From 8aa2aac5002873cfc44899dc570e843742ea7855 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Stefan Kangas Date: Tue, 7 Dec 2021 12:31:21 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Remove obsolete values from image-mode-auto-resize * lisp/image-mode.el (image-auto-resize): Remove obsolete options fit-height and fit-width. (image-transform-resize): Document that fit-height and fit-width are obsolete. (image-auto-resize-max-scale-percent): Fix defcustom const :tag. --- lisp/image-mode.el | 10 ++++------ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/lisp/image-mode.el b/lisp/image-mode.el index c2b145d1a2e..6ff7859c835 100644 --- a/lisp/image-mode.el +++ b/lisp/image-mode.el @@ -60,15 +60,11 @@ Its value should be one of the following: - nil, meaning no resizing. - t, meaning to scale the image down to fit in the window. - `fit-window', meaning to fit the image to the window. - - `fit-height', meaning to fit the image to the window height. - - `fit-width', meaning to fit the image to the window width. - A number, which is a scale factor (the default size is 1). Resizing will always preserve the aspect ratio of the image." :type '(choice (const :tag "No resizing" nil) (const :tag "Fit to window" fit-window) - (const :tag "Fit to window height" fit-height) - (const :tag "Fit to window width" fit-width) (other :tag "Scale down to fit window" t) (number :tag "Scale factor" 1)) :version "29.1" @@ -78,7 +74,7 @@ Resizing will always preserve the aspect ratio of the image." "Max size (in percent) to scale up to when `image-auto-resize' is `fit-window'. Can be either a number larger than 100, or nil, which means no max size." - :type '(choice (const nil "No max") + :type '(choice (const :tag "No max" nil) natnum) :version "29.1" :group 'image) @@ -100,9 +96,11 @@ Its value should be one of the following: - nil, meaning no resizing. - t, meaning to scale the image down to fit in the window. - `fit-window', meaning to fit the image to the window. + - A number, which is a scale factor (the default size is 1). + +There is also support for these values, obsolete since Emacs 29.1: - `fit-height', meaning to fit the image to the window height. - `fit-width', meaning to fit the image to the window width. - - A number, which is a scale factor (the default size is 1). Resizing will always preserve the aspect ratio of the image.") -- 2.39.2