#ifndef FISH_FALLBACK_H #define FISH_FALLBACK_H #ifdef TPUTS_KLUDGE /** Linux on PPC seems to have a tputs implementation that sometimes behaves strangely. This fallback seems to fix things. */ int tputs(const char *str, int affcnt, int (*putc)(tputs_arg_t)); #endif /* Here follows the prototypes for fallback implementations of various standarcs libc functions relating to wide character support. Some of these prototypes are always defined, since some libc versions include the code, but you have to use special magical #defines for the prototype to appear. */ #if !HAVE_FWPRINTF /** Print formated string. Some operating systems (Like NetBSD) do not have wide string formating functions. Therefore we implement our own. Not at all complete. Supports wide and narrow characters, strings and decimal numbers, position (%n), field width and precision. */ int fwprintf( FILE *f, const wchar_t *format, ... ); /** Print formated string. Some operating systems (Like NetBSD) do not have wide string formating functions. Therefore we define our own. Not at all complete. Supports wide and narrow characters, strings and decimal numbers, position (%n), field width and precision. */ int swprintf( wchar_t *str, size_t l, const wchar_t *format, ... ); /** Print formated string. Some operating systems (Like NetBSD) do not have wide string formating functions. Therefore we define our own. Not at all complete. Supports wide and narrow characters, strings and decimal numbers, position (%n), field width and precision. */ int wprintf( const wchar_t *format, ... ); /** Print formated string. Some operating systems (Like NetBSD) do not have wide string formating functions. Therefore we define our own. Not at all complete. Supports wide and narrow characters, strings and decimal numbers, position (%n), field width and precision. */ int vwprintf( const wchar_t *filter, va_list va ); /** Print formated string. Some operating systems (Like NetBSD) do not have wide string formating functions. Therefore we define our own. Not at all complete. Supports wide and narrow characters, strings and decimal numbers, position (%n), field width and precision. */ int vfwprintf( FILE *f, const wchar_t *filter, va_list va ); /** Print formated string. Some operating systems (Like NetBSD) do not have wide string formating functions. Therefore we define our own. Not at all complete. Supports wide and narrow characters, strings and decimal numbers, position (%n), field width and precision. */ int vswprintf( wchar_t *out, size_t n, const wchar_t *filter, va_list va ); #endif #ifndef HAVE_FGETWC /** Fallback implementation of fgetwc */ wint_t fgetwc(FILE *stream); /** Fallback implementation of getwc */ wint_t getwc(FILE *stream); #endif #ifndef HAVE_FPUTWC /** Fallback implementation of fputwc */ wint_t fputwc(wchar_t wc, FILE *stream); /** Fallback implementation of putwc */ wint_t putwc(wchar_t wc, FILE *stream); #endif #ifndef HAVE_WCSTOK /** Fallback implementation of wcstok. Uses code borrowed from glibc. */ wchar_t *wcstok(wchar_t *wcs, const wchar_t *delim, wchar_t **ptr); #endif /** Return the number of columns used by a character. This is a libc function, but the prototype for this function is missing in some libc implementations. Fish has a fallback implementation in case the implementation is missing altogether. In locales without a native wcwidth, Unicode is probably so broken that it isn't worth trying to implement a real wcwidth. Therefore, the fallback wcwidth assumes any printing character takes up one column and anything else uses 0 columns. */ int wcwidth( wchar_t c ); /** Create a duplicate string. Wide string version of strdup. Will automatically exit if out of memory. */ wchar_t *wcsdup(const wchar_t *in); size_t wcslen(const wchar_t *in); /** Case insensitive string compare function. Wide string version of strcasecmp. This implementation of wcscasecmp does not take into account esoteric locales where uppercase and lowercase do not cleanly transform between each other. Hopefully this should be fine since fish only uses this function with one of the strings supplied by fish and guaranteed to be a sane, english word. Using wcscasecmp on a user-supplied string should be considered a bug. */ int wcscasecmp( const wchar_t *a, const wchar_t *b ); /** Case insensitive string compare function. Wide string version of strncasecmp. This implementation of wcsncasecmp does not take into account esoteric locales where uppercase and lowercase do not cleanly transform between each other. Hopefully this should be fine since fish only uses this function with one of the strings supplied by fish and guaranteed to be a sane, english word. Using wcsncasecmp on a user-supplied string should be considered a bug. */ int wcsncasecmp( const wchar_t *a, const wchar_t *b, int count ); /** Returns a newly allocated wide character string wich is a copy of the string in, but of length c or shorter. The returned string is always null terminated, and the null is not included in the string length. */ wchar_t *wcsndup( const wchar_t *in, int c ); /** Converts from wide char to digit in the specified base. If d is not a valid digit in the specified base, return -1. */ long convert_digit( wchar_t d, int base ); /** Fallback implementation. Convert a wide character string to a number in the specified base. This functions is the wide character string equivalent of strtol. For bases of 10 or lower, 0..9 are used to represent numbers. For bases below 36, a-z and A-Z are used to represent numbers higher than 9. Higher bases than 36 are not supported. */ long wcstol(const wchar_t *nptr, wchar_t **endptr, int base); #endif