01c66110e1
Remove procedural code that did the scanning, which was faulty and didn't support complex constants such as 0x1p-61. Replace it with a finite state machine expressed as a transition table. The table was rewritten by hand from lx's output, given parts of grammar expressed as regular expressions. lx is Katherine Flavel's lexer generator, currently available at https://github.com/katef/libfsm and the parts of grammar were taken from http://quut.com/c/ANSI-C-grammar-l-2011.html and extended to support binary integer constants which are a popular GCC extension. Reported by: bde |
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.. | ||
tests | ||
args.c | ||
indent_codes.h | ||
indent_globs.h | ||
indent.1 | ||
indent.c | ||
indent.h | ||
io.c | ||
lexi.c | ||
Makefile | ||
Makefile.depend | ||
parse.c | ||
pr_comment.c | ||
README |
$FreeBSD$ This is the C indenter, it originally came from the University of Illinois via some distribution tape for PDP-11 Unix. It has subsequently been hacked upon by James Gosling @ CMU. It isn't very pretty, and really needs to be completely redone, but it is probably the nicest C pretty printer around. Further additions to provide "Kernel Normal Form" were contributed by the folks at Sun Microsystems. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > From mnetor!yunexus!oz@uunet.UU.NET Wed Mar 9 15:30:55 1988 > Date: Tue, 8 Mar 88 18:36:25 EST > From: yunexus!oz@uunet.UU.NET (Ozan Yigit) > To: bostic@okeeffe.berkeley.edu > Cc: ccvaxa!willcox@uunet.UU.NET, jag@sun.com, rsalz@uunet.UU.NET > In-Reply-To: Keith Bostic's message of Tue, 16 Feb 88 16:09:06 PST > Subject: Re: Indent... Thank you for your response about indent. I was wrong in my original observation (or mis-observation :-). UCB did keep the Illinois copyright intact. The issue still is whether we can distribute indent, and if we can, which version. David Willcox (the author) states that: | Several people have asked me on what basis I claim that indent is in | the public domain. I knew I would be sorry I made that posting. | | Some history. Way back in 1976, the project I worked on at the | University of Illinois Center for Advanced Computation had a huge | battle about how to format C code. After about a week of fighting, I | got disgusted and wrote a program, which I called indent, to reformat C | code. It had a bunch of different options that would let you format | the output the way you liked. In particular, all of the different | formats being championed were supported. | | It was my first big C program. It was ugly. It wasn't designed, it | just sort of grew. But it pretty much worked, and it stopped most of | the fighting. | | As a matter of form, I included a University of Illinois Copyright | notice. However, my understanding was that, since the work was done | on an ARPA contract, it was in the public domain. | | Time passed. Some years later, indent showed up on one of the early | emacs distributions. | | Later still, someone from UC Berkeley called the UofI and asked if | indent was in the public domain. They wanted to include it in their | UNIX distributions, along with the emacs stuff. I was no longer at the | UofI, but Rob Kolstad, who was, asked me about it. I told him I didn't | care if they used it, and since then it has been on the BSD distributions. | | Somewhere along the way, several other unnamed people have had their | hands in it. It was converted to understand version 7 C. (The | original was version 6.) It was converted from its original filter | interface to its current "blow away the user's file" interface. | The $HOME/.indent.pro file parsing was added. Some more formatting | options were added. | | The source I have right now has two copyright notices. One is the | original from the UofI. One is from Berkeley. | | I am not a lawyer, and I certainly do not understand copyright law. As | far as I am concerned, the bulk of this program, everything covered by | the UofI copyright, is in the public domain, and worth every penny. | Berkeley's copyright probably should only cover their changes, and I | don't know their feelings about sending it out. In any case, there appears to be none at UofI to clarify/and change that copyright, but I am confident (based on the statements of its author) that the code, as it stands with its copyright, is distributable, and will not cause any legal problems. Hence, the issue reduces to *which* one to distribute through comp.sources.unix. I would suggest that with the permission of you folks (given that you have parts copyrighted), we distribute the 4.3 version of indent, which appears to be the most up-to-date version. I happen to have just about every known version of indent, including the very original submission from the author to a unix tape, later the G-Emacs version, any 4.n version, sun version and the Unipress version. I still think we should not have to "go-back-in-time" and re-do all the work you people have done. I hope to hear from you as to what you think about this. You may of course send 4.3 version to the moderator directly, or you can let me know of your permission, and I will send the sources, or you can let me know that 4.3 version is off-limits, in which case we would probably have to revert to an older version. One way or another, I hope to get a version of indent to comp.sources.unix. regards.. oz cc: ccvaxa!willcox sun.com!jar uunet!rsalz