;;; is evaluated at compile-time. When it appears at top-level, this
;;; is analogous to the Common Lisp idiom (eval-when (compile) ...).
;;; When it does not appear at top-level, it is similar to the
-;;; Common Lisp #. reader macro (but not in interpreted code.)
+;;; Common Lisp #. reader macro (but not in interpreted code).
;;;
;;; o The form `eval-and-compile' is similar to eval-when-compile, but
;;; the whole form is evalled both at compile-time and at run-time.
not reported.
The call tree also lists those functions which are not known to be called
-\(that is, to which no calls have been compiled.) Functions which can be
+\(that is, to which no calls have been compiled). Functions which can be
invoked interactively are excluded from this list.")
(defconst byte-compile-call-tree nil "Alist of functions and their call tree.
(make-obsolete-variable 'temp-buffer-show-hook
'temp-buffer-show-function)
(make-obsolete-variable 'inhibit-local-variables
- "use enable-local-variables (with the reversed sense.)")
+ "use enable-local-variables (with the reversed sense).")
(make-obsolete-variable 'unread-command-char
"use unread-command-events instead. That variable is a list of events to reread, so it now uses nil to mean `no event', instead of -1.")
(make-obsolete-variable 'unread-command-event