* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text [not found] <1158280855.14121.69.camel@chrislap.madeupdomain.com> @ 2006-09-15 7:07 ` Jan Djärv 2006-09-15 16:30 ` Kevin Rodgers 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan Djärv @ 2006-09-15 7:07 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-pretest-bug, emacs-devel Chris Moore skrev: > Please describe exactly what actions triggered the bug > and the precise symptoms of the bug: > > I run the Xfce 4 desktop environment, along with the > xfce4-clipman-plugin applet which collects clipboard entries and > allows me to chose between them from a menu. > > I have x-select-enable-clipboard set to t in Emacs, so whenever I > 'kill' regions of the buffer, they get sent to the clipboard. > > Occasionally the clipman applet will start consuming all available > CPU. This happens when I copy certain binary characters. Seems the > clipman gets stuck in a loop trying to convert illegal an illegal UTF8 > string. > > A very simple case which reproduces the bug: > >> I made a 1-byte file containing just character 0300 (octal), >> copied that using Emacs, and clipman started printing its error >> message over and over again. > > I reported this bug firstly to the Xfce BTS: > > http://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1945 > > but they told me it was a gtk bug, so I raised the same bug in the > GNOME tracker: > > http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=349856 > > and they tell me it's an Emacs bug, saying: > >> Well, if emacs puts binary junk into a text property it is not gtk's > fault. >> Look at gtk_selection_data_get_text(): We only try to convert > something to >> utf8 if the sender claims that it is text... > > So I'm raising it here too! Isn't 0300 a valid unicode character? Anyway, when Emacs gets a selection request for the clipboard with type UTF8_STRING, it eventually ends up in xselect-convert-to-string. This function does: ((eq type 'UTF8_STRING) (setq str (encode-coding-string str 'utf-8))) As far as I can tell, it does not check if str is all text, it seems to return non-text unconverted. Should we check str first? And if it does contain non-text, what should Emacs send back as type? STRING, TEXT? Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-15 7:07 ` Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text Jan Djärv @ 2006-09-15 16:30 ` Kevin Rodgers 2006-09-16 11:31 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2006-09-15 16:30 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Jan Djärv wrote: > > > Chris Moore skrev: >> Please describe exactly what actions triggered the bug >> and the precise symptoms of the bug: >> >> I run the Xfce 4 desktop environment, along with the >> xfce4-clipman-plugin applet which collects clipboard entries and >> allows me to chose between them from a menu. >> >> I have x-select-enable-clipboard set to t in Emacs, so whenever I >> 'kill' regions of the buffer, they get sent to the clipboard. >> >> Occasionally the clipman applet will start consuming all available >> CPU. This happens when I copy certain binary characters. Seems the >> clipman gets stuck in a loop trying to convert illegal an illegal UTF8 >> string. >> >> A very simple case which reproduces the bug: >> >>> I made a 1-byte file containing just character 0300 (octal), >>> copied that using Emacs, and clipman started printing its error >>> message over and over again. >> >> I reported this bug firstly to the Xfce BTS: >> >> http://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1945 >> >> but they told me it was a gtk bug, so I raised the same bug in the >> GNOME tracker: >> >> http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=349856 >> >> and they tell me it's an Emacs bug, saying: >> >>> Well, if emacs puts binary junk into a text property it is not gtk's >> fault. >>> Look at gtk_selection_data_get_text(): We only try to convert >> something to >>> utf8 if the sender claims that it is text... >> >> So I'm raising it here too! > > Isn't 0300 a valid unicode character? Yes, but it is not encoded as a single byte in UTF-8, it would be 2 bytes: o303 o200 (xC3 x80). > Anyway, when Emacs gets a > selection request for the clipboard with type UTF8_STRING, it eventually > ends up in xselect-convert-to-string. This function does: > > ((eq type 'UTF8_STRING) > (setq str (encode-coding-string str 'utf-8))) > > As far as I can tell, it does not check if str is all text, it seems to > return non-text unconverted. Should we check str first? And if it > does contain non-text, what should Emacs send back as type? STRING, TEXT? Doesn't that all depend on buffer-file-coding-system and selection-coding-system being set correctly? -- Kevin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-15 16:30 