Mercurial > emacs
changeset 82208:1160d327dbdd
Update some .arch-inventory files
* lib-src/.arch-inventory: Don't track the blessmail binary.
* lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el: Don't track this. It is autogenerated.
* lisp/emacs-lisp/.arch-inventory: Don't track cl-loaddefs.el.
* lisp/ps-print.el: Check in trivial changes to the autoloads section
caused by the build process. These autoloads really ought to be placed
in a separate file, methinks.
Revision: emacs@sv.gnu.org/emacs--devo--0--patch-833
Creator: Michael Olson <mwolson@gnu.org>
author | Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 30 Jul 2007 05:33:47 +0000 |
parents | 2d740e717716 |
children | 34e4c24e4752 |
files | lib-src/.arch-inventory lisp/ChangeLog lisp/emacs-lisp/.arch-inventory lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el lisp/ps-print.el |
diffstat | 5 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 1237 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lib-src/.arch-inventory Mon Jul 30 05:33:38 2007 +0000 +++ b/lib-src/.arch-inventory Mon Jul 30 05:33:47 2007 +0000 @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ # Ignore binaries -backup ^(test-distrib|make-docfile|profile|digest-doc|movemail|cvtmail|fakemail|yow|emacsserver|hexl|update-game-score|etags|ctags|emacsclient|b2m|ebrowse|sorted-doc)$ +backup ^(test-distrib|make-docfile|profile|digest-doc|movemail|cvtmail|fakemail|blessmail|yow|emacsserver|hexl|update-game-score|etags|ctags|emacsclient|b2m|ebrowse|sorted-doc)$ # Building actually makes a copy/link of the source file precious ^(ctags\.c)$
--- a/lisp/ChangeLog Mon Jul 30 05:33:38 2007 +0000 +++ b/lisp/ChangeLog Mon Jul 30 05:33:47 2007 +0000 @@ -1,3 +1,9 @@ +2007-07-30 Michael Olson <mwolson@gnu.org> + + * ps-print.el: Check in trivial changes to the autoloads section + caused by the build process. These autoloads really ought to be + placed in a separate file, methinks. + 2007-07-29 Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> * calendar/calendar.el (calendar-mode): Make sure
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/lisp/emacs-lisp/.arch-inventory Mon Jul 30 05:33:47 2007 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Auto-generated lisp files, which we ignore +precious ^(cl-loaddefs)\.el$ + +# arch-tag: d6986671-2713-4fed-ae51-7758ae0d4c10
--- a/lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el Mon Jul 30 05:33:38 2007 +0000 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 @@ -1,1234 +0,0 @@ -;;; cl-loaddefs.el --- automatically extracted autoloads -;; -;;; Code: - - -;;;### (autoloads (cl-prettyexpand cl-macroexpand-all cl-remprop -;;;;;; cl-do-remf cl-set-getf getf get* tailp list-length nreconc -;;;;;; revappend concatenate subseq cl-float-limits random-state-p -;;;;;; make-random-state random* signum rem* mod* round* truncate* -;;;;;; ceiling* floor* isqrt lcm gcd cl-progv-before cl-set-frame-visible-p -;;;;;; cl-map-overlays cl-map-intervals cl-map-keymap-recursively -;;;;;; notevery notany every some mapcon mapcan mapl maplist map -;;;;;; cl-mapcar-many equalp coerce) "cl-extra" "cl-extra.el" "47c92504dda976a632c2c10bedd4b6a4") -;;; Generated autoloads from cl-extra.el - -(autoload (quote coerce) "cl-extra" "\ -Coerce OBJECT to type TYPE. -TYPE is a Common Lisp type specifier. - -\(fn OBJECT TYPE)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote equalp) "cl-extra" "\ -Return t if two Lisp objects have similar structures and contents. -This is like `equal', except that it accepts numerically equal -numbers of different types (float vs. integer), and also compares -strings case-insensitively. - -\(fn X Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-mapcar-many) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn CL-FUNC CL-SEQS)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote map) "cl-extra" "\ -Map a FUNCTION across one or more SEQUENCEs, returning a sequence. -TYPE is the sequence type to return. - -\(fn TYPE FUNCTION SEQUENCE...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote maplist) "cl-extra" "\ -Map FUNCTION to each sublist of LIST or LISTs. -Like `mapcar', except applies to lists and their cdr's rather than to -the elements themselves. - -\(fn FUNCTION LIST...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote mapl) "cl-extra" "\ -Like `maplist', but does not accumulate values returned by the function. - -\(fn FUNCTION LIST...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote mapcan) "cl-extra" "\ -Like `mapcar', but nconc's together the values returned by the function. - -\(fn FUNCTION SEQUENCE...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote mapcon) "cl-extra" "\ -Like `maplist', but nconc's together the values returned by the function. - -\(fn FUNCTION LIST...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote some) "cl-extra" "\ -Return true if PREDICATE is true of any element of SEQ or SEQs. -If so, return the true (non-nil) value returned by PREDICATE. - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote every) "cl-extra" "\ -Return true if PREDICATE is true of every element of SEQ or SEQs. - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote notany) "cl-extra" "\ -Return true if PREDICATE is false of every element of SEQ or SEQs. - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote notevery) "cl-extra" "\ -Return true if PREDICATE is false of some element of SEQ or SEQs. - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ...)" nil nil) - -(defalias (quote cl-map-keymap) (quote map-keymap)) - -(autoload (quote cl-map-keymap-recursively) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn CL-FUNC-REC CL-MAP &optional CL-BASE)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-map-intervals) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn CL-FUNC &optional CL-WHAT CL-PROP CL-START CL-END)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-map-overlays) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn CL-FUNC &optional CL-BUFFER CL-START CL-END CL-ARG)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-set-frame-visible-p) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn FRAME VAL)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-progv-before) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn SYMS VALUES)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote gcd) "cl-extra" "\ -Return the greatest common divisor of the arguments. - -\(fn &rest ARGS)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote lcm) "cl-extra" "\ -Return the least common multiple of the arguments. - -\(fn &rest ARGS)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote isqrt) "cl-extra" "\ -Return the integer square root of the argument. - -\(fn X)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote floor*) "cl-extra" "\ -Return a list of the floor of X and the fractional part of X. -With two arguments, return floor and remainder of their quotient. - -\(fn X &optional Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote ceiling*) "cl-extra" "\ -Return a list of the ceiling of X and the fractional part of X. -With two arguments, return ceiling and remainder of their quotient. - -\(fn X &optional Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote truncate*) "cl-extra" "\ -Return a list of the integer part of X and the fractional part of X. -With two arguments, return truncation and remainder of their quotient. - -\(fn X &optional Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote round*) "cl-extra" "\ -Return a list of X rounded to the nearest integer and the remainder. -With two arguments, return rounding and remainder of their quotient. - -\(fn X &optional Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote mod*) "cl-extra" "\ -The remainder of X divided by Y, with the same sign as Y. - -\(fn X Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote rem*) "cl-extra" "\ -The remainder of X divided by Y, with the same sign as X. - -\(fn X Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote signum) "cl-extra" "\ -Return 1 if X is positive, -1 if negative, 0 if zero. - -\(fn X)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote random*) "cl-extra" "\ -Return a random nonnegative number less than LIM, an integer or float. -Optional second arg STATE is a random-state object. - -\(fn LIM &optional STATE)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote make-random-state) "cl-extra" "\ -Return a copy of random-state STATE, or of `*random-state*' if omitted. -If STATE is t, return a new state object seeded from the time of day. - -\(fn &optional STATE)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote random-state-p) "cl-extra" "\ -Return t if OBJECT is a random-state object. - -\(fn OBJECT)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-float-limits) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote subseq) "cl-extra" "\ -Return the subsequence of SEQ from START to END. -If END is omitted, it defaults to the length of the sequence. -If START or END is negative, it counts from the end. - -\(fn SEQ START &optional END)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote concatenate) "cl-extra" "\ -Concatenate, into a sequence of type TYPE, the argument SEQUENCEs. - -\(fn TYPE SEQUENCE...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote revappend) "cl-extra" "\ -Equivalent to (append (reverse X) Y). - -\(fn X Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nreconc) "cl-extra" "\ -Equivalent to (nconc (nreverse X) Y). - -\(fn X Y)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote list-length) "cl-extra" "\ -Return the length of list X. Return nil if list is circular. - -\(fn X)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote tailp) "cl-extra" "\ -Return true if SUBLIST is a tail of LIST. - -\(fn SUBLIST LIST)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote get*) "cl-extra" "\ -Return the value of SYMBOL's PROPNAME property, or DEFAULT if none. - -\(fn SYMBOL PROPNAME &optional DEFAULT)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote getf) "cl-extra" "\ -Search PROPLIST for property PROPNAME; return its value or DEFAULT. -PROPLIST is a list of the sort returned by `symbol-plist'. - -\(fn PROPLIST PROPNAME &optional DEFAULT)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-set-getf) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn PLIST TAG VAL)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-do-remf) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn PLIST TAG)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-remprop) "cl-extra" "\ -Remove from SYMBOL's plist the property PROPNAME and its value. - -\(fn SYMBOL PROPNAME)" nil nil) - -(defalias (quote remprop) (quote cl-remprop)) - -(defalias (quote cl-gethash) (quote gethash)) - -(defalias (quote cl-puthash) (quote puthash)) - -(defalias (quote cl-remhash) (quote remhash)) - -(defalias (quote cl-clrhash) (quote clrhash)) - -(defalias (quote cl-maphash) (quote maphash)) - -(defalias (quote cl-make-hash-table) (quote make-hash-table)) - -(defalias (quote cl-hash-table-p) (quote hash-table-p)) - -(defalias (quote cl-hash-table-count) (quote hash-table-count)) - -(autoload (quote cl-macroexpand-all) "cl-extra" "\ -Expand all macro calls through a Lisp FORM. -This also does some trivial optimizations to make the form prettier. - -\(fn FORM &optional ENV)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-prettyexpand) "cl-extra" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn FORM &optional FULL)" nil nil) - -;;;*** - -;;;### (autoloads (compiler-macroexpand define-compiler-macro ignore-errors -;;;;;; assert check-type typep cl-struct-setf-expander defstruct -;;;;;; define-modify-macro callf2 callf letf* letf rotatef shiftf -;;;;;; remf cl-do-pop psetf setf get-setf-method defsetf define-setf-method -;;;;;; declare the locally multiple-value-setq multiple-value-bind -;;;;;; lexical-let* lexical-let symbol-macrolet macrolet labels -;;;;;; flet progv psetq do-all-symbols do-symbols dotimes dolist -;;;;;; do* do loop return-from return block etypecase typecase ecase -;;;;;; case load-time-value eval-when destructuring-bind function* -;;;;;; defmacro* defun* gentemp gensym cl-compile-time-init) "cl-macs" -;;;;;; "cl-macs.el" "7ccc827d272482ca276937ca18a7895a") -;;; Generated autoloads from cl-macs.el - -(autoload (quote cl-compile-time-init) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote gensym) "cl-macs" "\ -Generate a new uninterned symbol. -The name is made by appending a number to PREFIX, default \"G\". - -\(fn &optional PREFIX)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote gentemp) "cl-macs" "\ -Generate a new interned symbol with a unique name. -The name is made by appending a number to PREFIX, default \"G\". - -\(fn &optional PREFIX)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote defun*) "cl-macs" "\ -Define NAME as a function. -Like normal `defun', except ARGLIST allows full Common Lisp conventions, -and BODY is implicitly surrounded by (block NAME ...). - -\(fn NAME ARGLIST [DOCSTRING] BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote defmacro*) "cl-macs" "\ -Define NAME as a macro. -Like normal `defmacro', except ARGLIST allows full Common Lisp conventions, -and BODY is implicitly surrounded by (block NAME ...). - -\(fn NAME ARGLIST [DOCSTRING] BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote function*) "cl-macs" "\ -Introduce a function. -Like normal `function', except that if argument is a lambda form, -its argument list allows full Common Lisp conventions. - -\(fn FUNC)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote destructuring-bind) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn ARGS EXPR &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote eval-when) "cl-macs" "\ -Control when BODY is evaluated. -If `compile' is in WHEN, BODY is evaluated when compiled at top-level. -If `load' is in WHEN, BODY is evaluated when loaded after top-level compile. -If `eval' is in WHEN, BODY is evaluated when interpreted or at non-top-level. - -\(fn (WHEN...) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote load-time-value) "cl-macs" "\ -Like `progn', but evaluates the body at load time. -The result of the body appears to the compiler as a quoted constant. - -\(fn FORM &optional READ-ONLY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote case) "cl-macs" "\ -Eval EXPR and choose among clauses on that value. -Each clause looks like (KEYLIST BODY...). EXPR is evaluated and compared -against each key in each KEYLIST; the corresponding BODY is evaluated. -If no clause succeeds, case returns nil. A single atom may be used in -place of a KEYLIST of one atom. A KEYLIST of t or `otherwise' is -allowed only in the final clause, and matches if no other keys match. -Key values are compared by `eql'. - -\(fn EXPR (KEYLIST BODY...)...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote ecase) "cl-macs" "\ -Like `case', but error if no case fits. -`otherwise'-clauses are not allowed. - -\(fn EXPR (KEYLIST BODY...)...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote typecase) "cl-macs" "\ -Evals EXPR, chooses among clauses on that value. -Each clause looks like (TYPE BODY...). EXPR is evaluated and, if it -satisfies TYPE, the corresponding BODY is evaluated. If no clause succeeds, -typecase returns nil. A TYPE of t or `otherwise' is allowed only in the -final clause, and matches if no other keys match. - -\(fn EXPR (TYPE BODY...)...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote etypecase) "cl-macs" "\ -Like `typecase', but error if no case fits. -`otherwise'-clauses are not allowed. - -\(fn EXPR (TYPE BODY...)...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote block) "cl-macs" "\ -Define a lexically-scoped block named NAME. -NAME may be any symbol. Code inside the BODY forms can call `return-from' -to jump prematurely out of the block. This differs from `catch' and `throw' -in two respects: First, the NAME is an unevaluated symbol rather than a -quoted symbol or other form; and second, NAME is lexically rather than -dynamically scoped: Only references to it within BODY will work. These -references may appear inside macro expansions, but not inside functions -called from BODY. - -\(fn NAME &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote return) "cl-macs" "\ -Return from the block named nil. -This is equivalent to `(return-from nil RESULT)'. - -\(fn &optional RESULT)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote return-from) "cl-macs" "\ -Return from the block named NAME. -This jump out to the innermost enclosing `(block NAME ...)' form, -returning RESULT from that form (or nil if RESULT is omitted). -This is compatible with Common Lisp, but note that `defun' and -`defmacro' do not create implicit blocks as they do in Common Lisp. - -\(fn NAME &optional RESULT)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote loop) "cl-macs" "\ -The Common Lisp `loop' macro. -Valid clauses are: - for VAR from/upfrom/downfrom NUM to/upto/downto/above/below NUM by NUM, - for VAR in LIST by FUNC, for VAR on LIST by FUNC, for VAR = INIT then EXPR, - for VAR across ARRAY, repeat NUM, with VAR = INIT, while COND, until COND, - always COND, never COND, thereis COND, collect EXPR into VAR, - append EXPR into VAR, nconc EXPR into VAR, sum EXPR into VAR, - count EXPR into VAR, maximize EXPR into VAR, minimize EXPR into VAR, - if COND CLAUSE [and CLAUSE]... else CLAUSE [and CLAUSE...], - unless COND CLAUSE [and CLAUSE]... else CLAUSE [and CLAUSE...], - do EXPRS..., initially EXPRS..., finally EXPRS..., return EXPR, - finally return EXPR, named NAME. - -\(fn CLAUSE...