiters, and setting up
|
||
the comment syntax to handle both line style \"//\" and block style
|
||
\"/*\" \"*/\" comments."
|
||
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?_ "_" table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?\\ "\\" table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?+ "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?- "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?= "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?% "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?< "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?> "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?& "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?| "." table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?\' "\"" table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?\240 "." table)
|
||
|
||
;; Set up block and line oriented comments. The new C
|
||
;; standard mandates both comment styles even in C, so since
|
||
;; all languages now require dual comments, we make this the
|
||
;; default.
|
||
(cond
|
||
;; XEmacs
|
||
((memq '8-bit c-emacs-features)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?/ ". 1456" table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?* ". 23" table))
|
||
;; Emacs
|
||
((memq '1-bit c-emacs-features)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?/ ". 124b" table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?* ". 23" table))
|
||
;; incompatible
|
||
(t (error "CC Mode is incompatible with this version of Emacs")))
|
||
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?\n "> b" table)
|
||
;; Give CR the same syntax as newline, for selective-display
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?\^m "> b" table))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-make-mode-syntax-table
|
||
"Functions that generates the mode specific syntax tables.
|
||
The syntax tables aren't stored directly since they're quite large."
|
||
t `(lambda ()
|
||
(let ((table (make-syntax-table)))
|
||
(c-populate-syntax-table table)
|
||
;; Mode specific syntaxes.
|
||
,(cond ((c-major-mode-is 'objc-mode)
|
||
;; Let '@' be part of symbols in ObjC to cope with
|
||
;; its compiler directives as single keyword tokens.
|
||
;; This is then necessary since it's assumed that
|
||
;; every keyword is a single symbol.
|
||
`(modify-syntax-entry ?@ "_" table))
|
||
((c-major-mode-is 'pike-mode)
|
||
`(modify-syntax-entry ?@ "." table)))
|
||
table)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-mode-syntax-table
|
||
;; The syntax tables in evaluated form. Only used temporarily when
|
||
;; the constants in this file are evaluated.
|
||
t (funcall (c-lang-const c-make-mode-syntax-table)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c++-make-template-syntax-table
|
||
;; A variant of `c++-mode-syntax-table' that defines `<' and `>' as
|
||
;; parenthesis characters. Used temporarily when template argument
|
||
;; lists are parsed. Note that this encourages incorrect parsing of
|
||
;; templates since they might contain normal operators that uses the
|
||
;; '<' and '>' characters. Therefore this syntax table might go
|
||
;; away when CC Mode handles templates correctly everywhere.
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ `(lambda ()
|
||
(let ((table (funcall ,(c-lang-const c-make-mode-syntax-table))))
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?< "(>" table)
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry ?> ")<" table)
|
||
table)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c++-template-syntax-table
|
||
(and (c-lang-const c++-make-template-syntax-table)
|
||
(funcall (c-lang-const c++-make-template-syntax-table))))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-identifier-syntax-modifications
|
||
"A list that describes the modifications that should be done to the
|
||
mode syntax table to get a syntax table that matches all identifiers
|
||
and keywords as words.
|
||
|
||
The list is just like the one used in `font-lock-defaults': Each
|
||
element is a cons where the car is the character to modify and the cdr
|
||
the new syntax, as accepted by `modify-syntax-entry'."
|
||
;; The $ character is not allowed in most languages (one exception
|
||
;; is Java which allows it for legacy reasons) but we still classify
|
||
;; it as an indentifier character since it's often used in various
|
||
;; machine generated identifiers.
|
||
t '((?_ . "w") (?$ . "w"))
|
||
objc (append '((?@ . "w"))
|
||
(c-lang-const c-identifier-syntax-modifications))
|
||
awk '((?_ . "w")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-identifier-syntax-modifications
|
||
(c-lang-const c-identifier-syntax-modifications))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-identifier-syntax-table
|
||
(let ((table (copy-syntax-table (c-mode-var "mode-syntax-table")))
|
||
(mods c-identifier-syntax-modifications)
|
||
mod)
|
||
(while mods
|
||
(setq mod (car mods)
|
||
mods (cdr mods))
|
||
(modify-syntax-entry (car mod) (cdr mod) table))
|
||
table)
|
||
"Syntax table built on the mode syntax table but additionally
|
||
classifies symbol constituents like '_' and '$' as word constituents,
|
||
so that all identifiers are recognized as words.")
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Lexer-level syntax (identifiers, tokens etc).
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-symbol-start
|
||
"Regexp that matches the start of a symbol, i.e. any identifier or
|
||
keyword. It's unspecified how far it matches. Does not contain a \\|
|
||
operator at the top level."
|
||
t (concat "[" c-alpha "_]")
|
||
objc (concat "[" c-alpha "@]")
|
||
pike (concat "[" c-alpha "_`]"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-symbol-start (c-lang-const c-symbol-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-symbol-chars
|
||
"Set of characters that can be part of a symbol.
|
||
This is on the form that fits inside [ ] in a regexp."
|
||
;; Pike note: With the backquote identifiers this would include most
|
||
;; operator chars too, but they are handled with other means instead.
|
||
t (concat c-alnum "_$")
|
||
objc (concat c-alnum "_$@"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-symbol-key
|
||
"Regexp matching identifiers and keywords (with submatch 0). Assumed
|
||
to match if `c-symbol-start' matches on the same position."
|
||
t (concat (c-lang-const c-symbol-start)
|
||
"[" (c-lang-const c-symbol-chars) "]*")
|
||
pike (concat
|
||
;; Use the value from C here since the operator backquote is
|
||
;; covered by the other alternative.
|
||
(c-lang-const c-symbol-key c)
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(c-lang-const c-overloadable-operators))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-symbol-key (c-lang-const c-symbol-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-symbol-key-depth
|
||
;; Number of regexp grouping parens in `c-symbol-key'.
|
||
t (regexp-opt-depth (c-lang-const c-symbol-key)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonsymbol-chars
|
||
"This is the set of chars that can't be part of a symbol, i.e. the
|
||
negation of `c-symbol-chars'."
|
||
t (concat "^" (c-lang-const c-symbol-chars)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-nonsymbol-chars (c-lang-const c-nonsymbol-chars))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonsymbol-key
|
||
"Regexp that matches any character that can't be part of a symbol.
|
||
It's usually appended to other regexps to avoid matching a prefix.
|
||
It's assumed to not contain any submatchers."
|
||
;; The same thing regarding Unicode identifiers applies here as to
|
||
;; `c-symbol-key'.
|
||
t (concat "[" (c-lang-const c-nonsymbol-chars) "]"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-identifier-ops
|
||
"The operators that make up fully qualified identifiers. nil in
|
||
languages that don't have such things. See `c-operators' for a
|
||
description of the format. Binary operators can concatenate symbols,
|
||
e.g. \"::\" in \"A::B::C\". Prefix operators can precede identifiers,
|
||
e.g. \"~\" in \"~A::B\". Other types of operators aren't supported.
|
||
|
||
This value is by default merged into `c-operators'."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '((prefix "~" "??-" "compl")
|
||
(right-assoc "::")
|
||
(prefix "::"))
|
||
;; Java has "." to concatenate identifiers but it's also used for
|
||
;; normal indexing. There's special code in the Java font lock
|
||
;; rules to fontify qualified identifiers based on the standard
|
||
;; naming conventions. We still define "." here to make
|
||
;; `c-forward-name' move over as long names as possible which is
|
||
;; necessary to e.g. handle throws clauses correctly.
|
||
java '((left-assoc "."))
|
||
idl '((left-assoc "::")
|
||
(prefix "::"))
|
||
pike '((left-assoc "::")
|
||
(prefix "::")
|
||
(left-assoc ".")))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-identifier-concat-key
|
||
;; Appendable adorned regexp matching the operators that join
|
||
;; symbols to fully qualified identifiers, or nil in languages that
|
||
;; don't have such things.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; This was a docstring constant in 5.30. It still works but is now
|
||
;; considered internal - change `c-identifier-ops' instead.
|
||
t (let ((ops (c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-identifier-ops)
|
||
'(left-assoc right-assoc)
|
||
t)))
|
||
(when ops
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re 'appendable ops))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-identifier-concat-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-concat-key)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-identifier-concat-key-depth
|
||
;; Number of regexp grouping parens in `c-opt-identifier-concat-key'.
|
||
t (regexp-opt-depth (c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-concat-key)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-identifier-prefix-key
|
||
;; Appendable adorned regexp matching operators that might precede
|
||
;; an identifier and that are part of the identifier in that case.
|
||
;; nil in languages without such things.
|
||
t (let ((ops (c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-identifier-ops)
|
||
'(prefix)
|
||
t)))
|
||
(when ops
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re 'appendable ops))))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-after-id-concat-ops
|
||
"Operators that can occur after a binary operator on `c-identifier-ops'
|
||
in identifiers. nil in languages that don't have such things.
|
||
|
||
Operators here should also have appropriate entries in `c-operators' -
|
||
it's not taken care of by default."
|
||
t nil
|
||
;; '~' for destructors in C++, '*' for member pointers.
|
||
c++ '("~" "*")
|
||
;; In Java we recognize '*' to deal with "foo.bar.*" that can occur
|
||
;; in import declarations. (This will also match bogus things like
|
||
;; "foo.*bar" but we don't bother.)
|
||
java '("*"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-after-id-concat-key
|
||
;; Regexp that must match the token after
|
||
;; `c-opt-identifier-concat-key' for it to be considered an
|
||
;; identifier concatenation operator (which e.g. causes the
|
||
;; preceding identifier to be fontified as a reference). Assumed to
|
||
;; be a string if `c-opt-identifier-concat-key' is.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; This was a docstring constant in 5.30. It still works but is now
|
||
;; considered internal - change `c-after-id-concat-ops' instead.
|
||
t (concat (c-lang-const c-symbol-start)
|
||
(if (c-lang-const c-after-id-concat-ops)
|
||
(concat "\\|" (c-make-keywords-re 'appendable
|
||
(c-lang-const c-after-id-concat-ops)))
|
||
"")))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-identifier-start
|
||
"Regexp that matches the start of an (optionally qualified) identifier.
|
||
It should also match all keywords. It's unspecified how far it
|
||
matches."
|
||
t (concat (c-lang-const c-symbol-start)
|
||
(if (c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-prefix-key)
|
||
(concat "\\|"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-prefix-key))
|
||
"")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-identifier-start (c-lang-const c-identifier-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-identifier-key
|
||
"Regexp matching a fully qualified identifier, like \"A::B::c\" in
|
||
C++. It does not recognize the full range of syntactic whitespace
|
||
between the tokens; `c-forward-name' has to be used for that. It
|
||
should also not match identifiers containing parenthesis groupings,
|
||
e.g. identifiers with template arguments such as \"A<X,Y>\" in C++."
|
||
;; This regexp is more complex than strictly necessary to ensure
|
||
;; that it can be matched with a minimum of backtracking.
|
||
t (concat (if (c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-prefix-key)
|
||
(concat
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-prefix-key)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"\\)?")
|
||
"")
|
||
"\\(" (c-lang-const c-symbol-key) "\\)"
|
||
(if (c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-concat-key)
|
||
(concat
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-identifier-concat-key)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
(if (c-lang-const c-after-id-concat-ops)
|
||
(concat
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re 'appendable
|
||
(c-lang-const c-after-id-concat-ops))
|
||
(concat
|
||
;; For flexibility, consider the symbol match
|
||
;; optional if we've hit a
|
||
;; `c-after-id-concat-ops' operator. This is
|
||
;; also necessary to handle the "*" that can
|
||
;; end import declaration identifiers in Java.
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"\\(" (c-lang-const c-symbol-key) "\\)"
|
||
"\\)?")
