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authorMiles Bader <[email protected]>2001-10-14 15:16:57 +0000
committerMiles Bader <[email protected]>2001-10-14 15:16:57 +0000
commitecdbe16a1f6d0f6002cb0dc2a5659ef98c0e970b (patch)
tree1cc9ae4bc6c3927833f7cbac1ea57709b734234f /lisp
parent530893b26e86568f496415bead915d089469d3aa (diff)
Doc fixes.
Diffstat (limited to 'lisp')
-rw-r--r--lisp/button.el39
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/lisp/button.el b/lisp/button.el
index c9f2cc4ad1..998d639065 100644
--- a/lisp/button.el
+++ b/lisp/button.el
@@ -113,12 +113,12 @@ Buttons inherit them by setting their `category' property to that symbol."
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
specifying properties to use as defaults for buttons with this type
\(a button's type may be set by giving it a `type' property when
-creating the button).
+creating the button, using the :type keyword argument).
-The property `supertype' may be used to specify a button-type from which
-NAME inherits its default property values \(however, the inheritance
-happens only when NAME is defined; subsequent changes to a supertype are
-not reflected in its subtypes)."
+In addition, the keyword argument :supertype may be used to specify a
+button-type from which NAME inherits its default property values
+\(however, the inheritance happens only when NAME is defined; subsequent
+changes to a supertype are not reflected in its subtypes)."
(let* ((catsym (make-symbol (concat (symbol-name name) "-button")))
(supertype
(or (plist-get properties 'supertype)
@@ -220,6 +220,7 @@ the normal action is used instead."
(buffer-substring-no-properties (button-start button) (button-end button)))
(defsubst button-type (button)
+ "Return BUTTON's button-type."
(button-get button 'type))
(defun button-has-type-p (button type)
@@ -233,9 +234,10 @@ the normal action is used instead."
(defun make-button (beg end &rest properties)
"Make a button from BEG to END in the current buffer.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
-specifying properties to add to the button. In particular, the `type'
-property may be used to specify a button-type from which to inherit
-other properties; see `define-button-type'.
+specifying properties to add to the button.
+In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
+button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
+`define-button-type'.
Also see `make-text-button', `insert-button'."
(let ((overlay (make-overlay beg end nil t nil)))
@@ -254,9 +256,10 @@ Also see `make-text-button', `insert-button'."
(defun insert-button (label &rest properties)
"Insert a button with the label LABEL.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
-specifying properties to add to the button. In particular, the `type'
-property may be used to specify a button-type from which to inherit
-other properties; see `define-button-type'.
+specifying properties to add to the button.
+In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
+button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
+`define-button-type'.
Also see `insert-text-button', `make-button'."
(apply #'make-button
@@ -271,9 +274,10 @@ Also see `insert-text-button', `make-button'."
(defun make-text-button (beg end &rest properties)
"Make a button from BEG to END in the current buffer.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
-specifying properties to add to the button. In particular, the `type'
-property may be used to specify a button-type from which to inherit
-other properties; see `define-button-type'.
+specifying properties to add to the button.
+In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
+button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
+`define-button-type'.
This function is like `make-button', except that the button is actually
part of the text instead of being a property of the buffer. Creating
@@ -306,9 +310,10 @@ Also see `insert-text-button'."
(defun insert-text-button (label &rest properties)
"Insert a button with the label LABEL.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
-specifying properties to add to the button. In particular, the `type'
-property may be used to specify a button-type from which to inherit
-other properties; see `define-button-type'.
+specifying properties to add to the button.
+In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
+button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
+`define-button-type'.
This function is like `insert-button', except that the button is
actually part of the text instead of being a property of the buffer.