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote do) "cl-macs" "\ -The Common Lisp `do' loop. - -\(fn ((VAR INIT [STEP])...) (END-TEST [RESULT...]) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote do*) "cl-macs" "\ -The Common Lisp `do*' loop. - -\(fn ((VAR INIT [STEP])...) (END-TEST [RESULT...]) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote dolist) "cl-macs" "\ -Loop over a list. -Evaluate BODY with VAR bound to each `car' from LIST, in turn. -Then evaluate RESULT to get return value, default nil. - -\(fn (VAR LIST [RESULT]) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote dotimes) "cl-macs" "\ -Loop a certain number of times. -Evaluate BODY with VAR bound to successive integers from 0, inclusive, -to COUNT, exclusive. Then evaluate RESULT to get return value, default -nil. - -\(fn (VAR COUNT [RESULT]) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote do-symbols) "cl-macs" "\ -Loop over all symbols. -Evaluate BODY with VAR bound to each interned symbol, or to each symbol -from OBARRAY. - -\(fn (VAR [OBARRAY [RESULT]]) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote do-all-symbols) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn SPEC &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote psetq) "cl-macs" "\ -Set SYMs to the values VALs in parallel. -This is like `setq', except that all VAL forms are evaluated (in order) -before assigning any symbols SYM to the corresponding values. - -\(fn SYM VAL SYM VAL ...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote progv) "cl-macs" "\ -Bind SYMBOLS to VALUES dynamically in BODY. -The forms SYMBOLS and VALUES are evaluated, and must evaluate to lists. -Each symbol in the first list is bound to the corresponding value in the -second list (or made unbound if VALUES is shorter than SYMBOLS); then the -BODY forms are executed and their result is returned. This is much like -a `let' form, except that the list of symbols can be computed at run-time. - -\(fn SYMBOLS VALUES &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote flet) "cl-macs" "\ -Make temporary function definitions. -This is an analogue of `let' that operates on the function cell of FUNC -rather than its value cell. The FORMs are evaluated with the specified -function definitions in place, then the definitions are undone (the FUNCs -go back to their previous definitions, or lack thereof). - -\(fn ((FUNC ARGLIST BODY...) ...) FORM...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote labels) "cl-macs" "\ -Make temporary function bindings. -This is like `flet', except the bindings are lexical instead of dynamic. -Unlike `flet', this macro is fully compliant with the Common Lisp standard. - -\(fn ((FUNC ARGLIST BODY...) ...) FORM...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote macrolet) "cl-macs" "\ -Make temporary macro definitions. -This is like `flet', but for macros instead of functions. - -\(fn ((NAME ARGLIST BODY...) ...) FORM...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote symbol-macrolet) "cl-macs" "\ -Make symbol macro definitions. -Within the body FORMs, references to the variable NAME will be replaced -by EXPANSION, and (setq NAME ...) will act like (setf EXPANSION ...). - -\(fn ((NAME EXPANSION) ...) FORM...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote lexical-let) "cl-macs" "\ -Like `let', but lexically scoped. -The main visible difference is that lambdas inside BODY will create -lexical closures as in Common Lisp. - -\(fn VARLIST BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote lexical-let*) "cl-macs" "\ -Like `let*', but lexically scoped. -The main visible difference is that lambdas inside BODY will create -lexical closures as in Common Lisp. - -\(fn VARLIST BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote multiple-value-bind) "cl-macs" "\ -Collect multiple return values. -FORM must return a list; the BODY is then executed with the first N elements -of this list bound (`let'-style) to each of the symbols SYM in turn. This -is analogous to the Common Lisp `multiple-value-bind' macro, using lists to -simulate true multiple return values. For compatibility, (values A B C) is -a synonym for (list A B C). - -\(fn (SYM...) FORM BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote multiple-value-setq) "cl-macs" "\ -Collect multiple return values. -FORM must return a list; the first N elements of this list are stored in -each of the symbols SYM in turn. This is analogous to the Common Lisp -`multiple-value-setq' macro, using lists to simulate true multiple return -values. For compatibility, (values A B C) is a synonym for (list A B C). - -\(fn (SYM...) FORM)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote locally) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote the) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn TYPE FORM)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote declare) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn &rest SPECS)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote define-setf-method) "cl-macs" "\ -Define a `setf' method. -This method shows how to handle `setf's to places of the form (NAME ARGS...). -The argument forms ARGS are bound according to ARGLIST, as if NAME were -going to be expanded as a macro, then the BODY forms are executed and must -return a list