Mercurial > emacs
view src/prefix-args.c @ 35038:ac8eb6b4eee6
(Fdelete_other_windows): Set window's window_end_valid
to nil when changing the window's start. Don't change the
window's start when its top position hasn't changed. If we do,
this will set the window's optional_new_start, which act's like a
force_start during redisplay with C-x 1 M-> under particular
circumstances (see report from Per Starback to emacs-pretest-bug
from 2000-12-13.).
(Fdelete_other_windows): Set window's window_end_valid
to nil when changing the window's start.
author | Gerd Moellmann <gerd@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Jan 2001 12:53:14 +0000 |
parents | fa9ff387d260 |
children | 0c4cb98fb3f4 |
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/* prefix-args.c - echo each argument, prefixed by a string. Jim Blandy <jimb@occs.cs.oberlin.edu> - September 1992 When using GCC 2 as the linker in the build process, options intended for the linker need to be prefixed with the "-Xlinker" option. If an option takes an argument, we need to use -Xlinker twice - once for the option and once for its argument. For example, to run the linker with the options "-Bstatic" "-e" "_start", you'd need to pass the following options to GCC: -Xlinker -Bstatic -Xlinker -e -Xlinker _start. The Emacs makefile used to use a Bourne Shell `for' loop to prefix each linker option with "-Xlinker", but 1) the for loop was hairier than one might hope because it had to work when there were no arguments to pass to the linker - the shell barfs on a loop like this: for arg in ; do echo -Xlinker "$arg"; done and 2) the whole compilation command containing this loop seems to exit with a non-zero status and halt the build under Ultrix. If I can't write a completely portable program to do this in C, I'm quitting and taking up gardening. */ #include <stdio.h> int main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char *progname; char *prefix; progname = argv[0]; argc--, argv++; if (argc < 1) { fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s PREFIX ARGS...\n\ Echo each ARG preceded by PREFIX and a space.\n", progname); exit (2); } prefix = argv[0]; argc--, argv++; for (; argc > 0; argc--, argv++) printf ("%s %s%c", prefix, argv[0], (argc > 1) ? ' ' : '\n'); exit (0); }