* Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
@ 2003-05-23 9:19 Robin Hu
2003-05-23 17:22 ` Eli Zaretskii
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robin Hu @ 2003-05-23 9:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
Hi everyone:
Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients, due to it's
wrongly decoding compound text from others.
For example, a chinese word is encoded in compound text
as : "^[$(AV1^[%/2\200\210gbk-0^B\351F;y", as I have provide gbk
coding system myself, emacs can decode the first two characters
correctly, but it miss the last character, because it doesn't know
"\351F;y" should be decoded follow "^[$(AV1".
I try to correct this bug myself, but it seems quite diffcult in the
exist compound-text-with-extension coding system. ;-(
I'd like to know how about leaving this decoding stuff to X itself, I
knew XmbText family can do this kind of thing. And can anyone point me
out where is the suitable place if this change can be applied?
Robin.Hu
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-23 9:19 Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients Robin Hu
@ 2003-05-23 17:22 ` Eli Zaretskii
2003-05-24 11:10 ` Robin Hu
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2003-05-23 17:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
> From: Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn>
> Date: Fri, 23 May 2003 09:19:10 +0000
>
> For example, a chinese word is encoded in compound text
> as : "^[$(AV1^[%/2\200\210gbk-0^B\351F;y", as I have provide gbk
> coding system myself, emacs can decode the first two characters
> correctly, but it miss the last character, because it doesn't know
> "\351F;y" should be decoded follow "^[$(AV1".
>
> I try to correct this bug myself, but it seems quite diffcult in the
> exist compound-text-with-extension coding system. ;-(
I'm not sure I understand correctly the situation, but IIRC, gbk is
not supported by compound-text-with-extensions. If you want to add
such a support, you need to modify the alist of non-standard ICCCM
encodings used by Emacs to match known coding-systems to the encoding
name mentioned in the X selection encoding. See mule.el for the
definitions of those alists.
> I'd like to know how about leaving this decoding stuff to X itself, I
> knew XmbText family can do this kind of thing.
How can Emacs leave that to X? We need to convert the X selection
text into the internal representation of characters used by Emacs; X
knows nothing about that representation. Am I missing something?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-23 17:22 ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2003-05-24 11:10 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-24 17:38 ` Eli Zaretskii
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robin Hu @ 2003-05-24 11:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
>>>>> "Eli" == Eli Zaretskii <eliz@elta.co.il> writes:
>> From: Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn> Date: Fri, 23 May 2003
>> 09:19:10 +0000
Eli> I'm not sure I understand correctly the situation, but IIRC,
Eli> gbk is not supported by compound-text-with-extensions. If you
Eli> want to add such a support, you need to modify the alist of
Eli> non-standard ICCCM encodings used by Emacs to match known
Eli> coding-systems to the encoding name mentioned in the X
Eli> selection encoding. See mule.el for the definitions of those
Eli> alists.
Yeah, icccm list had been appended with GBK-0, that's why my emacs
can decode some gbk characters correctly, but problems are still
there. In the example I gived in the previous post, one embeded gbk
character will make all characters fail to be decoded. ;-(
Eli> How can Emacs leave that to X? We need to convert the X
Eli> selection text into the internal representation of characters
Eli> used by Emacs; X knows nothing about that representation. Am I
Eli> missing something?
But selection-coding-sytem can do this translation. For example, we
can leave X to decode compound text to gbk locale coding, then
set-selection-coding-system to chinese-gbk, then everything should
go fine. Why don't we just totally leave this copy/paste working to
be transparent to Emacs, to make this work just like a keyboard? If
I understand the source corrently, ntEmacs works in this way. Any
comments?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-24 11:10 ` Robin Hu
@ 2003-05-24 17:38 ` Eli Zaretskii
2003-05-26 2:56 ` Robin Hu
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2003-05-24 17:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
> From: Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn>
> Date: Sat, 24 May 2003 11:10:06 +0000
>
> Eli> I'm not sure I understand correctly the situation, but IIRC,
> Eli> gbk is not supported by compound-text-with-extensions. If you
> Eli> want to add such a support, you need to modify the alist of
> Eli> non-standard ICCCM encodings used by Emacs to match known
> Eli> coding-systems to the encoding name mentioned in the X
> Eli> selection encoding. See mule.el for the definitions of those
> Eli> alists.
>
> Yeah, icccm list had been appended with GBK-0, that's why my emacs
> can decode some gbk characters correctly, but problems are still
> there. In the example I gived in the previous post, one embeded gbk
> character will make all characters fail to be decoded. ;-(
Sounds like a bug. Unfortunately, I don't know enough about gbk to
guess what might be wrong, and don't have time to debug
compound-text-with-extensions myself.
