Mercurial > emacs
changeset 61852:48375a96a41a
(Variable Aliases): Clarify text.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 26 Apr 2005 10:55:24 +0000 |
parents | f30c24a40aeb |
children | 7f8f03acf7fe |
files | lispref/variables.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 23 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lispref/variables.texi Tue Apr 26 10:54:31 2005 +0000 +++ b/lispref/variables.texi Tue Apr 26 10:55:24 2005 +0000 @@ -1714,31 +1714,37 @@ This function returns @var{base-var}. @end defun -Variables aliases are often used prior to replacing an old name for a variable -with a new name. To allow some time for existing code to adapt to this change, -@code{make-obsolete-variable} declares that the old name is obsolete and -therefore that it may be removed at some stage in the future. +Variable aliases are convenient for replacing an old name for a +variable with a new name. @code{make-obsolete-variable} declares that +the old name is obsolete and therefore that it may be removed at some +stage in the future. @defmac make-obsolete-variable variable new &optional when -This macro makes the byte-compiler warn that symbol @var{variable} is -obsolete and that symbol @var{new} should be used instead. If -@var{new} is a string, this is the message and there is no replacement -variable. If it is provided, @var{when} should be a string indicating -when the variable was first made obsolete, for example a date or a -release number. +This macro makes the byte-compiler warn that the variable +@var{variable} is obsolete. If @var{new} is a symbol, it is the +variable's new name; the warning messages say to use @var{new} +instead of @var{variable}. +If @var{new} is a string, this is the message and there is no +replacement variable. + +If provided, @var{when} should be a string indicating when the +variable was first made obsolete---for example, a date or a release +number. @end defmac You can make two variables synonyms and declare one obsolete at the same time using the macro @code{define-obsolete-variable-alias}. @defmac define-obsolete-variable-alias variable new &optional when docstring -This macro defines the symbol @var{variable} as a variable alias for -symbol @var{new} and warns that @var{variable} is obsolete. If it is -provided, @var{when} should be a string indicating when @var{variable} -was first made obsolete. The optional argument @var{docstring} -specifies the documentation string for @var{variable}. If -@var{docstring} is omitted or nil, @var{variable} uses the -documentation string of @var{new} unless it already has one. +This macro marks the variable @var{variable} as obsolete and also +makes it an alias for the variable @var{new}. + +If provided, @var{when} should be a string indicating when +@var{variable} was first made obsolete. The optional argument +@var{docstring} specifies the documentation string for @var{variable}. +If @var{docstring} is omitted or nil, @var{variable} uses the +documentation string of @var{new} unless it already has one of its +own. @end defmac @defun indirect-variable variable