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
"\\(" (c-lang-const c-symbol-key) "\\)"
|
||
"\\)")
|
||
(concat "\\(" (c-lang-const c-symbol-key) "\\)"))
|
||
"\\)*")
|
||
"")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-identifier-key (c-lang-const c-identifier-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-identifier-last-sym-match
|
||
;; This was a docstring constant in 5.30 but it's no longer used.
|
||
;; It's only kept to avoid breaking third party code.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; Used to identify the submatch in `c-identifier-key' that
|
||
;; surrounds the last symbol in the qualified identifier. It's a
|
||
;; list of submatch numbers, of which the first that has a match is
|
||
;; taken. It's assumed that at least one does when the regexp has
|
||
;; matched.
|
||
t nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-string-escaped-newlines
|
||
"Set if the language support backslash escaped newlines inside string
|
||
literals."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++ objc pike) t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-string-escaped-newlines
|
||
(c-lang-const c-string-escaped-newlines))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-multiline-string-start-char
|
||
"Set if the language supports multiline string literals without escaped
|
||
newlines. If t, all string literals are multiline. If a character,
|
||
only literals where the open quote is immediately preceded by that
|
||
literal are multiline."
|
||
t nil
|
||
pike ?#)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-multiline-string-start-char
|
||
(c-lang-const c-multiline-string-start-char))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-cpp-prefix
|
||
"Regexp matching the prefix of a cpp directive in the languages that
|
||
normally use that macro preprocessor. Tested at bol or at boi.
|
||
Assumed to not contain any submatches or \\| operators."
|
||
;; TODO (ACM, 2005-04-01). Amend the following to recognise escaped NLs;
|
||
;; amend all uses of c-opt-cpp-prefix which count regexp-depth.
|
||
t "\\s *#\\s *"
|
||
(java awk) nil)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-cpp-prefix (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-cpp-start
|
||
"Regexp matching the prefix of a cpp directive including the directive
|
||
name, or nil in languages without preprocessor support. The first
|
||
submatch surrounds the directive name."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
(concat (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
"\\([" c-alnum "]+\\)"))
|
||
;; Pike, being a scripting language, recognizes hash-bangs too.
|
||
pike (concat (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
"\\([" c-alnum "]+\\|!\\)"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-cpp-start (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-cpp-message-directives
|
||
"List of cpp directives (without the prefix) that are followed by a
|
||
string message."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
'("error"))
|
||
pike '("error" "warning"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-cpp-include-directives
|
||
"List of cpp directives (without the prefix) that are followed by a
|
||
file name in angle brackets or quotes."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
'("include"))
|
||
objc '("include" "import"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-cpp-macro-define
|
||
"Cpp directive (without the prefix) that is followed by a macro
|
||
definition, or nil if the language doesn't have any."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
"define"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-cpp-macro-define-start
|
||
;; Regexp matching everything up to the macro body of a cpp define,
|
||
;; or the end of the logical line if there is none. Set if
|
||
;; c-opt-cpp-macro-define is.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-macro-define)
|
||
(concat (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-macro-define)
|
||
"[ \t]+\\(\\sw\\|_\\)+\\(\([^\)]*\)\\)?"
|
||
"\\([ \t]\\|\\\\\n\\)*")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-cpp-macro-define-start
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-macro-define-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-cpp-macro-define-id
|
||
;; Regexp matching everything up to the end of the identifier defined
|
||
;; by a cpp define.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-macro-define)
|
||
(concat (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix) ; #
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-macro-define) ; define
|
||
"[ \t]+\\(\\sw\\|_\\)+")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-cpp-macro-define-id
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-macro-define-id))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-cpp-expr-directives
|
||
"List if cpp directives (without the prefix) that are followed by an
|
||
expression."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
'("if" "elif")))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-cpp-expr-functions
|
||
"List of functions in cpp expressions."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
'("defined"))
|
||
pike '("defined" "efun" "constant"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-assignment-operators
|
||
"List of all assignment operators."
|
||
t '("=" "*=" "/=" "%=" "+=" "-=" ">>=" "<<=" "&=" "^=" "|=")
|
||
java (append (c-lang-const c-assignment-operators)
|
||
'(">>>="))
|
||
c++ (append (c-lang-const c-assignment-operators)
|
||
'("and_eq" "or_eq" "xor_eq" "??!=" "??'="))
|
||
idl nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-operators
|
||
"List describing all operators, along with their precedence and
|
||
associativity. The order in the list corresponds to the precedence of
|
||
the operators: The operators in each element are a group with the same
|
||
precedence, and the group has higher precedence than the groups in all
|
||
following elements. The car of each element describes the type of the
|
||
operator group, and the cdr is a list of the operator tokens in it.
|
||
The operator group types are:
|
||
|
||
'prefix Unary prefix operators.
|
||
'postfix Unary postfix operators.
|
||
'postfix-if-paren
|
||
Unary postfix operators if and only if the chars have
|
||
parenthesis syntax.
|
||
'left-assoc Binary left associative operators (i.e. a+b+c means (a+b)+c).
|
||
'right-assoc Binary right associative operators (i.e. a=b=c means a=(b=c)).
|
||
'right-assoc-sequence
|
||
Right associative operator that constitutes of a
|
||
sequence of tokens that separate expressions. All the
|
||
tokens in the group are in this case taken as
|
||
describing the sequence in one such operator, and the
|
||
order between them is therefore significant.
|
||
|
||
Operators containing a character with paren syntax are taken to match
|
||
with a corresponding open/close paren somewhere else. A postfix
|
||
operator with close paren syntax is taken to end a postfix expression
|
||
started somewhere earlier, rather than start a new one at point. Vice
|
||
versa for prefix operators with open paren syntax.
|
||
|
||
Note that operators like \".\" and \"->\" which in language references
|
||
often are described as postfix operators are considered binary here,
|
||
since CC Mode treats every identifier as an expression."
|
||
|
||
;; There's currently no code in CC Mode that exploit all the info
|
||
;; in this variable; precedence, associativity etc are present as a
|
||
;; preparation for future work.
|
||
|
||
t `(;; Preprocessor.
|
||
,@(when (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
`((prefix "#"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("%:" "??=")))
|
||
(left-assoc "##"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("%:%:" "??=??=")))))
|
||
|
||
;; Primary.
|
||
,@(c-lang-const c-identifier-ops)
|
||
,@(cond ((c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode)
|
||
`((postfix-if-paren "<" ">"))) ; Templates.
|
||
((c-major-mode-is 'pike-mode)
|
||
`((prefix "global" "predef")))
|
||
((c-major-mode-is 'java-mode)
|
||
`((prefix "super"))))
|
||
|
||
;; Postfix.
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode)
|
||
;; The following need special treatment.
|
||
`((prefix "dynamic_cast" "static_cast"
|
||
"reinterpret_cast" "const_cast" "typeid")))
|
||
(left-assoc "."
|
||
,@(unless (c-major-mode-is 'java-mode)
|
||
'("->")))
|
||
(postfix "++" "--" "[" "]" "(" ")"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("<:" ":>" "??(" "??)")))
|
||
|
||
;; Unary.
|
||
(prefix "++" "--" "+" "-" "!" "~"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("not" "compl"))
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("*" "&" "sizeof" "??-"))
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'objc-mode)
|
||
'("@selector" "@protocol" "@encode"))
|
||
;; The following need special treatment.
|
||
,@(cond ((c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode)
|
||
'("new" "delete"))
|
||
((c-major-mode-is 'java-mode)
|
||
'("new"))
|
||
((c-major-mode-is 'pike-mode)
|
||
'("class" "lambda" "catch" "throw" "gauge")))
|
||
"(" ")" ; Cast.
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'pike-mode)
|
||
'("[" "]"))) ; Type cast.
|
||
|
||
;; Member selection.
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode)
|
||
`((left-assoc ".*" "->*")))
|
||
|
||
;; Multiplicative.
|
||
(left-assoc "*" "/" "%")
|
||
|
||
;; Additive.
|
||
(left-assoc "+" "-")
|
||
|
||
;; Shift.
|
||
(left-assoc "<<" ">>"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'java-mode)
|
||
'(">>>")))
|
||
|
||
;; Relational.
|
||
(left-assoc "<" ">" "<=" ">="
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'java-mode)
|
||
'("instanceof")))
|
||
|
||
;; Equality.
|
||
(left-assoc "==" "!="
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("not_eq")))
|
||
|
||
;; Bitwise and.
|
||
(left-assoc "&"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("bitand")))
|
||
|
||
;; Bitwise exclusive or.
|
||
(left-assoc "^"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("??'"))
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("xor")))
|
||
|
||
;; Bitwise or.
|
||
(left-assoc "|"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("??!"))
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("bitor")))
|
||
|
||
;; Logical and.
|
||
(left-assoc "&&"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("and")))
|
||
|
||
;; Logical or.
|
||
(left-assoc "||"
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is '(c-mode c++-mode))
|
||
'("??!??!"))
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode) '("or")))
|
||
|
||
;; Conditional.
|
||
(right-assoc-sequence "?" ":")
|
||
|
||
;; Assignment.
|
||
(right-assoc ,@(c-lang-const c-assignment-operators))
|
||
|
||
;; Exception.
|
||
,@(when (c-major-mode-is 'c++-mode)
|
||
'((prefix "throw")))
|
||
|
||
;; Sequence.
|
||
(left-assoc ","))
|
||
|
||
;; IDL got its own definition since it has a much smaller operator
|
||
;; set than the other languages.
|
||
idl `(;; Preprocessor.
|
||
(prefix "#")
|
||
(left-assoc "##")
|
||
;; Primary.
|
||
,@(c-lang-const c-identifier-ops)
|
||
;; Unary.
|
||
(prefix "+" "-" "~")
|
||
;; Multiplicative.
|
||
(left-assoc "*" "/" "%")
|
||
;; Additive.
|
||
(left-assoc "+" "-")
|
||
;; Shift.
|
||
(left-assoc "<<" ">>")
|
||
;; And.
|
||
(left-assoc "&")
|
||
;; Xor.
|
||
(left-assoc "^")
|
||
;; Or.
|
||
(left-assoc "|")))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-operator-list
|
||
;; The operators as a flat list (without duplicates).
|
||
t (c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-operators) t t))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-overloadable-operators
|
||
"List of the operators that are overloadable, in their \"identifier
|
||
form\". See also `c-op-identifier-prefix'."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("new" "delete" ;; Can be followed by "[]" but we ignore that.
|
||
"+" "-" "*" "/" "%"
|
||
"^" "??'" "xor" "&" "bitand" "|" "??!" "bitor" "~" "??-" "compl"
|
||
"!" "=" "<" ">" "+=" "-=" "*=" "/=" "%=" "^="
|
||
"??'=" "xor_eq" "&=" "and_eq" "|=" "??!=" "or_eq"
|
||
"<<" ">>" ">>=" "<<=" "==" "!=" "not_eq" "<=" ">="
|
||
"&&" "and" "||" "??!??!" "or" "++" "--" "," "->*" "->"
|
||
"()" "[]" "<::>" "??(??)")
|
||
;; These work like identifiers in Pike.
|
||
pike '("`+" "`-" "`&" "`|" "`^" "`<<" "`>>" "`*" "`/" "`%" "`~"
|
||
"`==" "`<" "`>" "`!" "`[]" "`[]=" "`->" "`->=" "`()" "``+"
|
||
"``-" "``&" "``|" "``^" "``<<" "``>>" "``*" "``/" "``%"
|
||
"`+="))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-overloadable-operators-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp tested after an "operator" token in C++.
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ (c-make-keywords-re nil (c-lang-const c-overloadable-operators)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-overloadable-operators-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-overloadable-operators-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-op-identifier-prefix
|
||
"Regexp matching the token before the ones in
|
||
`c-overloadable-operators' when operators are specified in their
|
||
\"identifier form\". This typically matches \"operator\" in C++ where
|
||
operator functions are specified as e.g. \"operator +\". It's nil in
|
||
languages without operator functions or where the complete operator
|
||
identifier is listed in `c-overloadable-operators'.
|
||
|
||
This regexp is assumed to not match any non-operator identifier."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ (c-make-keywords-re t '("operator")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-op-identifier-prefix
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-op-identifier-prefix))
|
||
|
||
;; Note: the following alias is an old name which was a mis-spelling. It has
|
||
;; been corrected above and throughout cc-engine.el. It will be removed at
|
||
;; some release very shortly in the future. ACM, 2006-04-14.
|
||
(defalias 'c-opt-op-identitier-prefix 'c-opt-op-identifier-prefix)
|
||
(make-obsolete-variable 'c-opt-op-identitier-prefix 'c-opt-op-identifier-prefix
|
||
"CC Mode 5.31.4, 2006-04-14")
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-other-op-syntax-tokens
|
||
"List of the tokens made up of characters in the punctuation or
|
||
parenthesis syntax classes that have uses other than as expression
|
||
operators."
|
||
t '("{" "}" "(" ")" "[" "]" ";" ":" "," "=" "/*" "*/" "//")
|
||
(c c++ pike) (append '("#" "##" ; Used by cpp.
|
||
"::" "...")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens))
|
||
(c c++) (append '("*") (c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens))
|
||
c++ (append '("&" "<%" "%>" "<:" ":>" "%:" "%:%:")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens))
|
||
objc (append '("#" "##" ; Used by cpp.
|
||
"+" "-") (c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens))
|
||
idl (append '("#" "##") ; Used by cpp.
