1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
1003
1004
1005
1006
1007
1008
1009
1010
1011
1012
1013
1014
1015
1016
1017
1018
1019
1020
1021
1022
1023
1024
1025
1026
1027
1028
1029
1030
1031
1032
1033
1034
1035
1036
1037
1038
1039
1040
1041
1042
1043
1044
1045
1046
1047
1048
1049
1050
1051
1052
1053
1054
1055
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064
1065
1066
1067
1068
1069
1070
1071
1072
1073
1074
1075
1076
1077
1078
1079
1080
1081
1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
1087
1088
1089
1090
1091
1092
1093
1094
1095
1096
1097
1098
1099
1100
1101
1102
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107
1108
1109
1110
1111
1112
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118
1119
1120
1121
1122
1123
1124
1125
1126
1127
1128
1129
1130
1131
1132
1133
1134
1135
1136
1137
1138
1139
1140
1141
1142
1143
1144
1145
1146
1147
1148
1149
1150
1151
1152
1153
1154
1155
1156
1157
1158
1159
1160
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
1166
1167
1168
1169
1170
1171
1172
1173
1174
1175
1176
1177
1178
1179
1180
1181
1182
1183
1184
1185
1186
1187
1188
1189
1190
1191
1192
1193
1194
1195
1196
1197
1198
1199
1200
1201
1202
1203
1204
1205
1206
1207
1208
1209
1210
1211
1212
1213
1214
1215
1216
1217
1218
1219
1220
1221
1222
1223
1224
1225
1226
1227
1228
1229
1230
1231
1232
1233
1234
1235
1236
1237
1238
1239
1240
1241
1242
1243
1244
1245
1246
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251
1252
1253
1254
1255
1256
1257
1258
1259
1260
1261
1262
1263
1264
1265
1266
1267
1268
1269
1270
1271
1272
1273
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
1288
1289
1290
1291
1292
1293
1294
1295
1296
1297
1298
1299
1300
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
1314
1315
1316
1317
1318
1319
1320
1321
1322
1323
1324
1325
1326
1327
1328
1329
1330
1331
1332
1333
1334
1335
1336
1337
1338
1339
1340
1341
1342
1343
1344
1345
1346
1347
1348
1349
1350
1351
1352
1353
1354
1355
1356
1357
1358
1359
1360
1361
1362
1363
1364
1365
1366
1367
1368
1369
1370
1371
1372
1373
1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1379
1380
1381
1382
1383
1384
1385
1386
1387
1388
1389
1390
1391
1392
1393
1394
1395
1396
1397
1398
1399
1400
1401
1402
1403
1404
1405
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
1411
1412
1413
1414
1415
1416
1417
1418
1419
1420
1421
1422
1423
1424
1425
1426
1427
1428
1429
1430
1431
1432
1433
1434
1435
1436
1437
1438
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443
1444
1445
1446
1447
1448
1449
1450
1451
1452
1453
1454
1455
1456
1457
1458
1459
1460
1461
1462
1463
1464
1465
1466
1467
1468
1469
1470
1471
1472
1473
1474
1475
1476
1477
1478
1479
1480
1481
1482
1483
1484
1485
1486
1487
1488
1489
1490
1491
1492
1493
1494
1495
1496
1497
1498
1499
1500
1501
1502
1503
1504
1505
1506
1507
1508
1509
1510
1511
1512
1513
1514
1515
1516
1517
1518
1519
1520
1521
1522
1523
1524
1525
1526
1527
1528
1529
1530
1531
1532
1533
1534
1535
1536
1537
1538
1539
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
1550
1551
1552
1553
1554
1555
1556
1557
1558
1559
1560
1561
1562
1563
1564
1565
1566
1567
1568
1569
1570
1571
1572
1573
1574
1575
1576
1577
1578
1579
1580
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585
1586
1587
1588
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596
1597
1598
1599
1600
1601
1602
1603
1604
1605
1606
1607
1608
1609
1610
1611
1612
1613
1614
1615
1616
1617
1618
1619
1620
1621
1622
1623
1624
1625
1626
1627
1628
1629
1630
1631
1632
1633
1634
1635
1636
1637
1638
1639
1640
1641
1642
1643
1644
1645
1646
1647
1648
1649
1650
1651
1652
1653
1654
1655
1656
1657
1658
1659
1660
1661
1662
1663
1664
1665
1666
1667
1668
1669
1670
1671
|
;;; cc-vars.el --- user customization variables for CC Mode
;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
;; 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
;; 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:
;;; 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)
;; Silence the compiler.
(cc-bytecomp-defun get-char-table) ; XEmacs
(cc-eval-when-compile
(require 'custom)
(require 'widget))
(cc-eval-when-compile
;; Need the function form of `backquote', which isn't standardized
;; between Emacsen. It's called `bq-process' in XEmacs, and
;; `backquote-process' in Emacs. `backquote-process' returns a
;; slightly more convoluted form, so let `bq-process' be the norm.
(if (fboundp 'backquote-process)
(cc-bytecomp-defmacro bq-process (form)
`(cdr (backquote-process ,form)))))
;;; Helpers
;; This widget exists in newer versions of the Custom library
(or (get 'other 'widget-type)
(define-widget 'other 'sexp
"Matches everything, but doesn't let the user edit the value.
Useful as last item in a `choice' widget."
:tag "Other"
:format "%t%n"
:value 'other))
;; The next defun will supersede c-const-symbol.
(eval-and-compile
(defun c-constant-symbol (sym len)
"Create an uneditable symbol for customization buffers.
SYM is the name of the symbol, LEN the length of the field (in
characters) the symbol will be displayed in. LEN must be big
enough.
This returns a (const ....) structure, suitable for embedding
within a customization type."
(or (symbolp sym) (error "c-constant-symbol: %s is not a symbol" sym))
(let* ((name (symbol-name sym))
(l (length name))
(disp (concat name ":" (make-string (- len l 1) ?\ ))))
`(const
:size ,len
:format ,disp
:value ,sym))))
(define-widget 'c-const-symbol 'item
"An uneditable lisp symbol. This is obsolete -
use c-constant-symbol instead."
:value nil
:tag "Symbol"
:format "%t: %v\n%d"
:match (lambda (widget value) (symbolp value))
:value-to-internal
(lambda (widget value)
(let ((s (if (symbolp value)
(symbol-name value)
value))
(l (widget-get widget :size)))
(if l
(setq s (concat s (make-string (- l (length s)) ?\ ))))
s))
:value-to-external
(lambda (widget value)
(if (stringp value)
(intern (progn
(string-match "\\`[^ ]*" value)
(match-string 0 value)))
value)))
(define-widget 'c-integer-or-nil 'sexp
"An integer or the value nil."
:value nil
:tag "Optional integer"
:match (lambda (widget value) (or (integerp value) (null value))))
(define-widget 'c-symbol-list 'sexp
"A single symbol or a list of symbols."
:tag "Symbols separated by spaces"
:validate 'widget-field-validate
:match
(lambda (widget value)
(or (symbolp value)
(catch 'ok
(while (listp value)
(unless (symbolp (car value))
(throw 'ok nil))
(setq value (cdr value)))
(null value))))
:value-to-internal
(lambda (widget value)
(cond ((null value)
"")
((symbolp value)
(symbol-name value))
((consp value)
(mapconcat (lambda (symbol)
(symbol-name symbol))
value
" "))
(t
value)))
:value-to-external
(lambda (widget value)
(if (stringp value)
(let (list end)
(while (string-match "\\S +" value end)
(setq list (cons (intern (match-string 0 value)) list)
end (match-end 0)))
(if (and list (not (cdr list)))
(car list)
(nreverse list)))
value)))
(defvar c-style-variables
'(c-basic-offset c-comment-only-line-offset c-indent-comment-alist
c-indent-comments-syntactically-p c-block-comment-prefix
c-comment-prefix-regexp c-doc-comment-style c-cleanup-list
c-hanging-braces-alist c-hanging-colons-alist
c-hanging-semi&comma-criteria c-backslash-column c-backslash-max-column
c-special-indent-hook c-label-minimum-indentation c-offsets-alist)
"List of the style variables.")
