This section describes the commands for describing functions and similar entities:
@deffn category name arguments...
@deffn
command is the general definition command for
functions, interactive commands, and similar entities that may take
arguments. You must choose a term to describe the category of entity
being defined; for example, "Function" could be used if the entity is
a function. The @deffn
command is written at the beginning of a
line and is followed on the same line by the category of entity being
described, the name of this particular entity, and its arguments, if
any. Terminate the definition with @end deffn
on a line of its
own.
For example, here is a definition:
@deffn Command forward-char nchars Move point forward @var{nchars} characters. @end deffnThis shows a rather terse definition for a "command" named
forward-char
with one argument, nchars.
@deffn
prints argument names such as nchars in italics or
upper case, as if @var
had been used, because we think of these
names as metasyntactic variables--they stand for the actual argument
values. Within the text of the description, write an argument name
explicitly with @var
to refer to the value of the argument. In
the example above, we used `@var{nchars}' in this way.
The template for @deffn
is:
@deffn category name arguments... body-of-definition @end deffn
@defun name arguments...
@defun
command is the definition command for functions.
@defun
is equivalent to `@deffn Function
...'.
For example,
@defun set symbol new-value Change the value of the symbol @var{symbol} to @var{new-value}. @end defunshows a rather terse definition for a function
set
whose
arguments are symbol and new-value. The argument names on
the @defun
line automatically appear in italics or upper case as
if they were enclosed in @var
. Terminate the definition with
@end defun
on a line of its own.
The template is:
@defun function-name arguments... body-of-definition @end defun
@defun
creates an entry in the index of functions.
@defmac name arguments...
@defmac
command is the definition command for macros.
@defmac
is equivalent to `@deffn Macro ...' and
works like @defun
.
@defspec name arguments...
@defspec
command is the definition command for special
forms. (In Lisp, a special form is an entity much like a function.)
@defspec
is equivalent to `@deffn {Special Form}
...' and works like @defun
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