Mercurial > emacs
changeset 27225:ee242fddb1ab
Remove various old stuff and references thereto.
author | Dave Love <fx@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 06 Jan 2000 00:17:52 +0000 |
parents | d9c8c29ec5c4 |
children | 44dc06740e6c |
files | man/cl.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 46 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/cl.texi Wed Jan 05 23:54:20 2000 +0000 +++ b/man/cl.texi Thu Jan 06 00:17:52 2000 +0000 @@ -315,20 +315,17 @@ they do not cause other components like @file{cl-extra} to be loaded. @example -eql floatp-safe abs endp +eql floatp-safe endp evenp oddp plusp minusp -butlast nbutlast caar .. cddddr +butlast nbutlast caaar .. cddddr list* ldiff rest first .. tenth -member [1] copy-list subst mapcar* [2] +copy-list subst mapcar* [2] adjoin [3] acons pairlis pop [4] push [4] pushnew [3,4] incf [4] decf [4] proclaim declaim @end example @noindent -[1] This is the Emacs 19-compatible function, not @code{member*}. - -@noindent [2] Only for one sequence argument or two list arguments. @noindent @@ -676,9 +673,7 @@ Emacs 19 includes two special forms related to @code{eval-when}. One of these, @code{eval-when-compile}, is not quite equivalent to -any @code{eval-when} construct and is described below. This package -defines a version of @code{eval-when-compile} for the benefit of -Emacs 18 users. +any @code{eval-when} construct and is described below. The other form, @code{(eval-and-compile @dots{})}, is exactly equivalent to @samp{(eval-when (compile load eval) @dots{})} and @@ -2578,7 +2573,7 @@ @item for @var{var} being the key-seqs of @var{keymap} This clause iterates over all key sequences defined by @var{keymap} and its nested keymaps, where @var{var} takes on values which are -strings in Emacs 18 or vectors in Emacs 19. The strings or vectors +vectors. The strings or vectors are reused for each iteration, so you must copy them if you wish to keep them permanently. You can add a @samp{using (key-bindings ...)} clause to get the command bindings as well. @@ -2586,8 +2581,8 @@ @item for @var{var} being the overlays [of @var{buffer}] @dots{} This clause iterates over the Emacs 19 ``overlays'' or Lucid Emacs ``extents'' of a buffer (the clause @code{extents} is synonymous -with @code{overlays}). Under Emacs 18, this clause iterates zero -times. If the @code{of} term is omitted, the current buffer is used. +with @code{overlays}). If the @code{of} term is omitted, the current +buffer is used. This clause also accepts optional @samp{from @var{pos}} and @samp{to @var{pos}} terms, limiting the clause to overlays which overlap the specified region. @@ -2612,9 +2607,7 @@ @item for @var{var} being the windows [of @var{frame}] This clause iterates over the windows (in the Emacs sense) of -the current frame, or of the specified @var{frame}. (In Emacs 18 -there is only ever one frame, and the @code{of} term is not -allowed there.) +the current frame, or of the specified @var{frame}. @item for @var{var} being the buffers This clause iterates over all buffers in Emacs. It is equivalent @@ -3477,20 +3470,6 @@ @noindent These functions perform various arithmetic operations on numbers. -@defun abs number -This function returns the absolute value of @var{number}. (Newer -versions of Emacs provide this as a built-in function; this package -defines @code{abs} only for Emacs 18 versions which don't provide -it as a primitive.) -@end defun - -@defun expt base power -This function returns @var{base} raised to the power of @var{number}. -(Newer versions of Emacs provide this as a built-in function; this -package defines @code{expt} only for Emacs 18 versions which don't -provide it as a primitive.) -@end defun - @defun gcd &rest integers This function returns the Greatest Common Divisor of the arguments. For one argument, it returns the absolute value of that argument. @@ -4059,12 +4038,6 @@ The predicate-oriented functions @code{remove-if}, @code{remove-if-not}, @code{delete-if}, and @code{delete-if-not} are defined similarly. -@defun delete item list -This MacLisp-compatible function deletes from @var{list} all elements -which are @code{equal} to @var{item}. The @code{delete} function is -built-in to Emacs 19; this package defines it equivalently in Emacs 18. -@end defun - @defun remove item list This function removes from @var{list} all elements which are @code{equal} to @var{item}. This package defines it for symmetry @@ -4431,13 +4404,6 @@ These functions perform operations on lists which represent sets of elements. -@defun member item list -This MacLisp-compatible function searches @var{list} for an element -which is @code{equal} to @var{item}. The @code{member} function is -built-in to Emacs 19; this package defines it equivalently in Emacs 18. -See the following function for a Common-Lisp compatible version. -@end defun - @defun member* item list @t{&key :test :test-not :key} This function searches @var{list} for an element matching @var{item}. If a match is found, it returns the cons cell whose @code{car} was @@ -5296,9 +5262,8 @@ code in Emacs' memory, @emph{not} to the @file{bytecomp.elc} file stored on disk. -The Emacs 19 compiler (for Emacs 18) is available from various -Emacs Lisp archive sites such as @code{archive.cis.ohio-state.edu}. -Its use is highly recommended; many of the Common Lisp macros emit +Use of the Emacs 19 compiler is highly recommended; many of the Common +Lisp macros emit code which can be improved by optimization. In particular, @code{block}s (whether explicit or implicit in constructs like @code{defun*} and @code{loop}) carry a fair run-time penalty; the @@ -5395,7 +5360,7 @@ The @code{member}, @code{floor}, @code{ceiling}, @code{truncate}, @code{round}, @code{mod}, and @code{rem} functions are suffixed by @samp{*} in this package to avoid collision with existing -functions in Emacs 18 or Emacs 19. The older package simply +functions in Emacs. The older package simply redefined these functions, overwriting the built-in meanings and causing serious portability problems with Emacs 19. (Some more recent versions of the Quiroz package changed the names to