(defvar c-fallback-style nil)
(defsubst c-set-stylevar-fallback (name val)
(put name 'c-stylevar-fallback val)
(setq c-fallback-style (cons (cons name val) c-fallback-style)))
(defmacro defcustom-c-stylevar (name val doc &rest args)
"Define a style variable NAME with VAL and DOC.
More precisely, convert the given `:type FOO', mined out of ARGS,
to an aggregate `:type (radio STYLE (PREAMBLE FOO))', append some
some boilerplate documentation to DOC, arrange for the fallback
value of NAME to be VAL, and call `custom-declare-variable' to
do the rest of the work.
STYLE stands for the choice where the value is taken from some
style setting. PREAMBLE is optionally prepended to FOO; that is,
if FOO contains :tag or :value, the respective two-element list
component is ignored."
(declare (debug (symbolp form stringp &rest)))
(let* ((expanded-doc (concat doc "
This is a style variable. Apart from the valid values described
above, it can be set to the symbol `set-from-style'. In that case,
it takes its value from the style system (see `c-default-style' and
`c-style-alist') when a CC Mode buffer is initialized. Otherwise,
the value set here overrides the style system (there is a variable
`c-old-style-variable-behavior' that changes this, though)."))
(typ (eval (plist-get args :type)))
(type (if (consp typ) typ (list typ)))
(head (car type))
(tail (cdr type))
(newt (append (unless (plist-get tail :tag)
'(:tag "Override style settings"))
(unless (plist-get tail :value)
`(:value ,(eval val)))
tail))
(aggregate `'(radio
(const :tag "Use style settings" set-from-style)
,(cons head newt))))
`(progn
(c-set-stylevar-fallback ',name ,val)
(custom-declare-variable
',name ''set-from-style
,expanded-doc
,@(plist-put args :type aggregate)))))
(defun c-valid-offset (offset)
"Return non-nil if OFFSET is a valid offset for a syntactic symbol.
See `c-offsets-alist'."
(or (eq offset '+)
(eq offset '-)
(eq offset '++)
(eq offset '--)
(eq offset '*)
(eq offset '/)
(integerp offset)
(functionp offset)
(and (symbolp offset) (boundp offset))
(and (vectorp offset)
(= (length offset) 1)
(integerp (elt offset 0)))
(and (consp offset)
(not (eq (car offset) 'quote)) ; Detect misquoted lists.
(progn
(when (memq (car offset) '(first min max add))
(setq offset (cdr offset)))
(while (and (consp offset)
(c-valid-offset (car offset)))
(setq offset (cdr offset)))
(null offset)))))
;;; User variables
(defcustom c-strict-syntax-p nil
"*If non-nil, all syntactic symbols must be found in `c-offsets-alist'.
If the syntactic symbol for a particular line does not match a symbol
in the offsets alist, or if no non-nil offset value can be determined
for a symbol, an error is generated, otherwise no error is reported
and the syntactic symbol is ignored.
This variable is considered obsolete; it doesn't work well with lineup
functions that return nil to support the feature of using lists on
syntactic symbols in `c-offsets-alist'. Please keep it set to nil."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-echo-syntactic-information-p nil
"*If non-nil, syntactic info is echoed when the line is indented."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-report-syntactic-errors nil
"*If non-nil, certain syntactic errors are reported with a ding
and a message, for example when an \"else\" is indented for which
there's no corresponding \"if\".
Note however that CC Mode doesn't make any special effort to check for
syntactic errors; that's the job of the compiler. The reason it can
report cases like the one above is that it can't find the correct
anchoring position to indent the line in that case."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-basic-offset 4
"*Amount of basic offset used by + and - symbols in `c-offsets-alist'.
Also used as the indentation step when `c-syntactic-indentation' is
nil."
:type 'integer
:group 'c)
;;;###autoload(put 'c-basic-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
(defcustom c-tab-always-indent t
"*Controls the operation of the TAB key.
If t, hitting TAB always just indents the current line. If nil, hitting
TAB indents the current line if point is at the left margin or in the
line's indentation, otherwise it inserts a `real' tab character \(see
note\). If some other value (not nil or t), then tab is inserted only
within literals \(comments and strings), but the line is always
reindented.
Note: The value of `indent-tabs-mode' will determine whether a real
tab character will be inserted, or the equivalent number of spaces.
When inserting a tab, actually the function stored in the variable
`c-insert-tab-function' is called.
Note: indentation of lines containing only comments is also controlled
by the `c-comment-only-line-offset' variable."
:type '(radio
(const :tag "TAB key always indents, never inserts TAB" t)
(const :tag "TAB key indents in left margin, otherwise inserts TAB" nil)
(other :tag "TAB key inserts TAB in literals, otherwise indents" other))
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-insert-tab-function 'insert-tab
"*Function used when inserting a tab for \\[c-indent-command].
Only used when `c-tab-always-indent' indicates a `real' tab character
should be inserted. Value must be a function taking no arguments."
:type 'function
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-syntactic-indentation t
"*Whether the indentation should be controlled by the syntactic context.
If t, the indentation functions indent according to the syntactic
context, using the style settings specified by `c-offsets-alist'.
If nil, every line is just indented to the same level as the previous
one, and the \\[c-indent-command] command adjusts the indentation in
steps specified by `c-basic-offset'. The indentation style has no
effect in this mode, nor any of the indentation associated variables,
e.g. `c-special-indent-hook'."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(make-variable-buffer-local 'c-syntactic-indentation)
(put 'c-syntactic-indentation 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
(defcustom c-syntactic-indentation-in-macros t
"*Enable syntactic analysis inside macros.
If this is nil, all lines inside macro definitions are analyzed as
`cpp-macro-cont'. Otherwise they are analyzed syntactically, just
like normal code, and `cpp-define-intro' is used to create the
additional indentation of the bodies of \"#define\" macros.
Having this enabled simplifies editing of large multiline macros, but
it might complicate editing if CC Mode doesn't recognize the context
of the macro content. The default context inside the macro is the
same as the top level, so if it contains \"bare\" statements they
might be indented wrongly, although there are special cases that
handle this in most cases. If this problem occurs, it's usually
countered easily by surrounding the statements by a block \(or even
better with the \"do { ... } while \(0)\" trick)."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(put 'c-syntactic-indentation-in-macros 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-comment-only-line-offset 0
"*Extra offset for line which contains only the start of a comment.
Can contain an integer or a cons cell of the form:
(NON-ANCHORED-OFFSET . ANCHORED-OFFSET)
Where NON-ANCHORED-OFFSET is the amount of offset given to
non-column-zero anchored comment-only lines, and ANCHORED-OFFSET is
the amount of offset to give column-zero anchored comment-only lines.
Just an integer as value is equivalent to (<val> . -1000).
Note that this variable only has effect when the `c-lineup-comment'
lineup function is used on the `comment-intro' syntactic symbol (the
default)."