of five elements: a temporary-variables list, a value-forms -list, a store-variables list (of length one), a store-form, and an access- -form. See `defsetf' for a simpler way to define most setf-methods. - -\(fn NAME ARGLIST BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote defsetf) "cl-macs" "\ -Define a `setf' method. -This macro is an easy-to-use substitute for `define-setf-method' that works -well for simple place forms. In the simple `defsetf' form, `setf's of -the form (setf (NAME ARGS...) VAL) are transformed to function or macro -calls of the form (FUNC ARGS... VAL). Example: - - (defsetf aref aset) - -Alternate form: (defsetf NAME ARGLIST (STORE) BODY...). -Here, the above `setf' call is expanded by binding the argument forms ARGS -according to ARGLIST, binding the value form VAL to STORE, then executing -BODY, which must return a Lisp form that does the necessary `setf' operation. -Actually, ARGLIST and STORE may be bound to temporary variables which are -introduced automatically to preserve proper execution order of the arguments. -Example: - - (defsetf nth (n x) (v) (list 'setcar (list 'nthcdr n x) v)) - -\(fn NAME [FUNC | ARGLIST (STORE) BODY...])" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote get-setf-method) "cl-macs" "\ -Return a list of five values describing the setf-method for PLACE. -PLACE may be any Lisp form which can appear as the PLACE argument to -a macro like `setf' or `incf'. - -\(fn PLACE &optional ENV)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote setf) "cl-macs" "\ -Set each PLACE to the value of its VAL. -This is a generalized version of `setq'; the PLACEs may be symbolic -references such as (car x) or (aref x i), as well as plain symbols. -For example, (setf (cadar x) y) is equivalent to (setcar (cdar x) y). -The return value is the last VAL in the list. - -\(fn PLACE VAL PLACE VAL ...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote psetf) "cl-macs" "\ -Set PLACEs to the values VALs in parallel. -This is like `setf', except that all VAL forms are evaluated (in order) -before assigning any PLACEs to the corresponding values. - -\(fn PLACE VAL PLACE VAL ...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote cl-do-pop) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn PLACE)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote remf) "cl-macs" "\ -Remove TAG from property list PLACE. -PLACE may be a symbol, or any generalized variable allowed by `setf'. -The form returns true if TAG was found and removed, nil otherwise. - -\(fn PLACE TAG)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote shiftf) "cl-macs" "\ -Shift left among PLACEs. -Example: (shiftf A B C) sets A to B, B to C, and returns the old A. -Each PLACE may be a symbol, or any generalized variable allowed by `setf'. - -\(fn PLACE... VAL)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote rotatef) "cl-macs" "\ -Rotate left among PLACEs. -Example: (rotatef A B C) sets A to B, B to C, and C to A. It returns nil. -Each PLACE may be a symbol, or any generalized variable allowed by `setf'. - -\(fn PLACE...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote letf) "cl-macs" "\ -Temporarily bind to PLACEs. -This is the analogue of `let', but with generalized variables (in the -sense of `setf') for the PLACEs. Each PLACE is set to the corresponding -VALUE, then the BODY forms are executed. On exit, either normally or -because of a `throw' or error, the PLACEs are set back to their original -values. Note that this macro is *not* available in Common Lisp. -As a special case, if `(PLACE)' is used instead of `(PLACE VALUE)', -the PLACE is not modified before executing BODY. - -\(fn ((PLACE VALUE) ...) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote letf*) "cl-macs" "\ -Temporarily bind to PLACEs. -This is the analogue of `let*', but with generalized variables (in the -sense of `setf') for the PLACEs. Each PLACE is set to the corresponding -VALUE, then the BODY forms are executed. On exit, either normally or -because of a `throw' or error, the PLACEs are set back to their original -values. Note that this macro is *not* available in Common Lisp. -As a special case, if `(PLACE)' is used instead of `(PLACE VALUE)', -the PLACE is not modified before executing BODY. - -\(fn ((PLACE VALUE) ...) BODY...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote callf) "cl-macs" "\ -Set PLACE to (FUNC PLACE ARGS...). -FUNC should be an unquoted function name. PLACE may be a symbol, -or any generalized variable allowed by `setf'. - -\(fn FUNC PLACE ARGS...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote callf2) "cl-macs" "\ -Set PLACE to (FUNC ARG1 PLACE ARGS...). -Like `callf', but PLACE is the second argument of FUNC, not the first. - -\(fn FUNC ARG1 PLACE ARGS...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote define-modify-macro) "cl-macs" "\ -Define a `setf'-like modify macro. -If NAME is called, it combines its PLACE argument with the other arguments -from ARGLIST using FUNC: (define-modify-macro incf (&optional (n 1)) +) - -\(fn NAME ARGLIST FUNC &optional DOC)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote defstruct) "cl-macs" "\ -Define a struct type. -This macro defines a new Lisp data type called NAME, which contains data -stored in SLOTs. This defines a `make-NAME' constructor, a `copy-NAME' -copier, a `NAME-p' predicate, and setf-able `NAME-SLOT' accessors. - -\(fn (NAME OPTIONS...) (SLOT SLOT-OPTS...)...)