From 221a548549f12fa2ad19df2d0095f87edd816d16 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Debarshi Ray Date: Jan 27 2009 18:23:31 +0000 Subject: Initial import into devel. Added Files: devel/emacs-htmlize.spec devel/htmlize-init.el devel/htmlize.el devel/import.log --- diff --git a/emacs-htmlize.spec b/emacs-htmlize.spec new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7e836d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/emacs-htmlize.spec @@ -0,0 +1,84 @@ +%define pkg htmlize +%define pkgname HTMLize + +%if %($(pkg-config emacs) ; echo $?) +%define emacs_lispdir %{_datadir}/emacs/site-lisp +%define emacs_startdir %{_datadir}/emacs/site-lisp/site-start.d +%define emacs_version 22.2 +%else +%define emacs_lispdir %(pkg-config emacs --variable sitepkglispdir) +%define emacs_startdir %(pkg-config emacs --variable sitestartdir) +%define emacs_version %(pkg-config emacs --modversion) +%endif + +Summary: Convert buffer text and decorations to HTML +Name: emacs-%{pkg} +Version: 1.34 +Release: 2%{?dist} +License: GPLv2+ +Group: Applications/Publishing +URL: http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs-en/Htmlize +Source0: http://fly.srk.fer.hr/~hniksic/emacs/%{pkg}.el +Source1: %{pkg}-init.el + +BuildRoot: %(mktemp -ud %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%{release}-XXXXXX) + +Requires: emacs(bin) >= emacs_version + +BuildRequires: emacs +BuildRequires: emacs-el + +BuildArch: noarch + +%description +%{pkgname} is an add-on package for GNU Emacs. It converts the buffer text and +the associated decorations to HTML. The conversion is quite sophisticated, it +understands non-ascii characters, looks up colours in the X11 RGB database, +and can generate either CSS or old style font bits. + +%package el +Summary: Emacs Lisp source files for %{name} +Group: Development/Libraries + +Requires: %{name} = %{version}-%{release} + +%description el +This package contains Emacs Lisp source files for %{name} under +GNU Emacs. You do not need to install this package to run %{pkgname}. +Install the %{name} package to use %{pkgname} with GNU Emacs. + +%prep +%setup -cT +cp -p %{SOURCE0} . + +%build +emacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile ./%{pkg}.el + +%install +rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT +mkdir -p $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{emacs_lispdir}/%{pkg} +mkdir -p $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{emacs_startdir} + +install -p -m644 ./%{pkg}.el $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{emacs_lispdir}/%{pkg} +install -p -m644 ./%{pkg}.elc $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{emacs_lispdir}/%{pkg} +install -p -m644 %{SOURCE1} $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{emacs_startdir} + +%clean +rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT + +%files +%defattr(-,root,root,-) +%dir %{emacs_lispdir}/%{pkg} +%{emacs_lispdir}/%{pkg}/%{pkg}.elc +%{emacs_startdir}/%{pkg}-init.el + +%files el +%defattr(-,root,root,-) +%{emacs_lispdir}/%{pkg}/%{pkg}.el + +%changelog +* Fri Jan 23 2009 Debarshi Ray - 1.34-2 +- Added copyright and distribution notices to htmlize-init.el. + +* Sat Jan 17 2009 Debarshi Ray - 1.34-1 +- Initial build. diff --git a/htmlize-init.el b/htmlize-init.el new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0f3a422 --- /dev/null +++ b/htmlize-init.el @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ +;; Generated autoloads from htmlize.el +;; +;; Copyright (C) 2009 Debarshi Ray +;; +;; All rights reserved. +;; +;; Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are +;; permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and +;; this notice are preserved. + +(autoload (quote htmlize-buffer) "htmlize" "\ +Convert BUFFER to HTML, preserving colors and decorations. + +The generated HTML is available in a new buffer, which is returned. +When invoked interactively, the new buffer is selected in the current +window. The title of the generated document will be set to the buffer's +file name or, if that's not available, to the buffer's name. + +Note that htmlize doesn't fontify your buffers, it only uses the +decorations that are already present. If you don't set up font-lock or +something else to fontify your buffers, the resulting HTML will be +plain. Likewise, if you don't like the choice of colors, fix the mode +that created them, or simply alter the faces it uses. + +\(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil) + +(autoload (quote htmlize-region) "htmlize" "\ +Convert the region to HTML, preserving colors and decorations. +See `htmlize-buffer' for details. + +\(fn BEG END)" t nil) + +(autoload (quote htmlize-file) "htmlize" "\ +Load FILE, fontify it, convert it to HTML, and save the result. + +Contents of FILE are inserted into a temporary buffer, whose major mode +is set with `normal-mode' as appropriate for the file type. The buffer +is subsequently fontified with `font-lock' and converted to HTML. Note +that, unlike `htmlize-buffer', this function explicitly turns on +font-lock. If a form of highlighting other than font-lock is desired, +please use `htmlize-buffer' directly on buffers so highlighted. + +Buffers currently visiting FILE are unaffected by this function. The +function does not change current buffer or move the point. + +If TARGET is specified and names a directory, the resulting file will be +saved there instead of to FILE's directory. If TARGET is specified and +does not name a directory, it will be used as output file name. + +\(fn FILE &optional TARGET)" t nil) + +(autoload (quote htmlize-many-files) "htmlize" "\ +Convert FILES to HTML and save the corresponding HTML versions. + +FILES should be a list of file names to convert. This function calls +`htmlize-file' on each file; see that function for details. When +invoked interactively, you are prompted for a list of files to convert, +terminated with RET. + +If TARGET-DIRECTORY is specified, the HTML files will be saved to that +directory. Normally, each HTML file is saved to the directory of the +corresponding source file. + +\(fn FILES &optional TARGET-DIRECTORY)" t nil) + +(autoload (quote htmlize-many-files-dired) "htmlize" "\ +HTMLize dired-marked files. + +\(fn ARG &optional TARGET-DIRECTORY)" t nil) diff --git a/htmlize.el b/htmlize.el new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f1c4e11 --- /dev/null +++ b/htmlize.el @@ -0,0 +1,1769 @@ +;; htmlize.el -- Convert buffer text and decorations to HTML. + +;; Copyright (C) 1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2005,2006 Hrvoje Niksic + +;; Author: Hrvoje Niksic +;; Keywords: hypermedia, extensions + +;; This program 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 2, or (at your option) +;; any later version. + +;; This program 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 this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the +;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, +;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. + +;;; Commentary: + +;; This package converts the buffer text and the associated +;; decorations to HTML. Mail to to discuss +;; features and additions. All suggestions are more than welcome. + +;; To use this, just switch to the buffer you want HTML-ized and type +;; `M-x htmlize-buffer'. You will be switched to a new buffer that +;; contains the resulting HTML code. You can edit and inspect this +;; buffer, or you can just save it with C-x C-w. `M-x htmlize-file' +;; will find a file, fontify it, and save the HTML version in +;; FILE.html, without any additional intervention. `M-x +;; htmlize-many-files' allows you to htmlize any number of files in +;; the same manner. `M-x htmlize-many-files-dired' does the same for +;; files marked in a dired buffer. + +;; htmlize supports three types of HTML output, selected by setting +;; `htmlize-output-type': `css', `inline-css', and `font'. In `css' +;; mode, htmlize uses cascading style sheets to specify colors; it +;; generates classes that correspond to Emacs faces and uses ... to color parts of text. In this mode, the +;; produced HTML is valid under the 4.01 strict DTD, as confirmed by +;; the W3C validator. `inline-css' is like `css', except the CSS is +;; put directly in the STYLE attribute of the SPAN element, making it +;; possible to paste the generated HTML to other documents. In `font' +;; mode, htmlize uses ... to colorize HTML, +;; which is not standard-compliant, but works better in older +;; browsers. `css' mode is the default. + +;; You can also use htmlize from your Emacs Lisp code. When called +;; non-interactively, `htmlize-buffer' and `htmlize-region' will +;; return the resulting HTML buffer, but will not change current +;; buffer or move the point. + +;; I tried to make the package elisp-compatible with multiple Emacsen, +;; specifically aiming for XEmacs 19.14+ and GNU Emacs 19.34+. Please +;; let me know if it doesn't work on some of those, and I'll try to +;; fix it. I relied heavily on the presence of CL extensions, +;; especially for cross-emacs compatibility; please don't try to +;; remove that particular dependency. When byte-compiling under GNU +;; Emacs, you're likely to get some warnings; just ignore them. + +;; The latest version should be available at: +;; +;; +;; +;; You can find a sample of htmlize's output (possibly generated with +;; an older version) at: +;; +;; + +;; Thanks go to the multitudes of people who have sent reports and +;; contributed comments, suggestions, and fixes. They include Ron +;; Gut, Bob Weiner, Toni Drabik, Peter Breton, Thomas Vogels, Juri +;; Linkov, Maciek Pasternacki, and many others. + +;; User quotes: "You sir, are a sick, sick, _sick_ person. :)" +;; -- Bill Perry, author of Emacs/W3 + + +;;; Code: + +(require 'cl) +(eval-when-compile + (if (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version) + (byte-compiler-options + (warnings (- unresolved)))) + (defvar font-lock-auto-fontify) + (defvar font-lock-support-mode) + (defvar global-font-lock-mode) + (when (and (eq emacs-major-version 19) + (not (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version))) + ;; Older versions of GNU Emacs fail to autoload cl-extra even when + ;; `cl' is loaded. + (load "cl-extra"))) + +(defconst htmlize-version "1.34") + +;; Incantations to make custom stuff work without customize, e.g. on +;; XEmacs 19.14 or GNU Emacs 19.34. +(eval-and-compile + (condition-case () + (require 'custom) + (error nil)) + (if (and (featurep 'custom) (fboundp 'custom-declare-variable)) + nil ; we've got what we needed + ;; No custom or obsolete custom, define surrogates. Define all + ;; three macros, so we don't hose another library that expects + ;; e.g. `defface' to work after (fboundp 'defcustom) succeeds. + (defmacro defgroup (&rest ignored) nil) + (defmacro defcustom (var value doc &rest ignored) + `(defvar ,var ,value ,doc)) + (defmacro defface (face value doc &rest stuff) + `(make-face ,face)))) + +(defgroup htmlize nil + "Convert buffer text and faces to HTML." + :group 'hypermedia) + +(defcustom htmlize-head-tags "" + "*Additional tags to insert within HEAD of the generated document." + :type 'string + :group 'htmlize) + +(defcustom htmlize-output-type 'css + "*Output type of generated HTML, one of `css', `inline-css', or `font'. +When set to `css' (the default), htmlize will generate a style sheet +with description of faces, and use it in the HTML document, specifying +the faces in the actual text with . + +When set to `inline-css', the style will be generated as above, but +placed directly in the STYLE attribute of the span ELEMENT: . This makes it easier to paste the resulting HTML to +other documents. + +When set to `font', the properties will be set using layout tags +, , , , and . + +`css' output is normally preferred, but `font' is still useful for +supporting old, pre-CSS browsers, and both `inline-css' and `font' for +easier embedding of colorized text in foreign HTML documents (no style +sheet to carry around)." + :type '(choice (const css) (const inline-css) (const font)) + :group 'htmlize) + +(defcustom htmlize-generate-hyperlinks t + "*Non-nil means generate the hyperlinks for URLs and mail addresses. +This is on by default; set it to nil if you don't want htmlize to +insert hyperlinks in the resulting HTML. (In which case you can still +do your own hyperlinkification from htmlize-after-hook.)" + :type 'boolean + :group 'htmlize) + +(defcustom htmlize-hyperlink-style " + a { + color: inherit; + background-color: inherit; + font: inherit; + text-decoration: inherit; + } + a:hover { + text-decoration: underline; + } +" + "*The CSS style used for hyperlinks when in CSS mode." + :type 'string + :group 'htmlize) + +(defcustom htmlize-replace-form-feeds t + "*Non-nil means replace form feeds in source code with HTML separators. +Form feeds are the ^L characters at line beginnings that are sometimes +used to separate sections of source code. If this variable is set to +`t', form feed characters are replaced with the
separator. If this +is a string, it specifies the replacement to use. Note that
 is
+temporarily closed before the separator is inserted, so the default
+replacement is effectively \"

\".  If you specify
+another replacement, don't forget to close and reopen the 
 if you
+want the output to remain valid HTML.