:type '(choice (integer :tag "Non-anchored offset" 0)
(cons :tag "Non-anchored & anchored offset"
:value (0 . 0)
(integer :tag "Non-anchored offset")
(integer :tag "Anchored offset")))
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-indent-comment-alist
'((anchored-comment . (column . 0))
(end-block . (space . 1))
(cpp-end-block . (space . 2)))
"*Specifies how \\[indent-for-comment] calculates the comment start column.
This is an association list that contains entries of the form:
(LINE-TYPE . INDENT-SPEC)
LINE-TYPE specifies a type of line as described below, and INDENT-SPEC
says what \\[indent-for-comment] should do when used on that type of line.
The recognized values for LINE-TYPE are:
empty-line -- The line is empty.
anchored-comment -- The line contains a comment that starts in column 0.
end-block -- The line contains a solitary block closing brace.
cpp-end-block -- The line contains a preprocessor directive that
closes a block, i.e. either \"#endif\" or \"#else\".
other -- The line does not match any other entry
currently on the list.
An INDENT-SPEC is a cons cell of the form:
(ACTION . VALUE)
ACTION says how \\[indent-for-comment] should align the comment, and
VALUE is interpreted depending on ACTION. ACTION can be any of the
following:
space -- Put VALUE spaces between the end of the line and the start
of the comment.
column -- Start the comment at the column VALUE. If the line is
longer than that, the comment is preceded by a single
space. If VALUE is nil, `comment-column' is used.
align -- Align the comment with one on the previous line, if there
is any. If the line is too long, the comment is preceded
by a single space. If there isn't a comment start on the
previous line, the behavior is specified by VALUE, which
in turn is interpreted as an INDENT-SPEC.
If a LINE-TYPE is missing, then \\[indent-for-comment] indents the comment
according to `comment-column'.
Note that a non-nil value on `c-indent-comments-syntactically-p'
overrides this variable, so empty lines are indentented syntactically
in that case, i.e. as if \\[c-indent-command] was used instead."
:type
(let ((space '(cons :tag "space"
:format "%v"
:value (space . 1)
(const :format "space " space)
(integer :format "%v")))
(column '(cons :tag "column"
:format "%v"
(const :format "column " column)
(c-integer-or-nil :format "%v"))))
`(set ,@(mapcar
(lambda (elt)
`(cons :format "%v"
,(c-constant-symbol elt 20)
(choice
:format "%[Choice%] %v"
:value (column . nil)
,space
,column
(cons :tag "align"
:format "%v"
(const :format "align " align)
(choice
:format "%[Choice%] %v"
:value (column . nil)
,space
,column)))))
'(empty-line anchored-comment end-block cpp-end-block other))))
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-indent-comments-syntactically-p nil
"*Specifies how \\[indent-for-comment] should handle comment-only lines.
When this variable is non-nil, comment-only lines are indented
according to syntactic analysis via `c-offsets-alist'. Otherwise, the
comment is indented as if it was preceded by code. Note that this
variable does not affect how the normal line indentation treats
comment-only lines."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(make-obsolete-variable 'c-comment-continuation-stars
'c-block-comment-prefix)
;; Although c-comment-continuation-stars is obsolete, we look at it in
;; some places in CC Mode anyway, so make the compiler ignore it
;; during our compilation.
;; [This is unclean; better to use `symbol-value'. --ttn]
;;(cc-bytecomp-obsolete-var c-comment-continuation-stars)
;;(cc-bytecomp-defvar c-comment-continuation-stars)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-block-comment-prefix
(if (boundp 'c-comment-continuation-stars)
(symbol-value 'c-comment-continuation-stars)
"* ")
"*Specifies the line prefix of continued C-style block comments.
You should set this variable to the literal string that gets inserted
at the front of continued block style comment lines. This should
either be the empty string, or some characters without preceding
spaces. To adjust the alignment under the comment starter, put an
appropriate value on the `c' syntactic symbol (see the
`c-offsets-alist' variable).
It's only used when a one-line block comment is broken into two or
more lines for the first time; otherwise the appropriate prefix is
adapted from the comment. This variable is not used for C++ line
style comments."
:type 'string
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-comment-prefix-regexp
'((pike-mode . "//+!?\\|\\**")
(awk-mode . "#+")
(other . "//+\\|\\**"))
"*Regexp to match the line prefix inside comments.
This regexp is used to recognize the fill prefix inside comments for
correct paragraph filling and other things.
If this variable is a string, it will be used in all CC Mode major
modes. It can also be an association list, to associate specific
regexps to specific major modes. The symbol for the major mode is
looked up in the association list, and its value is used as the line
prefix regexp. If it's not found, then the symbol `other' is looked
up and its value is used instead.
The regexp should match the prefix used in both C++ style line
comments and C style block comments, but it does not need to match a
block comment starter. In other words, it should at least match
\"//\" for line comments and the string in `c-block-comment-prefix',
which is sometimes inserted by CC Mode inside block comments. It
should not match any surrounding whitespace.
Note that CC Mode uses this variable to set many other variables that
handle the paragraph filling. That's done at mode initialization or
when you switch to a style which sets this variable. Thus, if you
change it in some other way, e.g. interactively in a CC Mode buffer,
you will need to do \\[c-setup-paragraph-variables] afterwards so that
the other variables are updated with the new value.
Note also that when CC Mode starts up, all variables are initialized
before the mode hooks are run. It's therefore necessary to make a
call to `c-setup-paragraph-variables' explicitly if you change this
variable in a mode hook."
:type '(radio
(regexp :tag "Regexp for all modes")
(list
:tag "Mode-specific regexps"
(set
:inline t :format "%v"
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C " c-mode) (regexp :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C++ " c++-mode) (regexp :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "ObjC " objc-mode) (regexp :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Java " java-mode) (regexp :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "IDL " idl-mode) (regexp :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Pike " pike-mode) (regexp :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "AWK " awk-mode) (regexp :format "%v")))
(cons :format " %v"
(const :format "Other " other) (regexp :format "%v"))))
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-doc-comment-style
'((java-mode . javadoc)
(pike-mode . autodoc)
(c-mode . gtkdoc))
"*Specifies documentation comment style(s) to recognize.
This is primarily used to fontify doc comments and the markup within
them, e.g. Javadoc comments.
The value can be any of the following symbols for various known doc
comment styles:
javadoc -- Javadoc style for \"/** ... */\" comments (default in Java mode).
autodoc -- Pike autodoc style for \"//! ...\" comments (default in Pike mode).
gtkdoc -- GtkDoc style for \"/** ... **/\" comments (default in C mode).
The value may also be a list of doc comment styles, in which case all
of them are recognized simultaneously (presumably with markup cues
that don't conflict).
The value may also be an association list to specify different doc
comment styles for different languages. The symbol for the major mode
is then looked up in the alist, and the value of that element is
interpreted as above if found. If it isn't found then the symbol
`other' is looked up and its value is used instead.
Note that CC Mode uses this variable to set other variables that
handle fontification etc. That's done at mode initialization or when
you switch to a style which sets this variable. Thus, if you change
it in some other way, e.g. interactively in a CC Mode buffer, you will
need to do \\[java-mode] (or whatever mode you're currently using) to
reinitialize.
Note also that when CC Mode starts up, the other variables are
modified before the mode hooks are run. If you change this variable
in a mode hook, you have to call `c-setup-doc-comment-style'
afterwards to redo that work."
;; Symbols other than those documented above may be used on this
;; variable. If a variable exists that has that name with
;; "-font-lock-keywords" appended, it's value is prepended to the
;; font lock keywords list. If it's a function then it's called and
;; the result is prepended.
