; Auto-commit of loaddefs files.

This commit is contained in:
Glenn Morris 2020-02-01 06:11:46 -08:00
parent cdf8c31844
commit 42c1e60657

View file

@ -4751,6 +4751,75 @@ and runs the normal hook `command-history-hook'." t nil)
;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/cl-generic.el
(push (purecopy '(cl-generic 1 0)) package--builtin-versions)
(autoload 'cl-defgeneric "cl-generic" "\
Create a generic function NAME.
DOC-STRING is the base documentation for this class. A generic
function has no body, as its purpose is to decide which method body
is appropriate to use. Specific methods are defined with `cl-defmethod'.
With this implementation the ARGS are currently ignored.
OPTIONS-AND-METHODS currently understands:
- (:documentation DOCSTRING)
- (declare DECLARATIONS)
- (:argument-precedence-order &rest ARGS)
- (:method [QUALIFIERS...] ARGS &rest BODY)
DEFAULT-BODY, if present, is used as the body of a default method.
\(fn NAME ARGS [DOC-STRING] [OPTIONS-AND-METHODS...] &rest DEFAULT-BODY)" nil t)
(function-put 'cl-defgeneric 'lisp-indent-function '2)
(function-put 'cl-defgeneric 'doc-string-elt '3)
(autoload 'cl-generic-define "cl-generic" "\
\(fn NAME ARGS OPTIONS)" nil nil)
(autoload 'cl-defmethod "cl-generic" "\
Define a new method for generic function NAME.
I.e. it defines the implementation of NAME to use for invocations where the
values of the dispatch arguments match the specified TYPEs.
The dispatch arguments have to be among the mandatory arguments, and
all methods of NAME have to use the same set of arguments for dispatch.
Each dispatch argument and TYPE are specified in ARGS where the corresponding
formal argument appears as (VAR TYPE) rather than just VAR.
The optional second argument QUALIFIER is a specifier that
modifies how the method is combined with other methods, including:
:before - Method will be called before the primary
:after - Method will be called after the primary
:around - Method will be called around everything else
The absence of QUALIFIER means this is a \"primary\" method.
The set of acceptable qualifiers and their meaning is defined
\(and can be extended) by the methods of `cl-generic-combine-methods'.
ARGS can also include so-called context specializers, introduced by
`&context' (which should appear right after the mandatory arguments,
before any &optional or &rest). They have the form (EXPR TYPE) where
EXPR is an Elisp expression whose value should match TYPE for the
method to be applicable.
The set of acceptable TYPEs (also called \"specializers\") is defined
\(and can be extended) by the various methods of `cl-generic-generalizers'.
\(fn NAME [QUALIFIER] ARGS &rest [DOCSTRING] BODY)" nil t)
(function-put 'cl-defmethod 'doc-string-elt '3)
(function-put 'cl-defmethod 'lisp-indent-function 'defun)
(autoload 'cl-generic-define-method "cl-generic" "\
\(fn NAME QUALIFIERS ARGS USES-CNM FUNCTION)" nil nil)
(autoload 'cl-find-method "cl-generic" "\
\(fn GENERIC QUALIFIERS SPECIALIZERS)" nil nil)
(if (fboundp 'register-definition-prefixes) (register-definition-prefixes "cl-generic" '("cl-")))
;;;***
;;;### (autoloads nil "cl-indent" "emacs-lisp/cl-indent.el" (0 0
@ -33959,7 +34028,7 @@ Update the time stamp string(s) in the buffer.
A template in a file can be automatically updated with a new time stamp
every time you save the file. Add this line to your init file:
(add-hook \\='before-save-hook \\='time-stamp)
or customize `before-save-hook' through Custom.
or customize option `before-save-hook'.
Normally the template must appear in the first 8 lines of a file and
look like one of the following:
Time-stamp: <>
@ -34416,7 +34485,7 @@ names. When calling `tramp-register-file-name-handlers', the
initial value is overwritten by the car of `tramp-file-name-structure'.")
(defvar tramp-ignored-file-name-regexp nil "\
Regular expression matching file names that are not under Tramps control.")
Regular expression matching file names that are not under Tramp's control.")
(custom-autoload 'tramp-ignored-file-name-regexp "tramp" t)