+
+If you need more elaborate processing, set this to nil and use
+htmlize-after-hook."
+  :type 'boolean
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defcustom htmlize-html-charset nil
+  "*The charset declared by the resulting HTML documents.
+When non-nil, causes htmlize to insert the following in the HEAD section
+of the generated HTML:
+
+  
+
+where CHARSET is the value you've set for htmlize-html-charset.  Valid
+charsets are defined by MIME and include strings like \"iso-8859-1\",
+\"iso-8859-15\", \"utf-8\", etc.
+
+If you are using non-Latin-1 charsets, you might need to set this for
+your documents to render correctly.  Also, the W3C validator requires
+submitted HTML documents to declare a charset.  So if you care about
+validation, you can use this to prevent the validator from bitching.
+
+Needless to say, if you set this, you should actually make sure that
+the buffer is in the encoding you're claiming it is in.  (Under Mule
+that is done by ensuring the correct \"file coding system\" for the
+buffer.)  If you don't understand what that means, this option is
+probably not for you."
+  :type '(choice (const :tag "Unset" nil)
+		 string)
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defcustom htmlize-convert-nonascii-to-entities (featurep 'mule)
+  "*Whether non-ASCII characters should be converted to HTML entities.
+
+When this is non-nil, characters with codes in the 128-255 range will be
+considered Latin 1 and rewritten as \"&#CODE;\".  Characters with codes
+above 255 will be converted to \"&#UCS;\", where UCS denotes the Unicode
+code point of the character.  If the code point cannot be determined,
+the character will be copied unchanged, as would be the case if the
+option were nil.
+
+When the option is nil, the non-ASCII characters are copied to HTML
+without modification.  In that case, the web server and/or the browser
+must be set to understand the encoding that was used when saving the
+buffer.  (You might also want to specify it by setting
+`htmlize-html-charset'.)
+
+Note that in an HTML entity \"&#CODE;\", CODE is always a UCS code point,
+which has nothing to do with the charset the page is in.  For example,
+\"©\" *always* refers to the copyright symbol, regardless of charset
+specified by the META tag or the charset sent by the HTTP server.  In
+other words, \"©\" is exactly equivalent to \"©\".
+
+By default, entity conversion is turned on for Mule-enabled Emacsen and
+turned off otherwise.  This is because Mule knows the charset of
+non-ASCII characters in the buffer.  A non-Mule Emacs cannot tell
+whether a character with code 0xA9 represents Latin 1 copyright symbol,
+Latin 2 \"S with caron\", or something else altogether.  Setting this to
+t without Mule means asserting that 128-255 characters always mean Latin
+1.
+
+For most people htmlize will work fine with this option left at the
+default setting; don't change it unless you know what you're doing."
+  :type 'sexp
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defcustom htmlize-ignore-face-size 'absolute
+  "*Whether face size should be ignored when generating HTML.
+If this is nil, face sizes are used.  If set to t, sizes are ignored
+If set to `absolute', only absolute size specifications are ignored.
+Please note that font sizes only work with CSS-based output types."
+  :type '(choice (const :tag "Don't ignore" nil)
+		 (const :tag "Ignore all" t)
+		 (const :tag "Ignore absolute" absolute))
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defcustom htmlize-css-name-prefix ""
+  "*The prefix used for CSS names.
+The CSS names that htmlize generates from face names are often too
+generic for CSS files; for example, `font-lock-type-face' is transformed
+to `type'.  Use this variable to add a prefix to the generated names.
+The string \"htmlize-\" is an example of a reasonable prefix."
+  :type 'string
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defcustom htmlize-use-rgb-txt t
+  "*Whether `rgb.txt' should be used to convert color names to RGB.
+
+This conversion means determining, for instance, that the color
+\"IndianRed\" corresponds to the (205, 92, 92) RGB triple.  `rgb.txt'
+is the X color database that maps hundreds of color names to such RGB
+triples.  When this variable is non-nil, `htmlize' uses `rgb.txt' to
+look up color names.
+
+If this variable is nil, htmlize queries Emacs for RGB components of
+colors using `color-instance-rgb-components' and `x-color-values'.
+This can yield incorrect results on non-true-color displays.
+
+If the `rgb.txt' file is not found (which will be the case if you're
+running Emacs on non-X11 systems), this option is ignored."
+  :type 'boolean
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defcustom htmlize-html-major-mode nil
+  "The mode the newly created HTML buffer will be put in.
+Set this to nil if you prefer the default (fundamental) mode."
+  :type '(radio (const :tag "No mode (fundamental)" nil)
+		 (function-item html-mode)
+		 (function :tag "User-defined major mode"))
+  :group 'htmlize)
+
+(defvar htmlize-before-hook nil
+  "Hook run before htmlizing a buffer.
+The hook functions are run in the source buffer (not the resulting HTML
+buffer).")
+
+(defvar htmlize-after-hook nil
+  "Hook run after htmlizing a buffer.
+Unlike `htmlize-before-hook', these functions are run in the generated
+HTML buffer.  You may use them to modify the outlook of the final HTML
+output.")
+
+(defvar htmlize-file-hook nil
+  "Hook run by `htmlize-file' after htmlizing a file, but before saving it.")
+
+(defvar htmlize-buffer-places)
+
+;;; Some cross-Emacs compatibility.
+
+;; I try to conditionalize on features rather than Emacs version, but
+;; in some cases checking against the version *is* necessary.
+(defconst htmlize-running-xemacs (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version))
+
+(eval-and-compile
+  ;; save-current-buffer, with-current-buffer, and with-temp-buffer
+  ;; are not available in 19.34 and in older XEmacsen.  Strictly
+  ;; speaking, we should stick to our own namespace and define and use
+  ;; htmlize-save-current-buffer, etc.  But non-standard special forms
+  ;; are a pain because they're not properly fontified or indented and
+  ;; because they look weird and ugly.  So I'll just go ahead and
+  ;; define the real ones if they're not available.  If someone
+  ;; convinces me that this breaks something, I'll switch to the
+  ;; "htmlize-" namespace.
+  (unless (fboundp 'save-current-buffer)
+    (defmacro save-current-buffer (&rest forms)
+      `(let ((__scb_current (current-buffer)))
+	 (unwind-protect
+	     (progn ,@forms)
+	   (set-buffer __scb_current)))))
+  (unless (fboundp 'with-current-buffer)
+    (defmacro with-current-buffer (buffer &rest forms)
+      `(save-current-buffer (set-buffer ,buffer) ,@forms)))
+  (unless (fboundp 'with-temp-buffer)
+    (defmacro with-temp-buffer (&rest forms)
+      (let ((temp-buffer (gensym "tb-")))
+	`(let ((,temp-buffer
+		(get-buffer-create (generate-new-buffer-name " *temp*"))))
+	   (unwind-protect
+	       (with-current-buffer ,temp-buffer
+		 ,@forms)
+	     (and (buffer-live-p ,temp-buffer)
+		  (kill-buffer ,temp-buffer))))))))
+
+;; We need a function that efficiently finds the next change of a
+;; property (usually `face'), preferably regardless of whether the
+;; change occurred because of a text property or an extent/overlay.
+;; As it turns out, it is not easy to do that compatibly.
+;;
+;; Under XEmacs, `next-single-property-change' does that.  Under GNU
+;; Emacs beginning with version 21, `next-single-char-property-change'
+;; is available and does the same.  GNU Emacs 20 had
+;; `next-char-property-change', which we can use.  GNU Emacs 19 didn't
+;; provide any means for simultaneously examining overlays and text
+;; properties, so when using Emacs 19.34, we punt and fall back to
+;; `next-single-property-change', thus ignoring overlays altogether.
