DOKK / manpages / debian 10 / m17n-docs / minput_get_variable.3m17n.en
minput_get_variable(3m17n) The m17n Library minput_get_variable(3m17n)

minput_get_variable - Get information about input method variable(s).

MPlist* minput_get_variable (MSymbol language, MSymbol name, MSymbol variable)

Get information about input method variable(s). The minput_get_variable() function returns information about variable variable of the input method specified by language and name. An input method variable controls behavior of an input method.

There are two kinds of variables, global and local. A global variable has a global definition, and the description and the value may be inherited by a local variable. Each input method defines a local variable which has local value. It may also declare a local variable that inherits definition of a global variable of the same name.

If language is Mt and name is Mnil, information about a global variable is returned. Otherwise information about a local variable is returned.

If variable is Mnil, information about all variables is returned.

The return value is a well-formed plist (Property List) of this format:


((NAME DESCRIPTION STATUS VALUE [VALID-VALUE ...]) ...)

NAME is a symbol representing the variable name.

DESCRIPTION is an M-text describing the variable, or Mnil if the variable has no description.

STATUS is a symbol representing how the value is decided. The value is Mnil (the default value), Mcustomized (the value is customized by per-user customization file), or Mconfigured (the value is set by the call of minput_config_variable()). For a local variable only, it may also be Minherited (the value is inherited from the corresponding global variable).

VALUE is the initial value of the variable. If the key of this element is Mt, the variable has no initial value. Otherwise, the key is Minteger, Msymbol, or Mtext and the value is of the corresponding type.

VALID-VALUEs (if any) specify which values the variable can have. They have the same type (i.e. having the same key) as VALUE except for the case that VALUE is an integer. In that case, VALID-VALUE may be a plist of two integers specifying the range of possible values.

If there no VALID-VALUE, the variable can have any value as long as the type is the same as VALUE.

If variable is not Mnil, the first element of the returned plist contains the information about variable.

If the requested information was found, a pointer to a non-empty plist is returned. As the plist is kept in the library, the caller must not modify nor free it.

Otherwise (the specified input method or the specified variable does not exist), NULL is returned.

Copyright (C) 2001 Information-technology Promotion Agency (IPA)
Copyright (C) 2001-2011 National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html>.

12 Jan 2011 Version 1.6.2