# HG changeset patch # User Pavel Jank # Date 1003838450 0 # Node ID d13b14b50715b6d76b5353cd7bbfdedf88933370 # Parent 2ee3c7f9fb40ed23f2be2f71fc08f320492d4ec8 (modify-syntax-entry): Fix argument names (use CHAR instead of C) and usage. diff -r 2ee3c7f9fb40 -r d13b14b50715 src/syntax.c --- a/src/syntax.c Tue Oct 23 12:00:13 2001 +0000 +++ b/src/syntax.c Tue Oct 23 12:00:50 2001 +0000 @@ -974,7 +974,7 @@ */ DEFUN ("modify-syntax-entry", Fmodify_syntax_entry, Smodify_syntax_entry, 2, 3, "cSet syntax for character: \nsSet syntax for %s to: ", - doc: /* Set syntax for character C according to string NEWENTRY. + doc: /* Set syntax for character CHAR according to string NEWENTRY. The syntax is changed only for table SYNTAX_TABLE, which defaults to the current buffer's syntax table. The first character of NEWENTRY should be one of the following: @@ -993,22 +993,23 @@ used only if the first character is `(' or `)'. Any additional characters are flags. Defined flags are the characters 1, 2, 3, 4, b, p, and n. - 1 means C is the start of a two-char comment start sequence. - 2 means C is the second character of such a sequence. - 3 means C is the start of a two-char comment end sequence. - 4 means C is the second character of such a sequence. + 1 means CHAR is the start of a two-char comment start sequence. + 2 means CHAR is the second character of such a sequence. + 3 means CHAR is the start of a two-char comment end sequence. + 4 means CHAR is the second character of such a sequence. There can be up to two orthogonal comment sequences. This is to support language modes such as C++. By default, all comment sequences are of style a, but you can set the comment sequence style to b (on the second character of a comment-start, or the first character of a comment-end sequence) using this flag: - b means C is part of comment sequence b. - n means C is part of a nestable comment sequence. + b means CHAR is part of comment sequence b. + n means CHAR is part of a nestable comment sequence. - p means C is a prefix character for `backward-prefix-chars'; + p means CHAR is a prefix character for `backward-prefix-chars'; such characters are treated as whitespace when they occur - between expressions. */) + between expressions. +usage: (modify-syntax-entry CHAR NEWENTRY &optional SYNTAX-TABLE) */) (c, newentry, syntax_table) Lisp_Object c, newentry, syntax_table; {