Mercurial > emacs
changeset 61729:bd6904d99629
(Variable Aliases): Describe make-obsolete-variable
and define-obsolete-variable-alias.
author | Nick Roberts <nickrob@snap.net.nz> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 22 Apr 2005 04:07:29 +0000 |
parents | 5b01cec64cc9 |
children | d4e4e1694bf8 |
files | lispref/variables.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 27 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/lispref/variables.texi Thu Apr 21 23:46:49 2005 +0000 +++ b/lispref/variables.texi Fri Apr 22 04:07:29 2005 +0000 @@ -1714,6 +1714,33 @@ 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To allow some time for existing code to adapt to this change, +@code{make-obsolete-variable} declares that the old name is obsolete and +therefore that it may be removed at some stage in the future. + +@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. +@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+This macro defines the symbol @var{variable} as a variable alias for +symbol @var{new} and warns that @var{variable} is obsolete.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. +@end defmac + @defun indirect-variable variable This function returns the variable at the end of the chain of aliases of @var{variable}. If @var{variable} is not a symbol, or if @var{variable} is