compile issues. std::isspace(' ') was expanding to std::(!!_maskrune...)
which would cause a C++ compile error. Making __istype() an inline
causes the expansion to be std::__istype() instead, which is valid.
Reviewed by: jkh
of the C++ stdlib. Our ctype.h uses symbols of the form _<X> to denote the
various character classes. Our ctype.h also extends the usual ctype.h
offering by adding the "_T" (special) class. Problem is parts of the STL
also use the symbol "_T" as its parameterized type. These two uses are
incompatible.
Thus change the form of the symbols used in ctype to something that fixes
the current problem and is less likely to cause conflicts in the future.
Requested by: Tomoaki NISHIYAMA <tomoaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Ok'ed by: JKH
If _ANSI_SOURCE or _POSIX_SOURCE is defined, then <ctype.h> had to
be included before <stddef.h> or <stdlib.h> to get rune_t declared.
Now rune_t is declared perfectly bogusly in all cases when <ctype.h>
is included.
This change breaks similar (but more convoluted) convolutions in the
stddef.h in gcc distributions. Ports of gcc should avoid using the
gcc headers.
Fix numerous ANSI conformance bugs and other nits.
ctype.h:
o There were no prototypes behind the macros (conformance bug).
o isascii() didn't have enough parentheses (plain bug).
o tolower() and toupper were always static inline (conformance
bug? You could undef them and take their address, but this
gave different addresses in different modules. You couldn't
undef them and declare them (correctly) again). <stdio.h>'s
treatment of putc() shows one way to handle this problem,
but it only works because the putc() macro is allowed to
reevaluate its args. I used a hack controlled by
_EXTERNALIZE_CTYPE_INLINES_ to get <ctype.h> to generate the
code (the previous hack involving _ANSI_LIBRARY_ goes away).
This has the advantage that the core of the functions is only
written down once and the disadvantage that another layer of
functions is required. The extra layer goes away if inline
functions are used, leaving only the problem of understanding
why there are functions named toupper(), __toupper and
___toupper() as well as a macro named toupper.
o Nothing seems to define _USE_CTYPE_LIBRARY_. Eliminate it
o Let the user set _USE_CTYPE_INLINE_ and _DONT_USE_CTYPE_INLINE_
for full control over inlining.
o The args for the inline functions didn't have enough
underscores (conformance bug).
o The formatting and ordering was inconsistent (style bug).
o TODO: fix conformance bugs brought by including <runetype.h>.