+
+(cond
+ (htmlize-running-xemacs
+  ;; XEmacs: good.
+  (defun htmlize-next-change (pos prop &optional limit)
+    (next-single-property-change pos prop nil (or limit (point-max)))))
+ ((fboundp 'next-single-char-property-change)
+  ;; GNU Emacs 21: good.
+  (defun htmlize-next-change (pos prop &optional limit)
+    (next-single-char-property-change pos prop nil limit)))
+ ((fboundp 'next-char-property-change)
+  ;; GNU Emacs 20: bad, but fixable.
+  (defun htmlize-next-change (pos prop &optional limit)
+    (let ((done nil)
+	  (current-value (get-char-property pos prop))
+	  newpos next-value)
+      ;; Loop over positions returned by next-char-property-change
+      ;; until the value of PROP changes or we've hit EOB.
+      (while (not done)
+	(setq newpos (next-char-property-change pos limit)
+	      next-value (get-char-property newpos prop))
+	(cond ((eq newpos pos)
+	       ;; Possibly at EOB?  Whatever, just don't infloop.
+	       (setq done t))
+	      ((eq next-value current-value)
+	       ;; PROP hasn't changed -- keep looping.
+	       )
+	      (t
+	       (setq done t)))
+	(setq pos newpos))
+      pos)))
+ (t
+  ;; GNU Emacs 19.34: hopeless, cannot properly support overlays.
+  (defun htmlize-next-change (pos prop &optional limit)
+    (unless limit
+      (setq limit (point-max)))
+    (let ((res (next-single-property-change pos prop)))
+      (if (or (null res)
+	      (> res limit))
+	  limit
+	res)))))
+
+;;; Transformation of buffer text: HTML escapes, untabification, etc.
+
+(defvar htmlize-basic-character-table
+  ;; Map characters in the 0-127 range to either one-character strings
+  ;; or to numeric entities.
+  (let ((table (make-vector 128 ?\0)))
+    ;; Map characters in the 32-126 range to themselves, others to
+    ;; &#CODE entities;
+    (dotimes (i 128)
+      (setf (aref table i) (if (and (>= i 32) (<= i 126))
+			       (char-to-string i)
+			     (format "&#%d;" i))))
+    ;; Set exceptions manually.
+    (setf
+     ;; Don't escape newline, carriage return, and TAB.
+     (aref table ?\n) "\n"
+     (aref table ?\r) "\r"
+     (aref table ?\t) "\t"
+     ;; Escape &, <, and >.
+     (aref table ?&) "&"
+     (aref table ?<) "<"
+     (aref table ?>) ">"
+     ;; Not escaping '"' buys us a measurable speedup.  It's only
+     ;; necessary to quote it for strings used in attribute values,
+     ;; which htmlize doesn't do.
+     ;(aref table ?\") """
+     )
+    table))
+
+;; A cache of HTML representation of non-ASCII characters.  Depending
+;; on availability of `encode-char' and the setting of
+;; `htmlize-convert-nonascii-to-entities', this maps non-ASCII
+;; characters to either "&#;" or "" (mapconcat's mapper
+;; must always return strings).  It's only filled as characters are
+;; encountered, so that in a buffer with e.g. French text, it will
+;; only ever contain French accented characters as keys.  It's cleared
+;; on each entry to htmlize-buffer-1 to allow modifications of
+;; `htmlize-convert-nonascii-to-entities' to take effect.
+(defvar htmlize-extended-character-cache (make-hash-table :test 'eq))
+
+(defun htmlize-protect-string (string)
+  "HTML-protect string, escaping HTML metacharacters and I18N chars."
+  ;; Only protecting strings that actually contain unsafe or non-ASCII
+  ;; chars removes a lot of unnecessary funcalls and consing.
+  (if (not (string-match "[^\r\n\t -%'-;=?-~]" string))
+      string
+    (mapconcat (lambda (char)
+		 (cond
+		  ((< char 128)
+		   ;; ASCII: use htmlize-basic-character-table.
+		   (aref htmlize-basic-character-table char))
+		  ((gethash char htmlize-extended-character-cache)
+		   ;; We've already seen this char; return the cached
+		   ;; string.
+		   )
+		  ((not htmlize-convert-nonascii-to-entities)
+		   ;; If conversion to entities is not desired, always
+		   ;; copy the char literally.
+		   (setf (gethash char htmlize-extended-character-cache)
+			 (char-to-string char)))
+		  ((< char 256)
+		   ;; Latin 1: no need to call encode-char.
+		   (setf (gethash char htmlize-extended-character-cache)
+			 (format "&#%d;" char)))
+		  ((and (fboundp 'encode-char)
+			;; Must check if encode-char works for CHAR;
+			;; it fails for Arabic and possibly elsewhere.
+			(encode-char char 'ucs))
+		   (setf (gethash char htmlize-extended-character-cache)
+			 (format "&#%d;" (encode-char char 'ucs))))
+		  (t
+		   ;; encode-char doesn't work for this char.  Copy it
+		   ;; unchanged and hope for the best.
+		   (setf (gethash char htmlize-extended-character-cache)
+			 (char-to-string char)))))
+	       string "")))
+
+(defconst htmlize-ellipsis "...")
+(put-text-property 0 (length htmlize-ellipsis) 'htmlize-ellipsis t htmlize-ellipsis)
+
+(defun htmlize-buffer-substring-no-invisible (beg end)
+  ;; Like buffer-substring-no-properties, but don't copy invisible
+  ;; parts of the region.  Where buffer-substring-no-properties
+  ;; mandates an ellipsis to be shown, htmlize-ellipsis is inserted.
+  (let ((pos beg)
+	visible-list invisible show next-change)
+    ;; Iterate over the changes in the `invisible' property and filter
+    ;; out the portions where it's non-nil, i.e. where the text is
+    ;; invisible.
+    (while (< pos end)
+      (setq invisible (get-char-property pos 'invisible)
+	    next-change (htmlize-next-change pos 'invisible end))
+      (if (not (listp buffer-invisibility-spec))
+	  ;; If buffer-invisibility-spec is not a list, then all
+	  ;; characters with non-nil `invisible' property are visible.
+	  (setq show (not invisible))
+	;; Otherwise, the value of a non-nil `invisible' property can be:
+	;; 1. a symbol -- make the text invisible if it matches
+	;;    buffer-invisibility-spec.
+	;; 2. a list of symbols -- make the text invisible if
+	;;    any symbol in the list matches
+	;;    buffer-invisibility-spec.
+	;; If the match of buffer-invisibility-spec has a non-nil
+	;; CDR, replace the invisible text with an ellipsis.
+	(let (match)
+	  (if (symbolp invisible)
+	      (setq match (member* invisible buffer-invisibility-spec
+				   :key (lambda (i)
+					  (if (symbolp i) i (car i)))))
+	    (setq match (block nil
+			  (dolist (elem invisible)
+			    (let ((m (member*
+				      elem buffer-invisibility-spec
+				      :key (lambda (i)
+					     (if (symbolp i) i (car i))))))
+			      (when m (return m))))
+			  nil)))
+	  (setq show (cond ((null match) t)
+			   ((and (cdr-safe (car match))
+				 ;; Conflate successive ellipses.
+				 (not (eq show htmlize-ellipsis)))
+			    htmlize-ellipsis)
+			   (t nil)))))
+      (cond ((eq show t)
+	     (push (buffer-substring-no-properties pos next-change) visible-list))
+	    ((stringp show)
+	     (push show visible-list)))
+      (setq pos next-change))
+    (if (= (length visible-list) 1)
+	;; If VISIBLE-LIST consists of only one element, return it
+	;; without concatenation.  This avoids additional consing in
+	;; regions without any invisible text.
+	(car visible-list)
+      (apply #'concat (nreverse visible-list)))))
+
+(defun htmlize-trim-ellipsis (text)
+  ;; Remove htmlize-ellipses ("...") from the beginning of TEXT if it
+  ;; starts with it.  It checks for the special property of the
+  ;; ellipsis so it doesn't work on ordinary text that begins with
+  ;; "...".
+  (if (get-text-property 0 'htmlize-ellipsis text)
+      (substring text (length htmlize-ellipsis))
+    text))
+
+(defconst htmlize-tab-spaces
+  ;; A table of strings with spaces.  (aref htmlize-tab-spaces 5) is
+  ;; like (make-string 5 ?\ ), except it doesn't cons.
+  (let ((v (make-vector 32 nil)))
+    (dotimes (i (length v))
+      (setf (aref v i) (make-string i ?\ )))
+    v))
+
+(defun htmlize-untabify (text start-column)
+  "Untabify TEXT, assuming it starts at START-COLUMN."
+  (let ((column start-column)
+	(last-match 0)
+	(chunk-start 0)
+	chunks match-pos tab-size)
+    (while (string-match "[\t\n]" text last-match)
+      (setq match-pos (match-beginning 0))
+      (cond ((eq (aref text match-pos) ?\t)
+	     ;; Encountered a tab: create a chunk of text followed by
+	     ;; the expanded tab.
+	     (push (substring text chunk-start match-pos) chunks)
+	     ;; Increase COLUMN by the length of the text we've
+	     ;; skipped since last tab or newline.  (Encountering
+	     ;; newline resets it.)
+	     (incf column (- match-pos last-match))
+	     ;; Calculate tab size based on tab-width and COLUMN.
+	     (setq tab-size (- tab-width (% column tab-width)))
+	     ;; Expand the tab.
+	     (push (aref htmlize-tab-spaces tab-size) chunks)
+	     (incf column tab-size)
+	     (setq chunk-start (1+ match-pos)))
+	    (t
+	     ;; Reset COLUMN at beginning of line.
+	     (setq column 0)))
+      (setq last-match (1+ match-pos)))
+    ;; If no chunks have been allocated, it means there have been no
+    ;; tabs to expand.  Return TEXT unmodified.