:type '(radio
(c-symbol-list :tag "Doc style(s) in all modes")
(list
:tag "Mode-specific doc styles"
(set
:inline t :format "%v"
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C " c-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C++ " c++-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "ObjC " objc-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Java " java-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "IDL " idl-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Pike " pike-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "AWK " awk-mode)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Other " other)
(c-symbol-list :format "%v")))))
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-ignore-auto-fill '(string cpp code)
"*List of contexts in which automatic filling never occurs.
If Auto Fill mode is active, it will be temporarily disabled if point
is in any context on this list. It's e.g. useful to enable Auto Fill
in comments only, but not in strings or normal code. The valid
contexts are:
string -- inside a string or character literal
c -- inside a C style block comment
c++ -- inside a C++ style line comment
cpp -- inside a preprocessor directive
code -- anywhere else, i.e. in normal code"
:type '(set
(const :tag "String literals" string)
(const :tag "C style block comments" c)
(const :tag "C++ style line comments" c++)
(const :tag "Preprocessor directives" cpp)
(const :tag "Normal code" code))
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-cleanup-list '(scope-operator)
"*List of various C/C++/ObjC constructs to \"clean up\".
The following clean ups only take place when the auto-newline feature
is turned on, as evidenced by the `/la' appearing next to the mode
name:
brace-else-brace -- Clean up \"} else {\" constructs by placing
entire construct on a single line. This clean
up only takes place when there is nothing but
white space between the braces and the `else'.
Clean up occurs when the open brace after the
`else' is typed.
brace-elseif-brace -- Similar to brace-else-brace, but clean up
\"} else if (...) {\" constructs. Clean up
occurs after the open parenthesis and the open
brace.
brace-catch-brace -- Similar to brace-elseif-brace, but clean up
\"} catch (...) {\" constructs.
empty-defun-braces -- Clean up empty defun braces by placing the
braces on the same line. Clean up occurs when
the defun closing brace is typed.
one-liner-defun -- If the code inside a function body can fit in
a single line, then remove any newlines
between that line and the defun braces so that
the whole body becomes a single line.
`c-max-one-liner-length' gives the maximum
length allowed for the resulting line. Clean
up occurs when the closing brace is typed.
defun-close-semi -- Clean up the terminating semi-colon on defuns
by placing the semi-colon on the same line as
the closing brace. Clean up occurs when the
semi-colon is typed.
list-close-comma -- Clean up commas following braces in array
and aggregate initializers. Clean up occurs
when the comma is typed.
scope-operator -- Clean up double colons which may designate
a C++ scope operator split across multiple
lines. Note that certain C++ constructs can
generate ambiguous situations. This clean up
only takes place when there is nothing but
whitespace between colons. Clean up occurs
when the second colon is typed.
The following clean ups always take place when they are on this list,
regardless of the auto-newline feature, since they typically don't
involve auto-newline inserted newlines:
space-before-funcall -- Insert exactly one space before the opening
parenthesis of a function call. Clean up
occurs when the opening parenthesis is typed.
compact-empty-funcall -- Clean up any space before the function call
opening parenthesis if and only if the
argument list is empty. This is typically
useful together with `space-before-funcall' to
get the style \"foo (bar)\" and \"foo()\".
Clean up occurs when the closing parenthesis
is typed.
comment-close-slash -- When a slash is typed after the comment prefix
on a bare line in a c-style comment, the comment
is closed by cleaning up preceding space and
inserting a star if needed."
:type '(set
(const :tag "Put \"} else {\" on one line (brace-else-brace)"
brace-else-brace)
(const :tag "Put \"} else if (...) {\" on one line (brace-elseif-brace)"
brace-elseif-brace)
(const :tag "Put \"} catch (...) {\" on one line (brace-catch-brace)"
brace-catch-brace)
(const :tag "Put empty defun braces on one line (empty-defun-braces)"
empty-defun-braces)
(const :tag "Put short function bodies on one line (one-liner-defun)"
one-liner-defun)
(const :tag "Put \"};\" ending defuns on one line (defun-close-semi)"
defun-close-semi)
(const :tag "Put \"},\" in aggregates on one line (list-close-comma)"
list-close-comma)
(const :tag "Put C++ style \"::\" on one line (scope-operator)"
scope-operator)
(const :tag "Put a space before funcall parens, e.g. \"foo (bar)\" (space-before-funcall)"
space-before-funcall)
(const :tag "Remove space before empty funcalls, e.g. \"foo()\" (compact-empty-funcall)"
compact-empty-funcall)
(const :tag "Make / on a bare line of a C-style comment close it (comment-close-slash)"
comment-close-slash))
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-hanging-braces-alist '((brace-list-open)
(brace-entry-open)
(statement-cont)
(substatement-open after)
(block-close . c-snug-do-while)
(extern-lang-open after)
(namespace-open after)
(module-open after)
(composition-open after)
(inexpr-class-open after)
(inexpr-class-close before)
(arglist-cont-nonempty))
"*Controls the insertion of newlines before and after braces
when the auto-newline feature is active. This variable contains an
association list with elements of the following form:
\(SYNTACTIC-SYMBOL . ACTION).
When a brace (either opening or closing) is inserted, the syntactic
context it defines is looked up in this list, and if found, the
associated ACTION is used to determine where newlines are inserted.
If the context is not found, the default is to insert a newline both
before and after the brace.
SYNTACTIC-SYMBOL can be statement-cont, brace-list-intro,
inexpr-class-open, inexpr-class-close, and any of the *-open and
*-close symbols. See `c-offsets-alist' for details, except for
inexpr-class-open and inexpr-class-close, which doesn't have any
corresponding symbols there. Those two symbols are used for the
opening and closing braces, respectively, of anonymous inner classes
in Java.
ACTION can be either a function symbol or a list containing any
combination of the symbols `before' or `after'. If the list is empty,
no newlines are inserted either before or after the brace.
When ACTION is a function symbol, the function is called with a two
arguments: the syntactic symbol for the brace and the buffer position
at which the brace was inserted. The function must return a list as
described in the preceding paragraph. Note that during the call to
the function, the variable `c-syntactic-context' is set to the entire
syntactic context for the brace line."
:type
`(set ,@(mapcar
(lambda (elt)
`(cons :format "%v"
,(c-constant-symbol elt 24)
(choice :format "%[Choice%] %v"
:value (before after)
(set :menu-tag "Before/after"
:format "Newline %v brace\n"
(const :format "%v, " before)
(const :format "%v " after))
(function :menu-tag "Function"
:format "Run function: %v"))))
'(defun-open defun-close
class-open class-close
inline-open inline-close
block-open block-close
statement-cont substatement-open statement-case-open
brace-list-open brace-list-close
brace-list-intro brace-entry-open
extern-lang-open extern-lang-close
namespace-open namespace-close
module-open module-close
composition-open composition-close
inexpr-class-open inexpr-class-close
arglist-cont-nonempty)))
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-max-one-liner-length 80
"Maximum length of line that clean-up \"one-liner-defun\" will compact to.
Zero or nil means no limit."
:type 'integer
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-hanging-colons-alist nil
"*Controls the insertion of newlines before and after certain colons.
This variable contains an association list with elements of the
following form: (SYNTACTIC-SYMBOL . ACTION).
SYNTACTIC-SYMBOL can be any of: case-label, label, access-label,
member-init-intro, or inher-intro.
See the variable `c-hanging-braces-alist' for the semantics of this
variable. Note however that making ACTION a function symbol is
currently not supported for this variable."