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens))
|
||
pike (append '("..")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-overloadable-operators))
|
||
awk '("{" "}" "(" ")" "[" "]" ";" "," "=" "/"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-all-op-syntax-tokens
|
||
;; List of all tokens in the punctuation and parenthesis syntax
|
||
;; classes.
|
||
t (delete-duplicates (append (c-lang-const c-other-op-syntax-tokens)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-operator-list))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonsymbol-token-char-list
|
||
;; List containing all chars not in the word, symbol or
|
||
;; syntactically irrelevant syntax classes, i.e. all punctuation,
|
||
;; parenthesis and string delimiter chars.
|
||
t (c-with-syntax-table (c-lang-const c-mode-syntax-table)
|
||
;; Only go through the chars in the printable ASCII range. No
|
||
;; language so far has 8-bit or widestring operators.
|
||
(let (list (char 32))
|
||
(while (< char 127)
|
||
(or (memq (char-syntax char) '(?w ?_ ?< ?> ?\ ))
|
||
(setq list (cons (c-int-to-char char) list)))
|
||
(setq char (1+ char)))
|
||
list)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonsymbol-token-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching all tokens in the punctuation and parenthesis
|
||
;; syntax classes. Note that this also matches ".", which can start
|
||
;; a float.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-all-op-syntax-tokens)
|
||
t
|
||
"\\`\\(\\s.\\|\\s\(\\|\\s\)\\)+\\'")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-nonsymbol-token-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-nonsymbol-token-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-assignment-op-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching all assignment operators and only them. The
|
||
;; beginning of the first submatch is used to detect the end of the
|
||
;; token, along with the end of the whole match.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-assignment-operators)
|
||
(concat
|
||
;; Need special case for "=" since it's a prefix of "==".
|
||
"=\\([^=]\\|$\\)"
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(set-difference (c-lang-const c-assignment-operators)
|
||
'("=")
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
"\\<\\>"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-assignment-op-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-assignment-op-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-<>-multichar-token-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching all tokens containing "<" or ">" which are longer
|
||
;; than one char.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-all-op-syntax-tokens)
|
||
t
|
||
".[<>]\\|[<>].")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-<>-multichar-token-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-<>-multichar-token-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-<-op-cont-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching the second and subsequent characters of all
|
||
;; multicharacter tokens that begin with "<".
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-all-op-syntax-tokens)
|
||
t
|
||
"\\`<."
|
||
(lambda (op) (substring op 1)))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-<-op-cont-regexp (c-lang-const c-<-op-cont-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c->-op-cont-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching the second and subsequent characters of all
|
||
;; multicharacter tokens that begin with ">".
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-all-op-syntax-tokens)
|
||
t
|
||
"\\`>."
|
||
(lambda (op) (substring op 1)))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c->-op-cont-regexp (c-lang-const c->-op-cont-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-stmt-delim-chars
|
||
;; The characters that should be considered to bound statements. To
|
||
;; optimize `c-crosses-statement-barrier-p' somewhat, it's assumed to
|
||
;; begin with "^" to negate the set. If ? : operators should be
|
||
;; detected then the string must end with "?:".
|
||
t "^;{}?:"
|
||
awk "^;{}#\n\r?:") ; The newline chars gets special treatment.
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-stmt-delim-chars (c-lang-const c-stmt-delim-chars))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-stmt-delim-chars-with-comma
|
||
;; Variant of `c-stmt-delim-chars' that additionally contains ','.
|
||
t "^;,{}?:"
|
||
awk "^;,{}\n\r?:") ; The newline chars gets special treatment.
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-stmt-delim-chars-with-comma
|
||
(c-lang-const c-stmt-delim-chars-with-comma))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Syntactic whitespace.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-simple-ws
|
||
"Regexp matching an ordinary whitespace character.
|
||
Does not contain a \\| operator at the top level."
|
||
;; "\\s " is not enough since it doesn't match line breaks.
|
||
t "\\(\\s \\|[\n\r]\\)")
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-simple-ws-depth
|
||
;; Number of regexp grouping parens in `c-simple-ws'.
|
||
t (regexp-opt-depth (c-lang-const c-simple-ws)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-line-comment-starter
|
||
"String that starts line comments, or nil if such don't exist.
|
||
Line comments are always terminated by newlines. At least one of
|
||
`c-block-comment-starter' and this one is assumed to be set.
|
||
|
||
Note that it's currently not enough to set this to support a new
|
||
comment style. Other stuff like the syntax table must also be set up
|
||
properly."
|
||
t "//"
|
||
awk "#")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-line-comment-starter (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-comment-starter
|
||
"String that starts block comments, or nil if such don't exist.
|
||
Block comments are ended by `c-block-comment-ender', which is assumed
|
||
to be set if this is. At least one of `c-line-comment-starter' and
|
||
this one is assumed to be set.
|
||
|
||
Note that it's currently not enough to set this to support a new
|
||
comment style. Other stuff like the syntax table must also be set up
|
||
properly."
|
||
t "/*"
|
||
awk nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-comment-ender
|
||
"String that ends block comments, or nil if such don't exist.
|
||
|
||
Note that it's currently not enough to set this to support a new
|
||
comment style. Other stuff like the syntax table must also be set up
|
||
properly."
|
||
t "*/"
|
||
awk nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-comment-start-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp to match the start of any type of comment.
|
||
t (let ((re (c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(list (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter)))))
|
||
(if (memq 'gen-comment-delim c-emacs-features)
|
||
(concat re "\\|\\s!")
|
||
re)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-comment-start-regexp (c-lang-const c-comment-start-regexp))
|
||
|
||
;;;; Added by ACM, 2003/9/18.
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-comment-start-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp which matches the start of a block comment (if such exists in the
|
||
;; language)
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter)
|
||
(regexp-quote (c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter))
|
||
"\\<\\>"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-block-comment-start-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-start-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-literal-start-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp to match the start of comments and string literals.
|
||
t (concat (c-lang-const c-comment-start-regexp)
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(if (memq 'gen-string-delim c-emacs-features)
|
||
"\"|"
|
||
"\"")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-literal-start-regexp (c-lang-const c-literal-start-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-doc-comment-start-regexp
|
||
"Regexp to match the start of documentation comments."
|
||
t "\\<\\>"
|
||
;; From font-lock.el: `doxygen' uses /*! while others use /**.
|
||
(c c++ objc) "/\\*[*!]"
|
||
java "/\\*\\*"
|
||
pike "/[/*]!")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-doc-comment-start-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-doc-comment-start-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst comment-start
|
||
"String that starts comments inserted with M-; etc.
|
||
`comment-start' is initialized from this."
|
||
;; Default: Prefer line comments to block comments, and pad with a space.
|
||
t (concat (or (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter))
|
||
" ")
|
||
;; In C we still default to the block comment style since line
|
||
;; comments aren't entirely portable.
|
||
c "/* ")
|
||
(c-lang-setvar comment-start (c-lang-const comment-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst comment-end
|
||
"String that ends comments inserted with M-; etc.
|
||
`comment-end' is initialized from this."
|
||
;; Default: Use block comment style if comment-start uses block
|
||
;; comments, and pad with a space in that case.
|
||
t (if (string-match (concat "\\`\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-start-regexp)
|
||
"\\)")
|
||
(c-lang-const comment-start))
|
||
(concat " " (c-lang-const c-block-comment-ender))
|
||
""))
|
||
(c-lang-setvar comment-end (c-lang-const comment-end))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst comment-start-skip
|
||
"Regexp to match the start of a comment plus everything up to its body.
|
||
`comment-start-skip' is initialized from this."
|
||
;; Default: Allow the last char of the comment starter(s) to be
|
||
;; repeated, then allow any amount of horizontal whitespace.
|
||
t (concat "\\("
|
||
(c-concat-separated
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (cs)
|
||
(when cs
|
||
(concat (regexp-quote cs) "+")))
|
||
(list (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter)))
|
||
"\\|")
|
||
"\\)\\s *"))
|
||
(c-lang-setvar comment-start-skip (c-lang-const comment-start-skip))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-syntactic-ws-start
|
||
;; Regexp matching any sequence that can start syntactic whitespace.
|
||
;; The only uncertain case is '#' when there are cpp directives.
|
||
t (concat "\\s \\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(append (list (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter)
|
||
(when (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
"#"))
|
||
'("\n" "\r")))
|
||
"\\|\\\\[\n\r]"
|
||
(when (memq 'gen-comment-delim c-emacs-features)
|
||
"\\|\\s!")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-syntactic-ws-start (c-lang-const c-syntactic-ws-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-syntactic-ws-end
|
||
;; Regexp matching any single character that might end syntactic whitespace.
|
||
t (concat "\\s \\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(append (when (c-lang-const c-block-comment-ender)
|
||
(list
|
||
(string
|
||
(elt (c-lang-const c-block-comment-ender)
|
||
(1- (length
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-ender)))))))
|
||
'("\n" "\r")))
|
||
(when (memq 'gen-comment-delim c-emacs-features)
|
||
"\\|\\s!")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-syntactic-ws-end (c-lang-const c-syntactic-ws-end))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-unterminated-block-comment-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching an unterminated block comment that doesn't
|
||
;; contain line breaks, or nil in languages without block comments.
|
||
;; Does not contain a \| operator at the top level.
|
||
t (when (c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter)
|
||
(concat
|
||
(regexp-quote (c-lang-const c-block-comment-starter))
|
||
;; It's messy to cook together a regexp that matches anything
|
||
;; but c-block-comment-ender.
|
||
(let ((end (c-lang-const c-block-comment-ender)))
|
||
(cond ((= (length end) 1)
|
||
(concat "[^" end "\n\r]*"))
|
||
((= (length end) 2)
|
||
(concat "[^" (substring end 0 1) "\n\r]*"
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(regexp-quote (substring end 0 1)) "+"
|
||
"[^"
|
||
;; The quoting rules inside char classes are silly. :P
|
||
(cond ((= (elt end 0) (elt end 1))
|
||
(concat (substring end 0 1) "\n\r"))
|
||
((= (elt end 1) ?\])
|
||
(concat (substring end 1 2) "\n\r"
|
||
(substring end 0 1)))
|
||
(t
|
||
(concat (substring end 0 1) "\n\r"
|
||
(substring end 1 2))))
|
||
"]"
|
||
"[^" (substring end 0 1) "\n\r]*"
|
||
"\\)*"))
|
||
(t
|
||
(error "Can't handle a block comment ender of length %s"
|
||
(length end))))))))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-comment-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching a block comment that doesn't contain line breaks,
|
||
;; or nil in languages without block comments. The reason we don't
|
||
;; allow line breaks is to avoid going very far and risk running out
|
||
;; of regexp stack; this regexp is intended to handle only short
|
||
;; comments that might be put in the middle of limited constructs
|
||
;; like declarations. Does not contain a \| operator at the top
|
||
;; level.
|
||
t (when (c-lang-const c-unterminated-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
(concat
|
||
(c-lang-const c-unterminated-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
(let ((end (c-lang-const c-block-comment-ender)))
|
||
(cond ((= (length end) 1)
|
||
(regexp-quote end))
|
||
((= (length end) 2)
|
||
(concat (regexp-quote (substring end 0 1)) "+"
|
||
(regexp-quote (substring end 1 2))))
|
||
(t
|
||
(error "Can't handle a block comment ender of length %s"
|
||
(length end))))))))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonwhite-syntactic-ws
|
||
;; Regexp matching a piece of syntactic whitespace that isn't a
|
||
;; sequence of simple whitespace characters. As opposed to
|
||
;; `c-(forward|backward)-syntactic-ws', this doesn't regard cpp
|
||
;; directives as syntactic whitespace.
|
||
t (c-concat-separated
|
||
(list (when (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)
|
||
(concat (regexp-quote (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter))
|
||
"[^\n\r]*[\n\r]"))
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
"\\\\[\n\r]"
|
||
(when (memq 'gen-comment-delim c-emacs-features)
|
||
"\\s!\\S!*\\s!"))
|
||
"\\|"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-syntactic-ws
|
||
;; Regexp matching syntactic whitespace, including possibly the
|
||
;; empty string. As opposed to `c-(forward|backward)-syntactic-ws',
|
||
;; this doesn't regard cpp directives as syntactic whitespace. Does
|
||
;; not contain a \| operator at the top level.
|
||
t (concat (c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(concat "\\(" (c-lang-const c-nonwhite-syntactic-ws) "\\)"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*")
|
||
"\\)*"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-syntactic-ws-depth
|
||
;; Number of regexp grouping parens in `c-syntactic-ws'.
|
||
t (regexp-opt-depth (c-lang-const c-syntactic-ws)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonempty-syntactic-ws
|
||
;; Regexp matching syntactic whitespace, which is at least one
|
||
;; character long. As opposed to `c-(forward|backward)-syntactic-ws',
|
||
;; this doesn't regard cpp directives as syntactic whitespace. Does
|
||
;; not contain a \| operator at the top level.
|
||
t (concat "\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws)
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-nonwhite-syntactic-ws)
|
||
"\\)+"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonempty-syntactic-ws-depth
|
||
;; Number of regexp grouping parens in `c-nonempty-syntactic-ws'.
|
||
t (regexp-opt-depth (c-lang-const c-nonempty-syntactic-ws)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-single-line-syntactic-ws
|
||
;; Regexp matching syntactic whitespace without any line breaks. As
|
||
;; opposed to `c-(forward|backward)-syntactic-ws', this doesn't
|
||
;; regard cpp directives as syntactic whitespace. Does not contain
|
||
;; a \| operator at the top level.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
(concat "\\s *\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
"\\s *\\)*")
|
||
"\\s *"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-single-line-syntactic-ws-depth
|
||
;; Number of regexp grouping parens in `c-single-line-syntactic-ws'.
|
||
t (regexp-opt-depth (c-lang-const c-single-line-syntactic-ws)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-syntactic-eol
|
||
;; Regexp that matches when there is no syntactically significant
|
||
;; text before eol. Macros are regarded as syntactically
|
||
;; significant text here.
|
||
t (concat (c-lang-const c-single-line-syntactic-ws)
|
||
;; Match eol (possibly inside a block comment or preceded
|
||
;; by a line continuation backslash), or the beginning of a
|
||
;; line comment. Note: This has to be modified for awk
|
||
;; where line comments start with '#'.
|
||
"\\("
|
||
(c-concat-separated
|
||
(list (when (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)
|
||
(regexp-quote (c-lang-const c-line-comment-starter)))
|
||
(when (c-lang-const c-unterminated-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
(concat (c-lang-const c-unterminated-block-comment-regexp)
|
||
"$"))
|
||
"\\\\$"
|
||
"$")
|
||
"\\|")
|
||
"\\)"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-syntactic-eol (c-lang-const c-syntactic-eol))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Syntactic analysis ("virtual semicolons") for line-oriented languages (AWK).
