return r;
}
+/*
+ * Parse a ^C style character specification.
+ * Returns NULL in `next' if we didn't recognise it as a control character,
+ * in which case `c' should be ignored.
+ * The precise current parsing is an oddity inherited from the terminal
+ * answerback-string parsing code. All sequences start with ^; all except
+ * ^<123> are two characters. The ones that are worth keeping are probably:
+ * ^? 127
+ * ^@A-Z[\]^_ 0-31
+ * a-z 1-26
+ * <num> specified by number (decimal, 0octal, 0xHEX)
+ * ~ ^ escape
+ */
+char ctrlparse(char *s, char **next)
+{
+ char c = 0;
+ if (*s != '^') {
+ *next = NULL;
+ } else {
+ s++;
+ if (*s == '\0') {
+ *next = NULL;
+ } else if (*s == '<') {
+ s++;
+ c = (char)strtol(s, next, 0);
+ if ((*next == s) || (**next != '>')) {
+ c = 0;
+ *next = NULL;
+ } else
+ (*next)++;
+ } else if (*s >= 'a' && *s <= 'z') {
+ c = (*s - ('a' - 1));
+ *next = s+1;
+ } else if ((*s >= '@' && *s <= '_') || *s == '?' || (*s & 0x80)) {
+ c = ('@' ^ *s);
+ *next = s+1;
+ } else if (*s == '~') {
+ c = '^';
+ *next = s+1;
+ }
+ }
+ return c;
+}
+
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* String handling routines.
*/