+    (if (null chunks)
+	text
+      (when (< chunk-start (length text))
+	;; Push the remaining chunk.
+	(push (substring text chunk-start) chunks))
+      ;; Generate the output from the available chunks.
+      (apply #'concat (nreverse chunks)))))
+
+(defun htmlize-despam-address (string)
+  "Replace every occurrence of '@' in STRING with @.
+`htmlize-make-hyperlinks' uses this to spam-protect mailto links
+without modifying their meaning."
+  ;; Suggested by Ville Skytta.
+  (while (string-match "@" string)
+    (setq string (replace-match "@" nil t string)))
+  string)
+
+(defun htmlize-make-hyperlinks ()
+  "Make hyperlinks in HTML."
+  ;; Function originally submitted by Ville Skytta.  Rewritten by
+  ;; Hrvoje Niksic, then modified by Ville Skytta and Hrvoje Niksic.
+  (goto-char (point-min))
+  (while (re-search-forward
+	  "<\\(\\(mailto:\\)?\\([-=+_.a-zA-Z0-9]+@[-_.a-zA-Z0-9]+\\)\\)>"
+	  nil t)
+    (let ((address (match-string 3))
+	  (link-text (match-string 1)))
+      (delete-region (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0))
+      (insert "<"
+	      (htmlize-despam-address link-text)
+	      ">")))
+  (goto-char (point-min))
+  (while (re-search-forward "<\\(\\(URL:\\)?\\([a-zA-Z]+://[^;]+\\)\\)>"
+			    nil t)
+    (let ((url (match-string 3))
+	  (link-text (match-string 1)))
+      (delete-region (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0))
+      (insert "<" link-text ">"))))
+
+;; Tests for htmlize-make-hyperlinks:
+
+;; 
+;; 
+;; 
+;; 
+;; 
+;; 
+
+(defun htmlize-defang-local-variables ()
+  ;; Juri Linkov reports that an HTML-ized "Local variables" can lead
+  ;; visiting the HTML to fail with "Local variables list is not
+  ;; properly terminated".  He suggested changing the phrase to
+  ;; syntactically equivalent HTML that Emacs doesn't recognize.
+  (goto-char (point-min))
+  (while (search-forward "Local Variables:" nil t)
+    (replace-match "Local Variables:" nil t)))
+  
+
+;;; Color handling.
+
+(if (fboundp 'locate-file)
+    (defalias 'htmlize-locate-file 'locate-file)
+  (defun htmlize-locate-file (file path)
+    (dolist (dir path nil)
+      (when (file-exists-p (expand-file-name file dir))
+	(return (expand-file-name file dir))))))
+
+(defvar htmlize-x-library-search-path
+  '("/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/X11R5/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/lib/X11R6/X11/"
+    "/usr/lib/X11R5/X11/"
+    "/usr/local/X11R6/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/local/X11R5/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/local/lib/X11R6/X11/"
+    "/usr/local/lib/X11R5/X11/"
+    "/usr/X11/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/local/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/X386/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/x386/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/XFree86/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/unsupported/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/athena/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/local/x11r5/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/lpp/Xamples/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/openwin/lib/X11/"
+    "/usr/openwin/share/lib/X11/"))
+
+(defun htmlize-get-color-rgb-hash (&optional rgb-file)
+  "Return a hash table mapping X color names to RGB values.
+The keys in the hash table are X11 color names, and the values are the
+#rrggbb RGB specifications, extracted from `rgb.txt'.
+
+If RGB-FILE is nil, the function will try hard to find a suitable file
+in the system directories.
+
+If no rgb.txt file is found, return nil."
+  (let ((rgb-file (or rgb-file (htmlize-locate-file
+				"rgb.txt"
+				htmlize-x-library-search-path)))
+	(hash nil))
+    (when rgb-file
+      (with-temp-buffer
+	(insert-file-contents rgb-file)
+	(setq hash (make-hash-table :test 'equal))
+	(while (not (eobp))
+	  (cond ((looking-at "^\\s-*\\([!#]\\|$\\)")
+		 ;; Skip comments and empty lines.
+		 )
+		((looking-at
+		  "[ \t]*\\([0-9]+\\)[ \t]+\\([0-9]+\\)[ \t]+\\([0-9]+\\)[ \t]+\\(.*\\)")
+		 (setf (gethash (downcase (match-string 4)) hash)
+		       (format "#%02x%02x%02x"
+			       (string-to-number (match-string 1))
+			       (string-to-number (match-string 2))
+			       (string-to-number (match-string 3)))))
+		(t
+		 (error
+		  "Unrecognized line in %s: %s"
+		  rgb-file
+		  (buffer-substring (point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))))
+	  (forward-line 1))))
+    hash))
+
+;; Compile the RGB map when loaded.  On systems where rgb.txt is
+;; missing, the value of the variable will be nil, and rgb.txt will
+;; not be used.
+(defvar htmlize-color-rgb-hash (htmlize-get-color-rgb-hash))
+
+;;; Face handling.
+
+(defun htmlize-face-specifies-property (face prop)
+  ;; Return t if face specifies PROP, as opposed to it being inherited
+  ;; from the default face.  The problem with e.g.
+  ;; `face-foreground-instance' is that it returns an instance for
+  ;; EVERY face because every face inherits from the default face.
+  ;; However, we'd like htmlize-face-{fore,back}ground to return nil
+  ;; when called with a face that doesn't specify its own foreground
+  ;; or background.
+  (or (eq face 'default)
+      (assq 'global (specifier-spec-list (face-property face prop)))))
+
+(defun htmlize-face-color-internal (face fg)
+  ;; Used only under GNU Emacs.  Return the color of FACE, but don't
+  ;; return "unspecified-fg" or "unspecified-bg".  If the face is
+  ;; `default' and the color is unspecified, look up the color in
+  ;; frame parameters.
+  (let* ((function (if fg #'face-foreground #'face-background))
+	 color)
+    (if (>= emacs-major-version 22)
+	;; For GNU Emacs 22+ set INHERIT to get the inherited values.
+	(setq color (funcall function face nil t))
+      (setq color (funcall function face))
+      ;; For GNU Emacs 21 (which has `face-attribute'): if the color
+      ;; is nil, recursively check for the face's parent.
+      (when (and (null color)
+		 (fboundp 'face-attribute)
+		 (face-attribute face :inherit)
+		 (not (eq (face-attribute face :inherit) 'unspecified)))
+	(setq color (htmlize-face-color-internal
+		     (face-attribute face :inherit) fg))))
+    (when (and (eq face 'default) (null color))
+      (setq color (cdr (assq (if fg 'foreground-color 'background-color)
+			     (frame-parameters)))))
+    (when (or (eq color 'unspecified)
+	      (equal color "unspecified-fg")
+	      (equal color "unspecified-bg"))
+      (setq color nil))
+    (when (and (eq face 'default)
+	       (null color))
+      ;; Assuming black on white doesn't seem right, but I can't think
+      ;; of anything better to do.
+      (setq color (if fg "black" "white")))
+    color))
+
+(defun htmlize-face-foreground (face)
+  ;; Return the name of the foreground color of FACE.  If FACE does
+  ;; not specify a foreground color, return nil.
+  (cond (htmlize-running-xemacs
+	 ;; XEmacs.
+	 (and (htmlize-face-specifies-property face 'foreground)
+	      (color-instance-name (face-foreground-instance face))))
+	(t
+	 ;; GNU Emacs.
+	 (htmlize-face-color-internal face t))))
+
+(defun htmlize-face-background (face)
+  ;; Return the name of the background color of FACE.  If FACE does
+  ;; not specify a background color, return nil.
+  (cond (htmlize-running-xemacs
+	 ;; XEmacs.
+	 (and (htmlize-face-specifies-property face 'background)
+	      (color-instance-name (face-background-instance face))))
+	(t
+	 ;; GNU Emacs.
+	 (htmlize-face-color-internal face nil))))
+
+;; Convert COLOR to the #RRGGBB string.  If COLOR is already in that
+;; format, it's left unchanged.
+
+(defun htmlize-color-to-rgb (color)
+  (let ((rgb-string nil))
+    (cond ((null color)
+	   ;; Ignore nil COLOR because it means that the face is not
+	   ;; specifying any color.  Hence (htmlize-color-to-rgb nil)
+	   ;; returns nil.
+	   )
+	  ((string-match "\\`#" color)
+	   ;; The color is already in #rrggbb format.
+	   (setq rgb-string color))
+	  ((and htmlize-use-rgb-txt
+		htmlize-color-rgb-hash)
+	   ;; Use of rgb.txt is requested, and it's available on the
+	   ;; system.  Use it.
+	   (setq rgb-string (gethash (downcase color) htmlize-color-rgb-hash)))
+	  (t
+	   ;; We're getting the RGB components from Emacs.
+	   (let ((rgb
+		  ;; Here I cannot conditionalize on (fboundp ...) 
+		  ;; because ps-print under some versions of GNU Emacs
+		  ;; defines its own dummy version of
+		  ;; `color-instance-rgb-components'.
+		  (if htmlize-running-xemacs
+		      (mapcar (lambda (arg)
+				(/ arg 256))
+			      (color-instance-rgb-components
+			       (make-color-instance color)))
+		    (mapcar (lambda (arg)
+			      (/ arg 256))
+			    (x-color-values color)))))
+	     (when rgb
+	       (setq rgb-string (apply #'format "#%02x%02x%02x" rgb))))))
+    ;; If RGB-STRING is still nil, it means the color cannot be found,
+    ;; for whatever reason.  In that case just punt and return COLOR.
+    ;; Most browsers support a decent set of color names anyway.
+    (or rgb-string color)))
+
+;; We store the face properties we care about into an
+;; `htmlize-fstruct' type.  That way we only have to analyze face
+;; properties, which can be time consuming, once per each face.  The
+;; mapping between Emacs faces and htmlize-fstructs is established by
+;; htmlize-make-face-map.  The name "fstruct" refers to variables of
+;; type `htmlize-fstruct', while the term "face" is reserved for Emacs
+;; faces.