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-at-vsemi-p-fn
|
||
"Contains a function \"Is there a virtual semicolon at POS or point?\".
|
||
Such a function takes one optional parameter, a buffer position (defaults to
|
||
point), and returns nil or t. This variable contains nil for languages which
|
||
don't have EOL terminated statements. "
|
||
t nil
|
||
awk 'c-awk-at-vsemi-p)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-at-vsemi-p-fn (c-lang-const c-at-vsemi-p-fn))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-vsemi-status-unknown-p-fn
|
||
"Contains a function \"are we unsure whether there is a virtual semicolon on this line?\".
|
||
The (admittedly kludgey) purpose of such a function is to prevent an infinite
|
||
recursion in c-beginning-of-statement-1 when point starts at a `while' token.
|
||
The function MUST NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES call c-beginning-of-statement-1,
|
||
even indirectly. This variable contains nil for languages which don't have
|
||
EOL terminated statements."
|
||
t nil
|
||
awk 'c-awk-vsemi-status-unknown-p)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-vsemi-status-unknown-p-fn
|
||
(c-lang-const c-vsemi-status-unknown-p-fn))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Defun functions
|
||
|
||
;; The Emacs variables beginning-of-defun-function and
|
||
;; end-of-defun-function will be set so that commands like
|
||
;; `mark-defun' and `narrow-to-defun' work right. The key sequences
|
||
;; C-M-a and C-M-e are, however, bound directly to the CC Mode
|
||
;; functions, allowing optimisation for large n.
|
||
(c-lang-defconst beginning-of-defun-function
|
||
"Function to which beginning-of-defun-function will be set."
|
||
t 'c-beginning-of-defun
|
||
awk 'c-awk-beginning-of-defun)
|
||
(c-lang-setvar beginning-of-defun-function
|
||
(c-lang-const beginning-of-defun-function))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst end-of-defun-function
|
||
"Function to which end-of-defun-function will be set."
|
||
t 'c-end-of-defun
|
||
awk 'c-awk-end-of-defun)
|
||
(c-lang-setvar end-of-defun-function (c-lang-const end-of-defun-function))
|
||
|
||
;;; In-comment text handling.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paragraph-start
|
||
"Regexp to append to `paragraph-start'."
|
||
t "$"
|
||
java "\\(@[a-zA-Z]+\\>\\|$\\)" ; For Javadoc.
|
||
pike "\\(@[a-zA-Z_-]+\\>\\([^{]\\|$\\)\\|$\\)") ; For Pike refdoc.
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-paragraph-start (c-lang-const c-paragraph-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paragraph-separate
|
||
"Regexp to append to `paragraph-separate'."
|
||
t "$"
|
||
pike (c-lang-const c-paragraph-start))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-paragraph-separate (c-lang-const c-paragraph-separate))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Keyword lists.
|
||
|
||
;; Note: All and only all language constants containing keyword lists
|
||
;; should end with "-kwds"; they're automatically collected into the
|
||
;; `c-kwds-lang-consts' list below and used to build `c-keywords' etc.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-primitive-type-kwds
|
||
"Primitive type keywords. As opposed to the other keyword lists, the
|
||
keywords listed here are fontified with the type face instead of the
|
||
keyword face.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled.
|
||
|
||
Do not try to modify this list for end user customizations; the
|
||
`*-font-lock-extra-types' variable, where `*' is the mode prefix, is
|
||
the appropriate place for that."
|
||
t '("char" "double" "float" "int" "long" "short" "signed"
|
||
"unsigned" "void")
|
||
c (append
|
||
'("_Bool" "_Complex" "_Imaginary") ; Conditionally defined in C99.
|
||
(c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds))
|
||
c++ (append
|
||
'("bool" "wchar_t")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds))
|
||
;; Objective-C extends C, but probably not the new stuff in C99.
|
||
objc (append
|
||
'("id" "Class" "SEL" "IMP" "BOOL")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds))
|
||
java '("boolean" "byte" "char" "double" "float" "int" "long" "short" "void")
|
||
idl '("Object" "ValueBase" "any" "boolean" "char" "double" "fixed" "float"
|
||
"long" "octet" "sequence" "short" "string" "void" "wchar" "wstring"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"ref"
|
||
;; The following can't really end a type, but we have to specify them
|
||
;; here due to the assumption in `c-primitive-type-prefix-kwds'. It
|
||
;; doesn't matter that much.
|
||
"unsigned" "strong")
|
||
pike '(;; this_program isn't really a keyword, but it's practically
|
||
;; used as a builtin type.
|
||
"array" "float" "function" "int" "mapping" "mixed" "multiset"
|
||
"object" "program" "string" "this_program" "void"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-primitive-type-key
|
||
;; An adorned regexp that matches `c-primitive-type-kwds'.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-primitive-type-key (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-primitive-type-prefix-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that might act as prefixes for primitive types. Assumed to
|
||
be a subset of `c-primitive-type-kwds'."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) '("long" "short" "signed" "unsigned")
|
||
idl '("long" "unsigned"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"strong"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-prefix-kwds
|
||
"Keywords where the following name - if any - is a type name, and
|
||
where the keyword together with the symbol works as a type in
|
||
declarations.
|
||
|
||
Note that an alternative if the second part doesn't hold is
|
||
`c-type-list-kwds'. Keywords on this list are typically also present
|
||
on one of the `*-decl-kwds' lists."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c '("struct" "union" "enum")
|
||
c++ (append '("class" "typename")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-prefix-kwds c)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-prefix-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching `c-type-prefix-kwds'.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-type-prefix-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-type-prefix-key (c-lang-const c-type-prefix-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-modifier-kwds
|
||
"Type modifier keywords. These can occur almost anywhere in types
|
||
but they don't build a type of themselves. Unlike the keywords on
|
||
`c-primitive-type-kwds', they are fontified with the keyword face and
|
||
not the type face."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c '("const" "restrict" "volatile")
|
||
c++ '("const" "volatile" "throw")
|
||
objc '("const" "volatile"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-type-modifier-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching `c-type-modifier-kwds', or nil in
|
||
;; languages without such keywords.
|
||
t (and (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds)
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-type-modifier-key (c-lang-const c-opt-type-modifier-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-type-component-key
|
||
;; An adorned regexp that matches `c-primitive-type-prefix-kwds' and
|
||
;; `c-type-modifier-kwds', or nil in languages without any of them.
|
||
t (and (or (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-prefix-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds))
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-prefix-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds)))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-type-component-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-type-component-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-start-kwds
|
||
;; All keywords that can start a type (i.e. are either a type prefix
|
||
;; or a complete type).
|
||
t (delete-duplicates (append (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-prefix-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-class-decl-kwds
|
||
"Keywords introducing declarations where the following block (if any)
|
||
contains another declaration level that should be considered a class.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled.
|
||
|
||
Note that presence on this list does not automatically treat the
|
||
following identifier as a type; the keyword must also be present on
|
||
`c-type-prefix-kwds' or `c-type-list-kwds' to accomplish that."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c '("struct" "union")
|
||
c++ '("class" "struct" "union")
|
||
objc '("struct" "union"
|
||
"@interface" "@implementation" "@protocol")
|
||
java '("class" "interface")
|
||
idl '("component" "eventtype" "exception" "home" "interface" "struct"
|
||
"union" "valuetype"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"storagehome" "storagetype"
|
||
;; In CORBA CIDL:
|
||
"catalog" "executor" "manages" "segment")
|
||
pike '("class"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-class-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of a class.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-class-decl-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-class-key (c-lang-const c-class-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-brace-list-decl-kwds
|
||
"Keywords introducing declarations where the following block (if
|
||
any) is a brace list.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled."
|
||
t '("enum")
|
||
(java awk) nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-brace-list-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of declarations where the following
|
||
;; block is a brace list.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-brace-list-decl-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-brace-list-key (c-lang-const c-brace-list-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-other-block-decl-kwds
|
||
"Keywords where the following block (if any) contains another
|
||
declaration level that should not be considered a class. For every
|
||
keyword here, CC Mode will add a set of special syntactic symbols for
|
||
those blocks. E.g. if the keyword is \"foo\" then there will be
|
||
`foo-open', `foo-close', and `infoo' symbols.
|
||
|
||
The intention is that this category should be used for block
|
||
constructs that aren't related to object orientation concepts like
|
||
classes (which thus also include e.g. interfaces, templates,
|
||
contracts, structs, etc). The more pragmatic distinction is that
|
||
while most want some indentation inside classes, it's fairly common
|
||
that they don't want it in some of these constructs, so it should be
|
||
simple to configure that differently from classes. See also
|
||
`c-class-decl-kwds'.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c objc) '("extern")
|
||
c++ '("namespace" "extern")
|
||
idl '("module"
|
||
;; In CORBA CIDL:
|
||
"composition"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-other-decl-block-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of blocks besides classes that contain
|
||
;; another declaration level.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-other-block-decl-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-other-decl-block-key (c-lang-const c-other-decl-block-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-other-decl-block-key-in-symbols-alist
|
||
(mapcar
|
||
(lambda (elt)
|
||
(cons elt
|
||
(if (string= elt "extern")
|
||
'inextern-lang
|
||
(intern (concat "in" elt)))))
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-block-decl-kwds))
|
||
"Alist associating keywords in c-other-decl-block-decl-kwds with
|
||
their matching \"in\" syntactic symbols.")
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-typedef-decl-kwds
|
||
"Keywords introducing declarations where the identifier(s) being
|
||
declared are types.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled."
|
||
;; Default to `c-class-decl-kwds' and `c-brace-list-decl-kwds'
|
||
;; (since e.g. "Foo" is a type that's being defined in "class Foo
|
||
;; {...}").
|
||
t (append (c-lang-const c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-brace-list-decl-kwds))
|
||
;; Languages that have a "typedef" construct.
|
||
(c c++ objc idl pike) (append (c-lang-const c-typedef-decl-kwds)
|
||
'("typedef"))
|
||
;; Unlike most other languages, exception names are not handled as
|
||
;; types in IDL since they only can occur in "raises" specs.
|
||
idl (delete "exception" (append (c-lang-const c-typedef-decl-kwds) nil)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-typeless-decl-kwds
|
||
"Keywords introducing declarations where the \(first) identifier
|
||
\(declarator) follows directly after the keyword, without any type.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled."
|
||
;; Default to `c-class-decl-kwds' and `c-brace-list-decl-kwds'
|
||
;; (since e.g. "Foo" is the identifier being defined in "class Foo
|
||
;; {...}").
|
||
t (append (c-lang-const c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-brace-list-decl-kwds))
|
||
;; Note: "manages" for CORBA CIDL clashes with its presence on
|
||
;; `c-type-list-kwds' for IDL.
|
||
idl (append (c-lang-const c-typeless-decl-kwds)
|
||
'("factory" "finder" "native"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"key" "stores"
|
||
;; In CORBA CIDL:
|
||
"facet"))
|
||
pike (append (c-lang-const c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
'("constant")))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-modifier-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can prefix normal declarations of identifiers
|
||
\(and typically act as flags). Things like argument declarations
|
||
inside function headers are also considered declarations in this
|
||
sense.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) '("auto" "extern" "inline" "register" "static")
|
||
c++ (append '("explicit" "friend" "mutable" "template" "using" "virtual")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-modifier-kwds))
|
||
objc '("auto" "bycopy" "byref" "extern" "in" "inout" "oneway" "out" "static")
|
||
;; FIXME: Some of those below ought to be on `c-other-decl-kwds' instead.
