Lines Matching refs:unit
59 for a 16-bit data quantity, and the word "unit" is used for a quantity that is
149 variable length. The first unit in an item contains an opcode, and the length
161 bytes long in 8-bit mode (most significant byte first), or one unit in 16-bit
168 These items are all just one unit long
173 OP_ANYBYTE match any single unit, even in UTF-8/16 mode
214 OP_MARK is followed by the mark name, preceded by a one-unit length, and
225 the character may be more than one unit long. In UTF-32 mode, characters
226 are always exactly one unit long.
251 these are two-unit items; in UTF-8 or UTF-16 modes, the length is variable; in
252 UTF-32 mode these are one-unit items. Those with "MIN" in their names are the
278 unit. The opcodes are:
326 bits are counted from the least significant end of each unit. In caseless mode,
338 OP_XCLASS is followed by a unit containing flag bits: XCL_NOT indicates that
388 All but the last three are single-unit items, with no data. The others are
422 single-unit opcodes that tell the matcher that skipping the following
480 but in UTF-8/16 mode each character may occupy more than one unit; in UTF-32
481 mode each character occupies exactly one unit. A separate count is present in
502 just the single unit OP_DEF is used (it has no associated data). Otherwise, a
520 OP_CALLOUT is followed by one unit of data that holds a callout number in the