Mercurial > emacs
changeset 98711:43065c518c41
(Char-Tables): Remove documentation of set-char-table-default, which has no
effect since Emacs 23.
<char-table-range, set-char-table-range>: Don't mention generic characters
and charsets. Add a cons cell as a possible argument.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 14 Oct 2008 12:47:43 +0000 |
parents | df0ee162b492 |
children | 0002e6ddea37 |
files | doc/lispref/sequences.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/lispref/sequences.texi Tue Oct 14 12:47:06 2008 +0000 +++ b/doc/lispref/sequences.texi Tue Oct 14 12:47:43 2008 +0000 @@ -576,13 +576,8 @@ This function returns the subtype symbol of @var{char-table}. @end defun -@defun set-char-table-default char-table char new-default -This function sets the default value of generic character @var{char} -in @var{char-table} to @var{new-default}. - There is no special function to access default values in a char-table. To do that, use @code{char-table-range} (see below). -@end defun @defun char-table-parent char-table This function returns the parent of @var{char-table}. The parent is @@ -619,15 +614,9 @@ Refers to the element for character @var{char} (supposing @var{char} is a valid character code). -@item @var{charset} -Refers to the value specified for the whole character set -@var{charset} (@pxref{Character Sets}). - -@item @var{generic-char} -A generic character stands for a character set, or a row of a -character set; specifying the generic character as argument is -equivalent to specifying the character set name. @xref{Splitting -Characters}, for a description of generic characters. +@item @code{(@var{from} . @var{to})} +A cons cell refers to all the characters in the inclusive range +@samp{[@var{from}..@var{to}]}. @end table @end defun @@ -646,14 +635,9 @@ Refers to the element for character @var{char} (supposing @var{char} is a valid character code). -@item @var{charset} -Refers to the value specified for the whole character set -@var{charset} (@pxref{Character Sets}). - -@item @var{generic-char} -A generic character stands for a character set; specifying the generic -character as argument is equivalent to specifying the character set -name. @xref{Splitting Characters}, for a description of generic characters. +@item @code{(@var{from} . @var{to})} +A cons cell refers to all the characters in the inclusive range +@samp{[@var{from}..@var{to}]}. @end table @end defun