> Why don't we just totally leave this copy/paste working to
> be transparent to Emacs, to make this work just like a keyboard?
Keyboard input is nowhere as transparent as you seem to think. Emacs
decodes keyboard input similarly to what it does with X selections.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-24 17:38 ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2003-05-26 2:56 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-26 4:54 ` Kenichi Handa
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robin Hu @ 2003-05-26 2:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1513 bytes --]
>>>>> "Eli" == Eli Zaretskii <eliz@elta.co.il> writes:
>> From: Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn> Date: Sat, 24 May 2003
>> 11:10:06 +0000
>>
Eli> Sounds like a bug. Unfortunately, I don't know enough about
Eli> gbk to guess what might be wrong, and don't have time to debug
Eli> compound-text-with-extensions myself.
I'll try to clearify myself, and attachment is a dirty patch to
xselect.c, I also hope this can be any help out of my buggy english
;-(
My point is that compound-text decoding should be left to X itself,
rather then by emacs itself. It should be better be transparent to
emacs, for better portable and better extensible.
My patch implements this idea, it use XmbTextPropertyToTextList to
decode compound-text, then delegate the result to
selection_data_to_lisp_data, who will call decode_region with
chinese-gbk to translate gbk coding characters to emacs-mule. It
works fine for me these days.
But there is still some problems I am not so sure. First is that I
dont know whether this change of behavior will impact any other
packages exists. Second is that I still wonder if there are any
better places for this change.
Eli> Keyboard input is nowhere as transparent as you seem to think.
Eli> Emacs decodes keyboard input similarly to what it does with X
Eli> selections.
I mean decoding X selections should be seperated into 2 stages, then
compound text is transparent to emacs.
[-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --]
[-- Attachment #2: patch to Xselect.c --]
[-- Type: text/x-patch, Size: 2193 bytes --]
--- xselect.c 2003-04-07 04:35:06.000000000 +0800
+++ /home/huxw/tmp_src/emacs/src/xselect.c 2003-05-26 10:29:46.641097720 +0800
@@ -1496,6 +1496,11 @@
Lisp_Object target_type; /* for error messages only */
Atom selection_atom; /* for error messages only */
{
+ // by huxw start here
+ XTextProperty text_prop;
+ char** local_list;
+ int local_number;
+ // by huxw end here
Atom actual_type;
int actual_format;
unsigned long actual_size;
@@ -1554,12 +1559,50 @@
/* It's been read. Now convert it to a lisp object in some semi-rational
manner. */
+ //by huxw start here
+ if (XSupportsLocale()) {
+ int local_status;
+
+ text_prop.value = (char*)data;
+ text_prop.encoding = actual_type;
+ text_prop.format = actual_format;
+ text_prop.nitems = actual_size;
+
+ local_status = XmbTextPropertyToTextList(display, &text_prop, &local_list, &local_number);
+ if (local_status < Success || !local_number || !*local_list ) {
+ printf("failed due to XmbTextPropertyToTextList\n");
+ printf("XNoMemory is %d, XLocaleNotSupported is %d, XConverterNotFound is %d\n", XNoMemory, XLocaleNotSupported, XConverterNotFound);
+ printf("status is %d, number is %d, \n", local_status, local_number );
+ } else {
+ printf("XmbTextPropertyToTextList successfullly\n");
+ xfree((char*)data);
+ printf("xfree data successfully\n");
+ data = strdup(*local_list);
+ printf("strdup data successfully, data is %s\n", (char*)data);
+ XFreeStringList(local_list);
+ printf("XFreeStringList successfully\n");
+ }
+ } else {
+ printf("no support this locale\n");
+ }
+ //by huxw end here
+
+#if 0
val = selection_data_to_lisp_data (display, data, bytes,
actual_type, actual_format);
+#else
+ val = selection_data_to_lisp_data (display, data, strlen(data), actual_type, actual_format);
+#endif
/* Use xfree, not XFree, because x_get_window_property
calls xmalloc itself. */
- xfree ((char *) data);
+
+ // by huxw start here
+// xfree ((char *) data);
+ printf("selection_data_to_lisp_data successfully\n");
+ free(data);
+ printf("free data successfully\n");
+ // by huxw end here
return val;
}
\f
[-- Attachment #3: Type: text/plain, Size: 142 bytes --]
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-26 2:56 ` Robin Hu
@ 2003-05-26 4:54 ` Kenichi Handa
2003-05-26 6:06 ` Robin Hu
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Kenichi Handa @ 2003-05-26 4:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
In article <uznla2z61.fsf@knight.6test.edu.cn>, Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn> writes:
> My point is that compound-text decoding should be left
> to X itself, rather then by emacs itself. It should be
> better be transparent to emacs, for better portable and
> better extensible.
