Mercurial > emacs
changeset 63584:5565eb3af021
Fix formatting ugliness.
(Variable Aliases): Simplify.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 18 Jun 2005 13:58:02 +0000 |
parents | 99e9892a51d9 |
children | ba0246b5a6bb |
files | lispref/variables.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 29 deletions(-) [+] |
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line diff
--- a/lispref/variables.texi Sat Jun 18 13:57:17 2005 +0000 +++ b/lispref/variables.texi Sat Jun 18 13:58:02 2005 +0000 @@ -1722,24 +1722,24 @@ visiting a file could take over your Emacs. To prevent this, Emacs takes care not to allow to set such file local variables. - For one thing, any variable whose name ends in @samp{-command}, -@samp{-frame-alist}, @samp{-function}, @samp{-functions}, -@samp{-hook}, @samp{-hooks}, @samp{-form}, @samp{-forms}, @samp{-map}, -@samp{-map-alist}, @samp{-mode-alist}, @samp{-program}, or -@samp{-predicate} cannot be given a file local value. In general, -you should use such a name whenever it is appropriate for the -variable's meaning. The variables @samp{font-lock-keywords}, -@samp{font-lock-keywords-[0-9]}, and -@samp{font-lock-syntactic-keywords} cannot be given file local values either. -These rules can be overridden by giving the variable's -name a non-@code{nil} @code{safe-local-variable} property. If one -gives it a @code{safe-local-variable} property of @code{t}, then one -can give the variable any file local value. One can also give any -symbol, including the above, a @code{safe-local-variable} property -that is a function taking exactly one argument. In that case, giving -a variable with that name a file local value is only allowed if the -function returns non-@code{nil} when called with that value as -argument. + For one thing, any variable whose name ends in any of +@samp{-command}, @samp{-frame-alist}, @samp{-function}, +@samp{-functions}, @samp{-hook}, @samp{-hooks}, @samp{-form}, +@samp{-forms}, @samp{-map}, @samp{-map-alist}, @samp{-mode-alist}, +@samp{-program}, or @samp{-predicate} cannot be given a file local +value. In general, you should use such a name whenever it is +appropriate for the variable's meaning. The variables +@samp{font-lock-keywords}, @samp{font-lock-keywords} followed by a +digit, and @samp{font-lock-syntactic-keywords} cannot be given file +local values either. These rules can be overridden by giving the +variable's name a non-@code{nil} @code{safe-local-variable} property. +If one gives it a @code{safe-local-variable} property of @code{t}, +then one can give the variable any file local value. One can also +give any symbol, including the above, a @code{safe-local-variable} +property that is a function taking exactly one argument. In that +case, giving a variable with that name a file local value is only +allowed if the function returns non-@code{nil} when called with that +value as argument. In addition, any variable whose name has a non-@code{nil} @code{risky-local-variable} property is also ignored. So are all @@ -1822,19 +1822,12 @@ @defmac define-obsolete-variable-alias obsolete-name current-name &optional when docstring This macro marks the variable @var{obsolete-name} as obsolete and also -makes it an alias for the variable @var{current-name}. A typical call has -the form: +makes it an alias for the variable @var{current-name}. It is +equivalent to the following: @example -(define-obsolete-variable-alias 'old-var 'new-var "22.1" "Doc.") -@end example - -@noindent -which is equivalent to the following two lines of code: - -@example -(defvaralias 'oldvar 'newvar "Doc.") -(make-obsolete-variable 'old-var 'new-var "22.1") +(defvaralias @var{obsolete-name} @var{current-name} @var{docstring}) +(make-obsolete-variable @var{obsolete-name} @var{current-name} @var{when}) @end example @end defmac