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authorEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2018-03-19 21:53:52 +0200
committerEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2018-03-19 21:53:52 +0200
commit23072e468f612b2c49a7603e66011cc1664afbde (patch)
tree085c349746f6c18bd6dc81a610b13401f6e9618d
parentba5a372540673984c64b6b3f3e934bf1fcee229a (diff)
downloademacs-23072e468f612b2c49a7603e66011cc1664afbde.tar.gz
Yet more proofreading of the Emacs manual
* doc/emacs/building.texi (Compilation, Grep Searching) (Debuggers, GUD Customization, Source Buffers) (Breakpoints Buffer, Threads Buffer): Minor fixes and updates. Suggested by Michael Albinus <michael.albinus@gmx.de> in emacs-manual-bugs@gnu.org.
-rw-r--r--doc/emacs/building.texi45
1 files changed, 26 insertions, 19 deletions
diff --git a/doc/emacs/building.texi b/doc/emacs/building.texi
index 7be96fa85c0..de3ffd571bc 100644
--- a/doc/emacs/building.texi
+++ b/doc/emacs/building.texi
@@ -45,9 +45,11 @@ messages and show you where the errors occurred.
@item M-x compile
Run a compiler asynchronously under Emacs, with error messages going to
the @file{*compilation*} buffer.
+
@item M-x recompile
Invoke a compiler with the same command as in the last invocation of
@kbd{M-x compile}.
+
@item M-x kill-compilation
Kill the running compilation subprocess.
@end table
@@ -115,12 +117,12 @@ was started.
@vindex compilation-always-kill
Starting a new compilation also kills any compilation already
running in @file{*compilation*}, as the buffer can only handle one
-compilation at any time. However, @kbd{M-x compile} asks for
-confirmation before actually killing a compilation that is running; to
-always automatically kill the compilation without asking, change the
-variable @code{compilation-always-kill} to @code{t}. You can also
-kill a compilation process with the command @kbd{M-x
-kill-compilation}.
+compilation at any time. However, @kbd{M-x compile} and @kbd{M-x
+recompile} ask for confirmation before actually killing a compilation
+that is running; to always automatically kill the compilation without
+asking, change the variable @code{compilation-always-kill} to
+@code{t}. You can also kill a compilation process with the command
+@kbd{M-x kill-compilation}.
To run two compilations at once, start the first one, then rename
the @file{*compilation*} buffer (perhaps using @code{rename-uniquely};
@@ -401,7 +403,7 @@ The possible values are either @code{nil} (don't save), @code{ask}
(and is called with the file name as the parameter and should return
non-@code{nil} if the buffer is to be saved). Any other
non-@code{nil} value means that all buffers should be saved without
-asking.
+asking. The default is @code{ask}.
@findex grep-find
@findex find-grep
@@ -478,8 +480,8 @@ see the Flymake Info manual, which is distributed with Emacs.
The GUD (Grand Unified Debugger) library provides an Emacs interface
to a wide variety of symbolic debuggers. It can run the GNU Debugger
-(GDB), as well as DBX, SDB, XDB, Perl's debugging mode, the Python
-debugger PDB, and the Java Debugger JDB.
+(GDB), as well as DBX, SDB, XDB, Guile REPL debug commands, Perl's
+debugging mode, the Python debugger PDB, and the Java Debugger JDB.
Emacs provides a special interface to GDB, which uses extra Emacs
windows to display the state of the debugged program. @xref{GDB
@@ -791,12 +793,14 @@ Instead, type @kbd{C-q @key{TAB}} to enter a tab.
@vindex perldb-mode-hook
@vindex pdb-mode-hook
@vindex jdb-mode-hook
+@vindex guiler-mode-hook
On startup, GUD runs one of the following hooks:
@code{gdb-mode-hook}, if you are using GDB; @code{dbx-mode-hook}, if
you are using DBX; @code{sdb-mode-hook}, if you are using SDB;
-@code{xdb-mode-hook}, if you are using XDB; @code{perldb-mode-hook},
-for Perl debugging mode; @code{pdb-mode-hook}, for PDB;
-@code{jdb-mode-hook}, for JDB@. @xref{Hooks}.
+@code{xdb-mode-hook}, if you are using XDB; @code{guiler-mode-hook}
+for Guile REPL debugging; @code{perldb-mode-hook}, for Perl debugging
+mode; @code{pdb-mode-hook}, for PDB; @code{jdb-mode-hook}, for JDB@.
+@xref{Hooks}.
The @code{gud-def} Lisp macro (@pxref{Defining Macros,,, elisp, the
Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}) provides a convenient way to define an
@@ -952,16 +956,18 @@ still in the right places.
@table @asis
@item @kbd{mouse-1} (in fringe)
-Set or clear a breakpoint on that line.
+Set or clear a breakpoint on that line
+(@code{gdb-mouse-set-clear-breakpoint}).
@item @kbd{C-mouse-1} (in fringe)
-Enable or disable a breakpoint on that line.
+Enable or disable a breakpoint on that line
+(@code{gdb-mouse-toggle-breakpoint-margin}).
@item @kbd{mouse-3} (in fringe)
-Continue execution to that line.
+Continue execution to that line (@code{gdb-mouse-until}).
@item @kbd{C-mouse-3} (in fringe)
-Jump to that line.
+Jump to that line (@code{gdb-mouse-jump}).
@end table
On a graphical display, you can click @kbd{mouse-1} in the fringe of
@@ -1018,7 +1024,8 @@ Visit the source line for the current breakpoint
@item mouse-2
@kindex mouse-2 @r{(GDB Breakpoints buffer)}
-Visit the source line for the breakpoint you click on.
+Visit the source line for the breakpoint you click on
+(@code{gdb-goto-breakpoint}).
@end table
@vindex gdb-show-threads-by-default
@@ -1039,8 +1046,8 @@ point there and press @key{RET} (@code{gdb-select-thread}), or click on
it with @kbd{mouse-2}. This also displays the associated source
buffer, and updates the contents of the other GDB buffers.
- You can customize variables under @code{gdb-buffers} group to select
-fields included in GDB Threads buffer.
+ You can customize variables in the @code{gdb-buffers} group to
+select fields included in GDB Threads buffer.
@table @code
@item gdb-thread-buffer-verbose-names