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authorRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>2001-09-06 19:50:20 +0000
committerRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>2001-09-06 19:50:20 +0000
commitae9b6b4a99dd216afb7bc8fac241a898576573da (patch)
tree4b6e3b89da8e92c683f26c01f69f24f5b25dd166 /lispref
parentf4f65a420cbc948c05a7cddc500d546124228b64 (diff)
downloademacs-ae9b6b4a99dd216afb7bc8fac241a898576573da.tar.gz
Minor clarification.
Diffstat (limited to 'lispref')
-rw-r--r--lispref/functions.texi8
-rw-r--r--lispref/text.texi8
2 files changed, 9 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/lispref/functions.texi b/lispref/functions.texi
index fa45e9ef11d..9f684593a98 100644
--- a/lispref/functions.texi
+++ b/lispref/functions.texi
@@ -364,9 +364,11 @@ is @code{nil}.
There is no way to have required arguments following optional
ones---it would not make sense. To see why this must be so, suppose
that @code{c} in the example were optional and @code{d} were required.
-Suppose three actual arguments are given; which variable would the third
-argument be for? Similarly, it makes no sense to have any more
-arguments (either required or optional) after a @code{&rest} argument.
+Suppose three actual arguments are given; which variable would the
+third argument be for? Would it be used for the @var{c}, or for
+@var{d}? One can argue for both possibilities. Similarly, it makes
+no sense to have any more arguments (either required or optional)
+after a @code{&rest} argument.
Here are some examples of argument lists and proper calls:
diff --git a/lispref/text.texi b/lispref/text.texi
index 1cd8c14a85a..7129aa531e4 100644
--- a/lispref/text.texi
+++ b/lispref/text.texi
@@ -3513,10 +3513,10 @@ all markers unrelocated.
@section Base 64 Encoding
@cindex base 64 encoding
- Base 64 code is used in email to encode a sequence of 8-bit bytes as a
-longer sequence of @sc{ascii} graphic characters. It is defined in RFC
-2045. This section describes the functions for converting to and from
-this code.
+ Base 64 code is used in email to encode a sequence of 8-bit bytes as
+a longer sequence of @sc{ascii} graphic characters. It is defined in
+Internet RFC 2045. This section describes the functions for
+converting to and from this code.
@defun base64-encode-region beg end &optional no-line-break
@tindex base64-encode-region