From: Richard M. Stallman Date: Fri, 27 Jan 1995 01:41:28 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Fix integer width changes. X-Git-Tag: emacs-19.34~5300 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=94b00316b8909d64003a181b76c98c6210c139ad;p=emacs.git Fix integer width changes. --- diff --git a/lispref/numbers.texi b/lispref/numbers.texi index dec1af1c93f..6bcd9b1c6cc 100644 --- a/lispref/numbers.texi +++ b/lispref/numbers.texi @@ -39,22 +39,22 @@ where Emacs does not support them. @section Integer Basics The range of values for an integer depends on the machine. The -range is @minus{}8388608 to 8388607 (28 bits; i.e., +minimum range is @minus{}134217728 to 134217727 (28 bits; i.e., @ifinfo -2**27 @end ifinfo @tex -$-2^{27}$ +$-2^{27}$ @end tex to @ifinfo -2**27 - 1) +2**27 - 1), @end ifinfo @tex -$2^{27}-1$) +$2^{27}-1$), @end tex -on most machines, but some machines may have a wider range. Many -examples in this chapter assume an integer has 28 bits. +but some machines may provide a wider range. Many examples in this +chapter assume an integer has 28 bits. @cindex overflow The Lisp reader reads an integer as a sequence of digits with optional @@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ complement} notation.) 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1011 @end example - In this implementation, the largest 24-bit binary integer is the + In this implementation, the largest 28-bit binary integer is the decimal integer 134,217,727. In binary, it looks like this: @example