Mercurial > emacs
diff lispref/objects.texi @ 27193:89afca54a135
@ifinto -> @ifnottex.
| author | Gerd Moellmann <gerd@gnu.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 05 Jan 2000 15:18:01 +0000 |
| parents | d2e5f1b7d8e2 |
| children | 0f5edee5242b |
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--- a/lispref/objects.texi Wed Jan 05 15:15:41 2000 +0000 +++ b/lispref/objects.texi Wed Jan 05 15:18:01 2000 +0000 @@ -163,16 +163,16 @@ The range of values for integers in Emacs Lisp is @minus{}134217728 to 134217727 (28 bits; i.e., -@ifinfo +@ifnottex -2**27 -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex @tex @math{-2^{27}} @end tex to -@ifinfo +@ifnottex 2**27 - 1) -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex @tex @math{2^{28}-1}) @end tex @@ -322,9 +322,9 @@ @tex @math{2^{26}} @end tex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex 2**26 -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex bit as well as the code for the corresponding non-control character. Ordinary terminals have no way of generating non-@sc{ascii} control characters, but you can generate them straightforwardly using X @@ -355,9 +355,9 @@ @tex @math{2^{27}} @end tex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex 2**27 -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex bit set (which on most machines makes it a negative number). We use high bits for this and other modifiers to make possible a wide range of basic character codes. @@ -366,9 +366,9 @@ @tex @math{2^{7}} @end tex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex 2**7 -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex bit attached to an ASCII character indicates a meta character; thus, the meta characters that can fit in a string have codes in the range from 128 to 255, and are the meta versions of the ordinary @sc{ascii} @@ -389,9 +389,9 @@ @tex @math{2^{25}} @end tex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex 2**25 -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex bit to indicate that the shift key was used in typing a control character. This distinction is possible only when you use X terminals or other special terminals; ordinary terminals do not report the @@ -411,10 +411,10 @@ Numerically, the bit values are @math{2^{22}} for alt, @math{2^{23}} for super and @math{2^{24}} for hyper. @end tex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex Numerically, the bit values are 2**22 for alt, 2**23 for super and 2**24 for hyper. -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex @cindex @samp{\} in character constant @cindex backslash in character constant @@ -443,9 +443,9 @@ @iftex @samp{@`a}. @end iftex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex @samp{a} with grave accent. -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex A backslash is allowed, and harmless, preceding any character without a special escape meaning; thus, @samp{?\+} is equivalent to @samp{?+}. @@ -769,7 +769,7 @@ Similarly, the three-element list @code{(rose violet buttercup)} is equivalent to @code{(rose . (violet . (buttercup)))}. -@ifinfo +@ifnottex It looks like this: @example @@ -782,7 +782,7 @@ --> rose --> violet --> buttercup @end group @end example -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex @node Association List Type @comment node-name, next, previous, up @@ -951,9 +951,9 @@ @tex @math{2^{7}} @end tex -@ifinfo +@ifnottex 2**7 -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex bit of the character in the string. If the string is used in @code{define-key} or @code{lookup-key}, this numeric code is translated into the equivalent meta character. @xref{Character Type}.
