;; Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
;; Keywords: internal lisp
-(defconst byte-compile-version (purecopy "2.27 XEmacs; 2000-09-12."))
+(defconst byte-compile-version "2.27 XEmacs; 2000-09-12.")
;; This file is part of XEmacs.
;;; generate .elc files which can be loaded into
;;; generic emacs 19.
;;; emacs-lisp-file-regexp Regexp for the extension of source-files;
-;;; see also the function byte-compile-dest-file.
+;;; see also the function `byte-compile-dest-file'.
;;; byte-compile-overwrite-file If nil, delete old .elc files before saving.
;;;
;;; Most of the above parameters can also be set on a file-by-file basis; see
;;; This is, in fact, exactly what `defsubst' does. To make a function no
;;; longer be inline, you must use `proclaim-notinline'. Beware that if
;;; you define a function with `defsubst' and later redefine it with
-;;; `defun', it will still be open-coded until you use proclaim-notinline.
+;;; `defun', it will still be open-coded until you use `proclaim-notinline'.
;;;
;;; o You can also open-code one particular call to a function without
;;; open-coding all calls. Use the 'inline' form to do this, like so:
;;;
;;; o Forms like ((lambda ...) ...) are open-coded.
;;;
-;;; o The form `eval-when-compile' is like progn, except that the body
+;;; o The form `eval-when-compile' is like `progn', except that the body
;;; is evaluated at compile-time. When it appears at top-level, this
;;; is analogous to the Common Lisp idiom (eval-when (compile) ...).
;;; When it does not appear at top-level, it is similar to the
;;; Common Lisp #. reader macro (but not in interpreted code).
;;;
-;;; o The form `eval-and-compile' is similar to eval-when-compile, but
-;;; the whole form is evalled both at compile-time and at run-time.
+;;; o The form `eval-and-compile' is similar to `eval-when-compile',
+;;; but the whole form is evalled both at compile-time and at run-time.
;;;
;;; o The command M-x byte-compile-and-load-file does what you'd think.
;;;
-;;; o The command compile-defun is analogous to eval-defun.
+;;; o The command `compile-defun' is analogous to `eval-defun'.
;;;
-;;; o If you run byte-compile-file on a filename which is visited in a
+;;; o If you run `byte-compile-file' on a filename which is visited in a
;;; buffer, and that buffer is modified, you are asked whether you want
;;; to save the buffer before compiling.
;;;
(defmacro byte-compile-version-cond (cond) cond)))
)
-(defvar emacs-lisp-file-regexp (purecopy "\\.el$")
+(defvar emacs-lisp-file-regexp "\\.el$"
"*Regexp which matches Emacs Lisp source files.
You may want to redefine `byte-compile-dest-file' if you change this.")
(defvar byte-compiler-error-flag)
(defconst byte-compile-initial-macro-environment
- (purecopy
- '((byte-compiler-options . (lambda (&rest forms)
- (apply 'byte-compiler-options-handler forms)))
- (eval-when-compile . (lambda (&rest body)
- (list 'quote (eval (byte-compile-top-level
- (cons 'progn body))))))
- (eval-and-compile . (lambda (&rest body)
- (eval (cons 'progn body))
- (cons 'progn body)))))
+ '((byte-compiler-options . (lambda (&rest forms)
+ (apply 'byte-compiler-options-handler forms)))
+ (eval-when-compile . (lambda (&rest body)
+ (list 'quote (eval (cons 'progn body)))))
+ (eval-and-compile . (lambda (&rest body)
+ (eval (cons 'progn body))
+ (cons 'progn body))))
"The default macro-environment passed to macroexpand by the compiler.
Placing a macro here will cause a macro to have different semantics when
expanded by the compiler as when expanded by the interpreter.")
(defconst byte-constant-limit 64
"Exclusive maximum index usable in the `byte-constant' opcode.")
-(defconst byte-goto-ops (purecopy
- '(byte-goto byte-goto-if-nil byte-goto-if-not-nil
- byte-goto-if-nil-else-pop
- byte-goto-if-not-nil-else-pop))
+(defconst byte-goto-ops
+ '(byte-goto byte-goto-if-nil byte-goto-if-not-nil
+ byte-goto-if-nil-else-pop
+ byte-goto-if-not-nil-else-pop)
"List of byte-codes whose offset is a pc.")
(defconst byte-goto-always-pop-ops
- (purecopy '(byte-goto-if-nil byte-goto-if-not-nil)))
+ '(byte-goto-if-nil byte-goto-if-not-nil))
(defconst byte-rel-goto-ops
- (purecopy '(byte-rel-goto byte-rel-goto-if-nil byte-rel-goto-if-not-nil
- byte-rel-goto-if-nil-else-pop byte-rel-goto-if-not-nil-else-pop))
+ '(byte-rel-goto byte-rel-goto-if-nil byte-rel-goto-if-not-nil
+ byte-rel-goto-if-nil-else-pop byte-rel-goto-if-not-nil-else-pop)
"byte-codes for relative jumps.")
(byte-extrude-byte-code-vectors)
'(emacs19) '(emacs20)))))
;; now we can copy it.
-(setq byte-compiler-legal-options (purecopy byte-compiler-legal-options))
+(setq byte-compiler-legal-options byte-compiler-legal-options)
(defun byte-compiler-options-handler (&rest args)
(let (key val desc choices)
(setq var nil))
(setq rest (cdr rest)))
;; if var is nil at this point, it's a defvar in this file.
- (not var))))
+ (not var))
+ ;; Perhaps (eval-when-compile (defvar foo))
+ (and (boundp 'current-load-list)
+ (memq var current-load-list))))
;;; If we have compiled bindings of variables which have no referents, warn.
(defun byte-recompile-directory (directory &optional arg norecursion force)
"Recompile every `.el' file in DIRECTORY that needs recompilation.
This is if a `.elc' file exists but is older than the `.el' file.
-Files in subdirectories of DIRECTORY are processed also unless argument
-NORECURSION is non-nil.
+Files in subdirectories of DIRECTORY are also processed unless
+optional argument NORECURSION is non-nil.
If the `.elc' file does not exist, normally the `.el' file is *not* compiled.
But a prefix argument (optional second arg) means ask user,
A nonzero prefix argument also means ask about each subdirectory.
-If the fourth argument FORCE is non-nil,
+If the fourth optional argument FORCE is non-nil,
recompile every `.el' file that already has a `.elc' file."
(interactive "DByte recompile directory: \nP")
(if arg
(if (eq base-op 'byte-varset)
byte-compile-assigned-bit
byte-compile-referenced-bit)))))
+ (and (boundp 'current-load-list)
+ (memq var current-load-list))
(if (eq base-op 'byte-varset)
(or (memq var byte-compile-free-assignments)
(progn
(byte-compile-body-do-effect
(list
;; Put the defined variable in this library's load-history entry
- ;; just as a real defvar would, but only in top-level forms.
- (when (null byte-compile-current-form)
+ ;; just as a real defvar would, but only in top-level forms with values.
+ (when (and (> (length form) 2)
+ (null byte-compile-current-form))
`(push ',var current-load-list))
(when (> (length form) 3)
(when (and string (not (stringp string)))
Use this from the command line, with `-batch';
it won't work in an interactive Emacs.
Each file is processed even if an error occurred previously.
-For example, invoke \"xemacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile $emacs/ ~/*.el\""
+For example, invoke \"xemacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile $emacs/ ~/*.el\"."
;; command-line-args-left is what is left of the command line (from
;; startup.el)
(defvar command-line-args-left) ;Avoid 'free variable' warning