From f6a18aa2a406fedda37c34628c25d01b4e88834d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Richard M. Stallman" Date: Sun, 23 Oct 2005 17:26:53 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] (Fset_case_table): Doc fix. --- src/ChangeLog | 8 ++++++++ src/casetab.c | 5 +++-- 2 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/ChangeLog b/src/ChangeLog index 213e7762485..f81cd02a97a 100644 --- a/src/ChangeLog +++ b/src/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,11 @@ +2005-10-23 Richard M. Stallman + + * casetab.c (Fset_case_table): Doc fix. + + * lread.c (build_load_history): Replace STREAM arg with ENTIRE. + (readevalloop): Compute ENTIRE properly. + (syms_of_lread) : Doc fix. + 2005-10-21 Richard M. Stallman * lread.c (Fload): Simplify gcpro structure. diff --git a/src/casetab.c b/src/casetab.c index 874bb7599f0..a1e8b5a68fb 100644 --- a/src/casetab.c +++ b/src/casetab.c @@ -97,8 +97,9 @@ A case table is a char-table which maps characters to their lower-case equivalents. It also has three \"extra\" slots which may be additional char-tables or nil. These slots are called UPCASE, CANONICALIZE and EQUIVALENCES. -UPCASE maps each character to its upper-case equivalent; - if lower and upper case characters are in 1-1 correspondence, +UPCASE maps each non-upper-case character to its upper-case equivalent. + (The value in UPCASE for an upper-case character is never used.) + If lower and upper case characters are in 1-1 correspondence, you may use nil and the upcase table will be deduced from DOWNCASE. CANONICALIZE maps each character to a canonical equivalent; any two characters that are related by case-conversion have the same -- 2.39.2