|
||
idl '("abstract" "attribute" "const" "consumes" "custom" "emits" "import"
|
||
"in" "inout" "local" "multiple" "oneway" "out" "private" "provides"
|
||
"public" "publishes" "readonly" "typeid" "typeprefix" "uses"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"primary" "state"
|
||
;; In CORBA CIDL:
|
||
"bindsTo" "delegatesTo" "implements" "proxy" "storedOn")
|
||
;; Note: "const" is not used in Java, but it's still a reserved keyword.
|
||
java '("abstract" "const" "final" "native" "private" "protected" "public"
|
||
"static" "strictfp" "synchronized" "transient" "volatile")
|
||
pike '("final" "inline" "local" "nomask" "optional" "private" "protected"
|
||
"public" "static" "variant"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-other-decl-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can start or prefix any declaration level construct,
|
||
besides those on `c-class-decl-kwds', `c-brace-list-decl-kwds',
|
||
`c-other-block-decl-kwds', `c-typedef-decl-kwds',
|
||
`c-typeless-decl-kwds' and `c-modifier-kwds'.
|
||
|
||
If any of these also are on `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds' then the associated clauses
|
||
will be handled."
|
||
t nil
|
||
objc '("@class" "@end" "@defs")
|
||
java '("import" "package")
|
||
pike '("import" "inherit"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-start-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that always start declarations, wherever they occur.
|
||
This can be used for declarations that aren't recognized by the normal
|
||
combination of `c-decl-prefix-re' and `c-decl-start-re'."
|
||
t nil
|
||
;; Classes can be declared anywhere in a Pike expression.
|
||
pike '("class"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-hangon-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can occur anywhere in a declaration level construct.
|
||
This is used for self-contained things that can be tacked on anywhere
|
||
on a declaration and that should be ignored to be able to recognize it
|
||
correctly. Typical cases are compiler extensions like
|
||
\"__attribute__\" or \"__declspec\":
|
||
|
||
__declspec(noreturn) void foo();
|
||
class __declspec(dllexport) classname {...};
|
||
void foo() __attribute__((noreturn));
|
||
|
||
Note that unrecognized plain symbols are skipped anyway if they occur
|
||
before the type, so such things are not necessary to mention here.
|
||
Mentioning them here is necessary only if they can occur in other
|
||
places, or if they are followed by a construct that must be skipped
|
||
over \(like the parens in the \"__attribute__\" and \"__declspec\"
|
||
examples above). In the last case, they alse need to be present on
|
||
one of `c-type-list-kwds', `c-ref-list-kwds',
|
||
`c-colon-type-list-kwds', `c-paren-nontype-kwds', `c-paren-type-kwds',
|
||
`c-<>-type-kwds', or `c-<>-arglist-kwds'."
|
||
;; NB: These are currently not recognized in all parts of a
|
||
;; declaration. Specifically, they aren't recognized in the middle
|
||
;; of multi-token types, inside declarators, and between the
|
||
;; identifier and the arglist paren of a function declaration.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; FIXME: This ought to be user customizable since compiler stuff
|
||
;; like this usually is wrapped in project specific macros. (It'd
|
||
;; of course be even better if we could cope without knowing this.)
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) '(;; GCC extension.
|
||
"__attribute__"
|
||
;; MSVC extension.
|
||
"__declspec"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-hangon-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching `c-decl-hangon-kwds'.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-decl-hangon-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-decl-hangon-key (c-lang-const c-decl-hangon-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-prefix-spec-kwds
|
||
;; All keywords that can occur in the preamble of a declaration.
|
||
;; They typically occur before the type, but they are also matched
|
||
;; after presumptive types since we often can't be sure that
|
||
;; something is a type or just some sort of macro in front of the
|
||
;; declaration. They might be ambiguous with types or type
|
||
;; prefixes.
|
||
t (delete-duplicates (append (c-lang-const c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-brace-list-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-block-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-typedef-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-typeless-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-modifier-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-decl-start-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-decl-hangon-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-prefix-spec-kwds-re
|
||
;; Adorned regexp of `c-prefix-spec-kwds'.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-prefix-spec-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-prefix-spec-kwds-re (c-lang-const c-prefix-spec-kwds-re))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-specifier-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp of the keywords in `c-prefix-spec-kwds' that
|
||
;; aren't ambiguous with types or type prefixes.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(set-difference (c-lang-const c-prefix-spec-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-start-kwds)
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-specifier-key (c-lang-const c-specifier-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-postfix-spec-kwds
|
||
;; Keywords that can occur after argument list of a function header
|
||
;; declaration, i.e. in the "K&R region".
|
||
t (append (c-lang-const c-postfix-decl-spec-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-decl-hangon-kwds)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-not-decl-init-keywords
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching all keywords that can't appear at the
|
||
;; start of a declaration.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(set-difference (c-lang-const c-keywords)
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-type-start-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-prefix-spec-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-not-decl-init-keywords
|
||
(c-lang-const c-not-decl-init-keywords))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-protection-kwds
|
||
"Access protection label keywords in classes."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("private" "protected" "public")
|
||
objc '("@private" "@protected" "@public"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-decls-with-vars
|
||
"Keywords introducing declarations that can contain a block which
|
||
might be followed by variable declarations, e.g. like \"foo\" in
|
||
\"class Foo { ... } foo;\". So if there is a block in a declaration
|
||
like that, it ends with the following ';' and not right away.
|
||
|
||
The keywords on list are assumed to also be present on one of the
|
||
`*-decl-kwds' lists."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c objc) '("struct" "union" "enum" "typedef")
|
||
c++ '("class" "struct" "union" "enum" "typedef"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-block-decls-with-vars-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the `c-block-decls-with-vars' keywords, or nil in
|
||
;; languages without such constructs.
|
||
t (and (c-lang-const c-block-decls-with-vars)
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-block-decls-with-vars))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-block-decls-with-vars-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-block-decls-with-vars-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-postfix-decl-spec-kwds
|
||
"Keywords introducing extra declaration specifiers in the region
|
||
between the header and the body \(i.e. the \"K&R-region\") in
|
||
declarations."
|
||
t nil
|
||
java '("extends" "implements" "throws")
|
||
idl '("context" "getraises" "manages" "primarykey" "raises" "setraises"
|
||
"supports"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"as" "const" "implements" "of" "ref"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonsymbol-sexp-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by a nonsymbol sexp before whatever
|
||
construct it's part of continues."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++ objc) '("extern"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-list-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by a comma separated list of type
|
||
identifiers, where each optionally can be prefixed by keywords. (Can
|
||
also be used for the special case when the list can contain only one
|
||
element.)
|
||
|
||
Assumed to be mutually exclusive with `c-ref-list-kwds'. There's no
|
||
reason to put keywords on this list if they are on `c-type-prefix-kwds'.
|
||
There's also no reason to add keywords that prefixes a normal
|
||
declaration consisting of a type followed by a declarator (list), so
|
||
the keywords on `c-modifier-kwds' should normally not be listed here
|
||
either.
|
||
|
||
Note: Use `c-typeless-decl-kwds' for keywords followed by a function
|
||
or variable identifier (that's being defined)."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("operator")
|
||
objc '("@class")
|
||
java '("import" "new" "extends" "implements" "throws")
|
||
idl '("manages" "native" "primarykey" "supports"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"as" "implements" "of" "scope")
|
||
pike '("inherit"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-ref-list-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by a comma separated list of
|
||
reference (i.e. namespace/scope/module) identifiers, where each
|
||
optionally can be prefixed by keywords. (Can also be used for the
|
||
special case when the list can contain only one element.) Assumed to
|
||
be mutually exclusive with `c-type-list-kwds'.
|
||
|
||
Note: Use `c-typeless-decl-kwds' for keywords followed by a function
|
||
or variable identifier (that's being defined)."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("namespace")
|
||
java '("package")
|
||
idl '("import" "module"
|
||
;; In CORBA CIDL:
|
||
"composition")
|
||
pike '("import"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-colon-type-list-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed (not necessarily directly) by a colon
|
||
and then a comma separated list of type identifiers, where each
|
||
optionally can be prefixed by keywords. (Can also be used for the
|
||
special case when the list can contain only one element.)"
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("class" "struct")
|
||
idl '("component" "eventtype" "home" "interface" "valuetype"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"storagehome" "storagetype"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-colon-type-list-re
|
||
"Regexp matched after the keywords in `c-colon-type-list-kwds' to skip
|
||
forward to the colon. The end of the match is assumed to be directly
|
||
after the colon, so the regexp should end with \":\". Must be a
|
||
regexp if `c-colon-type-list-kwds' isn't nil."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-colon-type-list-kwds)
|
||
;; Disallow various common punctuation chars that can't come
|
||
;; before the ":" that starts the inherit list after "class"
|
||
;; or "struct" in C++. (Also used as default for other
|
||
;; languages.)
|
||
"[^\]\[{}();,/#=:]*:"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-colon-type-list-re (c-lang-const c-colon-type-list-re))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paren-nontype-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by a parenthesis expression that doesn't
|
||
contain type identifiers."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) '(;; GCC extension.
|
||
"__attribute__"
|
||
;; MSVC extension.
|
||
"__declspec"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paren-type-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by a parenthesis expression containing
|
||
type identifiers separated by arbitrary tokens."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("throw")
|
||
objc '("@defs")
|
||
idl '("switch")
|
||
pike '("array" "function" "int" "mapping" "multiset" "object" "program"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paren-any-kwds
|
||
t (delete-duplicates (append (c-lang-const c-paren-nontype-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-paren-type-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-<>-type-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by an angle bracket expression
|
||
containing type identifiers separated by \",\". The difference from
|
||
`c-<>-arglist-kwds' is that unknown names are taken to be types and
|
||
not other identifiers. `c-recognize-<>-arglists' is assumed to be set
|
||
if this isn't nil."
|
||
t nil
|
||
objc '("id")
|
||
idl '("sequence"
|
||
;; In CORBA PSDL:
|
||
"ref"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-<>-arglist-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can be followed by a C++ style template arglist; see
|
||
`c-recognize-<>-arglists' for details. That language constant is
|
||
assumed to be set if this isn't nil."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("template")
|
||
idl '("fixed" "string" "wstring"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-<>-sexp-kwds
|
||
;; All keywords that can be followed by an angle bracket sexp.
|
||
t (delete-duplicates (append (c-lang-const c-<>-type-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-<>-arglist-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-<>-sexp-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching keywords that can be followed by an angle
|
||
;; bracket sexp. Always set when `c-recognize-<>-arglists' is.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-recognize-<>-arglists)
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-<>-sexp-kwds))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-<>-sexp-key (c-lang-const c-opt-<>-sexp-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-brace-id-list-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that may be followed by a brace block containing a comma
|
||
separated list of identifier definitions, i.e. like the list of
|
||
identifiers that follows the type in a normal declaration."
|
||
t (c-lang-const c-brace-list-decl-kwds))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-stmt-1-kwds
|
||
"Statement keywords followed directly by a substatement."
|
||
t '("do" "else")
|
||
c++ '("do" "else" "try")
|
||
java '("do" "else" "finally" "try")
|
||
idl nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-stmt-1-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of any statement followed directly by a
|
||
;; substatement (doesn't match a bare block, however).