+
+(defstruct htmlize-fstruct
+  foreground				; foreground color, #rrggbb
+  background				; background color, #rrggbb
+  size					; size
+  boldp					; whether face is bold
+  italicp				; whether face is italic
+  underlinep				; whether face is underlined
+  overlinep				; whether face is overlined
+  strikep				; whether face is struck through
+  css-name				; CSS name of face
+  )
+
+(defun htmlize-face-emacs21-attr (fstruct attr value)
+  ;; For ATTR and VALUE, set the equivalent value in FSTRUCT.
+  (case attr
+    (:foreground
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-foreground fstruct) (htmlize-color-to-rgb value)))
+    (:background
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-background fstruct) (htmlize-color-to-rgb value)))
+    (:height
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-size fstruct) value))
+    (:weight
+     (when (string-match (symbol-name value) "bold")
+       (setf (htmlize-fstruct-boldp fstruct) t)))
+    (:slant
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-italicp fstruct) (or (eq value 'italic)
+						 (eq value 'oblique))))
+    (:bold
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-boldp fstruct) value))
+    (:italic
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-italicp fstruct) value))
+    (:underline
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-underlinep fstruct) value))
+    (:overline
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-overlinep fstruct) value))
+    (:strike-through
+     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-strikep fstruct) value))))
+
+(defun htmlize-face-size (face)
+  ;; The size (height) of FACE, taking inheritance into account.
+  ;; Only works in Emacs 21 and later.
+  (let ((size-list
+	 (loop
+	  for f = face then (face-attribute f :inherit)
+	  until (eq f 'unspecified)
+	  for h = (face-attribute f :height)
+	  collect (if (eq h 'unspecified) nil h))))
+    (reduce 'htmlize-merge-size (cons nil size-list))))
+
+(defun htmlize-face-to-fstruct (face)
+  "Convert Emacs face FACE to fstruct."
+  (let ((fstruct (make-htmlize-fstruct
+		  :foreground (htmlize-color-to-rgb
+			       (htmlize-face-foreground face))
+		  :background (htmlize-color-to-rgb
+			       (htmlize-face-background face)))))
+    (cond (htmlize-running-xemacs
+	   ;; XEmacs doesn't provide a way to detect whether a face is
+	   ;; bold or italic, so we need to examine the font instance.
+	   ;; #### This probably doesn't work under MS Windows and/or
+	   ;; GTK devices.  I'll need help with those.
+	   (let* ((font-instance (face-font-instance face))
+		  (props (font-instance-properties font-instance)))
+	     (when (equalp (cdr (assq 'WEIGHT_NAME props)) "bold")
+	       (setf (htmlize-fstruct-boldp fstruct) t))
+	     (when (or (equalp (cdr (assq 'SLANT props)) "i")
+		       (equalp (cdr (assq 'SLANT props)) "o"))
+	       (setf (htmlize-fstruct-italicp fstruct) t))
+	     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-strikep fstruct)
+		   (face-strikethru-p face))
+	     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-underlinep fstruct)
+		   (face-underline-p face))))
+	  ((fboundp 'face-attribute)
+	   ;; GNU Emacs 21 and further.
+	   (dolist (attr '(:weight :slant :underline :overline :strike-through))
+	     (let ((value (if (>= emacs-major-version 22)
+			      ;; Use the INHERIT arg in GNU Emacs 22.
+			      (face-attribute face attr nil t)
+			    ;; Otherwise, fake it.
+			    (let ((face face))
+			      (while (and (eq (face-attribute face attr)
+					      'unspecified)
+					  (not (eq (face-attribute face :inherit)
+						   'unspecified)))
+				(setq face (face-attribute face :inherit)))
+			      (face-attribute face attr)))))
+	       (when (and value (not (eq value 'unspecified)))
+		 (htmlize-face-emacs21-attr fstruct attr value))))
+	   (let ((size (htmlize-face-size face)))
+	     (unless (eql size 1.0) 	; ignore non-spec
+	       (setf (htmlize-fstruct-size fstruct) size))))
+	  (t
+	   ;; Older GNU Emacs.  Some of these functions are only
+	   ;; available under Emacs 20+, hence the guards.
+	   (when (fboundp 'face-bold-p)
+	     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-boldp fstruct) (face-bold-p face)))
+	   (when (fboundp 'face-italic-p)
+	     (setf (htmlize-fstruct-italicp fstruct) (face-italic-p face)))
+	   (setf (htmlize-fstruct-underlinep fstruct)
+		 (face-underline-p face))))
+    ;; Generate the css-name property.  Emacs places no restrictions
+    ;; on the names of symbols that represent faces -- any characters
+    ;; may be in the name, even ^@.  We try hard to beat the face name
+    ;; into shape, both esthetically and according to CSS1 specs.
+    (setf (htmlize-fstruct-css-name fstruct)
+	  (let ((name (downcase (symbol-name face))))
+	    (when (string-match "\\`font-lock-" name)
+	      ;; Change font-lock-FOO-face to FOO.
+	      (setq name (replace-match "" t t name)))
+	    (when (string-match "-face\\'" name)
+	      ;; Drop the redundant "-face" suffix.
+	      (setq name (replace-match "" t t name)))
+	    (while (string-match "[^-a-zA-Z0-9]" name)
+	      ;; Drop the non-alphanumerics.
+	      (setq name (replace-match "X" t t name)))
+	    (when (string-match "\\`[-0-9]" name)
+	      ;; CSS identifiers may not start with a digit.
+	      (setq name (concat "X" name)))
+	    ;; After these transformations, the face could come
+	    ;; out empty.
+	    (when (equal name "")
+	      (setq name "face"))
+	    ;; Apply the prefix.
+	    (setq name (concat htmlize-css-name-prefix name))
+	    name))
+    fstruct))
+
+(defmacro htmlize-copy-attr-if-set (attr-list dest source)
+  ;; Expand the code of the type
+  ;; (and (htmlize-fstruct-ATTR source)
+  ;;      (setf (htmlize-fstruct-ATTR dest) (htmlize-fstruct-ATTR source)))
+  ;; for the given list of boolean attributes.
+  (cons 'progn
+	(loop for attr in attr-list
+	      for attr-sym = (intern (format "htmlize-fstruct-%s" attr))
+	      collect `(and (,attr-sym ,source)
+			    (setf (,attr-sym ,dest) (,attr-sym ,source))))))
+
+(defun htmlize-merge-size (merged next)
+  ;; Calculate the size of the merge of MERGED and NEXT.
+  (cond ((null merged)     next)
+	((integerp next)   next)
+	((null next)       merged)
+	((floatp merged)   (* merged next))
+	((integerp merged) (round (* merged next)))))
+
+(defun htmlize-merge-two-faces (merged next)
+  (htmlize-copy-attr-if-set
+   (foreground background boldp italicp underlinep overlinep strikep)
+   merged next)
+  (setf (htmlize-fstruct-size merged)
+	(htmlize-merge-size (htmlize-fstruct-size merged)
+			    (htmlize-fstruct-size next)))
+  merged)
+
+(defun htmlize-merge-faces (fstruct-list)
+  (cond ((null fstruct-list)
+	 ;; Nothing to do, return a dummy face.
+	 (make-htmlize-fstruct))
+	((null (cdr fstruct-list))
+	 ;; Optimize for the common case of a single face, simply
+	 ;; return it.
+	 (car fstruct-list))
+	(t
+	 (reduce #'htmlize-merge-two-faces
+		 (cons (make-htmlize-fstruct) fstruct-list)))))
+
+;; GNU Emacs 20+ supports attribute lists in `face' properties.  For
+;; example, you can use `(:foreground "red" :weight bold)' as an
+;; overlay's "face", or you can even use a list of such lists, etc.
+;; We call those "attrlists".
+;;
+;; htmlize supports attrlist by converting them to fstructs, the same
+;; as with regular faces.
+
+(defun htmlize-attrlist-to-fstruct (attrlist)
+  ;; Like htmlize-face-to-fstruct, but accepts an ATTRLIST as input.
+  (let ((fstruct (make-htmlize-fstruct)))
+    (cond ((eq (car attrlist) 'foreground-color)
+	   ;; ATTRLIST is (foreground-color . COLOR)
+	   (setf (htmlize-fstruct-foreground fstruct)
+		 (htmlize-color-to-rgb (cdr attrlist))))
+	  ((eq (car attrlist) 'background-color)
+	   ;; ATTRLIST is (background-color . COLOR)
+	   (setf (htmlize-fstruct-background fstruct)
+		 (htmlize-color-to-rgb (cdr attrlist))))
+	  (t
+	   ;; ATTRLIST is a plist.
+	   (while attrlist
+	     (let ((attr (pop attrlist))
+		   (value (pop attrlist)))
+	       (when (and value (not (eq value 'unspecified)))
+		 (htmlize-face-emacs21-attr fstruct attr value))))))
+    (setf (htmlize-fstruct-css-name fstruct) "ATTRLIST")
+    fstruct))
+
+(defun htmlize-face-list-p (face-prop)
+  "Return non-nil if FACE-PROP is a list of faces, nil otherwise."
+  ;; If not for attrlists, this would return (listp face-prop).  This
+  ;; way we have to be more careful because attrlist is also a list!
+  (cond
+   ((eq face-prop nil)
+    ;; FACE-PROP being nil means empty list (no face), so return t.
+    t)
+   ((symbolp face-prop)
+    ;; A symbol other than nil means that it's only one face, so return
+    ;; nil.
+    nil)
+   ((not (consp face-prop))
+    ;; Huh?  Not a symbol or cons -- treat it as a single element.
+    nil)
+   (t
+    ;; We know that FACE-PROP is a cons: check whether it looks like an
+    ;; ATTRLIST.
