changeset 3551:8b5fa2d1755f

Doc fixes. Delete local variable list at the end. (expr-forward-sexp): Renamed from forw-expr. (expr-backward-sexp): Renamed from back-expr.
author Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
date Mon, 07 Jun 1993 19:37:18 +0000
parents 0d8c66f2e25e
children 84fded047f22
files lisp/gud.el
diffstat 1 files changed, 29 insertions(+), 55 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lisp/gud.el	Mon Jun 07 19:11:40 1993 +0000
+++ b/lisp/gud.el	Mon Jun 07 19:37:18 1993 +0000
@@ -362,8 +362,8 @@
   "Major mode for interacting with an inferior debugger process.
 
    You start it up with one of the commands M-x gdb, M-x sdb, or
-M-x dbx.  Each entry point finishes by executing a hook; gdb-mode-hook,
-sdb-mode-hook or dbx-mode-hook respectively.
+M-x dbx.  Each entry point finishes by executing a hook; `gdb-mode-hook',
+`sdb-mode-hook' or `dbx-mode-hook' respectively.
 
 After startup, the following commands are available in both the GUD
 interaction buffer and any source buffer GUD visits due to a breakpoint stop
@@ -398,14 +398,14 @@
 If you are using gdb, \\[gdb-finish] runs execution to the return from
 the current function and stops.
 
-All the keystrokes above have synonyms (in the GUD buffer only) with
-a prefix of C-c (this is for backward compatibility with old gdb.el).
+All the keystrokes above are accessible in the GUD buffer
+with the prefix C-c, and in all buffers through the prefix C-x C-a.
 
 All pre-defined functions for which the concept make sense repeat
 themselves the appropriate number of times if you give a prefix
 argument.
 
-You may use the gud-def macro in the initialization hook to define other
+You may use the `gud-def' macro in the initialization hook to define other
 commands.
 
 Other commands for interacting with the debugger process are inherited from
@@ -666,14 +666,13 @@
   (interactive "P")
   (recenter arg)
   (gud-display-frame))
-
+
 ;;; Code for parsing expressions out of C code.  The single entry point is
 ;;; find-c-expr, which tries to return an lvalue expression from around point.
 ;;;
 ;;; The rest of this file is a hacked version of gdbsrc.el by
 ;;; Debby Ayers <ayers@asc.slb.com>,
 ;;; Rich Schaefer <schaefer@asc.slb.com> Schlumberger, Austin, Tx.
-;;; ??? We're waiting on papers from these people
 
 (defun find-c-expr ()
   "Returns the C expr that surrounds point."
@@ -686,50 +685,44 @@
       (while (expr-compound test-expr expr)
 	(setq expr (cons (car test-expr) (cdr expr)))
 	(goto-char (car expr))
-	(setq test-expr (expr-prev))
-	)
+	(setq test-expr (expr-prev)))
       (goto-char p)
       (setq test-expr (expr-next))
       (while (expr-compound expr test-expr)
 	(setq expr (cons (car expr) (cdr test-expr)))
 	(setq test-expr (expr-next))
 	)
-      (buffer-substring (car expr) (cdr expr))
-      )
-    )
-  )
+      (buffer-substring (car expr) (cdr expr)))))
 
 (defun expr-cur ()
   "Returns the expr that point is in; point is set to beginning of expr.
 The expr is represented as a cons cell, where the car specifies the point in
 the current buffer that marks the beginning of the expr and the cdr specifies 
-the character after the end of the expr"
+the character after the end of the expr."
   (let ((p (point)) (begin) (end))
-    (back-expr)
+    (expr-backward-sexp)
     (setq begin (point))
-    (forw-expr)
+    (expr-forward-sexp)
     (setq end (point))
     (if (>= p end) 
 	(progn
 	 (setq begin p)
 	 (goto-char p)
-	 (forw-expr)
+	 (expr-forward-sexp)
 	 (setq end (point))
 	 )
       )
     (goto-char begin)
-    (cons begin end)
-    )
-  )
+    (cons begin end)))
 
-(defun back-expr ()
-  "Version of backward-sexp that catches errors"
+(defun expr-backward-sexp ()
+  "Version of `backward-sexp' that catches errors."
   (condition-case nil
       (backward-sexp)
     (error t)))
 
-(defun forw-expr ()
-  "Version of forward-sexp that catches errors"
+(defun expr-forward-sexp ()
+  "Version of `forward-sexp' that catches errors."
   (condition-case nil
      (forward-sexp)
     (error t)))
@@ -740,9 +733,9 @@
 the current buffer that marks the beginning of the expr and the cdr specifies 
 the character after the end of the expr"
   (let ((begin) (end))
-    (back-expr)
+    (expr-backward-sexp)
     (setq begin (point))
-    (forw-expr)
+    (expr-forward-sexp)
     (setq end (point))
     (goto-char begin)
     (cons begin end)))
@@ -751,16 +744,14 @@
   "Returns the following expr, point is set to beginning of that expr.
 The expr is represented as a cons cell, where the car specifies the point in
 the current buffer that marks the beginning of the expr and the cdr specifies 
-the character after the end of the expr"
+the character after the end of the expr."
   (let ((begin) (end))
-    (forw-expr)
-    (forw-expr)
+    (expr-forward-sexp)
+    (expr-forward-sexp)
     (setq end (point))
-    (back-expr)
+    (expr-backward-sexp)
     (setq begin (point))
-    (cons begin end)
-    )
-  )
+    (cons begin end)))
 
 (defun expr-compound-sep (span-start span-end)
   "Returns '.' for '->' & '.', returns ' ' for white space,
@@ -780,15 +771,13 @@
 	 (t (setq span-start span-end)
 	    (setq result ??)))))
       (setq span-start (+ span-start 1)))
-    result 
-    )
-  )
+    result))
 
 (defun expr-compound (first second)
-  "Returns non-nil if the concatenation of two exprs results in a single C 
-token. The two exprs are represented as a cons cells, where the car 
+  "Non-nil if concatenating FIRST and SECOND makes a single C token.
+The two exprs are represented as a cons cells, where the car 
 specifies the point in the current buffer that marks the beginning of the 
-expr and the cdr specifies the character after the end of the expr
+expr and the cdr specifies the character after the end of the expr.
 Link exprs of the form:
       Expr -> Expr
       Expr . Expr
@@ -814,21 +803,6 @@
 	  ((= span-end ?[ ) t )
 	  (t nil))
 	 )
-     (t nil))
-    )
-  )
-
-;;; There appears to be a bug in the byte compiler somewhere near macro
-;;; handling that (a) generates a spurious message about gud-key-prefix
-;;; when the global-set-key clause in gud-def is compiled, (b) generates
-;;; incorrect bytecode for gud-def.  The symptom of this incorrectness
-;;; is that loading gud.elc brings in a compiled gud-def that doesn't
-;;; properly perform both global (C-x C-a) and local (C-c) bindings.
-;;; The workaround is to always load from source.  Consequently, we try
-;;; to disable byte-compilation here.
-;;;
-;;; Local Variables:
-;;; no-byte-compile: t
-;;; End:
+     (t nil))))
 
 ;;; gud.el ends here