:type
`(set ,@(mapcar
(lambda (elt)
`(cons :format "%v"
,(c-constant-symbol elt 20)
(set :format "Newline %v colon\n"
(const :format "%v, " before)
(const :format "%v" after))))
'(case-label label access-label member-init-intro inher-intro)))
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-hanging-semi&comma-criteria
'(c-semi&comma-inside-parenlist)
"*List of functions that decide whether to insert a newline or not.
The functions in this list are called, in order, whenever the
auto-newline minor mode is activated (as evidenced by a `/a' or `/ah'
string in the mode line), and a semicolon or comma is typed (see
`c-electric-semi&comma'). Each function in this list is called with
no arguments, and should return one of the following values:
nil -- no determination made, continue checking
'stop -- do not insert a newline, and stop checking
(anything else) -- insert a newline, and stop checking
If every function in the list is called with no determination made,
then no newline is inserted."
:type '(repeat function)
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-backslash-column 48
"*Minimum alignment column for line continuation backslashes.
This is used by the functions that automatically insert or align the
line continuation backslashes in multiline macros. If any line in the
macro exceeds this column then the next tab stop from that line is
used as alignment column instead. See also `c-backslash-max-column'."
:type 'integer
:group 'c)
;;;###autoload(put 'c-backslash-column 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-backslash-max-column 72
"*Maximum alignment column for line continuation backslashes.
This is used by the functions that automatically insert or align the
line continuation backslashes in multiline macros. If any line in the
macro exceeds this column then the backslashes for the other lines
will be aligned at this column."
:type 'integer
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-auto-align-backslashes t
"*Align automatically inserted line continuation backslashes.
When line continuation backslashes are inserted automatically for line
breaks in multiline macros, e.g. by \\[c-context-line-break], they are
aligned with the other backslashes in the same macro if this flag is
set. Otherwise the inserted backslashes are preceded by a single
space."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-backspace-function 'backward-delete-char-untabify
"*Function called by `c-electric-backspace' when deleting backwards."
:type 'function
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-delete-function 'delete-char
"*Function called by `c-electric-delete-forward' when deleting forwards."
:type 'function
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-require-final-newline
;; C and C++ mandate that all nonempty files should end with a
;; newline. Objective-C refers to C for all things it doesn't
;; specify, so the same holds there. The other languages do not
;; require it (at least not explicitly in a normative text).
'((c-mode . t)
(c++-mode . t)
(objc-mode . t))
"*Controls whether a final newline is ensured when the file is saved.
The value is an association list that for each language mode specifies
the value to give to `require-final-newline' at mode initialization;
see that variable for details about the value. If a language isn't
present on the association list, CC Mode won't touch
`require-final-newline' in buffers for that language."
:type `(set (cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C " c-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C++ " c++-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "ObjC " objc-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Java " java-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "IDL " idl-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Pike " pike-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "AWK " awk-mode)
(symbol :format "%v" :value ,require-final-newline)))
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-electric-pound-behavior nil
"*List of behaviors for electric pound insertion.
Only currently supported behavior is `alignleft'."
:type '(set (const alignleft))
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-special-indent-hook nil
"*Hook for user defined special indentation adjustments.
This hook gets called after each line is indented by the mode. It is only
called if `c-syntactic-indentation' is non-nil."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom-c-stylevar c-label-minimum-indentation 1
"*Minimum indentation for lines inside code blocks.
This variable typically only affects code using the `gnu' style, which
mandates a minimum of one space in front of every line inside code
blocks. Specifically, the function `c-gnu-impose-minimum' on your
`c-special-indent-hook' is what enforces this."
:type 'integer
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-progress-interval 5
"*Interval used to update progress status during long re-indentation.
If a number, percentage complete gets updated after each interval of
that many seconds. To inhibit all messages during indentation, set
this variable to nil."
:type 'integer
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-default-style '((java-mode . "java") (awk-mode . "awk")
(other . "gnu"))
"*Style which gets installed by default when a file is visited.
The value of this variable can be any style defined in
`c-style-alist', including styles you add. The value can also be an
association list of major mode symbols to style names.
When the value is a string, all CC Mode major modes will install this
style by default.
When the value is an alist, the major mode symbol is looked up in it
and the associated style is installed. If the major mode is not
listed in the alist, then the symbol `other' is looked up in it, and
if found, the style in that entry is used. If `other' is not found in
the alist, then \"gnu\" style is used.
The default style gets installed before your mode hooks run, so you
can always override the use of `c-default-style' by making calls to
`c-set-style' in the appropriate mode hook."
:type '(radio
(string :tag "Style in all modes")
(set :tag "Mode-specific styles"
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C " c-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "C++ " c++-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "ObjC " objc-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Java " java-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "IDL " idl-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Pike " pike-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "AWK " awk-mode) (string :format "%v"))
(cons :format "%v"
(const :format "Other " other) (string :format "%v"))))
:group 'c)
;; *) At the start of a statement or declaration means in more detail:
;; At the closest preceding statement/declaration that starts at boi
;; and doesn't have a label or comment at that position. If there's
;; no such statement within the same block, then back up to the
;; surrounding block or statement, add the appropriate
;; statement-block-intro, defun-block-intro or substatement syntax
;; symbol and continue searching.
(c-set-stylevar-fallback 'c-offsets-alist
'((string . c-lineup-dont-change)
;; Anchor pos: Beg of previous line.
(c . c-lineup-C-comments)
;; Anchor pos: Beg of the comment.
(defun-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: When inside a class: Boi at the func decl start.
;; When at top level: Bol at the func decl start. When inside
;; a code block (only possible in Pike): At the func decl
;; start(*).
(defun-close . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the defun block open if it's at boi,
;; otherwise boi at the func decl start.
(defun-block-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the block open(*).
(class-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the class decl start.
(class-close . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the class decl start.
(inline-open . +)
;; Anchor pos: None for functions (inclass got the relpos
;; then), boi at the lambda start for lambdas.
(inline-close . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Inexpr functions: At the lambda block open if
;; it's at boi, else at the statement(*) at boi of the start of
;; the lambda construct. Otherwise: At the inline block open
;; if it's at boi, otherwise boi at the func decl start.
(func-decl-cont . +)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the func decl start.
(knr-argdecl-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the topmost intro line.
(knr-argdecl . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the beginning of the first K&R argdecl.
(topmost-intro . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Bol at the last line of previous construct.
(topmost-intro-cont . c-lineup-topmost-intro-cont)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the topmost intro line.
(member-init-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the func decl arglist open.
(member-init-cont . c-lineup-multi-inher)
;; Anchor pos: Beg of the first member init.
(inher-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the class decl start.
(inher-cont . c-lineup-multi-inher)
;; Anchor pos: Java: At the implements/extends keyword start.
;; Otherwise: At the inher start colon, or boi at the class
;; decl start if the first inherit clause hangs and it's not a
;; func-local inherit clause (when does that occur?).
(block-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Inexpr statement: At the statement(*) at boi of
;; the start of the inexpr construct. Otherwise: None.
(block-close . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Inexpr statement: At the inexpr block open if
;; it's at boi, else at the statement(*) at boi of the start of
;; the inexpr construct. Block hanging on a case/default
;; label: At the closest preceding label that starts at boi.
;; Otherwise: At the block open(*).
(brace-list-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the brace list decl start, but a starting
;; "typedef" token is ignored.
(brace-list-close . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the brace list decl start(*).
(brace-list-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the brace list decl start(*).
(brace-list-entry . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the first non-ws char after the open paren if
;; the first token is on the same line, otherwise boi at that
;; token.
(brace-entry-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Same as brace-list-entry.
(statement . 0)
;; Anchor pos: After a `;' in the condition clause of a for
;; statement: At the first token after the starting paren.