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-1-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-block-stmt-1-key (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-1-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-stmt-2-kwds
|
||
"Statement keywords followed by a paren sexp and then by a substatement."
|
||
t '("for" "if" "switch" "while")
|
||
c++ '("for" "if" "switch" "while" "catch")
|
||
java '("for" "if" "switch" "while" "catch" "synchronized")
|
||
idl nil
|
||
pike '("for" "if" "switch" "while" "foreach")
|
||
awk '("for" "if" "while"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-stmt-2-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of any statement followed by a paren sexp
|
||
;; and then by a substatement.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-2-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-block-stmt-2-key (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-2-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-stmt-kwds
|
||
;; Union of `c-block-stmt-1-kwds' and `c-block-stmt-2-kwds'.
|
||
t (delete-duplicates (append (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-1-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-stmt-2-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-block-stmt-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of any statement that has a
|
||
;; substatement (except a bare block). Nil in languages that
|
||
;; don't have such constructs.
|
||
t (if (or (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-1-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-stmt-2-kwds))
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-block-stmt-1-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-stmt-2-kwds)))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-block-stmt-key (c-lang-const c-opt-block-stmt-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-simple-stmt-kwds
|
||
"Statement keywords followed by an expression or nothing."
|
||
t '("break" "continue" "goto" "return")
|
||
;; Note: `goto' is not valid in Java, but the keyword is still reserved.
|
||
java '("break" "continue" "goto" "return" "throw")
|
||
idl nil
|
||
pike '("break" "continue" "return")
|
||
awk '(;; Not sure about "delete", "exit", "getline", etc. ; ACM 2002/5/30
|
||
"break" "continue" "return" "delete" "exit" "getline" "next"
|
||
"nextfile" "print" "printf"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-simple-stmt-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching `c-simple-stmt-kwds'.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-simple-stmt-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-simple-stmt-key (c-lang-const c-simple-stmt-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paren-stmt-kwds
|
||
"Statement keywords followed by a parenthesis expression that
|
||
nevertheless contains a list separated with ';' and not ','."
|
||
t '("for")
|
||
idl nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-paren-stmt-key
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching `c-paren-stmt-kwds'.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-paren-stmt-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-paren-stmt-key (c-lang-const c-paren-stmt-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-asm-stmt-kwds
|
||
"Statement keywords followed by an assembler expression."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) '("asm" "__asm__")) ;; Not standard, but common.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-asm-stmt-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of an assembler statement. Nil in
|
||
;; languages that don't support that.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-asm-stmt-kwds)
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-asm-stmt-kwds))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-asm-stmt-key (c-lang-const c-opt-asm-stmt-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-label-kwds
|
||
"Keywords introducing colon terminated labels in blocks."
|
||
t '("case" "default")
|
||
awk nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-label-kwds-regexp
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching any keyword that introduces a label.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-label-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-label-kwds-regexp (c-lang-const c-label-kwds-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-before-label-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that might be followed by a label identifier."
|
||
t '("goto")
|
||
(java pike) (append '("break" "continue")
|
||
(c-lang-const c-before-label-kwds))
|
||
idl nil
|
||
awk nil)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-constant-kwds
|
||
"Keywords for constants."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) '("NULL" ;; Not a keyword, but practically works as one.
|
||
"false" "true") ; Defined in C99.
|
||
objc '("nil" "Nil")
|
||
idl '("TRUE" "FALSE")
|
||
java '("true" "false" "null") ; technically "literals", not keywords
|
||
pike '("UNDEFINED")) ;; Not a keyword, but practically works as one.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-primary-expr-kwds
|
||
"Keywords besides constants and operators that start primary expressions."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ '("operator" "this")
|
||
objc '("super" "self")
|
||
java '("this")
|
||
pike '("this")) ;; Not really a keyword, but practically works as one.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-expr-kwds
|
||
;; Keywords that can occur anywhere in expressions. Built from
|
||
;; `c-primary-expr-kwds' and all keyword operators in `c-operators'.
|
||
t (delete-duplicates
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-primary-expr-kwds)
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-operator-list)
|
||
t
|
||
"\\`\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+\\'"))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-lambda-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that start lambda constructs, i.e. function definitions in
|
||
expressions."
|
||
t nil
|
||
pike '("lambda"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-inexpr-block-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that start constructs followed by statement blocks which can
|
||
be used in expressions \(the gcc extension for this in C and C++ is
|
||
handled separately by `c-recognize-paren-inexpr-blocks')."
|
||
t nil
|
||
pike '("catch" "gauge"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-inexpr-class-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can start classes inside expressions."
|
||
t nil
|
||
java '("new")
|
||
pike '("class"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-inexpr-brace-list-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can start brace list blocks inside expressions.
|
||
Note that Java specific rules are currently applied to tell this from
|
||
`c-inexpr-class-kwds'."
|
||
t nil
|
||
java '("new"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-inexpr-brace-list-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of a brace list in an expression, or
|
||
;; nil in languages that don't have such things. This should not
|
||
;; match brace lists recognized through `c-special-brace-lists'.
|
||
t (and (c-lang-const c-inexpr-brace-list-kwds)
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-inexpr-brace-list-kwds))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-inexpr-brace-list-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-inexpr-brace-list-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-block-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching keywords in any construct that contain another
|
||
;; declaration level, i.e. that isn't followed by a function block
|
||
;; or brace list. When the first submatch matches, it's an
|
||
;; unambiguous construct, otherwise it's an ambiguous match that
|
||
;; might also be the return type of a function declaration.
|
||
t (let* ((decl-kwds (append (c-lang-const c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-other-block-decl-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-inexpr-class-kwds)))
|
||
(unambiguous (set-difference decl-kwds
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-start-kwds)
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
(ambiguous (intersection decl-kwds
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-start-kwds)
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
(if ambiguous
|
||
(concat (c-make-keywords-re t unambiguous)
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t ambiguous))
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t unambiguous))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-decl-block-key (c-lang-const c-decl-block-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-bitfield-kwds
|
||
"Keywords that can introduce bitfields."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++ objc) '("char" "int" "long" "signed" "unsigned"))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-bitfield-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of a bitfield (not uniquely), or nil in
|
||
;; languages without bitfield support.
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-bitfield-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-bitfield-key (c-lang-const c-opt-bitfield-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-other-kwds
|
||
"Keywords not accounted for by any other `*-kwds' language constant."
|
||
t nil
|
||
idl '("truncatable"
|
||
;; In CORBA CIDL: (These are declaration keywords that never
|
||
;; can start a declaration.)
|
||
"entity" "process" "service" "session" "storage"))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Constants built from keywords.
|
||
|
||
;; Note: No `*-kwds' language constants may be defined below this point.
|
||
|
||
(eval-and-compile
|
||
(defconst c-kwds-lang-consts
|
||
;; List of all the language constants that contain keyword lists.
|
||
(let (list)
|
||
(mapatoms (lambda (sym)
|
||
(when (and (boundp sym)
|
||
(string-match "-kwds\\'" (symbol-name sym)))
|
||
;; Make the list of globally interned symbols
|
||
;; instead of ones interned in `c-lang-constants'.
|
||
(setq list (cons (intern (symbol-name sym)) list))))
|
||
c-lang-constants)
|
||
list)))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-keywords
|
||
;; All keywords as a list.
|
||
t (delete-duplicates
|
||
(c-lang-defconst-eval-immediately
|
||
`(append ,@(mapcar (lambda (kwds-lang-const)
|
||
`(c-lang-const ,kwds-lang-const))
|
||
c-kwds-lang-consts)
|
||
nil))
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-keywords-regexp
|
||
;; All keywords as an adorned regexp.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-keywords)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-keywords-regexp (c-lang-const c-keywords-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-keyword-member-alist
|
||
;; An alist with all the keywords in the cars. The cdr for each
|
||
;; keyword is a list of the symbols for the `*-kwds' lists that
|
||
;; contains it.
|
||
t (let ((kwd-list-alist
|
||
(c-lang-defconst-eval-immediately
|
||
`(list ,@(mapcar (lambda (kwds-lang-const)
|
||
`(cons ',kwds-lang-const
|
||
(c-lang-const ,kwds-lang-const)))
|
||
c-kwds-lang-consts))))
|
||
lang-const kwd-list kwd
|
||
result-alist elem)
|
||
(while kwd-list-alist
|
||
(setq lang-const (caar kwd-list-alist)
|
||
kwd-list (cdar kwd-list-alist)
|
||
kwd-list-alist (cdr kwd-list-alist))
|
||
(while kwd-list
|
||
(setq kwd (car kwd-list)
|
||
kwd-list (cdr kwd-list))
|
||
(unless (setq elem (assoc kwd result-alist))
|
||
(setq result-alist (cons (setq elem (list kwd)) result-alist)))
|
||
(unless (memq lang-const (cdr elem))
|
||
(setcdr elem (cons lang-const (cdr elem))))))
|
||
result-alist))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-keywords-obarray
|
||
;; An obarray containing all keywords as symbols. The property list
|
||
;; of each symbol has a non-nil entry for the specific `*-kwds'
|
||
;; lists it's a member of.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; E.g. to see whether the string str contains a keyword on
|
||
;; `c-class-decl-kwds', one can do like this:
|
||
;; (get (intern-soft str c-keyword-obarray) 'c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
;; Which preferably is written using the associated functions in
|
||
;; cc-engine:
|
||
;; (c-keyword-member (c-keyword-sym str) 'c-class-decl-kwds)
|
||
|
||
;; The obarray is not stored directly as a language constant since
|
||
;; the printed representation for obarrays used in .elc files isn't
|
||
;; complete.
|
||
|
||
(let* ((alist (c-lang-const c-keyword-member-alist))
|
||
kwd lang-const-list
|
||
(obarray (make-vector (* (length alist) 2) 0)))
|
||
(while alist
|
||
(setq kwd (caar alist)
|
||
lang-const-list (cdar alist)
|
||
alist (cdr alist))
|
||
(setplist (intern kwd obarray)
|
||
;; Emacs has an odd bug that causes `mapcan' to fail
|
||
;; with unintelligible errors. (XEmacs works.)
|
||
;;(mapcan (lambda (lang-const)
|
||
;; (list lang-const t))
|
||
;; lang-const-list)
|
||
(apply 'nconc (mapcar (lambda (lang-const)
|
||
(list lang-const t))
|
||
lang-const-list))))
|
||
obarray))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-regular-keywords-regexp
|
||
;; Adorned regexp matching all keywords that should be fontified
|
||
;; with the keywords face. I.e. that aren't types or constants.
|
||
t (c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(set-difference (c-lang-const c-keywords)
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-constant-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-regular-keywords-regexp
|
||
(c-lang-const c-regular-keywords-regexp))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-primary-expr-regexp
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of any primary expression, i.e. any
|
||
;; literal, symbol, prefix operator, and '('. It doesn't need to
|
||
;; exclude keywords; they are excluded afterwards unless the second
|
||
;; submatch matches. If the first but not the second submatch
|
||
;; matches then it is an ambiguous primary expression; it could also
|
||
;; be a match of e.g. an infix operator. (The case with ambiguous
|
||
;; keyword operators isn't handled.)
|
||
|
||
t (let* ((prefix-ops
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-operators)
|
||
'(prefix)
|
||
(lambda (op)
|
||
;; Filter out the special case prefix
|
||
;; operators that are close parens.
|
||
(not (string-match "\\s)" op)))))
|
||
|
||
(nonkeyword-prefix-ops
|
||
(c-filter-ops prefix-ops
|
||
t
|
||
"\\`\\(\\s.\\|\\s(\\|\\s)\\)+\\'"))
|
||
|
||
(in-or-postfix-ops
|
||
(c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-operators)
|
||
'(postfix
|
||
postfix-if-paren
|
||
left-assoc
|
||
right-assoc
|
||
right-assoc-sequence)
|
||
t))
|
||
|
||
(unambiguous-prefix-ops (set-difference nonkeyword-prefix-ops
|
||
in-or-postfix-ops
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
(ambiguous-prefix-ops (intersection nonkeyword-prefix-ops
|
||
in-or-postfix-ops
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
|
||
(concat
|
||
"\\("
|
||
;; Take out all symbol class operators from `prefix-ops' and make the
|
||
;; first submatch from them together with `c-primary-expr-kwds'.
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-primary-expr-kwds)
|
||
(set-difference prefix-ops nonkeyword-prefix-ops
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
;; Match all ambiguous operators.
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(intersection nonkeyword-prefix-ops in-or-postfix-ops
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
"\\)"
|
||
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
;; Now match all other symbols.
|
||
(c-lang-const c-symbol-start)
|
||
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
;; The chars that can start integer and floating point
|
||
;; constants.
|
||
"\\.?[0-9]"
|
||
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
;; The nonambiguous operators from `prefix-ops'.
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(set-difference nonkeyword-prefix-ops in-or-postfix-ops
|
||
:test 'string-equal))
|
||
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
;; Match string and character literals.
|
||
"\\s\""
|
||
(if (memq 'gen-string-delim c-emacs-features)
|
||
"\\|\\s|"
|
||
""))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-primary-expr-regexp (c-lang-const c-primary-expr-regexp))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Additional constants for parser-level constructs.
