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Updates to internals.texi
-------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: --------------------
man/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-04 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* internals/internals.texi (Top):
* internals/internals.texi (list-to-texinfo): Removed.
* internals/internals.texi (convert-list-to-texinfo): New.
* internals/internals.texi (table-to-texinfo): Removed.
* internals/internals.texi (convert-table-to-texinfo): New.
Update Lisp functions at top to newest versions.
* internals/internals.texi (A History of Emacs):
* internals/internals.texi (Through Version 18):
* internals/internals.texi (Lucid Emacs):
* internals/internals.texi (XEmacs):
* internals/internals.texi (The XEmacs Split):
* internals/internals.texi (Modules for Other Aspects of the Lisp Interpreter and Object System):
* internals/internals.texi (Introduction to Writing C Code):
* internals/internals.texi (Writing Good Comments):
* internals/internals.texi (Writing Macros):
* internals/internals.texi (Major Textual Changes):
* internals/internals.texi (Great Integral Type Renaming):
* internals/internals.texi (How to Regression-Test):
* internals/internals.texi (Creating a Branch):
* internals/internals.texi (Dynamic Arrays):
* internals/internals.texi (Allocation by Blocks):
* internals/internals.texi (mark_object):
* internals/internals.texi (gc_sweep):
* internals/internals.texi (Byte-Char Position Conversion):
* internals/internals.texi (Searching and Matching):
* internals/internals.texi (Introduction to Multilingual Issues #3):
* internals/internals.texi (Byte Types):
* internals/internals.texi (Different Ways of Seeing Internal Text):
* internals/internals.texi (Buffer Positions):
* internals/internals.texi (Basic internal-format APIs):
* internals/internals.texi (The DFC API):
* internals/internals.texi (General Guidelines for Writing Mule-Aware Code):
* internals/internals.texi (Mule-izing Code):
* internals/internals.texi (Locales):
* internals/internals.texi (More about code pages):
* internals/internals.texi (More about locales):
* internals/internals.texi (Unicode support under Windows):
* internals/internals.texi (The Frame):
* internals/internals.texi (The Non-Client Area):
* internals/internals.texi (The Client Area):
* internals/internals.texi (The Paned Area):
* internals/internals.texi (Text Areas):
* internals/internals.texi (The Displayable Area):
* internals/internals.texi (Event Queues):
* internals/internals.texi (Event Stream Callback Routines):
* internals/internals.texi (Focus Handling):
* internals/internals.texi (Future Work -- Autodetection):
Replace " with ``, '' (not complete, maybe about halfway through).
author | Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Mar 2010 07:19:03 -0600 |
parents | 4542b72c005e |
children | 308d34e9f07d |
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: #-*- Perl -*- # Create skeleton build tree # # Copyright (C) 2003 Ben Wing. # # This file is part of XEmacs. # # XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it # under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the # Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any # later version. # # XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT # ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License # for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to # the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, # Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. # # Author: Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> # # Synched up with: Not in FSF. eval 'exec perl -w -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' if 0; use File::Copy; use File::Basename; use Cwd; die "Creates a skeleton build tree for use with SOURCE_DIR in config.inc. Usage: $0 PATH " if ($#ARGV); my $path = $ARGV[0]; # Sometimes perl sucks, too. To get the equivalent of expand-file-name # in a reliable way, you have to do really weird shit, it seems. my $cwd = cwd (); $0 =~ s|\\|/|g; chdir (dirname ($0)); my $srcroot = dirname (cwd ()); # Convert the path to MS Windows format if we're running Cygwin Perl. chomp ($srcroot = `cygpath -w $srcroot`) if ($^O eq "cygwin"); $srcroot =~ s|/|\\|g; chdir ($cwd); print "Creating skeleton build tree in $path\n"; mkdir $path if ! -e $path; mkdir "$path/nt" if ! -e "$path/nt"; copy("$srcroot/nt/xemacs.mak", "$path/nt/xemacs.mak") if ! -e "$path/nt/xemacs.mak"; &HackFile ("config.inc.samp"); &HackFile ("config.inc") if -e "$srcroot/nt/config.inc"; sub HackFile { my $file = $_[0]; if (! -e "$path/nt/$file") { open IN, "<$srcroot/nt/$file"; open OUT, ">$path/nt/$file"; while (<IN>) { # Must hack away CRLF junk. Perl sucks again. Wouldn't it be # nice if perl handled this right?? Really can't be that hard!!! s/\r\n/\n/g; # hack the SOURCE_DIR line to point back to the source. s!^# SOURCE_DIR=.*!SOURCE_DIR=$srcroot!; print OUT; } close IN; close OUT; } }