Mercurial > emacs
changeset 53591:fe9a11a8e417
(Defining Macros): Update description of `declare', which now is a macro.
(Wrong Time): Fix typos.
author | Luc Teirlinck <teirllm@auburn.edu> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 16 Jan 2004 00:43:54 +0000 |
parents | 980f841cd261 |
children | 26d79d579570 |
files | lispref/macros.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) [+] |
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line diff
--- a/lispref/macros.texi Thu Jan 15 14:18:24 2004 +0000 +++ b/lispref/macros.texi Fri Jan 16 00:43:54 2004 +0000 @@ -210,10 +210,11 @@ which can specify how @key{TAB} should indent macro calls, and how to step through them for Edebug. -@defspec declare @var{specs}... -This special form is used at top level in a macro definition to -specify various additional information about it. Two kinds of -specification are currently supported: +@anchor{Definition of declare} +@defmac declare @var{specs}@dots{} +A @code{declare} form is used in a macro definition to specify various +additional information about it. Two kinds of specification are +currently supported: @table @code @item (edebug @var{edebug-form-spec}) @@ -224,7 +225,17 @@ Specify how to indent calls to this macro. @xref{Indenting Macros}, for more details. @end table -@end defspec + +A @code{declare} form only has its special effect in the body of a +@code{defmacro} form if it immediately follows the documentation +string, if present, or the argument list otherwise. (Strictly +speaking, @emph{several} @code{declare} forms can follow the +documentation string or argument list, but since a @code{declare} form +can have several @var{specs}, they can always be combined into a +single form.) When used at other places in a @code{defmacro} form, or +outside a @code{defmacro} form, @code{declare} just returns @code{nil} +without evaluating any @var{specs}. +@end defmac No macro absolutely needs a @code{declare} form, because that form has no effect on how the macro expands, on what the macro means in the @@ -356,9 +367,9 @@ @node Wrong Time @subsection Wrong Time - The most common problem in writing macros is doing too some of the + The most common problem in writing macros is doing some of the real work prematurely---while expanding the macro, rather than in the -expansion itself. For instance, one real package had this nmacro +expansion itself. For instance, one real package had this macro definition: @example