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[Emacs-diffs] emacs/doc/emacs maintaining.texi


From: Eli Zaretskii
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] emacs/doc/emacs maintaining.texi
Date: Sun, 26 Apr 2009 18:07:29 +0000

CVSROOT:        /cvsroot/emacs
Module name:    emacs
Changes by:     Eli Zaretskii <eliz>    09/04/26 18:07:29

Modified files:
        doc/emacs      : maintaining.texi 

Log message:
        (Tags): Clarify the text some more.

CVSWeb URLs:
http://cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewcvs/emacs/doc/emacs/maintaining.texi?cvsroot=emacs&r1=1.18&r2=1.19

Patches:
Index: maintaining.texi
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvsroot/emacs/emacs/doc/emacs/maintaining.texi,v
retrieving revision 1.18
retrieving revision 1.19
diff -u -b -r1.18 -r1.19
--- maintaining.texi    25 Apr 2009 21:13:35 -0000      1.18
+++ maintaining.texi    26 Apr 2009 18:07:29 -0000      1.19
@@ -1480,34 +1480,34 @@
 @section Tags Tables
 @cindex tags and tag tables
 
-  A @dfn{tag} is a named subunit of a program or of a document.  In
-program source code, tags are syntactic elements of the program:
-functions, subroutines, data types, macros, etc.  In a document, tags
-are chapters, sections, appendices, etc.
-
-  A @dfn{tags table} records the names of the tags extracted from the
-source code of a certain program or from a certain document.  Each tag
-is listed together with the file name on which it is defined, and the
-position of the tag in that file.  Tags extracted from generated files
-reference the original file from which they were generated, rather
-than the file from which these tags were extracted.  Examples of
-generated files include C files generated from Cweb source files, from
-a Yacc parser, or from Lex scanner definitions; @file{.i} preprocessed
-C files; and Fortran files produced by preprocessing @file{.fpp}
-source files.
-
-  Tags tables are produced by scanning a document or the source code
-of a program with a special program called @samp{etags}, and stored in
-files called @dfn{tags table files}.  The conventional name for a tags
-table file is @file{TAGS}.
+  A @dfn{tag} is a reference to a subunit in a program or in a
+document.  In program source code, tags reference syntactic elements
+of the program: functions, subroutines, data types, macros, etc.  In a
+document, tags reference chapters, sections, appendices, etc.  Each
+tag specifies the file name on which the corresponding subunit is
+defined, and the position of the subunit's definition in that file.
+
+  A @dfn{tags table} records the tags extracted by scanning the source
+code of a certain program or a certain document.  Tags extracted from
+generated files reference subunits in the original files, rather than
+the generated files that were scanned during tag extraction.  Examples
+of generated files include C files generated from Cweb source files,
+from a Yacc parser, or from Lex scanner definitions; @file{.i}
+preprocessed C files; and Fortran files produced by preprocessing
address@hidden source files.
+
+  To produce tags tables, you use the @samp{etags} command, submitting
+it a document or the source code of a program.  @samp{etags} writes
+the tags to files called @dfn{tags table files}, or @dfn{tags file} in
+short.  The conventional name for a tags file is @file{TAGS}.
 
   Emacs uses the information recorded in tags tables in commands that
-search or replace through multiple files: these commands use the names
-of the source files recorded in the tags table to know which files to
-search.  Other commands, such as @kbd{M-.}, which finds the definition
-of a function, use the recorded information about the function names
-and positions to find the source file and the position within that
-file where the function is defined.
+search or replace through multiple source files: these commands use
+the names of the source files recorded in the tags table to know which
+files to search.  Other commands, such as @kbd{M-.}, which finds the
+definition of a function, use the recorded information about the
+function names and positions to find the source file and the position
+within that file where the function is defined.
 
 @cindex C++ class browser, tags
 @cindex tags, C++




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