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-rw-r--r--generic/tclUtil.c50
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 25 deletions
diff --git a/generic/tclUtil.c b/generic/tclUtil.c
index 8c6adfe..69d0b17 100644
--- a/generic/tclUtil.c
+++ b/generic/tclUtil.c
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ static ProcessGlobalValue executableName = {
* CONVERT_MASK A mask value used to extract the conversion mode from
* the flags argument.
* Also indicates a strange conversion mode where all
- * special characters are escaped with backslashes
+ * special characters are escaped with backslashes
* *except for braces*. This is a strange and unnecessary
* case, but it's part of the historical way in which
* lists have been formatted in Tcl. To experiment with
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ static ProcessGlobalValue executableName = {
* in other cases this means an overestimate of the
* required size.
*
- * For more details, see the comments on the Tcl*Scan*Element and
+ * For more details, see the comments on the Tcl*Scan*Element and
* Tcl*Convert*Element routines.
*/
@@ -171,12 +171,12 @@ Tcl_ObjType tclEndOffsetType = {
* rules similar to the parsing of the words of a command in a Tcl script.
* Backslash substitution plays a key role, and is defined exactly as it is
* in command parsing. The same routine, TclParseBackslash() is used in both
- * command parsing and list parsing.
+ * command parsing and list parsing.
*
* NOTE: This means that if and when backslash substitution rules ever
* change for command parsing, the interpretation of strings as lists also
* changes.
- *
+ *
* Backslash substitution replaces an "escape sequence" of one or more
* characters starting with
* \u005c \ BACKSLASH
@@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ Tcl_ObjType tclEndOffsetType = {
*
* * If the first character of a formatted substring is
* \u007b { OPEN BRACE
- * then the end of the substring is the matching
+ * then the end of the substring is the matching
* \u007d } CLOSE BRACE
* character, where matching is determined by counting nesting levels,
* and not including any brace characters that are contained within a
@@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ Tcl_ObjType tclEndOffsetType = {
* that includes an unbalanced brace not in a backslash escape sequence,
* and any value that ends with a backslash not itself in a backslash
* escape sequence.
- *
+ *
* * If the first character of a formatted substring is
* \u0022 " QUOTE
* then the end of the substring is the next QUOTE character, not counting
@@ -246,7 +246,7 @@ Tcl_ObjType tclEndOffsetType = {
* minimum be able to produce escape sequences for the 10 characters
* identified above that have significance to a list parser.
*
- * * * CANONICAL LISTS * * * * *
+ * * * CANONICAL LISTS * * * * *
*
* In addition to the basic rules for parsing strings into Tcl lists, there
* are additional properties to be met by the set of list values that are
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ Tcl_ObjType tclEndOffsetType = {
* This sort of coding was once fairly common, though it's become more
* idiomatic to see the following instead:
* set script [list puts [list $one $two $three]]; eval $script
- * In order to support this guarantee, every canonical list must have
+ * In order to support this guarantee, every canonical list must have
* balance when counting those braces that are not in escape sequences.
*
* Within these constraints, the canonical list generation routines
@@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ Tcl_ObjType tclEndOffsetType = {
* #if COMPAT directives. This makes it easy to experiment with eliminating
* this formatting mode simply with "#define COMPAT 0" above. I believe
* this is worth considering.
- *
+ *
* Another consideration is the treatment of QUOTE characters in list elements.