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote cl-struct-setf-expander) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn X NAME ACCESSOR PRED-FORM POS)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote typep) "cl-macs" "\ -Check that OBJECT is of type TYPE. -TYPE is a Common Lisp-style type specifier. - -\(fn OBJECT TYPE)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote check-type) "cl-macs" "\ -Verify that FORM is of type TYPE; signal an error if not. -STRING is an optional description of the desired type. - -\(fn FORM TYPE &optional STRING)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote assert) "cl-macs" "\ -Verify that FORM returns non-nil; signal an error if not. -Second arg SHOW-ARGS means to include arguments of FORM in message. -Other args STRING and ARGS... are arguments to be passed to `error'. -They are not evaluated unless the assertion fails. If STRING is -omitted, a default message listing FORM itself is used. - -\(fn FORM &optional SHOW-ARGS STRING &rest ARGS)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote ignore-errors) "cl-macs" "\ -Execute BODY; if an error occurs, return nil. -Otherwise, return result of last form in BODY. - -\(fn &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote define-compiler-macro) "cl-macs" "\ -Define a compiler-only macro. -This is like `defmacro', but macro expansion occurs only if the call to -FUNC is compiled (i.e., not interpreted). Compiler macros should be used -for optimizing the way calls to FUNC are compiled; the form returned by -BODY should do the same thing as a call to the normal function called -FUNC, though possibly more efficiently. Note that, like regular macros, -compiler macros are expanded repeatedly until no further expansions are -possible. Unlike regular macros, BODY can decide to \"punt\" and leave the -original function call alone by declaring an initial `&whole foo' parameter -and then returning foo. - -\(fn FUNC ARGS &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro)) - -(autoload (quote compiler-macroexpand) "cl-macs" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn FORM)" nil nil) - -;;;*** - -;;;### (autoloads (tree-equal nsublis sublis nsubst-if-not nsubst-if -;;;;;; nsubst subst-if-not subst-if subsetp nset-exclusive-or set-exclusive-or -;;;;;; nset-difference set-difference nintersection intersection -;;;;;; nunion union rassoc-if-not rassoc-if rassoc* assoc-if-not -;;;;;; assoc-if assoc* cl-adjoin member-if-not member-if member* -;;;;;; merge stable-sort sort* search mismatch count-if-not count-if -;;;;;; count position-if-not position-if position find-if-not find-if -;;;;;; find nsubstitute-if-not nsubstitute-if nsubstitute substitute-if-not -;;;;;; substitute-if substitute delete-duplicates remove-duplicates -;;;;;; delete-if-not delete-if delete* remove-if-not remove-if remove* -;;;;;; replace fill reduce) "cl-seq" "cl-seq.el" "8805f76626399794931f5db36ddf855f") -;;; Generated autoloads from cl-seq.el - -(autoload (quote reduce) "cl-seq" "\ -Reduce two-argument FUNCTION across SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :start :end :from-end :initial-value :key - -\(fn FUNCTION SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote fill) "cl-seq" "\ -Fill the elements of SEQ with ITEM. - -Keywords supported: :start :end - -\(fn SEQ ITEM [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote replace) "cl-seq" "\ -Replace the elements of SEQ1 with the elements of SEQ2. -SEQ1 is destructively modified, then returned. - -Keywords supported: :start1 :end1 :start2 :end2 - -\(fn SEQ1 SEQ2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote remove*) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all occurrences of ITEM in SEQ. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of SEQ if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn ITEM SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote remove-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all items satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of SEQ if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote remove-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all items not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of SEQ if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote delete*) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all occurrences of ITEM in SEQ. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn ITEM SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote delete-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all items satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote delete-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all items not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote remove-duplicates) "cl-seq" "\ -Return a copy of SEQ with all duplicate elements removed. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote delete-duplicates) "cl-seq" "\ -Remove all duplicate elements from SEQ (destructively). - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote substitute) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for OLD in SEQ. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of SEQ if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn NEW OLD SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote substitute-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for all items satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of SEQ if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote substitute-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for all items not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of SEQ if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsubstitute) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for OLD in SEQ. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn NEW OLD SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsubstitute-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for all items satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsubstitute-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for all items not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :key :count :start :end :from-end - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote find) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first occurrence of ITEM in SEQ. -Return the matching ITEM, or nil if not found. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn ITEM SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote find-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -Return the matching item, or nil if not found. - -Keywords supported: :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote find-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -Return the matching item, or nil if not found. - -Keywords supported: :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote position) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first occurrence of ITEM in SEQ. -Return the index of the matching item, or nil if not found. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn ITEM SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote position-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -Return the index of the matching item, or nil if not found. - -Keywords supported: :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote position-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. -Return the index of the matching item, or nil if not found. - -Keywords supported: :key :start :end :from-end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote count) "cl-seq" "\ -Count the number of occurrences of ITEM in SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start :end - -\(fn ITEM SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote count-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Count the number of items satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :key :start :end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote count-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Count the number of items not satisfying PREDICATE in SEQ. - -Keywords supported: :key :start :end - -\(fn PREDICATE SEQ [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote mismatch) "cl-seq" "\ -Compare SEQ1 with SEQ2, return index of first mismatching element. -Return nil if the sequences match. If one sequence is a prefix of the -other, the return value indicates the end of the shorter sequence. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start1 :end1 :start2 :end2 :from-end - -\(fn SEQ1 SEQ2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote search) "cl-seq" "\ -Search for SEQ1 as a subsequence of SEQ2. -Return the index of the leftmost element of the first match found; -return nil if there are no matches. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key :start1 :end1 :start2 :end2 :from-end - -\(fn SEQ1 SEQ2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote sort*) "cl-seq" "\ -Sort the argument SEQ according to PREDICATE. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ if possible. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn SEQ PREDICATE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote stable-sort) "cl-seq" "\ -Sort the argument SEQ stably according to PREDICATE. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of SEQ if possible. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn SEQ PREDICATE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote merge) "cl-seq" "\ -Destructively merge the two sequences to produce a new sequence. -TYPE is the sequence type to return, SEQ1 and SEQ2 are the two argument -sequences, and PREDICATE is a `less-than' predicate on the elements. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn TYPE SEQ1 SEQ2 PREDICATE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote member*) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first occurrence of ITEM in LIST. -Return the sublist of LIST whose car is ITEM. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn ITEM LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote member-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item satisfying PREDICATE in LIST. -Return the sublist of LIST whose car matches. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn PREDICATE LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote member-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item not satisfying PREDICATE in LIST. -Return the sublist of LIST whose car matches. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn PREDICATE LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote cl-adjoin) "cl-seq" "\ -Not documented - -\(fn CL-ITEM CL-LIST &rest CL-KEYS)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote assoc*) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item whose car matches ITEM in LIST. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn ITEM LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote assoc-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item whose car satisfies PREDICATE in LIST. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn PREDICATE LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote assoc-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item whose car does not satisfy PREDICATE in LIST. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn PREDICATE LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote rassoc*) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item whose cdr matches ITEM in LIST. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn ITEM LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote rassoc-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item whose cdr satisfies PREDICATE in LIST. