Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
FRIGN
1c462012e4 Rename variable Rune * p -> r in fgetrune() 2015-02-11 21:14:28 +01:00
FRIGN
7c578bf5b0 Scrap writerune(), introducing fputrune()
Interface and function as proposed by cls.
Code is also shorter, everything else analogous to fgetrune().
2015-02-11 20:58:00 +01:00
FRIGN
a5ae899a48 Scrap readrune(), introducing fgetrune()
Interface as proposed by cls, but internally rewritten after a few
considerations.
The code is much shorter and to the point, aligning itself with other
standard functions. It should also be much faster, which is not bad.
2015-02-11 20:16:49 +01:00
FRIGN
f9846a9a6b Split up is*rune() and to*rune() functions into individual source files
This optimizes the binary size for each tool that uses these functions.
Previously, if a program just used one single function, maybe even a
one-liner, it would statically compile in all lookup-tables, bloating
the binary by up to 20K.
All these changes are derived from a local libutf where I do the
primary changes. So I hope that I can merge these things into libutf
sooner or later, as discussed on the ml.
2015-02-11 15:48:18 +01:00
FRIGN
22f40b5a03 Add explicit boundary to loop in readrune()
You never know what could happen. Better have a "blind" read than
a segmentation fault.
2015-02-01 04:20:02 +01:00
FRIGN
696bb992c3 Return number of bytes read even on a partial read
and set the rune to Runeerror for later checking (if desired).
2015-02-01 03:54:56 +01:00
FRIGN
f2e6af7350 Return number of bytes read in readrune()
Could be useful in some cases...
2015-02-01 03:43:54 +01:00
Hiltjo Posthuma
4469b0b641 chartorunearr: initialize ret 2015-01-10 17:00:01 +00:00
FRIGN
a582cb8a2f Rewrite tr(1) in a sane way
tr(1) always used to be a saddening part of sbase, which was
inherently broken and crufted.
But to be fair, the POSIX-standard doesn't make it very simple.
Given the current version was unfixable and broken by design, I
sat down and rewrote tr(1) very close to the concept of set theory
and the POSIX-standard with a few exceptions:

 - UTF-8: not allowed in POSIX, but in my opinion a must. This
          finally allows you to work with UTF-8 streams without
          problems or unexpected behaviour.
 - Equivalence classes: Left out, even GNU coreutils ignore them
                        and depending on LC_COLLATE, which sucks.
 - Character classes: No experiments or environment-variable-trickery.
                      Just plain definitions derived from the POSIX-
                      standard, working as expected.

I tested this thoroughly, but expect problems to show up in some
way given the wide range of input this program has to handle.
The only thing left on the TODO is to add support for literal
expressions ('\n', '\t', '\001', ...) and probably rethinking
the way [_*n] is unnecessarily restricted to string2.
2015-01-10 14:26:30 +00:00
sin
18850f5dfa writerune() should operate on a FILE * 2014-11-21 16:34:57 +00:00
sin
5b5bb82ec0 Factor out readrune and writerune 2014-11-21 16:31:16 +00:00
sin
56709a2414 Import libutf from http://git.suckless.org/libutf 2014-11-17 15:46:01 +00:00