;; Otherwise: At the preceding statement(*).
(statement-cont . +)
;; Anchor pos: After the first token in the condition clause of
;; a for statement: At the first token after the starting
;; paren. Otherwise: At the containing statement(*).
(statement-block-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: In inexpr statement block: At the inexpr block
;; open if it's at boi, else at the statement(*) at boi of the
;; start of the inexpr construct. In a block hanging on a
;; case/default label: At the closest preceding label that
;; starts at boi. Otherwise: At the start of the containing
;; block(*).
(statement-case-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the case/default label(*).
(statement-case-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the case/default label(*).
(substatement . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the containing statement(*).
(substatement-open . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the containing statement(*).
(substatement-label . 2)
;; Anchor pos: At the containing statement(*).
(case-label . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the start of the switch block(*).
(access-label . -)
;; Anchor pos: Same as inclass.
(label . 2)
;; Anchor pos: At the start of the containing block(*).
(do-while-closure . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the corresponding while statement(*).
(else-clause . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the corresponding if statement(*).
(catch-clause . 0)
;; Anchor pos: At the previous try or catch statement clause(*).
(comment-intro . (c-lineup-knr-region-comment c-lineup-comment))
;; Anchor pos: None.
(arglist-intro . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the containing statement(*).
;; 2nd pos: At the open paren.
(arglist-cont . (c-lineup-gcc-asm-reg 0))
;; Anchor pos: At the first token after the open paren.
(arglist-cont-nonempty . (c-lineup-gcc-asm-reg c-lineup-arglist))
;; Anchor pos: At the containing statement(*).
;; 2nd pos: At the open paren.
(arglist-close . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the containing statement(*).
;; 2nd pos: At the open paren.
(stream-op . c-lineup-streamop)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the first stream op in the statement.
(inclass . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the class open brace if it's at boi,
;; otherwise boi at the class decl start.
(cpp-macro . [0])
;; Anchor pos: None.
(cpp-macro-cont . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the macro start (always at boi).
(cpp-define-intro . (c-lineup-cpp-define +))
;; Anchor pos: None.
(friend . 0)
;; Anchor pos: None.
(objc-method-intro . [0])
;; Anchor pos: Boi.
(objc-method-args-cont . c-lineup-ObjC-method-args)
;; Anchor pos: At the method start (always at boi).
(objc-method-call-cont . c-lineup-ObjC-method-call)
;; Anchor pos: At the open bracket.
(extern-lang-open . 0)
(namespace-open . 0)
(module-open . 0)
(composition-open . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the extern/namespace/etc keyword.
(extern-lang-close . 0)
(namespace-close . 0)
(module-close . 0)
(composition-close . 0)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the corresponding extern/namespace/etc keyword.
(inextern-lang . +)
(innamespace . +)
(inmodule . +)
(incomposition . +)
;; Anchor pos: At the extern/namespace/etc block open brace if
;; it's at boi, otherwise boi at the keyword.
(template-args-cont . (c-lineup-template-args +))
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the decl start. This might be changed;
;; the logical position is clearly the opening '<'.
(inlambda . c-lineup-inexpr-block)
;; Anchor pos: None.
(lambda-intro-cont . +)
;; Anchor pos: Boi at the lambda start.
(inexpr-statement . +)
;; Anchor pos: None.
(inexpr-class . +)
;; Anchor pos: None.
))
(defcustom c-offsets-alist nil
"Association list of syntactic element symbols and indentation offsets.
As described below, each cons cell in this list has the form:
(SYNTACTIC-SYMBOL . OFFSET)
When a line is indented, CC Mode first determines the syntactic
context of it by generating a list of symbols called syntactic
elements. The global variable `c-syntactic-context' is bound to the
that list. Each element in the list is in turn a list where the first
element is a syntactic symbol which tells what kind of construct the
indentation point is located within. More elements in the syntactic
element lists are optional. If there is one more and it isn't nil,
then it's the anchor position for that construct.
After generating the syntactic context for the line, CC Mode
calculates the absolute indentation: First the base indentation is
found by using the anchor position for the first syntactic element
that provides one. If none does, zero is used as base indentation.
Then CC Mode looks at each syntactic element in the context in turn.
It compares the car of the syntactic element against the
SYNTACTIC-SYMBOL's in `c-offsets-alist'. When it finds a match, it
adds OFFSET to the base indentation. The sum of this calculation is
the absolute offset for line being indented.
If the syntactic element does not match any in the `c-offsets-alist',
the element is ignored.
OFFSET can specify an offset in several different ways:
If OFFSET is nil then it's ignored.
If OFFSET is an integer then it's used as relative offset, i.e. it's
added to the base indentation.
If OFFSET is one of the symbols `+', `-', `++', `--', `*', or `/'
then a positive or negative multiple of `c-basic-offset' is added to
the base indentation; 1, -1, 2, -2, 0.5, and -0.5, respectively.
If OFFSET is a symbol with a value binding then that value, which
must be an integer, is used as relative offset.
If OFFSET is a vector then its first element, which must be an
integer, is used as an absolute indentation column. This overrides
the previous base indentation and the relative offsets applied to
it, and it becomes the new base indentation.
If OFFSET is a function or a lambda expression then it's called with
a single argument containing the cons of the syntactic symbol and
the anchor position (or nil if there is none). The return value
from the function is then reinterpreted as an offset specification.
If OFFSET is a list then its elements are evaluated recursively as
offset specifications. If the first element is any of the symbols
below then it isn't evaluated but instead specifies how the
remaining offsets in the list should be combined. If it's something
else then the list is combined according the method `first'. The
valid combination methods are:
`first' -- Use the first offset (that doesn't evaluate to nil).
`min' -- Use the minimum of all the offsets. All must be either
relative or absolute - they can't be mixed.
`max' -- Use the maximum of all the offsets. All must be either
relative or absolute - they can't be mixed.
`add' -- Add all the evaluated offsets together. Exactly one of
them may be absolute, in which case the result is
absolute. Any relative offsets that preceded the
absolute one in the list will be ignored in that case.
`c-offsets-alist' is a style variable. This means that the offsets on
this variable are normally taken from the style system in CC Mode
\(see `c-default-style' and `c-style-alist'). However, any offsets
put explicitly on this list will override the style system when a CC
Mode buffer is initialized \(there is a variable
`c-old-style-variable-behavior' that changes this, though).
Here is the current list of valid syntactic element symbols:
string -- Inside multi-line string.
c -- Inside a multi-line C style block comment.
defun-open -- Brace that opens a function definition.
defun-close -- Brace that closes a function definition.
defun-block-intro -- The first line in a top-level defun.
class-open -- Brace that opens a class definition.
class-close -- Brace that closes a class definition.
inline-open -- Brace that opens an in-class inline method.
inline-close -- Brace that closes an in-class inline method.
func-decl-cont -- The region between a function definition's
argument list and the function opening brace
(excluding K&R argument declarations). In C, you
cannot put anything but whitespace and comments
between them; in C++ and Java, throws declarations
and other things can appear in this context.
knr-argdecl-intro -- First line of a K&R C argument declaration.
knr-argdecl -- Subsequent lines in a K&R C argument declaration.
topmost-intro -- The first line in a topmost construct definition.
topmost-intro-cont -- Topmost definition continuation lines.
member-init-intro -- First line in a member initialization list.
member-init-cont -- Subsequent member initialization list lines.
inher-intro -- First line of a multiple inheritance list.
inher-cont -- Subsequent multiple inheritance lines.
block-open -- Statement block open brace.
block-close -- Statement block close brace.
brace-list-open -- Open brace of an enum or static array list.