+    (let* ((car (car face-prop))
+	   (attrlist-p (and (symbolp car)
+			    (or (eq car 'foreground-color)
+				(eq car 'background-color)
+				(eq (aref (symbol-name car) 0) ?:)))))
+      ;; If FACE-PROP is not an ATTRLIST, it means it's a list of
+      ;; faces.
+      (not attrlist-p)))))
+
+(defun htmlize-make-face-map (faces)
+  ;; Return a hash table mapping Emacs faces to htmlize's fstructs.
+  ;; The keys are either face symbols or attrlists, so the test
+  ;; function must be `equal'.
+  (let ((face-map (make-hash-table :test 'equal))
+	css-names)
+    (dolist (face faces)
+      (unless (gethash face face-map)
+	;; Haven't seen FACE yet; convert it to an fstruct and cache
+	;; it.
+	(let ((fstruct (if (symbolp face)
+			   (htmlize-face-to-fstruct face)
+			 (htmlize-attrlist-to-fstruct face))))
+	  (setf (gethash face face-map) fstruct)
+	  (let* ((css-name (htmlize-fstruct-css-name fstruct))
+		 (new-name css-name)
+		 (i 0))
+	    ;; Uniquify the face's css-name by using NAME-1, NAME-2,
+	    ;; etc.
+	    (while (member new-name css-names)
+	      (setq new-name (format "%s-%s" css-name (incf i))))
+	    (unless (equal new-name css-name)
+	      (setf (htmlize-fstruct-css-name fstruct) new-name))
+	    (push new-name css-names)))))
+    face-map))
+
+(defun htmlize-unstringify-face (face)
+  "If FACE is a string, return it interned, otherwise return it unchanged."
+  (if (stringp face)
+      (intern face)
+    face))
+
+(defun htmlize-faces-in-buffer ()
+  "Return a list of faces used in the current buffer.
+Under XEmacs, this returns the set of faces specified by the extents
+with the `face' property.  (This covers text properties as well.)  Under
+GNU Emacs, it returns the set of faces specified by the `face' text
+property and by buffer overlays that specify `face'."
+  (let (faces)
+    ;; Testing for (fboundp 'map-extents) doesn't work because W3
+    ;; defines `map-extents' under FSF.
+    (if htmlize-running-xemacs
+	(let (face-prop)
+	  (map-extents (lambda (extent ignored)
+			 (setq face-prop (extent-face extent)
+			       ;; FACE-PROP can be a face or a list of
+			       ;; faces.
+			       faces (if (listp face-prop)
+					 (union face-prop faces)
+				       (adjoin face-prop faces)))
+			 nil)
+		       nil
+		       ;; Specify endpoints explicitly to respect
+		       ;; narrowing.
+		       (point-min) (point-max) nil nil 'face))
+      ;; FSF Emacs code.
+      ;; Faces used by text properties.
+      (let ((pos (point-min)) face-prop next)
+	(while (< pos (point-max))
+	  (setq face-prop (get-text-property pos 'face)
+		next (or (next-single-property-change pos 'face) (point-max)))
+	  ;; FACE-PROP can be a face/attrlist or a list thereof.
+	  (setq faces (if (htmlize-face-list-p face-prop)
+			  (nunion (mapcar #'htmlize-unstringify-face face-prop)
+				  faces :test 'equal)
+			(adjoin (htmlize-unstringify-face face-prop)
+				faces :test 'equal)))
+	  (setq pos next)))
+      ;; Faces used by overlays.
+      (dolist (overlay (overlays-in (point-min) (point-max)))
+	(let ((face-prop (overlay-get overlay 'face)))
+	  ;; FACE-PROP can be a face/attrlist or a list thereof.
+	  (setq faces (if (htmlize-face-list-p face-prop)
+			  (nunion (mapcar #'htmlize-unstringify-face face-prop)
+				  faces :test 'equal)
+			(adjoin (htmlize-unstringify-face face-prop)
+				faces :test 'equal))))))
+    faces))
+
+;; htmlize-faces-at-point returns the faces in use at point.  The
+;; faces are sorted by increasing priority, i.e. the last face takes
+;; precedence.
+;;
+;; Under XEmacs, this returns all the faces in all the extents at
+;; point.  Under GNU Emacs, this returns all the faces in the `face'
+;; property and all the faces in the overlays at point.
+
+(cond (htmlize-running-xemacs
+       (defun htmlize-faces-at-point ()
+	 (let (extent extent-list face-list face-prop)
+	   (while (setq extent (extent-at (point) nil 'face extent))
+	     (push extent extent-list))
+	   ;; extent-list is in reverse display order, meaning that
+	   ;; smallest ones come last.  That is the order we want,
+	   ;; except it can be overridden by the `priority' property.
+	   (setq extent-list (stable-sort extent-list #'<
+					  :key #'extent-priority))
+	   (dolist (extent extent-list)
+	     (setq face-prop (extent-face extent))
+	     ;; extent's face-list is in reverse order from what we
+	     ;; want, but the `nreverse' below will take care of it.
+	     (setq face-list (if (listp face-prop)
+				 (append face-prop face-list)
+			       (cons face-prop face-list))))
+	   (nreverse face-list))))
+      (t
+       (defun htmlize-faces-at-point ()
+	 (let (all-faces)
+	   ;; Faces from text properties.
+	   (let ((face-prop (get-text-property (point) 'face)))
+	     (setq all-faces (if (htmlize-face-list-p face-prop)
+				 (nreverse (mapcar #'htmlize-unstringify-face
+						   face-prop))
+			       (list (htmlize-unstringify-face face-prop)))))
+	   ;; Faces from overlays.
+	   (let ((overlays
+		  ;; Collect overlays at point that specify `face'.
+		  (delete-if-not (lambda (o)
+				   (overlay-get o 'face))
+				 (overlays-at (point))))
+		 list face-prop)
+	     ;; Sort the overlays so the smaller (more specific) ones
+	     ;; come later.  The number of overlays at each one
+	     ;; position should be very small, so the sort shouldn't
+	     ;; slow things down.
+	     (setq overlays (sort* overlays
+				   ;; Sort by ascending...
+				   #'<
+				   ;; ...overlay size.
+				   :key (lambda (o)
+					  (- (overlay-end o)
+					     (overlay-start o)))))
+	     ;; Overlay priorities, if present, override the above
+	     ;; established order.  Larger overlay priority takes
+	     ;; precedence and therefore comes later in the list.
+	     (setq overlays (stable-sort
+			     overlays
+			     ;; Reorder (stably) by acending...
+			     #'<
+			     ;; ...overlay priority.
+			     :key (lambda (o)
+				    (or (overlay-get o 'priority) 0))))
+	     (dolist (overlay overlays)
+	       (setq face-prop (overlay-get overlay 'face))
+	       (setq list (if (htmlize-face-list-p face-prop)
+			      (nconc (nreverse (mapcar
+						#'htmlize-unstringify-face
+						face-prop))
+				     list)
+			    (cons (htmlize-unstringify-face face-prop) list))))
+	     ;; Under "Merging Faces" the manual explicitly states
+	     ;; that faces specified by overlays take precedence over
+	     ;; faces specified by text properties.
+	     (setq all-faces (nconc all-faces list)))
+	   all-faces))))
+
+;; htmlize supports generating HTML in two several fundamentally
+;; different ways, one with the use of CSS and nested  tags, and
+;; the other with the use of the old  tags.  Rather than adding
+;; a bunch of ifs to many places, we take a semi-OO approach.
+;; `htmlize-buffer-1' calls a number of "methods", which indirect to
+;; the functions that depend on `htmlize-output-type'.  The currently
+;; used methods are `doctype', `insert-head', `body-tag', and
+;; `insert-text'.  Not all output types define all methods.
+;;
+;; Methods are called either with (htmlize-method METHOD ARGS...) 
+;; special form, or by accessing the function with
+;; (htmlize-method-function 'METHOD) and calling (funcall FUNCTION).
+;; The latter form is useful in tight loops because `htmlize-method'
+;; conses.
+;;
+;; Currently defined output types are `css' and `font'.
+
+(defmacro htmlize-method (method &rest args)
+  ;; Expand to (htmlize-TYPE-METHOD ...ARGS...).  TYPE is the value of
+  ;; `htmlize-output-type' at run time.
+  `(funcall (htmlize-method-function ',method) ,@args))
+
+(defun htmlize-method-function (method)
+  ;; Return METHOD's function definition for the current output type.
+  ;; The returned object can be safely funcalled.
+  (let ((sym (intern (format "htmlize-%s-%s" htmlize-output-type method))))
+    (indirect-function (if (fboundp sym)
+			   sym
+			 (let ((default (intern (concat "htmlize-default-"
+							(symbol-name method)))))
+			   (if (fboundp default)
+			       default
+			     'ignore))))))
+
+(defvar htmlize-memoization-table (make-hash-table :test 'equal))
+
+(defmacro htmlize-memoize (key generator)
+  "Return the value of GENERATOR, memoized as KEY.
+That means that GENERATOR will be evaluated and returned the first time
+it's called with the same value of KEY.  All other times, the cached
+\(memoized) value will be returned."
+  (let ((value (gensym)))
+    `(let ((,value (gethash ,key htmlize-memoization-table)))
+       (unless ,value
+	 (setq ,value ,generator)
+	 (setf (gethash ,key htmlize-memoization-table) ,value))
+       ,value)))
+
+;;; Default methods.
+
+(defun htmlize-default-doctype ()
+  nil					; no doc-string
+  ;; According to DTDs published by the W3C, it is illegal to embed
+  ;;  in 
.  This makes sense in general, but is bad for
+  ;; htmlize's intended usage of  to specify the document color.
+
+  ;; To make generated HTML legal, htmlize's `font' mode used to
+  ;; specify the SGML declaration of "HTML Pro" DTD here.  HTML Pro
+  ;; aka Silmaril DTD was a project whose goal was to produce a GPL'ed
+  ;; DTD that would encompass all the incompatible HTML extensions
+  ;; procured by Netscape, MSIE, and other players in the field.