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-prefix-re
|
||
"Regexp matching something that might precede a declaration, cast or
|
||
label, such as the last token of a preceding statement or declaration.
|
||
This is used in the common situation where a declaration or cast
|
||
doesn't start with any specific token that can be searched for.
|
||
|
||
The regexp should not match bob; that is done implicitly. It can't
|
||
require a match longer than one token. The end of the token is taken
|
||
to be at the end of the first submatch, which is assumed to always
|
||
match. It's undefined whether identifier syntax (see
|
||
`c-identifier-syntax-table') is in effect or not. This regexp is
|
||
assumed to be a superset of `c-label-prefix-re' if
|
||
`c-recognize-colon-labels' is set.
|
||
|
||
Besides this, `c-decl-start-kwds' is used to find declarations.
|
||
|
||
Note: This variable together with `c-decl-start-re' and
|
||
`c-decl-start-kwds' is only used to detect \"likely\"
|
||
declaration/cast/label starts. I.e. they might produce more matches
|
||
but should not miss anything (or else it's necessary to use text
|
||
properties - see the next note). Wherever they match, the following
|
||
construct is analyzed to see if it indeed is a declaration, cast or
|
||
label. That analysis is not cheap, so it's important that not too
|
||
many false matches are triggered.
|
||
|
||
Note: If a declaration/cast/label start can't be detected with this
|
||
variable, it's necessary to use the `c-type' text property with the
|
||
value `c-decl-end' on the last char of the last token preceding the
|
||
declaration. See the comment blurb at the start of cc-engine.el for
|
||
more info."
|
||
|
||
;; We match a sequence of characters to skip over things like \"};\"
|
||
;; more quickly. We match ")" in C for K&R region declarations, and
|
||
;; in all languages except Java for when a cpp macro definition
|
||
;; begins with a declaration.
|
||
t "\\([\{\}\(\);,]+\\)"
|
||
java "\\([\{\}\(;,]+\\)"
|
||
;; Match "<" in C++ to get the first argument in a template arglist.
|
||
;; In that case there's an additional check in `c-find-decl-spots'
|
||
;; that it got open paren syntax.
|
||
c++ "\\([\{\}\(\);,<]+\\)"
|
||
;; Additionally match the protection directives in Objective-C.
|
||
;; Note that this doesn't cope with the longer directives, which we
|
||
;; would have to match from start to end since they don't end with
|
||
;; any easily recognized characters.
|
||
objc (concat "\\([\{\}\(\);,]+\\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil (c-lang-const c-protection-kwds))
|
||
"\\)")
|
||
;; Pike is like C but we also match "[" for multiple value
|
||
;; assignments and type casts.
|
||
pike "\\([\{\}\(\)\[;,]+\\)")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-decl-prefix-re (c-lang-const c-decl-prefix-re)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-start-re
|
||
"Regexp matching the start of any declaration, cast or label.
|
||
It's used on the token after the one `c-decl-prefix-re' matched. This
|
||
regexp should not try to match those constructs accurately as it's
|
||
only used as a sieve to avoid spending more time checking other
|
||
constructs."
|
||
t (c-lang-const c-identifier-start))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-decl-start-re (c-lang-const c-decl-start-re))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-decl-prefix-or-start-re
|
||
;; Regexp matching something that might precede or start a
|
||
;; declaration, cast or label.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; If the first submatch matches, it's taken to match the end of a
|
||
;; token that might precede such a construct, e.g. ';', '}' or '{'.
|
||
;; It's built from `c-decl-prefix-re'.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; If the first submatch did not match, the match of the whole
|
||
;; regexp is taken to be at the first token in the declaration.
|
||
;; `c-decl-start-re' is not checked in this case.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; Design note: The reason the same regexp is used to match both
|
||
;; tokens that precede declarations and start them is to avoid an
|
||
;; extra regexp search from the previous declaration spot in
|
||
;; `c-find-decl-spots'. Users of `c-find-decl-spots' also count on
|
||
;; that it finds all declaration/cast/label starts in approximately
|
||
;; linear order, so we can't do the searches in two separate passes.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-decl-start-kwds)
|
||
(concat (c-lang-const c-decl-prefix-re)
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-decl-start-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-const c-decl-prefix-re)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-decl-prefix-or-start-re
|
||
(c-lang-const c-decl-prefix-or-start-re)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-cast-parens
|
||
;; List containing the paren characters that can open a cast, or nil in
|
||
;; languages without casts.
|
||
t (c-filter-ops (c-lang-const c-operators)
|
||
'(prefix)
|
||
"\\`\\s\(\\'"
|
||
(lambda (op) (elt op 0))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-cast-parens (c-lang-const c-cast-parens))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars
|
||
"List of syntactically relevant characters that never can occur before
|
||
the open brace in any construct that contains a brace block, e.g. in
|
||
the \"class Foo: public Bar\" part of:
|
||
|
||
class Foo: public Bar {int x();} a, *b;
|
||
|
||
If parens can occur, the chars inside those aren't filtered with this
|
||
list.
|
||
|
||
'<' and '>' should be disallowed even if angle bracket arglists can
|
||
occur. That since the search function needs to stop at them anyway to
|
||
ensure they are given paren syntax.
|
||
|
||
This is used to skip backward from the open brace to find the region
|
||
in which to look for a construct like \"class\", \"enum\",
|
||
\"namespace\" or whatever. That skipping should be as tight as
|
||
possible for good performance."
|
||
|
||
;; Default to all chars that only occurs in nonsymbol tokens outside
|
||
;; identifiers.
|
||
t (set-difference
|
||
(c-lang-const c-nonsymbol-token-char-list)
|
||
(c-filter-ops (append (c-lang-const c-identifier-ops)
|
||
(list (cons nil
|
||
(c-lang-const c-after-id-concat-ops))))
|
||
t
|
||
t
|
||
(lambda (op)
|
||
(let ((pos 0) res)
|
||
(while (string-match "\\(\\s.\\|\\s(\\|\\s)\\)"
|
||
op pos)
|
||
(setq res (cons (aref op (match-beginning 1)) res)
|
||
pos (match-end 0)))
|
||
res))))
|
||
|
||
;; Allow cpp operatios (where applicable).
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-cpp-prefix)
|
||
(set-difference (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars)
|
||
'(?#))
|
||
(c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars))
|
||
|
||
;; Allow ':' for inherit list starters.
|
||
(c++ objc idl) (set-difference (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars)
|
||
'(?:))
|
||
|
||
;; Allow ',' for multiple inherits.
|
||
(c++ java) (set-difference (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars)
|
||
'(?,))
|
||
|
||
;; Allow parentheses for anonymous inner classes in Java and class
|
||
;; initializer lists in Pike.
|
||
(java pike) (set-difference (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars)
|
||
'(?\( ?\)))
|
||
|
||
;; Allow '"' for extern clauses (e.g. extern "C" {...}).
|
||
(c c++ objc) (set-difference (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars)
|
||
'(?\" ?')))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-block-prefix-charset
|
||
;; `c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars' as an inverted charset suitable
|
||
;; for `c-syntactic-skip-backward'.
|
||
t (c-make-bare-char-alt (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-disallowed-chars) t))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-block-prefix-charset (c-lang-const c-block-prefix-charset))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-decl-prefix-key
|
||
"Regexp matching the declarator operators that might precede the
|
||
identifier in a declaration, e.g. the \"*\" in \"char *argv\". This
|
||
regexp should match \"(\" if parentheses are valid in declarators.
|
||
The end of the first submatch is taken as the end of the operator.
|
||
Identifier syntax is in effect when this is matched \(see
|
||
`c-identifier-syntax-table')."
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds)
|
||
(concat (regexp-opt (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds) t) "\\>")
|
||
;; Default to a regexp that never matches.
|
||
"\\<\\>")
|
||
;; Check that there's no "=" afterwards to avoid matching tokens
|
||
;; like "*=".
|
||
(c objc) (concat "\\("
|
||
"[*\(]"
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-decl-prefix-key)
|
||
"\\)"
|
||
"\\([^=]\\|$\\)")
|
||
c++ (concat "\\("
|
||
"[*\(&]"
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(concat "\\(" ; 2
|
||
;; If this matches there's special treatment in
|
||
;; `c-font-lock-declarators' and
|
||
;; `c-font-lock-declarations' that check for a
|
||
;; complete name followed by ":: *".
|
||
(c-lang-const c-identifier-start)
|
||
"\\)")
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-type-decl-prefix-key)
|
||
"\\)"
|
||
"\\([^=]\\|$\\)")
|
||
pike "\\(\\*\\)\\([^=]\\|$\\)")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-type-decl-prefix-key (c-lang-const c-type-decl-prefix-key)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-decl-suffix-key
|
||
"Regexp matching the declarator operators that might follow after the
|
||
identifier in a declaration, e.g. the \"[\" in \"char argv[]\". This
|
||
regexp should match \")\" if parentheses are valid in declarators. If
|
||
it matches an open paren of some kind, the type declaration check
|
||
continues at the corresponding close paren, otherwise the end of the
|
||
first submatch is taken as the end of the operator. Identifier syntax
|
||
is in effect when this is matched (see `c-identifier-syntax-table')."
|
||
;; Default to a regexp that matches `c-type-modifier-kwds' and a
|
||
;; function argument list parenthesis.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds)
|
||
(concat "\\(\(\\|"
|
||
(regexp-opt (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds) t) "\\>"
|
||
"\\)")
|
||
"\\(\(\\)")
|
||
(c c++ objc) (concat
|
||
"\\("
|
||
"[\)\[\(]"
|
||
(if (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds)
|
||
(concat
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
;; "throw" in `c-type-modifier-kwds' is followed
|
||
;; by a parenthesis list, but no extra measures
|
||
;; are necessary to handle that.
|
||
(regexp-opt (c-lang-const c-type-modifier-kwds) t)
|
||
"\\>")
|
||
"")
|
||
"\\)")
|
||
(java idl) "\\([\[\(]\\)")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-type-decl-suffix-key (c-lang-const c-type-decl-suffix-key)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key
|
||
"This regexp is matched after a declarator expression where
|
||
`c-type-decl-suffix-key' has matched. If it matches then the
|
||
construct is taken as a declaration. It's typically used to match the
|
||
beginning of a function body or whatever might occur after the
|
||
function header in a function declaration or definition. It's
|
||
undefined whether identifier syntax (see `c-identifier-syntax-table')
|
||
is in effect or not.
|
||
|
||
Note that it's used in cases like after \"foo (bar)\" so it should
|
||
only match when it's certain that it's a declaration, e.g \"{\" but
|
||
not \",\" or \";\"."
|
||
t "{"
|
||
;; If K&R style declarations should be recognized then one could
|
||
;; consider to match the start of any symbol since we want to match
|
||
;; the start of the first declaration in the "K&R region". That
|
||
;; could however produce false matches on code like "FOO(bar) x"
|
||
;; where FOO is a cpp macro, so it's better to leave it out and rely
|
||
;; on the other heuristics in that case.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-postfix-spec-kwds)
|
||
;; Add on the keywords in `c-postfix-spec-kwds'.
|
||
(concat (c-lang-const c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key)
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-postfix-spec-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-const c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key))
|
||
;; Also match the colon that starts a base class initializer list in
|
||
;; C++. That can be confused with a function call before the colon
|
||
;; in a ? : operator, but we count on that `c-decl-prefix-re' won't
|
||
;; match before such a thing (as a declaration-level construct;
|
||
;; matches inside arglist contexts are already excluded).
|
||
c++ "[{:]")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-after-suffixed-type-maybe-decl-key
|
||
;; Regexp that in addition to `c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key'
|
||
;; matches ";" and ",".
|
||
t (concat "\\(" (c-lang-const c-after-suffixed-type-decl-key) "\\)"
|
||
"\\|[;,]"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-after-suffixed-type-maybe-decl-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-after-suffixed-type-maybe-decl-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-type-concat-key
|
||
"Regexp matching operators that concatenate types, e.g. the \"|\" in
|
||
\"int|string\" in Pike. The end of the first submatch is taken as the
|
||
end of the operator. nil in languages without such operators. It's
|
||
undefined whether identifier syntax (see `c-identifier-syntax-table')
|
||
is in effect or not."
|
||
t nil
|
||
pike "\\([|.&]\\)\\($\\|[^|.&]\\)")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-type-concat-key (c-lang-const c-opt-type-concat-key)
|
||
'dont-doc)
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-type-suffix-key
|
||
"Regexp matching operators that might follow after a type, or nil in
|
||
languages that don't have such operators. The end of the first
|
||
submatch is taken as the end of the operator. This should not match
|
||
things like C++ template arglists if `c-recognize-<>-arglists' is set.
|
||
It's undefined whether identifier syntax (see `c-identifier-syntax-table')
|
||
is in effect or not."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++ objc pike) "\\(\\.\\.\\.\\)"
|
||
java (concat "\\(\\[" (c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*\\]\\)"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-type-suffix-key (c-lang-const c-opt-type-suffix-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-known-type-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the known type identifiers. This is initialized
|
||
;; from the type keywords and `*-font-lock-extra-types'. The first
|
||
;; submatch is the one that matches the type. Note that this regexp
|
||
;; assumes that symbol constituents like '_' and '$' have word
|
||
;; syntax.
|
||
(let* ((extra-types
|
||
(when (boundp (c-mode-symbol "font-lock-extra-types"))
|
||
(c-mode-var "font-lock-extra-types")))
|
||
(regexp-strings
|
||
(apply 'nconc
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (re)
|
||
(when (string-match "[][.*+?^$\\]" re)
|
||
(list re)))
|
||
extra-types)))
|
||
(plain-strings
|
||
(apply 'nconc
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (re)
|
||
(unless (string-match "[][.*+?^$\\]" re)
|
||
(list re)))
|
||
extra-types))))
|
||
(concat "\\<\\("
|
||
(c-concat-separated
|
||
(append (list (c-make-keywords-re nil
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-primitive-type-kwds)
|
||
plain-strings)))
|
||
regexp-strings)
|
||
"\\|")
|
||
"\\)\\>")))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-special-brace-lists
|
||
"List of open- and close-chars that makes up a pike-style brace list,
|
||
i.e. for a ([<5B>]) list there should be a cons (?\\[ . ?\\]) in this
|
||
list."
|
||
t nil
|
||
pike '((?{ . ?}) (?\[ . ?\]) (?< . ?>)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-special-brace-lists (c-lang-const c-special-brace-lists))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-recognize-knr-p
|
||
"Non-nil means K&R style argument declarations are valid."
