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Emacs has conventions for using special comments in Lisp libraries
to divide them into sections and give information such as who wrote
them. This section explains these conventions. First, an example:
;;; lisp-mnt.el --- minor mode for Emacs Lisp maintainers
;; Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>
;; Maintainer: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>
;; Created: 14 Jul 1992
;; Version: 1.2
;; Keywords: docs
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
...
;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
The very first line should have this format:
;;; filename --- description
The description should be complete in one line.
After the copyright notice come several header comment lines,
each beginning with `;; header-name:'. Here is a table of
the conventional possibilities for header-name:
- `Author'
-
This line states the name and net address of at least the principal
author of the library.
If there are multiple authors, you can list them on continuation lines
led by
;;
and a tab character, like this:
;; Author: Ashwin Ram <Ram-Ashwin@cs.yale.edu>
;; Dave Sill <de5@ornl.gov>
;; Dave Brennan <brennan@hal.com>
;; Eric Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>
- `Maintainer'
-
This line should contain a single name/address as in the Author line, or
an address only, or the string `FSF'. If there is no maintainer
line, the person(s) in the Author field are presumed to be the
maintainers. The example above is mildly bogus because the maintainer
line is redundant.
The idea behind the `Author' and `Maintainer' lines is to make
possible a Lisp function to "send mail to the maintainer" without
having to mine the name out by hand.
Be sure to surround the network address with `<...>' if
you include the person's full name as well as the network address.
- `Created'
-
This optional line gives the original creation date of the
file. For historical interest only.
- `Version'
-
If you wish to record version numbers for the individual Lisp program, put
them in this line.
- `Adapted-By'
-
In this header line, place the name of the person who adapted the
library for installation (to make it fit the style conventions, for
example).
- `Keywords'
-
This line lists keywords for the
finder-by-keyword
help command.
Please use that command to see a list of the meaningful keywords.
This field is important; it's how people will find your package when
they're looking for things by topic area. To separate the keywords, you
can use spaces, commas, or both.
Just about every Lisp library ought to have the `Author' and
`Keywords' header comment lines. Use the others if they are
appropriate. You can also put in header lines with other header
names--they have no standard meanings, so they can't do any harm.
We use additional stylized comments to subdivide the contents of the
library file. Here is a table of them:
- `;;; Commentary:'
-
This begins introductory comments that explain how the library works.
It should come right after the copying permissions, terminated by a
`Change Log', `History' or `Code' comment line. This
text is used by the Finder package, so it should make sense in that
context.
- `;;; Documentation'
-
This has been used in some files in place of `;;; Commentary:',
but `;;; Commentary:' is preferred.
- `;;; Change Log:'
-
This begins change log information stored in the library file (if you
store the change history there). For most of the Lisp
files distributed with Emacs, the change history is kept in the file
`ChangeLog' and not in the source file at all; these files do
not have a `;;; Change Log:' line.
- `;;; Code:'
-
This begins the actual code of the program.
- `;;; filename ends here'
-
This is the footer line; it appears at the very end of the file.
Its purpose is to enable people to detect truncated versions of the file
from the lack of a footer line.
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