changeset 19467:d76f57ca7aba

Explain after-change-functions and chars vs bytes.
author Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
date Fri, 22 Aug 1997 05:58:17 +0000
parents 3fce1e7c0fd0
children b6517e9b8e60
files lispref/text.texi
diffstat 1 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lispref/text.texi	Fri Aug 22 05:51:48 1997 +0000
+++ b/lispref/text.texi	Fri Aug 22 05:58:17 1997 +0000
@@ -2973,9 +2973,16 @@
 This variable holds a list of a functions to call after any buffer
 modification.  Each function receives three arguments: the beginning and
 end of the region just changed, and the length of the text that existed
-before the change.  (To get the current length, subtract the region
-beginning from the region end.)  All three arguments are integers.  The
-buffer that's about to change is always the current buffer.
+before the change.  All three arguments are integers.  The buffer that's
+about to change is always the current buffer.
+
+The length of the old text is measured in bytes; it is the difference
+between the buffer positions before and after that text, before the
+change.  As for the changed text, its length in bytes is simply the
+difference between the first two arguments.  If you want the length
+in @emph{characters} of the text before the change, you should use
+a @code{before-change-functions} function that calls @code{chars-in-region}
+(@pxref{Chars and Bytes}).
 @end defvar
 
 @defvar before-change-function