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-rw-r--r--src/charset.c7
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/charset.c b/src/charset.c
index e11a8366d58..6e2bf17cdf6 100644
--- a/src/charset.c
+++ b/src/charset.c
@@ -1886,6 +1886,13 @@ Return nil if CHARSET doesn't support CH. */)
1886 code = ENCODE_CHAR (charsetp, c); 1886 code = ENCODE_CHAR (charsetp, c);
1887 if (code == CHARSET_INVALID_CODE (charsetp)) 1887 if (code == CHARSET_INVALID_CODE (charsetp))
1888 return Qnil; 1888 return Qnil;
1889 /* There are much fewer codepoints in the world than we have positive
1890 fixnums, so it could be argued that we never really need a bignum,
1891 e.g. Unicode codepoints only need 21bit, and China's GB-10830
1892 can fit in 22bit. Yet we encode GB-10830's chars in a sparse way
1893 (we just take the 4byte sequences as a 32bit int), so some
1894 GB-10830 chars (such as 0x81308130 in etc/charsets/gb108304.map) end
1895 up represented as bignums here. */
1889 return INT_TO_INTEGER (code); 1896 return INT_TO_INTEGER (code);
1890} 1897}
1891 1898