[PATCH] Redefine skip_quoted

Adam Fedor fedor@doc.com
Thu Oct 17 23:33:00 GMT 2002


Jim Blandy wrote:
> Klee Dienes <klee@apple.com> writes:
> 
>>In the Apple code, we use skip_quoted to allow for the possibility of
>>spaces in Objective-C function names.
>>
>>I'm actually coming to think that allowing people to break on unquoted
>>Objective-C methods was a mistake: it's caused us no end of trouble
>>trying to shoehorn decode_line_1() into handling every possible
>>edge-case.  I'm not sure how practical it is for us to remove it at
>>this point, though --- we'd have to do some research among our
>>Objective-C developers to find out how important a feature it is to
>>them, I think.
> 
> 
> So, the original patch posted is preparation for a behavior which you
> now suspect was a mistake, and which has caused you no end of trouble?
> (Or do I have the sense of what you were saying reversed?)  You can
> forgive me if hearing that makes me a bit hesitant to approve the
> patch, right?  :)
> 

Well, really the use of skip_quoted for ObjC (in a patch that I haven't 
submitted yet), really has more to do with handling the canonical form 
of an Objective-C method symbol (e.g. -[MyObject myMethod:arg2:]) that 
comes from objc-lang.c. Most of the breakpoint cases that a user would 
enter are handled elsewhere (in a patch that I also haven't submitted).

I'd have to look more closely at how the canonical form is generated 
(really, demangled) to see if the gdb machinery could handle having 
quotes around the symbol. I don't know if that would cause other problems.


-- 
Adam Fedor, Digital Optics Corp.      | I'm glad I hate spinach, because
http://www.doc.com                    | if I didn't, I'd eat it, and you
                                       | know how I hate the stuff.



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