nano/utils.c
David Lawrence Ramsey 9b13ff31bb miscellaneous bug fixes, part 2
git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.gnu.org/nano/trunk/nano@1331 35c25a1d-7b9e-4130-9fde-d3aeb78583b8
2002-12-22 16:30:00 +00:00

368 lines
8.7 KiB
C

/* $Id$ */
/**************************************************************************
* utils.c *
* *
* Copyright (C) 1999-2002 Chris Allegretta *
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify *
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by *
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) *
* any later version. *
* *
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, *
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of *
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the *
* GNU General Public License for more details. *
* *
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License *
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software *
* Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. *
* *
**************************************************************************/
#include "config.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include "proto.h"
#include "nano.h"
int is_cntrl_char(int c)
{
return (-128 <= c && c < -96) || (0 <= c && c < 32) ||
(127 <= c && c < 160);
}
int num_of_digits(int n)
{
int i = 1;
if (n < 0)
n = -n;
while (n > 10) {
n /= 10;
i++;
}
return i;
}
/* Fix the memory allocation for a string. */
void align(char **strp)
{
assert(strp != NULL);
*strp = nrealloc(*strp, strlen(*strp) + 1);
}
/* Null a string at a certain index and align it. */
void null_at(char **data, size_t index)
{
assert(data != NULL);
*data = (char *)nrealloc(*data, sizeof(char) * (index + 1));
(*data)[index] = '\0';
}
/* For non-null-terminated lines. A line, by definition, shouldn't
* normally have newlines in it, so encode its nulls as newlines. */
void unsunder(char *str, size_t true_len)
{
assert(str != NULL);
for(; true_len > 0; true_len--, str++)
if (*str == '\0')
*str = '\n';
}
/* For non-null-terminated lines. A line, by definition, shouldn't
* normally have newlines in it, so decode its newlines into nulls. */
void sunder(char *str)
{
assert(str != NULL);
for(; *str != '\0'; str++)
if (*str == '\n')
*str = '\0';
}
/* None of this is needed if we're using NANO_SMALL! */
#ifndef NANO_SMALL
const char *revstrstr(const char *haystack, const char *needle,
const char *rev_start)
{
for(; rev_start >= haystack ; rev_start--) {
const char *r, *q;
for (r = rev_start, q = needle ; *q == *r && *q != '\0'; r++, q++)
;
if (*q == '\0')
return rev_start;
}
return NULL;
}
const char *revstristr(const char *haystack, const char *needle,
const char *rev_start)
{
for (; rev_start >= haystack; rev_start--) {
const char *r = rev_start, *q = needle;
for (; (tolower(*q) == tolower(*r)) && (*q != '\0') ; r++, q++)
;
if (*q == '\0')
return rev_start;
}
return NULL;
}
#endif /* !NANO_SMALL */
/* This is now mutt's version (called mutt_stristr) because it doesn't
* use memory allocation to do a simple search (yuck). */
const char *stristr(const char *haystack, const char *needle)
{
const char *p, *q;
if (haystack == NULL)
return NULL;
if (needle == NULL)
return haystack;
while (*(p = haystack) != '\0') {
for (q = needle; *p != 0 && *q != 0 && tolower(*p) == tolower(*q); p++, q++)
;
if (*q == 0)
return haystack;
haystack++;
}
return NULL;
}
const char *strstrwrapper(const char *haystack, const char *needle,
const char *rev_start, int line_pos)
{
#ifdef HAVE_REGEX_H
if (ISSET(USE_REGEXP)) {
if (!ISSET(REVERSE_SEARCH)) {
if (!regexec(&search_regexp, haystack, 10, regmatches, (line_pos > 0) ? REG_NOTBOL : 0))
return haystack + regmatches[0].rm_so;
}
#ifndef NANO_SMALL
else {
const char *i, *j;
/* do a quick search forward first */
if (!regexec(&search_regexp, haystack, 10, regmatches, 0)) {
/* there's a match somewhere in the line - now search for it backwards, much slower */
