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A compatibility digraph characters, such as Dž, are neither upper- nor lower-case. At the moment however, those are reported as upper-case¹ despite the fact that they change when upper-cased. Stop checking if a character is upper-case before trying to up-case it so that title-case characters are handled correctly. This fixes one of the issues mentioned in bug#24603. ¹ Because they change when converted to lower-case. Notice an asymmetry in that for a character to be considered lower-case it must not be upper-case (plus the usual condition of changing when upper-cased). * src/buffer.h (upcase1): Delete. (upcase): Change to upcase character unconditionally just like downcase does it. This is what upcase1 was. * src/casefiddle.c (casify_object, casify_region): Use upcase instead of upcase1 and don’t check !uppercasep(x) before calling upcase. * src/keyboard.c (read_key_sequence): Don’t check if uppercase(x), just downcase(x) and see if it changed. * test/src/casefiddle-tests.el (casefiddle-tests--characters, casefiddle-tests-casing): Update test cases which are now passing. |
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Copyright (C) 2008-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. See the end of the file for license conditions. This directory contains files intended to test various aspects of Emacs's functionality. Please help add tests! See the file file-organization.org for the details of the directory structure and file-naming conventions. Emacs uses ERT, Emacs Lisp Regression Testing, for testing. See (info "(ert)") or https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/ert/ for more information on writing and running tests. The Makefile in this directory supports the following targets: * make check Run all tests as defined in the directory. Expensive tests are suppressed. The result of the tests for <filename>.el is stored in <filename>.log. * make check-maybe Like "make check", but run only the tests for files which have unresolved prerequisites. * make check-expensive Like "make check", but run also the tests marked as expensive. * make <filename> or make <filename>.log Run all tests declared in <filename>.el. This includes expensive tests. In the former case the output is shown on the terminal, in the latter case the output is written to <filename>.log. ERT offers selectors, which make it possible to filter out which test cases shall run. The make variable $(SELECTOR) gives you a simple mean to use your own selectors. The ERT manual describes how selectors are constructed, see (info "(ert)Test Selectors") or https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/ert/Test-Selectors.html You could use predefined selectors of the Makefile. "make <filename> SELECTOR='$(SELECTOR_DEFAULT)'" runs all tests for <filename>.el except the tests tagged as expensive. If your test file contains the tests "test-foo", "test2-foo" and "test-foo-remote", and you want to run only the former two tests, you could use a selector regexp: "make <filename> SELECTOR='\"foo$$\"'". (Also, see etc/compilation.txt for compilation mode font lock tests.) This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.