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2006-09-16 11:31 ` Jan D. 2006-09-16 17:25 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2006-09-16 11:31 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-pretest-bug, emacs-devel Kevin Rodgers wrote: > Jan Djärv wrote: >> >> >> Chris Moore skrev: >>> A very simple case which reproduces the bug: >>> >>>> I made a 1-byte file containing just character 0300 (octal), >>>> copied that using Emacs, and clipman started printing its error >>>> message over and over again. >>> >>> I reported this bug firstly to the Xfce BTS: >>> >>> http://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1945 >>> >>> but they told me it was a gtk bug, so I raised the same bug in the >>> GNOME tracker: >>> >>> http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=349856 >>> >>> and they tell me it's an Emacs bug, saying: >>> >>>> Well, if emacs puts binary junk into a text property it is not gtk's >>> fault. >>>> Look at gtk_selection_data_get_text(): We only try to convert >>> something to >>>> utf8 if the sender claims that it is text... >>> >>> So I'm raising it here too! >> >> Isn't 0300 a valid unicode character? > > Yes, but it is not encoded as a single byte in UTF-8, it would be 2 > bytes: o303 o200 (xC3 x80). > But that is as it should be, UTF8_STRING says data is in UTF-8, so Emacs sends o303 o200. gtk_selection_data_get_text does not complain on that. Anyway, xfce should not loop like that, gtk_selection_data_get_text does not loop, it just prints one error message and returns. >> Anyway, when Emacs gets a selection request for the clipboard with >> type UTF8_STRING, it eventually ends up in >> xselect-convert-to-string. This function does: >> >> ((eq type 'UTF8_STRING) >> (setq str (encode-coding-string str 'utf-8))) >> >> As far as I can tell, it does not check if str is all text, it seems >> to return non-text unconverted. Should we check str first? And if >> it does contain non-text, what should Emacs send back as type? >> STRING, TEXT? > > Doesn't that all depend on buffer-file-coding-system and > selection-coding-system being set correctly? > Yes, but I kind of assumed that was the case. Anyway, I will fix this somehow, we should not be sending non-UTF8 as a UTF8_STRING. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-16 11:31 ` Jan D. @ 2006-09-16 17:25 ` Jan D. 2006-09-19 5:05 ` Kenichi Handa 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2006-09-16 17:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-pretest-bug, Kevin Rodgers, richard.stallman, emacs-devel Jan D. wrote: > Kevin Rodgers wrote: >> Jan Djärv wrote: >>> >>> >>> Chris Moore skrev: >>>> A very simple case which reproduces the bug: >>>> >>>>> I made a 1-byte file containing just character 0300 (octal), >>>>> copied that using Emacs, and clipman started printing its error >>>>> message over and over again. >>>> >>>> > Anyway, I will fix this somehow, we should not be sending non-UTF8 as > a UTF8_STRING. I've checked in a fix that changes UTF8_STRING to STRING if the data doesn't look like UTF8. However, this might give errors too. The only way to be sure to copy raw binary data correctly is by adding a new type (like application-specific/octet-stream). But if we do that, nobody will be able to get data from Emacs, as such a type is not standard and unsupported. Copy-paste with raw binary data is just something most apps don't do. Please try this, it is hopefully better. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-16 17:25 ` Jan D. @ 2006-09-19 5:05 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 6:15 ` Jan Djärv 2006-09-19 10:54 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Kenichi Handa @ 2006-09-19 5:05 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, christopher.ian.moore, emacs-devel, richard.stallman In article <450C3380.2050008@swipnet.se>, "Jan D." <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> writes: > I've checked in a fix that changes UTF8_STRING to STRING if the data > doesn't look like UTF8. However, this might give errors too. The only > way to be sure to copy raw binary data correctly is by adding a new type > (like application-specific/octet-stream). But if we do that, nobody > will be able to get data from Emacs, as such a type is not standard and > unsupported. Copy-paste with raw binary data is just something most > apps don't do. AFAIK, only when TEXT is requested, an selection owner can choose the returning type from STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, or UTF8_STRING. When UTF8_STRING is requested, we should return it or return nothing. And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing is to make it multibyte according to the current lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode it by utf-8. --- Kenichi Handa handa@m17n.