for (i = rev_start; i >= haystack; --i) {
if (!regexec(&search_regexp, i, 10, regmatches, (i > haystack) ? REG_NOTBOL : 0)) {
j = i + regmatches[0].rm_so;
if (j <= rev_start)
return j;
}
}
}
}
#endif
return 0;
}
#endif
#ifndef NANO_SMALL
if (ISSET(CASE_SENSITIVE)) {
if (ISSET(REVERSE_SEARCH))
return revstrstr(haystack, needle, rev_start);
else
return strstr(haystack, needle);
} else {
if (ISSET(REVERSE_SEARCH))
return revstristr(haystack, needle, rev_start);
else
#endif
return stristr(haystack, needle);
#ifndef NANO_SMALL
}
#endif
}
/* This is a wrapper for the perror function. The wrapper takes care of
* ncurses, calls perror (which writes to STDERR), then refreshes the
* screen. Note that nperror causes the window to flicker once. */
void nperror(const char *s)
{
/* leave ncurses mode, go to the terminal */
if (endwin() != ERR) {
perror(s); /* print the error */
total_refresh(); /* return to ncurses and repaint */
}
}
/* Thanks BG, many ppl have been asking for this... */
void *nmalloc(size_t howmuch)
{
void *r;
/* Panic save? */
if ((r = malloc(howmuch)) == NULL)
die(_("nano: malloc: out of memory!"));
return r;
}
/* We're going to need this too - Hopefully this will minimize the
* transition cost of moving to the appropriate function. */
char *charalloc(size_t howmuch)
{
char *r = (char *)malloc(howmuch * sizeof(char));
if (r == NULL)
die(_("nano: malloc: out of memory!"));
return r;
}
void *nrealloc(void *ptr, size_t howmuch)
{
void *r;
if ((r = realloc(ptr, howmuch)) == NULL)
die(_("nano: realloc: out of memory!"));
return r;
}
/* Copy one malloc()ed string to another pointer. Should be used as:
* dest = mallocstrcpy(dest, src); */
char *mallocstrcpy(char *dest, const char *src)
{
if (src == dest)
return dest;
if (dest != NULL)
free(dest);
if (src == NULL)
return NULL;
dest = charalloc(strlen(src) + 1);
strcpy(dest, src);
return dest;
}
/* Append a new magic-line to filebot. */
void new_magicline(void)
{
filebot->next = nmalloc(sizeof(filestruct));
filebot->next->data = charalloc(1);
filebot->next->data[0] = '\0';
filebot->next->prev = filebot;
filebot->next->next = NULL;
filebot->next->lineno = filebot->lineno + 1;
filebot = filebot->next;
totlines++;
totsize++;
}
#ifndef DISABLE_TABCOMP
/*
* Routine to see if a text string is matched by a wildcard pattern.
* Returns TRUE if the text is matched, or FALSE if it is not matched
* or if the pattern is invalid.
* * matches zero or more characters
* ? matches a single character
* [abc] matches 'a', 'b' or 'c'
* \c quotes character c
* Adapted from code written by Ingo Wilken, and
* then taken from sash, Copyright (c) 1999 by David I. Bell
* Permission is granted to use, distribute, or modify this source,
* provided that this copyright notice remains intact.
* Permission to distribute this code under the GPL has been granted.
*/
int check_wildcard_match(const char *text, const char *pattern)
{
const char *retrypat;
const char *retrytext;
int ch;
int found;
int len;
retrypat = NULL;
retrytext = NULL;
while (*text != '\0' || *pattern != '\0') {
ch = *pattern++;
switch (ch) {
case '*':
retrypat = pattern;
retrytext = text;
break;
case '[':
found = FALSE;
while ((ch = *pattern++) != ']') {
if (ch == '\\')
ch = *pattern++;
if (ch == '\0')
return FALSE;
if (*text == ch)
found = TRUE;
}
len = strlen(text);
if (found == FALSE && len != 0) {
return FALSE;
}
if (found == TRUE) {
if (strlen(pattern) == 0 && len == 1) {
return TRUE;
}
if (len != 0) {
text++;
continue;
}
}
/* fall into next case */
case '?':
if (*text++ == '\0')
return FALSE;
break;
case '\\':
ch = *pattern++;
if (ch == '\0')
return FALSE;
/* fall into next case */
default:
if (*text == ch) {
if (*text != '\0')
text++;
break;
}
if (*text != '\0') {
pattern = retrypat;
text = ++retrytext;
break;
}
return FALSE;
}
if (pattern == NULL)
return FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
#endif