changeset 105318:179b0f945895

(Declaring Functions): Mention that we also search for ".m" files in the src/ directory.
author Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>
date Thu, 01 Oct 2009 02:05:32 +0000
parents 78728d295b59
children a3a24186a0e9
files doc/lispref/ChangeLog doc/lispref/functions.texi
diffstat 2 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/lispref/ChangeLog	Thu Oct 01 02:03:38 2009 +0000
+++ b/doc/lispref/ChangeLog	Thu Oct 01 02:05:32 2009 +0000
@@ -1,7 +1,11 @@
+2009-10-01  Glenn Morris  <rgm@gnu.org>
+
+	* functions.texi (Declaring Functions): Mention that we also search for
+	".m" files in the src/ directory.
+
 2009-09-25  David Engster  <deng@randomsample.de>
 
-	* display.texi (Managing Overlays): Document
-	copy-overlay (Bug#4549).
+	* display.texi (Managing Overlays): Document copy-overlay (Bug#4549).
 
 2009-09-22  Glenn Morris  <rgm@gnu.org>
 
--- a/doc/lispref/functions.texi	Thu Oct 01 02:03:38 2009 +0000
+++ b/doc/lispref/functions.texi	Thu Oct 01 02:05:32 2009 +0000
@@ -1312,11 +1312,11 @@
 expand the definition file name relative to the directory of the file
 that contains the @code{declare-function} call.
 
-  You can also say that a function is defined by C code by specifying
-a file name ending in @samp{.c}.  @code{check-declare-file} looks for
-these files in the C source code directory.  This is useful only when
-you call a function that is defined only on certain systems.  Most
-of the primitive functions of Emacs are always defined so they will
+  You can also say that a function is defined by C code by specifying a
+file name ending in @samp{.c} or @samp{.m}.  @code{check-declare-file}
+looks for these files in the C source code directory.  This is useful
+only when you call a function that is defined only on certain systems.
+Most of the primitive functions of Emacs are always defined so they will
 never give you a warning.
 
   Sometimes a file will optionally use functions from an external package.