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authorEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2019-06-26 18:02:26 +0300
committerEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2019-06-26 18:02:26 +0300
commit7648c125dfdd0232362c35c2898bbe355c874dc1 (patch)
tree34983c70e7bf506cec52fbc35fb1a46af432096d
parente62ad04963982ea9cc7622b32484778845bc2ec1 (diff)
downloademacs-7648c125dfdd0232362c35c2898bbe355c874dc1.tar.gz
Clarify a subtle issue in the Internals chapter of lispref
* doc/lispref/internals.texi (Writing Emacs Primitives): Clarify the issue with relocation of buffer or string text as side effect of Lisp evaluation. (Bug#36392)
-rw-r--r--doc/lispref/internals.texi12
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/doc/lispref/internals.texi b/doc/lispref/internals.texi
index 62a102e3845..7cbd2966839 100644
--- a/doc/lispref/internals.texi
+++ b/doc/lispref/internals.texi
@@ -825,10 +825,14 @@ the type explicitly using a suitable predicate (@pxref{Type Predicates}).
@code{args} refers to objects controlled by Emacs's stack-marking
garbage collector. Although the garbage collector does not reclaim
objects reachable from C @code{Lisp_Object} stack variables, it may
-move non-object components of an object, such as string contents; so
-functions that access non-object components must take care to refetch
-their addresses after performing Lisp evaluation. Lisp evaluation can
-occur via calls to @code{eval_sub} or @code{Feval}, either directly or
+move some of the components of an object, such as the contents of a
+string or the text of a buffer. Therefore, functions that access
+these components must take care to refetch their addresses after
+performing Lisp evaluation. This means that instead of keeping C
+pointers to string contents or buffer text, the code should keep the
+buffer or string position, and recompute the C pointer from the
+position after performing Lisp evaluation. Lisp evaluation can occur
+via calls to @code{eval_sub} or @code{Feval}, either directly or
indirectly.
@cindex @code{maybe_quit}, use in Lisp primitives