+  ;; Apparently the project got abandoned, the last available version
+  ;; being "Draft 0 Revision 11" from January 1997, as documented at
+  ;; .
+
+  ;; Since by now HTML Pro is remembered by none but the most die-hard
+  ;; early-web-days nostalgics and used by not even them, there is no
+  ;; use in specifying it.  So we return the standard HTML 4.0
+  ;; declaration, which makes generated HTML technically illegal.  If
+  ;; you have a problem with that, use the `css' engine designed to
+  ;; create fully conforming HTML.
+
+  ""
+
+  ;; Now-abandoned HTML Pro declaration.
+  ;""
+  )
+
+(defun htmlize-default-body-tag (face-map)
+  nil					; no doc-string
+  "")
+
+;;; CSS based output support.
+
+;; Internal function; not a method.
+(defun htmlize-css-specs (fstruct)
+  (let (result)
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-foreground fstruct)
+      (push (format "color: %s;" (htmlize-fstruct-foreground fstruct))
+	    result))
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-background fstruct)
+      (push (format "background-color: %s;"
+		    (htmlize-fstruct-background fstruct))
+	    result))
+    (let ((size (htmlize-fstruct-size fstruct)))
+      (when (and size (not (eq htmlize-ignore-face-size t)))
+	(cond ((floatp size)
+	       (push (format "font-size: %d%%;" (* 100 size)) result))
+	      ((not (eq htmlize-ignore-face-size 'absolute))
+	       (push (format "font-size: %spt;" (/ size 10.0)) result)))))
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-boldp fstruct)
+      (push "font-weight: bold;" result))
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-italicp fstruct)
+      (push "font-style: italic;" result))
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-underlinep fstruct)
+      (push "text-decoration: underline;" result))
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-overlinep fstruct)
+      (push "text-decoration: overline;" result))
+    (when (htmlize-fstruct-strikep fstruct)
+      (push "text-decoration: line-through;" result))
+    (nreverse result)))
+
+(defun htmlize-css-insert-head (buffer-faces face-map)
+  (insert "    \n"))
+
+(defun htmlize-css-insert-text (text fstruct-list buffer)
+  ;; Insert TEXT colored with FACES into BUFFER.  In CSS mode, this is
+  ;; easy: just nest the text in one  tag for each
+  ;; face in FSTRUCT-LIST.
+  (dolist (fstruct fstruct-list)
+    (princ "" buffer))
+  (princ text buffer)
+  (dolist (fstruct fstruct-list)
+    (ignore fstruct)			; shut up the byte-compiler
+    (princ "" buffer)))
+
+;; `inline-css' output support.
+
+(defun htmlize-inline-css-body-tag (face-map)
+  (format ""
+	  (mapconcat #'identity (htmlize-css-specs (gethash 'default face-map))
+		     " ")))
+
+(defun htmlize-inline-css-insert-text (text fstruct-list buffer)
+  (let* ((merged (htmlize-merge-faces fstruct-list))
+	 (style (htmlize-memoize
+		 merged
+		 (let ((specs (htmlize-css-specs merged)))
+		   (and specs
+			(mapconcat #'identity (htmlize-css-specs merged) " "))))))
+    (when style
+      (princ "" buffer))
+    (princ text buffer)
+    (when style
+      (princ "" buffer))))
+
+;;; `font' tag based output support.
+
+(defun htmlize-font-body-tag (face-map)
+  (let ((fstruct (gethash 'default face-map)))
+    (format ""
+	    (htmlize-fstruct-foreground fstruct)
+	    (htmlize-fstruct-background fstruct))))
+       
+(defun htmlize-font-insert-text (text fstruct-list buffer)
+  ;; In `font' mode, we use the traditional HTML means of altering
+  ;; presentation:  tag for colors,  for bold,  for
+  ;; underline, and  for strike-through.
+  (let* ((merged (htmlize-merge-faces fstruct-list))
+	 (markup (htmlize-memoize
+		  merged
+		  (cons (concat
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-foreground merged)
+			      (format "" (htmlize-fstruct-foreground merged)))
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-boldp merged)      "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-italicp merged)    "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-underlinep merged) "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-strikep merged)    ""))
+			(concat
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-strikep merged)    "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-underlinep merged) "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-italicp merged)    "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-boldp merged)      "")
+			 (and (htmlize-fstruct-foreground merged) ""))))))
+    (princ (car markup) buffer)
+    (princ text buffer)
+    (princ (cdr markup) buffer)))
+
+(defun htmlize-buffer-1 ()
+  ;; Internal function; don't call it from outside this file.  Htmlize
+  ;; current buffer, writing the resulting HTML to a new buffer, and
+  ;; return it.  Unlike htmlize-buffer, this doesn't change current
+  ;; buffer or use switch-to-buffer.
+  (save-excursion
+    ;; Protect against the hook changing the current buffer.
+    (save-excursion
+      (run-hooks 'htmlize-before-hook))
+    ;; Convince font-lock support modes to fontify the entire buffer
+    ;; in advance.
+    (htmlize-ensure-fontified)
+    (clrhash htmlize-extended-character-cache)
+    (clrhash htmlize-memoization-table)
+    (let* ((buffer-faces (htmlize-faces-in-buffer))
+	   (face-map (htmlize-make-face-map (adjoin 'default buffer-faces)))
+	   ;; Generate the new buffer.  It's important that it inherits
+	   ;; default-directory from the current buffer.
+	   (htmlbuf (generate-new-buffer (if (buffer-file-name)
+					     (htmlize-make-file-name
+					      (file-name-nondirectory
+					       (buffer-file-name)))
+					   "*html*")))
+	   ;; Having a dummy value in the plist allows writing simply
+	   ;; (plist-put places foo bar).
+	   (places '(nil nil))
+	   (title (if (buffer-file-name)
+		      (file-name-nondirectory (buffer-file-name))
+		    (buffer-name))))
+      ;; Initialize HTMLBUF and insert the HTML prolog.
+      (with-current-buffer htmlbuf
+	(buffer-disable-undo)
+	(insert (htmlize-method doctype) ?\n
+		(format "\n"
+			htmlize-version htmlize-output-type)
+		"\n  ")
+	(plist-put places 'head-start (point-marker))
+	(insert "\n"
+		"    " (htmlize-protect-string title) "\n"
+		(if htmlize-html-charset
+		    (format (concat "    \n")
+			    htmlize-html-charset)
+		  "")
+		htmlize-head-tags)
+	(htmlize-method insert-head buffer-faces face-map)
+	(insert "  ")
+	(plist-put places 'head-end (point-marker))
+	(insert "\n  ")
+	(plist-put places 'body-start (point-marker))
+	(insert (htmlize-method body-tag face-map)
+		"\n    ")
+	(plist-put places 'content-start (point-marker))
+	(insert "
\n"))
+      (let ((insert-text-method
+	     ;; Get the inserter method, so we can funcall it inside
+	     ;; the loop.  Not calling `htmlize-method' in the loop
+	     ;; body yields a measurable speed increase.
+	     (htmlize-method-function 'insert-text))
+	    ;; Declare variables used in loop body outside the loop
+	    ;; because it's faster to establish `let' bindings only
+	    ;; once.
+	    next-change text face-list fstruct-list trailing-ellipsis)
+	;; This loop traverses and reads the source buffer, appending
+	;; the resulting HTML to HTMLBUF with `princ'.  This method is
+	;; fast because: 1) it doesn't require examining the text
+	;; properties char by char (htmlize-next-change is used to
+	;; move between runs with the same face), and 2) it doesn't
+	;; require buffer switches, which are slow in Emacs.
+	(goto-char (point-min))
+	(while (not (eobp))
+	  (setq next-change (htmlize-next-change (point) 'face))
+	  ;; Get faces in use between (point) and NEXT-CHANGE, and
+	  ;; convert them to fstructs.
+	  (setq face-list (htmlize-faces-at-point)
+		fstruct-list (delq nil (mapcar (lambda (f)
+						 (gethash f face-map))
+					       face-list)))
+	  ;; Extract buffer text, sans the invisible parts.  Then
+	  ;; untabify it and escape the HTML metacharacters.
+	  (setq text (htmlize-buffer-substring-no-invisible
+		      (point) next-change))
+	  (when trailing-ellipsis
+	    (setq text (htmlize-trim-ellipsis text)))
+	  ;; If TEXT ends up empty, don't change trailing-ellipsis.
+	  (when (> (length text) 0)
+	    (setq trailing-ellipsis
+		  (get-text-property (1- (length text))
+				     'htmlize-ellipsis text)))
+	  (setq text (htmlize-untabify text (current-column)))
+	  (setq text (htmlize-protect-string text))
+	  ;; Don't bother writing anything if there's no text (this
+	  ;; happens in invisible regions).
+	  (when (> (length text) 0)
+	    ;; Insert the text, along with the necessary markup to
+	    ;; represent faces in FSTRUCT-LIST.
+	    (funcall insert-text-method text fstruct-list htmlbuf))
+	  (goto-char next-change)))
+
+      ;; Insert the epilog and post-process the buffer.
+      (with-current-buffer htmlbuf
+	(insert "
") + (plist-put places 'content-end (point-marker)) + (insert "\n ") + (plist-put places 'body-end (point-marker)) + (insert "\n\n") + (when htmlize-generate-hyperlinks + (htmlize-make-hyperlinks)) + (htmlize-defang-local-variables) + (when htmlize-replace-form-feeds + ;; Change each "\n^L" to "
". + (goto-char (point-min)) + (let ((source + ;; ^L has already been escaped, so search for that. + (htmlize-protect-string "\n\^L")) + (replacement + (if (stringp htmlize-replace-form-feeds) + htmlize-replace-form-feeds + "

")))
+	    (while (search-forward source nil t)
+	      (replace-match replacement t t))))
+	(goto-char (point-min))
+	(when htmlize-html-major-mode
+	  ;; What sucks about this is that the minor modes, most notably
+	  ;; font-lock-mode, won't be initialized.  Oh well.