brace-list-close -- Close brace of an enum or static array list.
brace-list-intro -- First line in an enum or static array list.
brace-list-entry -- Subsequent lines in an enum or static array list.
brace-entry-open -- Subsequent lines in an enum or static array
list that start with an open brace.
statement -- A C (or like) statement.
statement-cont -- A continuation of a C (or like) statement.
statement-block-intro -- The first line in a new statement block.
statement-case-intro -- The first line in a case \"block\".
statement-case-open -- The first line in a case block starting with brace.
substatement -- The first line after an if/while/for/do/else.
substatement-open -- The brace that opens a substatement block.
substatement-label -- Labelled line after an if/while/for/do/else.
case-label -- A \"case\" or \"default\" label.
access-label -- C++ private/protected/public access label.
label -- Any ordinary label.
do-while-closure -- The \"while\" that ends a do/while construct.
else-clause -- The \"else\" of an if/else construct.
catch-clause -- The \"catch\" or \"finally\" of a try/catch construct.
comment-intro -- A line containing only a comment introduction.
arglist-intro -- The first line in an argument list.
arglist-cont -- Subsequent argument list lines when no
arguments follow on the same line as the
arglist opening paren.
arglist-cont-nonempty -- Subsequent argument list lines when at
least one argument follows on the same
line as the arglist opening paren.
arglist-close -- The solo close paren of an argument list.
stream-op -- Lines continuing a stream operator construct.
inclass -- The construct is nested inside a class definition.
Used together with e.g. `topmost-intro'.
cpp-macro -- The start of a C preprocessor macro definition.
cpp-macro-cont -- Inside a multi-line C preprocessor macro definition.
friend -- A C++ friend declaration.
objc-method-intro -- The first line of an Objective-C method definition.
objc-method-args-cont -- Lines continuing an Objective-C method definition.
objc-method-call-cont -- Lines continuing an Objective-C method call.
extern-lang-open -- Brace that opens an \"extern\" block.
extern-lang-close -- Brace that closes an \"extern\" block.
inextern-lang -- Analogous to the `inclass' syntactic symbol,
but used inside \"extern\" blocks.
namespace-open, namespace-close, innamespace
-- Similar to the three `extern-lang' symbols, but for
C++ \"namespace\" blocks.
module-open, module-close, inmodule
-- Similar to the three `extern-lang' symbols, but for
CORBA IDL \"module\" blocks.
composition-open, composition-close, incomposition
-- Similar to the three `extern-lang' symbols, but for
CORBA CIDL \"composition\" blocks.
template-args-cont -- C++ template argument list continuations.
inlambda -- In the header or body of a lambda function.
lambda-intro-cont -- Continuation of the header of a lambda function.
inexpr-statement -- The statement is inside an expression.
inexpr-class -- The class is inside an expression. Used e.g. for
Java anonymous classes."
:type
`(set :format "%{%t%}:
Override style setting
| Syntax Offset
%v"
,@(mapcar
(lambda (elt)
`(cons :format "%v"
:value ,elt
,(c-constant-symbol (car elt) 25)
(sexp :format "%v"
:validate
(lambda (widget)
(unless (c-valid-offset (widget-value widget))
(widget-put widget :error "Invalid offset")
widget)))))
(get 'c-offsets-alist 'c-stylevar-fallback)))
:group 'c)
;; The syntactic symbols that can occur inside code blocks. Used by
;; `c-gnu-impose-minimum'.
(defconst c-inside-block-syms
'(defun-block-intro block-open block-close statement statement-cont
statement-block-intro statement-case-intro statement-case-open
substatement substatement-open substatement-label case-label label
do-while-closure else-clause catch-clause inlambda))
(defcustom c-style-variables-are-local-p t
"*Whether style variables should be buffer local by default.
If non-nil, then all indentation style related variables will be made
buffer local by default. If nil, they will remain global. Variables
are made buffer local when this file is loaded, and once buffer
localized, they cannot be made global again.
This variable must be set appropriately before CC Mode is loaded.
The list of variables to buffer localize are:
c-basic-offset
c-comment-only-line-offset
c-indent-comment-alist
c-indent-comments-syntactically-p
c-block-comment-prefix
c-comment-prefix-regexp
c-doc-comment-style
c-cleanup-list
c-hanging-braces-alist
c-hanging-colons-alist
c-hanging-semi&comma-criteria
c-backslash-column
c-backslash-max-column
c-label-minimum-indentation
c-offsets-alist
c-special-indent-hook
c-indentation-style"
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `c-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom c++-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `c++-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom objc-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `objc-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom java-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `java-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom idl-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `idl-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom pike-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `pike-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom awk-mode-hook nil
"*Hook called by `awk-mode'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-mode-common-hook nil
"*Hook called by all CC Mode modes for common initializations."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-initialization-hook nil
"*Hook called when the CC Mode package gets initialized.
This hook is only run once per Emacs session and can be used as a
`load-hook' or in place of using `eval-after-load'."
:type 'hook
:group 'c)
(defcustom c-enable-xemacs-performance-kludge-p nil
"*Enables a XEmacs only hack that may improve speed for some coding styles.
For styles that hang top-level opening braces (as is common with JDK
Java coding styles) this can improve performance between 3 and 60
times for core indentation functions (e.g. `c-parse-state'). For
styles that conform to the Emacs recommendation of putting these
braces in column zero, this can degrade performance about as much.
This variable only has effect in XEmacs."
:type 'boolean
:group 'c)
(defvar c-old-style-variable-behavior nil
"*Enables the old style variable behavior when non-nil.
Normally the values of the style variables will override the style
settings specified by the variables `c-default-style' and
`c-style-alist'. However, in CC Mode 5.25 and earlier, it was the
other way around, meaning that changes made to the style variables
from e.g. Customize would not take effect unless special precautions
were taken. That was confusing, especially for novice users.
It's believed that despite this change, the new behavior will still
produce the same results for most old CC Mode configurations, since
all style variables are per default set in a special non-override
state. Set this variable only if your configuration has stopped
working due to this change.")
(define-widget 'c-extra-types-widget 'radio
"Internal CC Mode widget for the `*-font-lock-extra-types' variables."
:args '((const :tag "none" nil)
(repeat :tag "types" regexp)))
(defun c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb (mode1 mode2 example)
(concat "\
*List of extra types (aside from the type keywords) to recognize in "
mode1 " mode.
Each list item should be a regexp matching a single identifier.
" example "
Note that items on this list that don't include any regexp special
characters are automatically optimized using `regexp-opt', so you
should not use `regexp-opt' explicitly to build regexps here.
On decoration level 3 (and higher, where applicable), a method is used
that finds most types and declarations by syntax alone. This variable
is still used as a first step, but other types are recognized
correctly anyway in most cases. Therefore this variable should be
fairly restrictive and not contain patterns that are uncertain.
Note that this variable is only consulted when the major mode is
initialized. If you change it later you have to reinitialize CC Mode
by doing \\[" mode2 "].
Despite the name, this variable is not only used for font locking but
also elsewhere in CC Mode to tell types from other identifiers."))
;; Note: Most of the variables below are also defined in font-lock.el
;; in older versions of Emacs, so depending on the load order we might
;; not install the values below. There's no kludge to cope with this
;; (as opposed to the *-font-lock-keywords-* variables) since the old
;; values work fairly well anyway.