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 5:05 ` Kenichi Handa @ 2006-09-19 6:15 ` Jan Djärv 2006-09-19 7:14 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 10:54 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan Djärv @ 2006-09-19 6:15 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: richard.stallman, emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, christopher.ian.moore, emacs-devel Kenichi Handa skrev: > In article <450C3380.2050008@swipnet.se>, "Jan D." <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> writes: > >> I've checked in a fix that changes UTF8_STRING to STRING if the data >> doesn't look like UTF8. However, this might give errors too. The only >> way to be sure to copy raw binary data correctly is by adding a new type >> (like application-specific/octet-stream). But if we do that, nobody >> will be able to get data from Emacs, as such a type is not standard and >> unsupported. Copy-paste with raw binary data is just something most >> apps don't do. > > AFAIK, only when TEXT is requested, an selection owner can > choose the returning type from STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, or > UTF8_STRING. When UTF8_STRING is requested, we should > return it or return nothing. > > And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing > is to make it multibyte according to the current > lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode > it by utf-8. What would that do to illegal UTF-8 sequences in the original unibyte string? I.e. will this procedure always produce valid UTF-8 data? Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 6:15 ` Jan Djärv @ 2006-09-19 7:14 ` Kenichi Handa 0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Kenichi Handa @ 2006-09-19 7:14 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, christopher.ian.moore, emacs-devel, richard.stallman In article <450F8AF7.5010702@swipnet.se>, Jan Djärv <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> writes: > > AFAIK, only when TEXT is requested, an selection owner can > > choose the returning type from STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, or > > UTF8_STRING. When UTF8_STRING is requested, we should > > return it or return nothing. > > > > And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing > > is to make it multibyte according to the current > > lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode > > it by utf-8. > What would that do to illegal UTF-8 sequences in the original unibyte string? The original unibyte string won't be in UTF-8 format. But, string-make-multibyte will convert it to a correct multibyte string, thus encoding that multibyte string by UTF-8 will produce a correct UTF-8 string ... usually. > I.e. will this procedure always produce valid UTF-8 data? No. If a byte in the original unibyte string is not a valid code point of the primary charset of the current lang. env., string-make-unibyte will produce a multibyte string that contains eight-bit-control or eight-bit-graphic character. Then, encoding it by UTF-8 will results in incorrect UTF-8 sequence. So, for safely, we must delete such eight-bit characters or replace them with U+FFFD (REPLACEMENT CHARACTER) before encoding by UTF-8. Or, in such a case, don't return anything (which means Emacs doesn't hold a requested data). --- Kenichi Handa handa@m17n.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 5:05 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 6:15 ` Jan Djärv @ 2006-09-19 10:54 ` Stefan Monnier 2006-09-19 11:14 ` Kenichi Handa 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2006-09-19 10:54 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Jan D., emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, emacs-devel, richard.stallman, christopher.ian.moore >> I've checked in a fix that changes UTF8_STRING to STRING if the data >> doesn't look like UTF8. However, this might give errors too. The only >> way to be sure to copy raw binary data correctly is by adding a new type >> (like application-specific/octet-stream). But if we do that, nobody >> will be able to get data from Emacs, as such a type is not standard and >> unsupported. Copy-paste with raw binary data is just something most >> apps don't do. > AFAIK, only when TEXT is requested, an selection owner can > choose the returning type from STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, or > UTF8_STRING. When UTF8_STRING is requested, we should > return it or return nothing. Also IIRC a perfectly valid utf-8 buffer may contain eight-bit-* chars, use to keep track of valid unicode chars that have no corresponding character in emacs-mule. So the presence of eight-bit-* chars does not imply that the utf-8 encoded form of the text will contain an invalid utf-8 byte sequence. > And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing > is to make it multibyte according to the current > lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode > it by utf-8. That sounds terribly fragile/buggy. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 10:54 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2006-09-19 11:14 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 16:15 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Kenichi Handa @ 2006-09-19 11:14 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: christopher.ian.moore, emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, richard.stallman, emacs-devel In article <jwv3baojfj7.fsf-monnier+emacs@gnu.org>, Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > > AFAIK, only when TEXT is requested, an selection owner can > > choose the returning type from STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, or > > UTF8_STRING. When UTF8_STRING is requested, we should > > return it or return nothing. > Also IIRC a perfectly valid utf-8 buffer may contain eight-bit-* chars, use > to keep track of valid unicode chars that have no corresponding character in > emacs-mule. So the presence of eight-bit-* chars does not imply that the > utf-8 encoded form of the text will contain an invalid utf-8 byte sequence. Yes, but such eight-bit-* chars can be detected by checking `untranslated-utf-8' property. > > And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing > > is to make it multibyte according to the current > > lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode > > it by utf-8. > That sounds terribly fragile/buggy. Then, what do you think Emacs should do in such a case? --- Kenichi Handa handa@m17n.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 11:14 ` Kenichi Handa @ 2006-09-19 16:15 ` Stefan Monnier 2006-09-19 19:32 ` Jan D. 2006-09-20 2:20 ` Kenichi Handa 0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2006-09-19 16:15 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: christopher.ian.moore, emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, richard.stallman, emacs-devel >> Also IIRC a perfectly valid utf-8 buffer may contain eight-bit-* chars, use >> to keep track of valid unicode chars that have no corresponding character in >> emacs-mule. So the presence of eight-bit-* chars does not imply that the >> utf-8 encoded form of the text will contain an invalid utf-8 byte sequence. > Yes, but such eight-bit-* chars can be detected by checking > `untranslated-utf-8' property. Sure, but the current code doesn't do that. >> > And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing >> > is to make it multibyte according to the current >> > lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode >> > it by utf-8. >> That sounds terribly fragile/buggy. > Then, what do you think Emacs should do in such a case? I think we can't know what should be done, so we should strive for simplicity and try to avoid losing information. I.e. just return the unibyte string as-is. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 16:15 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2006-09-19 19:32 ` Jan D. 2006-09-20 2:20 ` Kenichi Handa 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2006-09-19 19:32 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Kenichi Handa, emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, emacs-devel, richard.stallman, christopher.ian.moore Stefan Monnier skrev: >>> Also IIRC a perfectly valid utf-8 buffer may contain eight-bit-* chars, use >>> to keep track of valid unicode chars that have no corresponding character in >>> emacs-mule. So the presence of eight-bit-* chars does not imply that the >>> utf-8 encoded form of the text will contain an invalid utf-8 byte sequence. >>> > > >> Yes, but such eight-bit-* chars can be detected by checking >> `untranslated-utf-8' property. >> > > Sure, but the current code doesn't do that. > > >>>> And, if Emacs owns a unibyte string, perhaps the right thing >>>> is to make it multibyte according to the current >>>> lang. env. (by string-make-multibyte) at first, then encode >>>> it by utf-8. >>>> > > >>> That sounds terribly fragile/buggy. >>> > > >> Then, what do you think Emacs should do in such a case? >> > > I think we can't know what should be done, so we should strive for > simplicity and try to avoid losing information. I.e. just return the > unibyte string as-is. > That was the problem the original report was about. Gtk+-applications print big warnings. And there is no agreed upon selection type that represents just bytes. W.r.t the standards, Emacs has two choices, return a valid UTF8-string or don't return anything at all. I'm beginning to think the second option is the best. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-19 16:15 ` Stefan Monnier 2006-09-19 19:32 ` Jan D. @ 2006-09-20 2:20 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-10-19 7:19 ` Jan Djärv 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Kenichi Handa @ 2006-09-20 2:20 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: christopher.ian.moore, emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, richard.stallman, emacs-devel In article <jwvk63z7s2s.fsf-monnier+emacs@gnu.org>, Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > I think we can't know what should be done, so we should strive for > simplicity and try to avoid losing information. I.e. just return the > unibyte string as-is. Even if it doesn't conform to ICCCM? I'll attach the relevant part of that document. "Jan D." <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> writes: > W.r.t the standards, Emacs has two choices, return a valid UTF8-string > or don't return anything at all. I'm beginning to think the second > option is the best. This will be useful for checking UTF-8 validity. (define-ccl-program ccl-check-utf-8 '(0 ((r0 = 1) (loop (read-if (r1 < #x80) (repeat) ((r0 = 0) (if (r1 < #xC2) (end)) (read r2) (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) (if (r1 < #xE0) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) (read r2) (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) (if (r1 < #xF0) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) (read r2) (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) (if (r1 < #xF8) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) (read r2) (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) (if (r1 == #xF8) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) (end)))))) "Check if the input unibyte string is a valid UTF-8 sequence or not. If it is valid, set the register `r0' to 1, else set it to 0.") (defun string-utf-8-p (string) "Return non-nil iff STRING is a unibyte string of valid UTF-8 sequence." (if (or (not (stringp string)) (multibyte-string-p string)) (error "Not a unibyte string: %s" string)) (let ((status (make-vector 9 0))) (ccl-execute-on-string ccl-check-utf-8 status string) (= (aref status 0) 1))) --- Kenichi Handa handa@m17n.org Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual Version 2.0.xf86.1 [...] 2.7. Use of Selection Properties The names of the properties used in selection data transfer are chosen by the requestor. The use of None property fields in ConvertSelection requests (which request the selection owner to choose a name) is not permitted by these conventions. The selection owner always chooses the type of the property in the selection data transfer. Some types have special semantics assigned by convention, and these are reviewed in the following sections. In all cases, a request for conversion to a target should return either a property of one of the types listed in the previous table for that target or a property of type INCR and then a property of one of the listed types. Certain selection properties may contain resource IDs. The selection owner should ensure that the resource is not destroyed and that its contents are not changed until after the selection transfer is complete. Requestors that rely on the existence or on the proper contents of a resource must operate on the resource (for example, by copying the con- tents of a pixmap) before deleting the selection property. The selection owner will return a list of zero or more items of the type indicated by the property type. In general, the number of items in the list will correspond to the number of disjoint parts of the selection. Some targets (for example, side-effect targets) will be of length zero irrespective of the number of disjoint selection parts. In the case of fixed-size items, the requestor may determine the number of items by the property size. Selection property types are listed in the table below. For variable-length items such as text, the separators are also listed. ------------------------------------- Type Atom Format Separator ------------------------------------- APPLE_PICT 8 Self-sizing ATOM 32 Fixed-size ATOM_PAIR 32 Fixed-size BITMAP 32 Fixed-size C_STRING 8 Zero COLORMAP 32 Fixed-size COMPOUND_TEXT 8 Zero DRAWABLE 32 Fixed-size INCR 32 Fixed-size INTEGER 32 Fixed-size PIXEL 32 Fixed-size PIXMAP 32 Fixed-size SPAN 32 Fixed-size STRING 8 Zero UTF8_STRING 8 Zero WINDOW 32 Fixed-size ------------------------------------- It is expected that this table will grow over time. 2.7.1. TEXT Properties In general, the encoding for the characters in a text string property is specified by its type. It is highly desirable for there to be a simple, invertible mapping between string property types and any character set names embedded within font names in any font naming standard