|
||
t nil
|
||
c t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-recognize-knr-p (c-lang-const c-recognize-knr-p))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-recognize-typeless-decls
|
||
"Non-nil means function declarations without return type should be
|
||
recognized. That can introduce an ambiguity with parenthesized macro
|
||
calls before a brace block. This setting does not affect declarations
|
||
that are preceded by a declaration starting keyword, so
|
||
e.g. `c-typeless-decl-kwds' may still be used when it's set to nil."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++ objc) t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-recognize-typeless-decls
|
||
(c-lang-const c-recognize-typeless-decls))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-recognize-<>-arglists
|
||
"Non-nil means C++ style template arglists should be handled. More
|
||
specifically, this means a comma separated list of types or
|
||
expressions surrounded by \"<\" and \">\". It's always preceded by an
|
||
identifier or one of the keywords on `c-<>-type-kwds' or
|
||
`c-<>-arglist-kwds'. If there's an identifier before then the whole
|
||
expression is considered to be a type."
|
||
t (or (consp (c-lang-const c-<>-type-kwds))
|
||
(consp (c-lang-const c-<>-arglist-kwds))))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-recognize-<>-arglists (c-lang-const c-recognize-<>-arglists))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-recognize-paren-inits
|
||
"Non-nil means that parenthesis style initializers exist,
|
||
i.e. constructs like
|
||
|
||
Foo bar (gnu);
|
||
|
||
in addition to the more classic
|
||
|
||
Foo bar = gnu;"
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-recognize-paren-inits (c-lang-const c-recognize-paren-inits))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-recognize-paren-inexpr-blocks
|
||
"Non-nil to recognize gcc style in-expression blocks,
|
||
i.e. compound statements surrounded by parentheses inside expressions."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++) t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-recognize-paren-inexpr-blocks
|
||
(c-lang-const c-recognize-paren-inexpr-blocks))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-<>-arglist-start
|
||
;; Regexp matching the start of angle bracket arglists in languages
|
||
;; where `c-recognize-<>-arglists' is set. Does not exclude
|
||
;; keywords outside `c-<>-arglist-kwds'. The first submatch is
|
||
;; assumed to surround the preceding symbol. The whole match is
|
||
;; assumed to end directly after the opening "<".
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-recognize-<>-arglists)
|
||
(concat "\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-symbol-key)
|
||
"\\)"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-syntactic-ws)
|
||
"<")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-<>-arglist-start (c-lang-const c-opt-<>-arglist-start))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-<>-arglist-start-in-paren
|
||
;; Regexp that in addition to `c-opt-<>-arglist-start' matches close
|
||
;; parens. The first submatch is assumed to surround
|
||
;; `c-opt-<>-arglist-start'.
|
||
t (if (c-lang-const c-opt-<>-arglist-start)
|
||
(concat "\\("
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-<>-arglist-start)
|
||
"\\)\\|\\s\)")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-<>-arglist-start-in-paren
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-<>-arglist-start-in-paren))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-postfix-decl-spec-key
|
||
;; Regexp matching the beginning of a declaration specifier in the
|
||
;; region between the header and the body of a declaration.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; TODO: This is currently not used uniformly; c++-mode and
|
||
;; java-mode each have their own ways of using it.
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ (concat ":?"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"\\(virtual" (c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "+\\)?\\("
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re nil (c-lang-const c-protection-kwds))
|
||
"\\)" (c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "+"
|
||
"\\(" (c-lang-const c-symbol-key) "\\)")
|
||
java (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-postfix-spec-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-postfix-decl-spec-key
|
||
(c-lang-const c-opt-postfix-decl-spec-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-recognize-colon-labels
|
||
"Non-nil if generic labels ending with \":\" should be recognized.
|
||
That includes labels in code and access keys in classes. This does
|
||
not apply to labels recognized by `c-label-kwds' and
|
||
`c-opt-extra-label-key'."
|
||
t nil
|
||
(c c++ objc java pike) t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-recognize-colon-labels
|
||
(c-lang-const c-recognize-colon-labels))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-label-prefix-re
|
||
"Regexp like `c-decl-prefix-re' that matches any token that can precede
|
||
a generic colon label. Not used if `c-recognize-colon-labels' is
|
||
nil."
|
||
t "\\([{};]+\\)")
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-label-prefix-re
|
||
(c-lang-const c-label-prefix-re))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-nonlabel-token-key
|
||
"Regexp matching things that can't occur in generic colon labels,
|
||
neither in a statement nor in a declaration context. The regexp is
|
||
tested at the beginning of every sexp in a suspected label,
|
||
i.e. before \":\". Only used if `c-recognize-colon-labels' is set."
|
||
t (concat
|
||
;; Don't allow string literals.
|
||
"[\"']\\|"
|
||
;; All keywords except `c-label-kwds' and `c-protection-kwds'.
|
||
(c-make-keywords-re t
|
||
(set-difference (c-lang-const c-keywords)
|
||
(append (c-lang-const c-label-kwds)
|
||
(c-lang-const c-protection-kwds))
|
||
:test 'string-equal)))
|
||
;; Also check for open parens in C++, to catch member init lists in
|
||
;; constructors. We normally allow it so that macros with arguments
|
||
;; work in labels.
|
||
c++ (concat "\\s\(\\|" (c-lang-const c-nonlabel-token-key)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-nonlabel-token-key (c-lang-const c-nonlabel-token-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-extra-label-key
|
||
"Optional regexp matching labels.
|
||
Normally, labels are detected according to `c-nonlabel-token-key',
|
||
`c-decl-prefix-re' and `c-nonlabel-decl-prefix-re'. This regexp can
|
||
be used if there are additional labels that aren't recognized that
|
||
way."
|
||
t nil
|
||
objc (c-make-keywords-re t (c-lang-const c-protection-kwds)))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-extra-label-key (c-lang-const c-opt-extra-label-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-friend-key
|
||
;; Regexp describing friend declarations classes, or nil in
|
||
;; languages that don't have such things.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; TODO: Ought to use `c-prefix-spec-kwds-re' or similar, and the
|
||
;; template skipping isn't done properly. This will disappear soon.
|
||
t nil
|
||
c++ (concat "friend" (c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "+"
|
||
"\\|"
|
||
(concat "template"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"<.+>"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"friend"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "+")))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-friend-key (c-lang-const c-opt-friend-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-opt-method-key
|
||
;; Special regexp to match the start of Objective-C methods. The
|
||
;; first submatch is assumed to end after the + or - key.
|
||
t nil
|
||
objc (concat
|
||
;; TODO: Ought to use a better method than anchoring on bol.
|
||
"^\\s *"
|
||
"\\([+-]\\)"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
(concat "\\(" ; Return type.
|
||
"([^\)]*)"
|
||
(c-lang-const c-simple-ws) "*"
|
||
"\\)?")
|
||
"\\(" (c-lang-const c-symbol-key) "\\)"))
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-opt-method-key (c-lang-const c-opt-method-key))
|
||
|
||
(c-lang-defconst c-type-decl-end-used
|
||
;; Must be set in buffers where the `c-type' text property might be
|
||
;; used with the value `c-decl-end'.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; `c-decl-end' is used to mark the ends of labels and access keys
|
||
;; to make interactive refontification work better.
|
||
t (or (c-lang-const c-recognize-colon-labels)
|
||
(and (c-lang-const c-label-kwds) t))
|
||
;; `c-decl-end' is used to mark the end of the @-style directives in
|
||
;; Objective-C.
|
||
objc t)
|
||
(c-lang-defvar c-type-decl-end-used (c-lang-const c-type-decl-end-used))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;;; Wrap up the `c-lang-defvar' system.
|
||
|
||
;; Compile in the list of language variables that has been collected
|
||
;; with the `c-lang-defvar' and `c-lang-setvar' macros. Note that the
|
||
;; first element of each is nil.
|
||
(defconst c-lang-variable-inits (cc-eval-when-compile c-lang-variable-inits))
|
||
(defconst c-emacs-variable-inits (cc-eval-when-compile c-emacs-variable-inits))
|
||
|
||
;; Make the `c-lang-setvar' variables buffer local in the current buffer.
|
||
;; These are typically standard emacs variables such as `comment-start'.
|
||
(defmacro c-make-emacs-variables-local ()
|
||
`(progn
|
||
,@(mapcar (lambda (init)
|
||
`(make-local-variable ',(car init)))
|
||
(cdr c-emacs-variable-inits))))
|
||
|
||
(defun c-make-init-lang-vars-fun (mode)
|
||
"Create a function that initializes all the language dependent variables
|
||
for the given mode.
|
||
|
||
This function should be evaluated at compile time, so that the
|
||
function it returns is byte compiled with all the evaluated results
|
||
from the language constants. Use the `c-init-language-vars' macro to
|
||
accomplish that conveniently."
|
||
|
||
(if (and (not load-in-progress)
|
||
(boundp 'byte-compile-dest-file)
|
||
(stringp byte-compile-dest-file))
|
||
|
||
;; No need to byte compile this lambda since the byte compiler is
|
||
;; smart enough to detect the `funcall' construct in the
|
||
;; `c-init-language-vars' macro below and compile it all straight
|
||
;; into the function that contains `c-init-language-vars'.
|
||
`(lambda ()
|
||
|
||
;; This let sets up the context for `c-mode-var' and similar
|
||
;; that could be in the result from `cl-macroexpand-all'.
|
||
(let ((c-buffer-is-cc-mode ',mode)
|
||
current-var source-eval)
|
||
(c-make-emacs-variables-local)
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
|
||
(if (eq c-version-sym ',c-version-sym)
|
||
(setq ,@(let ((c-buffer-is-cc-mode mode)
|
||
(c-lang-const-expansion 'immediate))
|
||
;; `c-lang-const' will expand to the evaluated
|
||
;; constant immediately in `cl-macroexpand-all'
|
||
;; below.
|
||
(mapcan
|
||
(lambda (init)
|
||
`(current-var ',(car init)
|
||
,(car init) ,(cl-macroexpand-all
|
||
(elt init 1))))
|
||
;; Note: The following `append' copies the
|
||
;; first argument. That list is small, so
|
||
;; this doesn't matter too much.
|
||
(append (cdr c-emacs-variable-inits)
|
||
(cdr c-lang-variable-inits)))))
|
||
|
||
;; This diagnostic message isn't useful for end
|
||
;; users, so it's disabled.
|
||
;;(unless (get ',mode 'c-has-warned-lang-consts)
|
||
;; (message ,(concat "%s compiled with CC Mode %s "
|
||
;; "but loaded with %s - evaluating "
|
||
;; "language constants from source")
|
||
;; ',mode ,c-version c-version)
|
||
;; (put ',mode 'c-has-warned-lang-consts t))
|
||
|
||
(require 'cc-langs)
|
||
(setq source-eval t)
|
||
(let ((init (append (cdr c-emacs-variable-inits)
|
||
(cdr c-lang-variable-inits))))
|
||
(while init
|
||
(setq current-var (caar init))
|
||
(set (caar init) (eval (cadar init)))
|
||
(setq init (cdr init)))))
|
||
|
||
(error
|
||
(if current-var
|
||
(message "Eval error in the `c-lang-defvar' or `c-lang-setvar' for `%s'%s: %S"
|
||
current-var
|
||
(if source-eval
|
||
(format "\
|
||
(fallback source eval - %s compiled with CC Mode %s but loaded with %s)"
|
||
',mode ,c-version c-version)
|
||
"")
|
||
err)
|
||
(signal (car err) (cdr err)))))))
|
||
|
||
;; Being evaluated from source. Always use the dynamic method to
|
||
;; work well when `c-lang-defvar's in this file are reevaluated
|
||
;; interactively.
|
||
`(lambda ()
|
||
(require 'cc-langs)
|
||
(let ((c-buffer-is-cc-mode ',mode)
|
||
(init (append (cdr c-emacs-variable-inits)
|
||
(cdr c-lang-variable-inits)))
|
||
current-var)
|
||
(c-make-emacs-variables-local)
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
|
||
(while init
|
||
(setq current-var (caar init))
|
||
(set (caar init) (eval (cadar init)))
|
||
(setq init (cdr init)))
|
||
|
||
(error
|
||
(if current-var
|
||
(message
|
||
"Eval error in the `c-lang-defvar' or `c-lang-setver' for `%s' (source eval): %S"
|
||
current-var err)
|
||
(signal (car err) (cdr err)))))))
|
||
))
|
||
|
||
(defmacro c-init-language-vars (mode)
|
||
"Initialize all the language dependent variables for the given mode.
|
||
This macro is expanded at compile time to a form tailored for the mode
|
||
in question, so MODE must be a constant. Therefore MODE is not
|
||
evaluated and should not be quoted."
|
||
`(funcall ,(c-make-init-lang-vars-fun mode)))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(cc-provide 'cc-langs)
|
||
|
||
;;; arch-tag: 1ab57482-cfc2-4c5b-b628-3539c3098822
|
||
;;; cc-langs.el ends here
|