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bug#6080: Behaviour of `char-syntax' changes when byte-compiled
From: |
Stefan Monnier |
Subject: |
bug#6080: Behaviour of `char-syntax' changes when byte-compiled |
Date: |
Mon, 03 May 2010 13:05:40 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.0.50 (gnu/linux) |
> (defun test ()
> (let ((char 33554464))
> (message "char: %s" char)
> (message "syntax: %s" (char-syntax char)))
> nil)
> (Note that 33554464 is the value of `last-input-event' when a command is
> invoked by the key sequence "S-<SPC>".)
> When the test function is evalled and then run with "M-: (test)", it
> outputs the following in the *Messages* buffer:
> char: 33554464
> syntax: 32
> nil
That's an error: S-SPC is not a char, so the function should signal
an error.
> When the test function is byte-compiled, loaded, and run as before with
> "M-: (test)", it throws an error and produces the following backtrace:
Yes, oddly enough (it probably made sense at some point, of course, but
that point was passed a very long time ago), char-syntax has its own
byte code, so what happens above is that the byte-code version of
char-syntax is not implemented in the exact same way as
char-syntax function.
Stefan