adopted by the Con- sortium. The atom TEXT is a polymorphic target. Requesting conver- sion into TEXT will convert into whatever encoding is conve- nient for the owner. The encoding chosen will be indicated by the type of the property returned. TEXT is not defined as a type; it will never be the returned type from a selec- tion conversion request. If the requestor wants the owner to return the contents of the selection in a specific encoding, it should request con- version into the name of that encoding. In the table in section 2.6.2, the word TEXT (in the Type column) is used to indicate one of the registered encoding names. The type would not actually be TEXT; it would be STRING or some other ATOM naming the encoding chosen by the owner. STRING as a type or a target specifies the ISO Latin-1 char- acter set plus the control characters TAB (hex 09) and NEW- LINE (hex 0A). The spacing interpretation of TAB is context dependent. Other ASCII control characters are explicitly not included in STRING at the present time. COMPOUND_TEXT as a type or a target specifies the Compound Text interchange format; see the Compound Text Encoding. UTF8_STRING as a type or a target specifies an UTF-8 encoded string, with NEWLINE (U+000A, hex 0A) as end-of-line marker. There are some text objects where the source or intended user, as the case may be, does not have a specific character set for the text, but instead merely requires a zero-termi- nated sequence of bytes with no other restriction; no ele- ment of the selection mechanism may assume that any byte value is forbidden or that any two differing sequences are equivalent.8 For these objects, the type C_STRING should be used. Rationale An example of the need for C_STRING is to transmit the names of files; many operating systems do not interpret filenames as having a character set. For example, the same character string uses a differ- ent sequence of bytes in ASCII and EBCDIC, and so most operating systems see these as different filenames and offer no way to treat them as the same. Thus no character-set based property type is suitable. Type STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, UTF8_STRING, and C_STRING prop- erties will consist of a list of elements separated by null characters; other encodings will need to specify an appro- priate list format. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text 2006-09-20 2:20 ` Kenichi Handa @ 2006-10-19 7:19 ` Jan Djärv 0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan Djärv @ 2006-10-19 7:19 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-pretest-bug, ihs_4664, emacs-devel, richard.stallman, christopher.ian.moore Kenichi Handa wrote: > This will be useful for checking UTF-8 validity. > > (define-ccl-program ccl-check-utf-8 > '(0 > ((r0 = 1) > (loop > (read-if (r1 < #x80) (repeat) > ((r0 = 0) > (if (r1 < #xC2) (end)) > (read r2) > (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) > (if (r1 < #xE0) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) > (read r2) > (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) > (if (r1 < #xF0) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) > (read r2) > (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) > (if (r1 < #xF8) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) > (read r2) > (if ((r2 & #xC0) != #x80) (end)) > (if (r1 == #xF8) ((r0 = 1) (repeat))) > (end)))))) > "Check if the input unibyte string is a valid UTF-8 sequence or not. > If it is valid, set the register `r0' to 1, else set it to 0.") > > (defun string-utf-8-p (string) > "Return non-nil iff STRING is a unibyte string of valid UTF-8 sequence." > (if (or (not (stringp string)) > (multibyte-string-p string)) > (error "Not a unibyte string: %s" string)) > (let ((status (make-vector 9 0))) > (ccl-execute-on-string ccl-check-utf-8 status string) > (= (aref status 0) 1))) > > Thanks. I used them to check for UTF-8. We now decline selection requests for UTF8_STRING if the data is not in UTF-8. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-10-19 7:19 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 13+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <1158280855.14121.69.camel@chrislap.madeupdomain.com> 2006-09-15 7:07 ` Emacs puts binary junk into the clipboard, marking it as text Jan Djärv 2006-09-15 16:30 ` Kevin Rodgers 2006-09-16 11:31 ` Jan D. 2006-09-16 17:25 ` Jan D. 2006-09-19 5:05 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 6:15 ` Jan Djärv 2006-09-19 7:14 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 10:54 ` Stefan Monnier 2006-09-19 11:14 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-09-19 16:15 ` Stefan Monnier 2006-09-19 19:32 ` Jan D. 2006-09-20 2:20 ` Kenichi Handa 2006-10-19 7:19 ` Jan Djärv
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