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Re: creating unibyte strings


From: Eli Zaretskii
Subject: Re: creating unibyte strings
Date: Fri, 22 Mar 2019 17:11:52 +0200

> From: Stefan Monnier <address@hidden>
> Date: Fri, 22 Mar 2019 10:23:20 -0400
> 
> >> I don't see what's subtle about "unibyte" strings, as long as you
> >> understand that these are strings of *bytes* instead of strings
> >> of *characters* (i.e. they're `int8[]` rather than `w_char_t[]`).
> >
> > That's the subtlety, right there.  Handling such "strings" in Emacs
> > Lisp can produce strange and unexpected results for someone who is not
> > aware of the difference and its implications.
> 
> But this has nothing to do with the modules API: it's not more tricky
> then when doing it purely in Elisp.  Are you seriously suggesting we
> deprecate unibyte strings altogether?

We won't deprecate unibyte strings, but we decided long ago to
minimize their use.

> >> "Multibyte" strings are just as subtle (maybe more so even), yet we
> >> rightly don't hesitate to offer a primitive way to construct them.
> > Because we succeed to hide the subtleties in that case,
> > so the multibyte nature is not really visible on the Lisp level,
> > unless you try very hard to make it so.
> 
> Then I don't know what subtleties you're talking about.
> Can you give some examples of the kinds of things you're thinking of?

String concatenation, for one.  Regular expression search for another.
And those just the ones I thought about in the first 5 seconds.

> >> > Instead, how about doing that via vectors of byte values?
> >> What's the advantage?  That seems even more convoluted: create a Lisp
> >> vector of the right size (i.e. 8x the size of your string on a 64bit
> >> system), loop over your string turning each byte into a Lisp integer
> >> (with the reverted API, this involves allocation of an `emacs_value`
> >> box), then pass that to `concat`?
> > That's one way, but I'm sure I can come up with a simpler one. ;-)
> 
> I'm all ears.

Provide an Emacs primitive for that, then at least some of the
awkwardness is gone.  And/or use records.

> >> It's probably going to be even less efficient than going through utf-8
> >> and back.
> > I doubt that.  It's just an assignment.  And it's a rare situation
> > anyway.
> 
> Why do you think it's rare?

Because the number of Emacs features that require you to submit a
unibyte string is very small.

> It's pretty common to receive non-utf-8 byte streams from the external world.
> And when you do receive them, it can come at a very fast pace and become
> temporarily anything but rare.

Are you talking about text encoded in some non-UTF-8 encoding?  If so,
it should be converted to UTF-8, and that will solve the problem.  If
it isn't text, then what common use cases are you talking about?

> 2- the C side string contains text in latin-1, big5, younameit.
>    The module API provides nothing convenient.  Should we force our
>    module to link to C-side coding-system libraries to convert to utf-8
>    before passing it on to the Elisp, even though Emacs already has all
>    the needed facilities?  Really?

Yes, really.  Why is that a problem?  libiconv exists on every
platform we support, and is easy to use.  Moreover, if you just want
to convert a native string into another native string, using Emacs
built-in en/decoding machinery is inconvenient, because it involves
more copying than necessary.

> 3- The C side string contains binary data (say PNG images).
>    What does "arrange for it to be UTF-8" even mean?

Nothing, since in this case there's no meaning to "decoding".



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