Mercurial > emacs
view BUGS @ 60044:d1e94109daa4
(Printed Representation): Clarify read syntax vs print.
(Floating Point Type): Explain meaning better.
(Symbol Type): Explain uniqueness better.
(Cons Cell Type): Explain empty list sooner. CAR and CDR later.
List examples sooner.
(Box Diagrams): New subnode broken out.
Some examples moved from old Lists as Boxes node.
(Dotted Pair Notation): Clarify intro.
(Array Type): Clarify.
(Type Predicates): Add hash-table-p.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
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date | Mon, 14 Feb 2005 10:22:36 +0000 |
parents | 8ce686bd7f4f |
children | fb8bf24d2eb9 |
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If you think you may have found a bug in GNU Emacs, please read the Bugs section of the Emacs manual for advice on (1) how to tell when to report a bug, and (2) how to write a useful bug report and what information it needs to have. There are three ways to read the Bugs section. (1) In a printed copy of the Emacs manual. You can order one from the Free Software Foundation; see the file etc/ORDERS. But if you don't have a copy on hand and you think you have found a bug, you shouldn't wait to get a printed manual; you should read the section right away as described below. (2) With Info. Start Emacs, do C-h i to enter Info, then m Emacs RET to get to the Emacs manual, then m Bugs RET to get to the section on bugs. Or use standalone Info in a like manner. (Standalone Info is part of the Texinfo distribution, not part of the Emacs distribution.) (3) By hand. Do cat info/emacs* | more "+/^File: emacs, Node: Bugs," Please first check the file etc/PROBLEMS (e.g. with C-h C-e in Emacs) to make sure it isn't a known issue.