> My patch implements this idea, it use
> XmbTextPropertyToTextList to decode compound-text, then
> delegate the result to selection_data_to_lisp_data, who
> will call decode_region with chinese-gbk to translate gbk
> coding characters to emacs-mule. It works fine for me
> these days.
XmbTextPropertyToTextList can handle only such compound-text
that contains characters supported in the current X locale.
So, in your way, if you are in GBK locale, Emacs can't
receive, for instance, Hangul chacaters even if
compound-text can correctly encode Hangul characters and
Emacs itself can handle Hangul in any locales.
So, I beleive we should avoid such kind of change.
By the way, the coding system chinese-gbk is not yet
supported in the current Emacs. Or, are you using
emacs-unicode?
---
Ken'ichi HANDA
handa@m17n.org
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-26 4:54 ` Kenichi Handa
@ 2003-05-26 6:06 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-26 7:09 ` Kenichi Handa
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robin Hu @ 2003-05-26 6:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
>>>>> "Kenichi" == Kenichi Handa <handa@m17n.org> writes:
Kenichi> XmbTextPropertyToTextList can handle only such
Kenichi> compound-text that contains characters supported in the
Kenichi> current X locale. So, in your way, if you are in GBK
Kenichi> locale, Emacs can't receive, for instance, Hangul chacaters
Kenichi> even if compound-text can correctly encode Hangul
Kenichi> characters and Emacs itself can handle Hangul in any
Kenichi> locales.
Thank you Kenichi for your answering ;-) But I still have some
different ideas here.
Of course Hangul characters can not be received when we set locale
to zh_CN.GBK, but I think this is the right behavior. For example,
while I set keyboard-coding-system to chinese-gbk, I can not input
Hangul characters, because it's my responsibility to set correct
keyboard coding system for chinese input. So I think that's also my
responsibility to set correct locale for X paste.
Another problem with current implementation is, some characters can
be encoded in different char-settings. For example, I set file
coding system to chinese-iso-8bit, and selection coding system to
compound-text-with-extension, and copy/paste a very long chinese
article from mozilla. Every thing seems to go fine, but this article
just cannot be saved. This is because X encode some characters as if
they are not chinese-iso-8bit characters, but emacs decode them to
emacs-mule successfully, and finally file coding system cannot
encode emacs-mule to chinese-iso-8bit.
Kenichi> By the way, the coding system chinese-gbk is not yet
Kenichi> supported in the current Emacs. Or, are you using
Kenichi> emacs-unicode?
Chinese-gbk is my extension to Emacs, I believe I have post it in
m17n's maillist. I can read/write gbk encoding file, and unicode
file with utf-translate-gbk-mode turned on. Everything goes fine,
except copy/paste in X (ntEmacs is fine). ;-(
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-26 6:06 ` Robin Hu
@ 2003-05-26 7:09 ` Kenichi Handa
2003-05-26 8:42 ` Robin Hu
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Kenichi Handa @ 2003-05-26 7:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
In article <usmr21bsz.fsf@knight.6test.edu.cn>, Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn> writes:
> Of course Hangul characters can not be received when
> we set locale to zh_CN.GBK, but I think this is the right
> behavior. For example, while I set keyboard-coding-system
> to chinese-gbk, I can not input Hangul characters, because
> it's my responsibility to set correct keyboard coding
> system for chinese input. So I think that's also my
> responsibility to set correct locale for X paste.
The reason why you can't input Hangul characters is that
your input method doesn't support it or it generates data
only in chiense-gbk encoding which can't contain Hangul
characters.
Provided that you have an input method that produces both
Chinese and Hangul and sends data to Emacs in compound-text
encoding, and you set keyboard-coding-system to
compound-text, Emacs should accept all characters, shouldn't
it?
Emacs is a multilingual editor and its functionality should
not be limited by locale.
> Another problem with current implementation is, some
> characters can be encoded in different char-settings. For
> example, I set file coding system to chinese-iso-8bit, and
> selection coding system to compound-text-with-extension,
> and copy/paste a very long chinese article from
> mozilla. Every thing seems to go fine, but this article
> just cannot be saved. This is because X encode some
> characters as if they are not chinese-iso-8bit characters,
> but emacs decode them to emacs-mule successfully, and
> finally file coding system cannot encode emacs-mule to
> chinese-iso-8bit.