(defcustom c-font-lock-extra-types
'("\\sw+_t"
;; Defined in C99:
"bool" "complex" "imaginary"
;; Standard library types (except those matched by the _t pattern):
"FILE" "lconv" "tm" "va_list" "jmp_buf"
;; I do not appreciate the following very Emacs-specific luggage
;; in the default value, but otoh it can hardly get in the way for
;; other users, and removing it would cause unnecessary grief for
;; the old timers that are used to it. /mast
"Lisp_Object")
(c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb "C" "c-mode"
"For example, a value of (\"FILE\" \"\\\\sw+_t\") means the word \"FILE\"
and words ending in \"_t\" are treated as type names.")
:type 'c-extra-types-widget
:group 'c)
(defcustom c++-font-lock-extra-types
'("\\sw+_t"
;; C library types (except those matched by the _t pattern):
"FILE" "lconv" "tm" "va_list" "jmp_buf"
;; Some standard C++ types that came from font-lock.el.
;; Experienced C++ users says there's no clear benefit in
;; extending this to all the types in the standard library, at
;; least not when they'll be recognized without "std::" too.
"istream" "istreambuf"
"ostream" "ostreambuf"
"ifstream" "ofstream" "fstream"
"strstream" "strstreambuf" "istrstream" "ostrstream"
"ios"
"string" "rope"
"list" "slist"
"deque" "vector" "bit_vector"
"set" "multiset"
"map" "multimap"
"hash"
"hash_set" "hash_multiset"
"hash_map" "hash_multimap"
"stack" "queue" "priority_queue"
"type_info"
"iterator" "const_iterator" "reverse_iterator" "const_reverse_iterator"
"reference" "const_reference")
(c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb "C++" "c++-mode"
"For example, a value of (\"string\") means the word \"string\" is treated
as a type name.")
:type 'c-extra-types-widget
:group 'c)
(defcustom objc-font-lock-extra-types
(list (concat "[" c-upper "]\\sw*[" c-lower "]\\sw*"))
(c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb "ObjC" "objc-mode" (concat
"For example, a value of (\"[" c-upper "]\\\\sw*[" c-lower "]\\\\sw*\") means
capitalized words are treated as type names (the requirement for a
lower case char is to avoid recognizing all-caps macro and constant
names)."))
:type 'c-extra-types-widget
:group 'c)
(defcustom java-font-lock-extra-types
(list (concat "[" c-upper "]\\sw*[" c-lower "]\\sw*"))
(c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb "Java" "java-mode" (concat
"For example, a value of (\"[" c-upper "]\\\\sw*[" c-lower "]\\\\sw*\") means
capitalized words are treated as type names (the requirement for a
lower case char is to avoid recognizing all-caps constant names)."))
:type 'c-extra-types-widget
:group 'c)
(defcustom idl-font-lock-extra-types nil
(c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb "IDL" "idl-mode" "")
:type 'c-extra-types-widget
:group 'c)
(defcustom pike-font-lock-extra-types
(list (concat "[" c-upper "]\\sw*[" c-lower "]\\sw*"))
(c-make-font-lock-extra-types-blurb "Pike" "pike-mode" (concat
"For example, a value of (\"[" c-upper "]\\\\sw*[" c-lower "]\\\\sw*\") means
capitalized words are treated as type names (the requirement for a
lower case char is to avoid recognizing all-caps macro and constant
names)."))
:type 'c-extra-types-widget
:group 'c)
;; Non-customizable variables, still part of the interface to CC Mode
(defvar c-file-style nil
"Variable interface for setting style via File Local Variables.
In a file's Local Variable section, you can set this variable to a
string suitable for `c-set-style'. When the file is visited, CC Mode
will set the style of the file to this value automatically.
Note that file style settings are applied before file offset settings
as designated in the variable `c-file-offsets'.")
(make-variable-buffer-local 'c-file-style)
;;;###autoload(put 'c-file-style 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
(defvar c-file-offsets nil
"Variable interface for setting offsets via File Local Variables.
In a file's Local Variable section, you can set this variable to an
association list similar to the values allowed in `c-offsets-alist'.
When the file is visited, CC Mode will institute these offset settings
automatically.
Note that file offset settings are applied after file style settings
as designated in the variable `c-file-style'.")
(make-variable-buffer-local 'c-file-offsets)
;; It isn't possible to specify a doc-string without specifying an
;; initial value with `defvar', so the following two variables have been
;; given doc-strings by setting the property `variable-documentation'
;; directly. C-h v will read this documentation only for versions of GNU
;; Emacs from 22.1. It's really good not to have an initial value for
;; variables like these that always should be dynamically bound, so it's
;; worth the inconvenience.
(cc-bytecomp-defvar c-syntactic-context)
(defvar c-syntactic-context)
(put 'c-syntactic-context 'variable-documentation
"Variable containing the syntactic analysis list for a line of code.
It is a list with one element for each syntactic symbol pertinent to the
line, for example \"((defun-block-intro 1) (comment-intro))\".
It is dynamically bound when calling \(i) a brace hanging \"action
function\"; \(ii) a semicolon/comma hanging \"criteria function\"; \(iii) a
\"line-up function\"; \(iv) a c-special-indent-hook function. It is also
used internally by CC Mode.
c-syntactic-context is always bound dynamically. It must NEVER be set
statically (e.g. with `setq').")
(cc-bytecomp-defvar c-syntactic-element)
(defvar c-syntactic-element)
(put 'c-syntactic-element 'variable-documentation
"Variable containing the current syntactic element during calls to
the lineup functions. The value is one of the elements in the list in
`c-syntactic-context' and is a list with the symbol name in the first
position, followed by zero or more elements containing any additional
info associated with the syntactic symbol. There are accessor functions
`c-langelem-sym', `c-langelem-pos', `c-langelem-col', and
`c-langelem-2nd-pos' to access the list.
Specifically, the element returned by `c-langelem-pos' is the anchor
position, or nil if there isn't any. See the comments in the
`c-offsets-alist' variable and the CC Mode manual for more detailed info
about the data each syntactic symbol provides.
This is always bound dynamically. It should never be set
statically (e.g. with `setq').")
(defvar c-indentation-style nil
"Name of the currently installed style.
Don't change this directly; call `c-set-style' instead, or set the variable
`c-file-style' in the file's Local Variable list.")
(defvar c-current-comment-prefix nil
"The current comment prefix regexp.
Set from `c-comment-prefix-regexp' at mode initialization.")
(make-variable-buffer-local 'c-current-comment-prefix)
;; N.B. The next three variables are initialized in
;; c-setup-paragraph-variables. Their initializations here are "just in
;; case". ACM, 2004/2/15. They are NOT buffer local (yet?).
(defvar c-string-par-start
;; (concat "\\(" (default-value 'paragraph-start) "\\)\\|[ \t]*\\\\$")
"\f\\|[ \t]*\\\\?$"
"Value of paragraph-start used when scanning strings.
It treats escaped EOLs as whitespace.")
(defvar c-string-par-separate
;; (concat "\\(" (default-value 'paragraph-separate) "\\)\\|[ \t]*\\\\$")
"[ \t\f]*\\\\?$"
"Value of paragraph-separate used when scanning strings.
It treats escaped EOLs as whitespace.")
(defvar c-sentence-end-with-esc-eol
(concat "\\(\\(" (c-default-value-sentence-end) "\\)"
;; N.B.: "$" would be illegal when not enclosed like "\\($\\)".
"\\|" "[.?!][]\"')}]* ?\\\\\\($\\)[ \t\n]*"
"\\)")
"Value used like sentence-end used when scanning strings.
It treats escaped EOLs as whitespace.")
(cc-provide 'cc-vars)
;;; arch-tag: d62e9a55-c9fe-409b-b5b6-050b6aa202c9
;;; cc-vars.el ends here
|