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Revision: miles@gnu.org--gnu-2004/emacs--cvs-trunk--0--patch-668
Merge from gnus--rel--5.10
Patches applied:
* miles@gnu.org--gnu-2004/gnus--rel--5.10--patch-66
- miles@gnu.org--gnu-2004/gnus--rel--5.10--patch-68
Update from CVS
2004-11-04 Katsumi Yamaoka <yamaoka@jpl.org>
* lisp/gnus/gnus-art. (gnus-article-edit-article): Don't associate the
article buffer with a draft file. This is a temporary measure
against the 2004-08-22 change to gnus-article-edit-mode.
2004-11-02 Katsumi Yamaoka <yamaoka@jpl.org>
* lisp/gnus/html2text.el (html2text-get-attr): Remove unused argument `tag'.
(html2text-format-tags): Remove unused variable `attr'.
* lisp/gnus/mm-util.el (mm-enrich-utf-8-by-mule-ucs): Fix cleaning of
after-load-alist.
* lisp/gnus/mm-util.el (mm-mime-mule-charset-alist): Add the windows-1251
entry. From Ilya N. Golubev <gin@mo.msk.ru>.
(mm-enrich-utf-8-by-mule-ucs): New function run when Mule-UCS is
loaded under XEmacs.
(): Don't make duplicated entries in mm-mime-mule-charset-alist.
* lisp/gnus/mm-util.el (mm-coding-system-p): Return a coding-system.
(mm-mime-mule-charset-alist): Use shift_jis instead of
iso-2022-jp-2 for the katakana-jisx0201 mule charset; add new
entries for the mime charsets iso-2022-jp-3 and shift_jis.
(mm-coding-system-priorities): Use shift_jis and iso-8859-1
instead of japanese-shift-jis and iso-latin-1 respectively in
order to share the default value with both Emacs and XEmacs-mule.
(mm-mule-charset-to-mime-charset): Make
mm-coding-system-priorities effective.
(mm-sort-coding-systems-predicate): Canonicalize coding-systems
while predicating of candidates upon the priorities.
2004-11-02 Katsumi Yamaoka <yamaoka@jpl.org>
* man/emacs-mime.texi (Encoding Customization): Fix
mm-coding-system-priorities entry.
author | Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Nov 2004 08:12:39 +0000 |
parents | 695cf19ef79e |
children | 375f2633d815 ef719132ddfa |
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Iso-Functional Type Contour This is a term coined to describe "column int->float" change approach, and can be used whenever low-level types need to change (hopefully not often!) but the meanings of the values (whose type has changed) do not. The premise is that changing a low-level type potentially means lots of code needs to be changed as well, and the question is how to do this incrementally, which is the preferred way to change things. Say LOW and HIGH are C functions: int LOW (void) { return 1; } void HIGH (void) { int value = LOW (); } We want to convert LOW to return float, so we cast HIGH usage: float LOW (void) { return 1.0; } void HIGH (void) { int value = (int) LOW (); } /* iftc */ The comment /* iftc */ is used to mark this type of casting to differentiate it from other casting. We commit the changes and can now go about modifying LOW and HIGH separately. When HIGH is ready to handle the type change, the cast can be removed. ;;; arch-tag: 3309cc41-5d59-421b-b7be-c94b04083bb5