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn PREDICATE LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote rassoc-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Find the first item whose cdr does not satisfy PREDICATE in LIST. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn PREDICATE LIST [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote union) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-union operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in either LIST1 or LIST2. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nunion) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-union operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in either LIST1 or LIST2. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 -whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote intersection) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-intersection operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nintersection) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-intersection operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 -whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote set-difference) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-difference operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in LIST1 but not LIST2. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nset-difference) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-difference operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in LIST1 but not LIST2. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 -whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote set-exclusive-or) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-exclusive-or operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in exactly one of LIST1, LIST2. -This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary -to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nset-exclusive-or) "cl-seq" "\ -Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-exclusive-or operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in exactly one of LIST1, LIST2. -This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 -whenever possible. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote subsetp) "cl-seq" "\ -Return true if LIST1 is a subset of LIST2. -I.e., if every element of LIST1 also appears in LIST2. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn LIST1 LIST2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote subst-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for elements matching PREDICATE in TREE (non-destructively). -Return a copy of TREE with all matching elements replaced by NEW. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote subst-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for elts not matching PREDICATE in TREE (non-destructively). -Return a copy of TREE with all non-matching elements replaced by NEW. - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsubst) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for OLD everywhere in TREE (destructively). -Any element of TREE which is `eql' to OLD is changed to NEW (via a call -to `setcar'). - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn NEW OLD TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsubst-if) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for elements matching PREDICATE in TREE (destructively). -Any element of TREE which matches is changed to NEW (via a call to `setcar'). - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsubst-if-not) "cl-seq" "\ -Substitute NEW for elements not matching PREDICATE in TREE (destructively). -Any element of TREE which matches is changed to NEW (via a call to `setcar'). - -Keywords supported: :key - -\(fn NEW PREDICATE TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote sublis) "cl-seq" "\ -Perform substitutions indicated by ALIST in TREE (non-destructively). -Return a copy of TREE with all matching elements replaced. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn ALIST TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote nsublis) "cl-seq" "\ -Perform substitutions indicated by ALIST in TREE (destructively). -Any matching element of TREE is changed via a call to `setcar'. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn ALIST TREE [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -(autoload (quote tree-equal) "cl-seq" "\ -Return t if trees TREE1 and TREE2 have `eql' leaves. -Atoms are compared by `eql'; cons cells are compared recursively. - -Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key - -\(fn TREE1 TREE2 [KEYWORD VALUE]...)" nil nil) - -;;;*** - -;; Local Variables: -;; version-control: never -;; no-byte-compile: t -;; no-update-autoloads: t -;; End: - -;; arch-tag: 08cc5aab-e992-47f6-992e-12a7428c1a0e -;;; cl-loaddefs.el ends here
--- a/lisp/ps-print.el Mon Jul 30 05:33:38 2007 +0000 +++ b/lisp/ps-print.el Mon Jul 30 05:33:47 2007 +0000 @@ -7040,7 +7040,7 @@ ;;;### (autoloads (ps-mule-begin-page ps-mule-begin-job ps-mule-encode-header-string ;;;;;; ps-mule-initialize ps-mule-plot-composition ps-mule-plot-string ;;;;;; ps-mule-set-ascii-font ps-mule-prepare-ascii-font ps-multibyte-buffer) -;;;;;; "ps-mule" "ps-mule.el" "cbb193f9b6bebd27378819035d3788f7") +;;;;;; "ps-mule" "ps-mule.el" "586d0a4deeb89be9b80cc01def34481c") ;;; Generated autoloads from ps-mule.el (defvar ps-multibyte-buffer nil "\ @@ -7145,7 +7145,7 @@ (autoload (quote ps-mule-begin-job) "ps-mule" "\ Start printing job for multi-byte chars between FROM and TO. -This checks if all multi-byte characters in the region are printable or not. +It checks if all multi-byte characters in the region are printable or not. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)