+	  (funcall htmlize-html-major-mode))
+	(set (make-local-variable 'htmlize-buffer-places) places)
+	(run-hooks 'htmlize-after-hook)
+	(buffer-enable-undo))
+      htmlbuf)))
+
+;; Utility functions.
+
+(defmacro htmlize-with-fontify-message (&rest body)
+  ;; When forcing fontification of large buffers in
+  ;; htmlize-ensure-fontified, inform the user that he is waiting for
+  ;; font-lock, not for htmlize to finish.
+  `(progn
+     (if (> (buffer-size) 65536)
+	 (message "Forcing fontification of %s..."
+		  (buffer-name (current-buffer))))
+     ,@body
+     (if (> (buffer-size) 65536)
+	 (message "Forcing fontification of %s...done"
+		  (buffer-name (current-buffer))))))
+
+(defun htmlize-ensure-fontified ()
+  ;; If font-lock is being used, ensure that the "support" modes
+  ;; actually fontify the buffer.  If font-lock is not in use, we
+  ;; don't care because, except in htmlize-file, we don't force
+  ;; font-lock on the user.
+  (when (and (boundp 'font-lock-mode)
+	     font-lock-mode)
+    ;; In part taken from ps-print-ensure-fontified in GNU Emacs 21.
+    (cond
+     ((and (boundp 'jit-lock-mode)
+	   (symbol-value 'jit-lock-mode))
+      (htmlize-with-fontify-message
+       (jit-lock-fontify-now (point-min) (point-max))))
+     ((and (boundp 'lazy-lock-mode)
+	   (symbol-value 'lazy-lock-mode))
+      (htmlize-with-fontify-message
+       (lazy-lock-fontify-region (point-min) (point-max))))
+     ((and (boundp 'lazy-shot-mode)
+	   (symbol-value 'lazy-shot-mode))
+      (htmlize-with-fontify-message
+       ;; lazy-shot is amazing in that it must *refontify* the region,
+       ;; even if the whole buffer has already been fontified.  
+       (lazy-shot-fontify-region (point-min) (point-max))))
+     ;; There's also fast-lock, but we don't need to handle specially,
+     ;; I think.  fast-lock doesn't really defer fontification, it
+     ;; just saves it to an external cache so it's not done twice.
+     )))
+
+
+;;;###autoload
+(defun htmlize-buffer (&optional buffer)
+  "Convert BUFFER to HTML, preserving colors and decorations.
+
+The generated HTML is available in a new buffer, which is returned.
+When invoked interactively, the new buffer is selected in the current
+window.  The title of the generated document will be set to the buffer's
+file name or, if that's not available, to the buffer's name.
+
+Note that htmlize doesn't fontify your buffers, it only uses the
+decorations that are already present.  If you don't set up font-lock or
+something else to fontify your buffers, the resulting HTML will be
+plain.  Likewise, if you don't like the choice of colors, fix the mode
+that created them, or simply alter the faces it uses."
+  (interactive)
+  (let ((htmlbuf (with-current-buffer (or buffer (current-buffer))
+		   (htmlize-buffer-1))))
+    (when (interactive-p)
+      (switch-to-buffer htmlbuf))
+    htmlbuf))
+
+;;;###autoload
+(defun htmlize-region (beg end)
+  "Convert the region to HTML, preserving colors and decorations.
+See `htmlize-buffer' for details."
+  (interactive "r")
+  ;; Don't let zmacs region highlighting end up in HTML.
+  (when (fboundp 'zmacs-deactivate-region)
+    (zmacs-deactivate-region))
+  (let ((htmlbuf (save-restriction
+		   (narrow-to-region beg end)
+		   (htmlize-buffer-1))))
+    (when (interactive-p)
+      (switch-to-buffer htmlbuf))
+    htmlbuf))
+
+(defun htmlize-region-for-paste (beg end)
+  "Htmlize the region and return just the HTML as a string.
+This forces the `inline-css' style and only returns the HTML body,
+but without the BODY tag.  This should make it useful for inserting
+the text to another HTML buffer."
+  (let* ((htmlize-output-type 'inline-css)
+	 (htmlbuf (htmlize-region beg end)))
+    (unwind-protect
+	(with-current-buffer htmlbuf
+	  (buffer-substring (plist-get htmlize-buffer-places 'content-start)
+			    (plist-get htmlize-buffer-places 'content-end)))
+      (kill-buffer htmlbuf))))
+
+(defun htmlize-make-file-name (file)
+  "Make an HTML file name from FILE.
+
+In its default implementation, this simply appends `.html' to FILE.
+This function is called by htmlize to create the buffer file name, and
+by `htmlize-file' to create the target file name.
+
+More elaborate transformations are conceivable, such as changing FILE's
+extension to `.html' (\"file.c\" -> \"file.html\").  If you want them,
+overload this function to do it and htmlize will comply."
+  (concat file ".html"))
+
+;; Older implementation of htmlize-make-file-name that changes FILE's
+;; extension to ".html".
+;(defun htmlize-make-file-name (file)
+;  (let ((extension (file-name-extension file))
+;	(sans-extension (file-name-sans-extension file)))
+;    (if (or (equal extension "html")
+;	    (equal extension "htm")
+;	    (equal sans-extension ""))
+;	(concat file ".html")
+;      (concat sans-extension ".html"))))
+
+;;;###autoload
+(defun htmlize-file (file &optional target)
+  "Load FILE, fontify it, convert it to HTML, and save the result.
+
+Contents of FILE are inserted into a temporary buffer, whose major mode
+is set with `normal-mode' as appropriate for the file type.  The buffer
+is subsequently fontified with `font-lock' and converted to HTML.  Note
+that, unlike `htmlize-buffer', this function explicitly turns on
+font-lock.  If a form of highlighting other than font-lock is desired,
+please use `htmlize-buffer' directly on buffers so highlighted.
+
+Buffers currently visiting FILE are unaffected by this function.  The
+function does not change current buffer or move the point.
+
+If TARGET is specified and names a directory, the resulting file will be
+saved there instead of to FILE's directory.  If TARGET is specified and
+does not name a directory, it will be used as output file name."
+  (interactive (list (read-file-name
+		      "HTML-ize file: "
+		      nil nil nil (and (buffer-file-name)
+				       (file-name-nondirectory
+					(buffer-file-name))))))
+  (let ((output-file (if (and target (not (file-directory-p target)))
+			 target
+		       (expand-file-name
+			(htmlize-make-file-name (file-name-nondirectory file))
+			(or target (file-name-directory file)))))
+	;; Try to prevent `find-file-noselect' from triggering
+	;; font-lock because we'll fontify explicitly below.
+	(font-lock-mode nil)
+	(font-lock-auto-fontify nil)
+	(global-font-lock-mode nil)
+	;; Ignore the size limit for the purposes of htmlization.
+	(font-lock-maximum-size nil)
+	;; Disable font-lock support modes.  This will only work in
+	;; more recent Emacs versions, so htmlize-buffer-1 still needs
+	;; to call htmlize-ensure-fontified.
+	(font-lock-support-mode nil))
+    (with-temp-buffer
+      ;; Insert FILE into the temporary buffer.
+      (insert-file-contents file)
+      ;; Set the file name so normal-mode and htmlize-buffer-1 pick it
+      ;; up.  Restore it afterwards so with-temp-buffer's kill-buffer
+      ;; doesn't complain about killing a modified buffer.
+      (let ((buffer-file-name file))
+	;; Set the major mode for the sake of font-lock.
+	(normal-mode)
+	(font-lock-mode 1)
+	(unless font-lock-mode
+	  ;; In GNU Emacs (font-lock-mode 1) doesn't force font-lock,
+	  ;; contrary to the documentation.  This seems to work.
+	  (font-lock-fontify-buffer))
+	;; htmlize the buffer and save the HTML.
+	(with-current-buffer (htmlize-buffer-1)
+	  (unwind-protect
+	      (progn
+		(run-hooks 'htmlize-file-hook)
+		(write-region (point-min) (point-max) output-file))
+	    (kill-buffer (current-buffer)))))))
+  ;; I haven't decided on a useful return value yet, so just return
+  ;; nil.
+  nil)
+
+;;;###autoload
+(defun htmlize-many-files (files &optional target-directory)
+  "Convert FILES to HTML and save the corresponding HTML versions.
+
+FILES should be a list of file names to convert.  This function calls
+`htmlize-file' on each file; see that function for details.  When
+invoked interactively, you are prompted for a list of files to convert,
+terminated with RET.
+
+If TARGET-DIRECTORY is specified, the HTML files will be saved to that
+directory.  Normally, each HTML file is saved to the directory of the
+corresponding source file."
+  (interactive
+   (list
+    (let (list file)
+      ;; Use empty string as DEFAULT because setting DEFAULT to nil
+      ;; defaults to the directory name, which is not what we want.
+      (while (not (equal (setq file (read-file-name
+				     "HTML-ize file (RET to finish): "
+				     (and list (file-name-directory
+						(car list)))
+				     "" t))
+			 ""))
+	(push file list))
+      (nreverse list))))
+  ;; Verify that TARGET-DIRECTORY is indeed a directory.  If it's a
+  ;; file, htmlize-file will use it as target, and that doesn't make
+  ;; sense.
+  (and target-directory
+       (not (file-directory-p target-directory))
+       (error "target-directory must name a directory: %s" target-directory))
+  (dolist (file files)
+    (htmlize-file file target-directory)))
+
+;;;###autoload
+(defun htmlize-many-files-dired (arg &optional target-directory)
+  "HTMLize dired-marked files."
+  (interactive "P")
+  (htmlize-many-files (dired-get-marked-files nil arg) target-directory))
+
+(provide 'htmlize)
+
+;;; htmlize.el ends here
diff --git a/import.log b/import.log
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a04837d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/import.log
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+emacs-htmlize-1_34-2_fc10:HEAD:emacs-htmlize-1.34-2.fc10.src.rpm:1233060515