view nt/debug.bat @ 20914:8f189ffad604

(c-forward-syntactic-ws, c-backward-syntactic-ws): Don't narrow, just make a simple check against the given limit. (c-collect-line-comments): New function. (c-literal-limits): New function that finds the start and end pos of a comment or string surrounding point. (c-literal-limits-fast): A faster variant of `c-literal-limits' for newer Emacsen where the state returned from `parse-partial-sexp' contains the starting pos of the last literal. (c-parse-state): Use (c-point 'bod) instead of beginning-of-defun directly. (c-guess-basic-syntax): Fixed a few byte compiler warnings. (c-backward-to-start-of-do): Break infloop for invalid code, e.g. when someone types while (TRUE) { at the top of a buffer, we shouldn't hang when the { is typed! (c-backward-to-start-of-if): Ensure never move forward, not even if point < lim. (c-search-uplist-for-classkey): When searching up for a class key, instead of hardcoding the extended search for "extern", use the new variable c-extra-toplevel-key, which is language dependent. For C++, this variable includes the keyword "namespace" which will match C++ namespace introducing blocks. (c-guess-basic-syntax): Support for recognizing C++ namespace blocks, by elaborating on the mechanism used to find external language blocks. Searches which hardcoded "extern" now use c-extra-toplevel-key, a language dependent variable. Case clauses that were modified: CASE 5A.1, CASE 5A.4, CASE 5F, CASE 5I, CASE 14A. CASE 3: we can now determine whether we're at the beginning of a cpp macro definition, or inside the middle of one. Set syntax to 'cpp-macro in the former case, 'cpp-macro-cont in the latter. In both cases, the relpos is the beginning of the macro. (c-forward-syntactic-ws): Added code that skips forward over multi-line cpp macros. (c-beginning-of-macro): Moved, and made into a defsubst. This function can now actually find the beginning of a multi-line C preprocessor macro. (c-backward-syntactic-ws): Use c-beginning-of-macro to skip backwards over multi-line macro definitions. (c-in-literal, c-fast-in-literal): Use c-beginning-of-macro to find out whether we're in a multi-line macro definition. (c-fast-in-literal): Function which should be faster than c-in-literal. In XEmacs, this uses buffer-syntactic-context.
author Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
date Tue, 17 Feb 1998 07:08:44 +0000
parents 9bfe8a6b9575
children
line wrap: on
line source

@echo off 
set emacs_dir=c:\emacs

REM Here begins emacs.bat.in

REM Set OS specific values.
set ARCH_SAVE=%PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE%
set PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE=
if "%ARCH_SAVE%" == "%PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE%" goto win95
set PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE=%ARCH_SAVE%
set SHELL=cmd
goto next

:win95
set SHELL=command

:next

set EMACSLOADPATH=%emacs_dir%\lisp
set EMACSDATA=%emacs_dir%\etc
set EMACSPATH=%emacs_dir%\bin
set EMACSLOCKDIR=%emacs_dir%\lock
set INFOPATH=%emacs_dir%\info
set EMACSDOC=%emacs_dir%\etc
set TERM=CMD

REM The variable HOME is used to find the startup file, ~\_emacs.  Ideally,
REM this will not be set in this file but should already be set before
REM this file is invoked.  If HOME is not set, use some generic default.

set HOME_SAVE=%HOME%
set HOME_EXISTS=yes
set HOME_DEFAULT=C:\
set HOME=
if "%HOME%" == "%HOME_SAVE%" set HOME_EXISTS=no
if "%HOME_EXISTS%" == "yes" set HOME=%HOME_SAVE%
if "%HOME_EXISTS%" == "no" set HOME=%HOME_DEFAULT%
if "%HOME_EXISTS%" == "no" echo HOME is not set!  Using %HOME% as a default...

start c:\msdev\bin\msdev -nologo %emacs_dir%\bin\emacs.exe %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9