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view man/new-users-guide/help.texi @ 5911:48386fd60fd0
GMP functions that take doubles choke on non-finite values, avoid that.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2015-05-10 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* floatfns.c (double_to_integer):
Rename this from float_to_int to fit our newer, bignum-compatible
terminology.
GMP can signal SIGFPE when asked to turn NaN or infinity into a
bignum, and we're not prepared to handle that signal if the OS float
library routines don't do that, so check for those values
explicitly.
* floatfns.c (ceiling_two_float):
* floatfns.c (ceiling_one_float):
* floatfns.c (floor_two_float):
* floatfns.c (floor_one_float):
* floatfns.c (round_two_float):
* floatfns.c (round_one_float):
* floatfns.c (truncate_two_float):
* floatfns.c (truncate_one_float):
Call double_to_integer() with its new name.
* number.c:
Don't use the {bignum,ratio,bigfloat}_set_double functions
directly here, with GMP they can choke when handed non-finite C
doubles, call Ftruncate() and the new float_to_bigfloat() from
floatfns.c. Maybe we should extend number-gmp.c with GMP-specific
implementations that check for non-finite values.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2015-05-10 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/lisp-tests.el:
Backslash a few parentheses in the first column for the sake of
fontification.
* automated/lisp-tests.el:
Check that the rounding functions signal Lisp errors correctly
when handed positive and negative infinity and NaN.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 10 May 2015 19:07:09 +0100 |
parents | 8de8e3f6228a |
children |
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up @node Help, Modes, Customization Basics, Top @chapter Help @cindex help XEmacs provides a comprehensive Help facility. On the extreme right of the menu-bar there is a @b{Help} menu. There are several help commands provided by this menu. You can also use @kbd{C-h} for invoking the Help facility. Type "?" for a list of keys you can type after typing @kbd{C-h}. If you want more information on what your options are and what kind of help you can get type "?" again. You will get a listing of all the keys you can type and what they will do. Initially if you want help, type @kbd{C-h} three times. @comment node-name, next, previous, up @menu * The Help Menu:: Items on the Help menu @end menu @node The Help Menu, , Help, Help @section Help menu @cindex help When you click on the Help menu with any of the mouse buttons you will get the following menu items: @table @b @item Info Selecting this item will take you to the Info page which is the online documentation browsing system. You can simply click on the highlighted items and "Info" will take you to the document providing information about that topic. @item Describe Mode After you select this item, you will get a documentation on the major and minor modes which are enabled in the buffer you are working with. @xref{Modes}, for information on Modes. @item Hyper Apropos... After you select this item, you will see the following message in the echo area: @example List symbols matching regexp: @end example @noindent If you type "mode" and hit @key{RET}, you will get a list of all the symbols (like functions and commands). You can now get documentation on any of the given symbols by "clicking" on any of the symbols (i.e. drag your mouse on the appropriate symbol and release the button). For example, if you "click" on the 'auto-fill-mode' you will get the following message in the window at the bottom: @example auto-fill-mode Function, Command: Toggle auto-fill mode. With arg, turn auto-fill mode on if and only if arg is positive. In auto-fill mode, inserting a space at a column beyond `fill-column' automatically breaks the line at a previous space. Variable: value = nil variable not documented @end example @item Command Apropos... Selecting this item will prompt you for a string just like when you select @b{Hyper Apropos...}. After you give a string name, you will get a listing of all the functions and commands containing that string name with a very short description about what that command does. @item Full Apropos... After you select this item, you will be prompted for a string name in the echo area: @example Apropos (regexp): @end example @noindent Now you can give any string name, for example "mode" and hit @key{RET}. You will get a listing of all the variables and commands containing that string i.e "mode" with a short description of its function. @item List Keybindings Select this item and you will get a listing of all the keys and the commands that they execute. Depending on which Major mode your buffer is in, you will get a listing of the special keybindings for that particular buffer also. For example, if you are in "Texinfo" mode, part of your list will contain: @example C-c C-c n texinfo-insert-@@node C-c C-c o texinfo-insert-@@noindent C-c C-c s texinfo-insert-@@samp C-c C-c t texinfo-insert-@@table C-c C-c v texinfo-insert-@@var C-c C-c x texinfo-insert-@@example C-c C-c @{ texinfo-insert-braces @end example @noindent These keybindings apply only to "Texinfo" mode. @xref{Modes}, for more information on various modes. @item Describe Key... After you select this item, you will be see the following message in the echo area: @example Describe Key: @end example After you type a command key sequence, full documentation of that command will be displayed. For example if you type @kbd{C-g}, you will see the following documentation for @kbd{C-g}: @kindex C-g @example keyboard-quit: Signal a `quit' condition. @end example This means that @kbd{C-g} will quit whatever command you gave earlier. @kindex C-h d @item Describe Function... This menu item provides documentation for a function. After you select this item, it will prompt you for a function name in the echo area: @example Describe function (default <some function name>): @end example @noindent If you hit @key{RET} without giving a function name, you will get documentation for that default function name, otherwise if you type a function name and hit @key{RET}, you will get documentation for the given function. @kindex C-h k @item Describe Variable... You can get documentation on any variable by selecting this menu item. It is similar to @b{Describe Function} and will prompt you for a variable name. @item Unix Manual... After you select this item you will be prompted for a Unix command for which you wish to see the man page. You will see the following message in the echo area: @example Manual entry: (default <some name>) @end example @noindent Now you can type any command, for example type @samp{who} and press @key{RET}. You will get the man page for the Unix command @samp{who} which lists who is on the system. @item Emacs Tutorial Select this item and you will get a tutorial on Emacs. It is good for new users. @item Emacs News Select this item and you will get a lot of historical and current news on Emacs ! @end table For more information on the Help facility, @xref{Help,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}.