* TclConvertElement() must have the ability to produce the escape sequence
* \" so that when a list element begins with a QUOTE we do not confuse
@@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ TclMaxListLength(
}
/* No list element before leading white space */
- count += 1 - TclIsSpaceProc(*bytes);
+ count += 1 - TclIsSpaceProc(*bytes);
/* Count white space runs as potential element separators */
while (numBytes) {
@@ -420,7 +420,7 @@ TclMaxListLength(
}
/* No list element following trailing white space */
- count -= TclIsSpaceProc(bytes[-1]);
+ count -= TclIsSpaceProc(bytes[-1]);
done:
if (endPtr) {
@@ -488,7 +488,7 @@ TclFindElement(
* indicate that the substring of *sizePtr
* bytes starting at **elementPtr is/is not
* the literal list element and therefore
- * does not/does require a call to
+ * does not/does require a call to
* TclCopyAndCollapse() by the caller. */
{
CONST char *p = list;
@@ -945,7 +945,7 @@ TclScanElement(
int preferBrace = 0; /* CONVERT_MASK mode. */
int braceCount = 0; /* Count of all braces '{' '}' seen. */
#endif
-
+
if ((p == NULL) || (length == 0) || ((*p == '\0') && (length == -1))) {
/* Empty string element must be brace quoted. */
*flagPtr = CONVERT_BRACE;
@@ -1012,7 +1012,7 @@ TclScanElement(
extra++; /* Escape '\' => '\\' */
if ((length == 1) || ((length == -1) && (p[1] == '\0'))) {
/* Final backslash. Cannot format with brace quoting. */
- requireEscape = 1;
+ requireEscape = 1;
break;
}
if (p[1] == '\n') {
@@ -1087,7 +1087,7 @@ TclScanElement(
if (preferEscape && !preferBrace) {
/*
* If we are quoting solely due to ] or internal " characters
- * use the CONVERT_MASK mode where we escape all special
+ * use the CONVERT_MASK mode where we escape all special
* characters except for braces. "extra" counted space needed
* to escape braces too, so substract "braceCount" to get our
* actual needs.
@@ -1351,7 +1351,7 @@ int TclConvertElement(
if (length == -1) {
return p - dst;
}
- /*
+ /*
* If we reach this point, there's an embedded NULL in the
* string range being processed, which should not happen when
* the encoding rules for Tcl strings are properly followed.
@@ -1417,7 +1417,7 @@ Tcl_Merge(
/*
* We cannot allocate a large enough flag array to format this
* list in one pass. We could imagine converting this routine
- * to a multi-pass implementation, but for sizeof(int) == 4,
+ * to a multi-pass implementation, but for sizeof(int) == 4,
* the limit is a max of 2^30 list elements and since each element
* is at least one byte formatted, and requires one byte space
* between it and the next one, that a minimum space requirement
@@ -1678,7 +1678,7 @@ Tcl_Concat(
}
if (bytesNeeded + argc - 1 < 0) {
/*
- * Panic test could be tighter, but not going to bother for
+ * Panic test could be tighter, but not going to bother for
* this legacy routine.
*/
Tcl_Panic("Tcl_Concat: max size of Tcl value exceeded");
@@ -1689,7 +1689,7 @@ Tcl_Concat(
for (p = result, i = 0; i < argc; i++) {
int trim, elemLength;
const char *element;
-
+
element = argv[i];
elemLength = strlen(argv[i]);
@@ -1827,7 +1827,7 @@ Tcl_ConcatObj(
for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) {
int trim;
-
+
element = TclGetStringFromObj(objv[i], &elemLength);
/* Trim away the leading whitespace */
@@ -2828,7 +2828,7 @@ Tcl_PrintDouble(
/*
* Remember to copy the terminating NUL too.
*/
-
+
if (value < 0) {
memcpy(dst, "-Inf", 5);
} else {
@@ -2885,7 +2885,7 @@ Tcl_PrintDouble(
*/
digits = TclDoubleDigits(value, *precisionPtr,
- TCL_DD_E_FORMAT /* | TCL_DD_SHORTEN_FLAG */,
+ TCL_DD_E_FORMAT /* | TCL_DD_SHORTEN_FLAG */,
&exponent, &signum, &end);
}
if (signum) {
@@ -2896,7 +2896,7 @@ Tcl_PrintDouble(
/*
* E format for numbers < 1e-3 or >= 1e17.
*/
-
+
*dst++ = *p++;
c = *p;
if (c != '\0') {
@@ -2906,7 +2906,7 @@ Tcl_PrintDouble(
c = *++p;
}
}
- /*
+ /*
* Tcl 8.4 appears to format with at least a two-digit exponent; \
* preserve that behaviour when tcl_precision != 0
*/
@@ -2919,7 +2919,7 @@ Tcl_PrintDouble(
/*
* F format for others.
*/
-
+
if (exponent < 0) {
*dst++ = '0';
}