GNU bug report logs -
#58168
string-lessp glitches and inconsistencies
Previous Next
Full log
View this message in rfc822 format
4 okt. 2022 kl. 18.24 skrev Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>:
>> This treats unibyte format strings as if they were Latin-1 for the purpose of the error message.
>
> No, it doesn't. It shows the problematic characters as raw bytes, as
> in "%\200" (where \200 is a single character). If you see something
> different, please show the recipe.
(format-message "%\345" 0)
=> (error "Invalid format operation %å")
where the format string is a unibyte string of two bytes, % and 0xFC, yet the error treats it as the Latin-1 character å.
In fact,
(format-message "%å" 0)
yields the same error string.
>> Not very important, of course, but maybe there should be a UNIBYTE_TO_CHAR in the alternative branch?
>
> No, that would show the multibyte codepoint, and will confuse users,
> because the result would look very different from the problematic
> format spec in this case.
Yes, that's probably right. I suppose the right solution is something like:
unsigned char *p = (unsigned char *) format - 1;
if (multibyte_format)
error ("Invalid format operation %%%c", STRING_CHAR (p));
else
error (*p <= 127 ? "Invalid format operation %%%c"
: "Invalid format operation char 0x%02x",
*p);
but perhaps it's a rare error not worth the trouble. (If we don't bother changing it, a little comment saying that we are aware of the glitch may be a good idea.)
> Who said anything about #x3fffc? The original code had #xfc, the
> unibyte code for #x3ffffc.
There seems to be a misunderstanding. The original (and current) code attempts to display char #x3fffc, which is not a raw byte. It's just a typo for #x3ffffc -- not a big deal.
Of course I could have retained the 3fffc under a different label, but everyone else reading the test would just assume it was a typo of 3ffffc since 3fffc itself is not very interesting. I replaced it with 10abcd, a wide Unicode value deliberately chosen to be arbitrary-looking. We could use another value if you prefer.
> I don't see why we shouldn't test both.
> In the other problematic hunk you replaced \777774 with \374 -- why?
3fffc in octal is 777774; when changed to 3ffffc it becomes a raw byte, fc, displayed as \374.
This bug report was last modified 2 years and 276 days ago.
Previous Next
GNU bug tracking system
Copyright (C) 1999 Darren O. Benham,
1997,2003 nCipher Corporation Ltd,
1994-97 Ian Jackson.