In that case, Emacs asks you to select some of safe coding
systems. If your Emacs supports chinese-gbk, it should also
be listed as a safe coding system. I think that behaviour
is better than refusing characters not supported by
chinese-iso-8bit from the beginning.
Kenichi> By the way, the coding system chinese-gbk is not
Kenichi> yet supported in the current Emacs. Or, are you
Kenichi> using emacs-unicode?
> Chinese-gbk is my extension to Emacs, I believe I have
> post it in m17n's maillist.
Oops, then, I'm very sorry that I completely forgot about
that mail. Could you send it to me again? Then I'll check
why:
> Yeah, icccm list had been appended with GBK-0, that's why my emacs
> can decode some gbk characters correctly, but problems are still
> there. In the example I gived in the previous post, one embeded gbk
> character will make all characters fail to be decoded. ;-(
that happens.
By the way, the name non-standard-icccm-encodings-alist is
wrong. "icccm" should actually be "ctext". I'll fix it
soon.
---
Ken'ichi HANDA
handa@m17n.org
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-26 7:09 ` Kenichi Handa
@ 2003-05-26 8:42 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-27 12:26 ` Kenichi Handa
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robin Hu @ 2003-05-26 8:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1148 bytes --]
>>>>> "Kenichi" == Kenichi Handa <handa@m17n.org> writes:
Kenichi> Provided that you have an input method that produces both
Kenichi> Chinese and Hangul and sends data to Emacs in compound-text
Kenichi> encoding, and you set keyboard-coding-system to
Kenichi> compound-text, Emacs should accept all characters,
Kenichi> shouldn't it?
Kenichi> Emacs is a multilingual editor and its functionality should
Kenichi> not be limited by locale.
Kenichi> In that case, Emacs asks you to select some of safe coding
Kenichi> systems. If your Emacs supports chinese-gbk, it should
Kenichi> also be listed as a safe coding system. I think that
Kenichi> behaviour is better than refusing characters not supported
Kenichi> by chinese-iso-8bit from the beginning.
Well, I think you successfully persuade me to believe your idea is
a better choice, though it takes more effort. ;-)
The first attachment is my extension for gbk coding. The second is a
sample gbk coding file, it helps to show copy/paste problems. Hope
they can be any help.
Kenichi> --- Ken'ichi HANDA handa@m17n.org
[-- Attachment #2: Chinese-gbk --]
[-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 104177 bytes --]
[-- Attachment #3: Sample.txt --]
[-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 34 bytes --]
[-- Attachment #4: Type: text/plain, Size: 142 bytes --]
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients
2003-05-26 8:42 ` Robin Hu
@ 2003-05-27 12:26 ` Kenichi Handa
0 siblings, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Kenichi Handa @ 2003-05-27 12:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
In article <uk7certe8.fsf@knight.6test.edu.cn>, Robin Hu <huxw@knight.6test.edu.cn> writes:
> The first attachment is my extension for gbk
> coding. The second is a sample gbk coding file, it helps
> to show copy/paste problems. Hope they can be any help.
Thank you. I loaded your chinese-gbk.el, evaluate this,
(push '("gbk-0" . chinese-gbk) non-standard-icccm-encodings-alist)
and tried your failure example as below (as I don't have an
X client that sends such a data):
(decode-coding-string "\e$(AV1\e%/2\200\210gbk-0\C-b\351F;y"
'compound-text-with-extensions)
It retursn four characters string:
1. chinese-gb2312 (zhi2)
2. chinese-cns11643-5 (can't see because I don't have a gbk font)
3. ';'
4. 'y'
If I encode that string into chinese-gbk, I get this:
"\326\261\351F;y"
Isn't it the correct string?
---
Ken'ichi HANDA
handa@m17n.org
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2003-05-27 12:26 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2003-05-23 9:19 Emacs failes to communicate with other X clients Robin Hu
2003-05-23 17:22 ` Eli Zaretskii
2003-05-24 11:10 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-24 17:38 ` Eli Zaretskii
2003-05-26 2:56 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-26 4:54 ` Kenichi Handa
2003-05-26 6:06 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-26 7:09 ` Kenichi Handa
2003-05-26 8:42 ` Robin Hu
2003-05-27 12:26 ` Kenichi Handa
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