From 588da9812e055fbceb900c350ab406f97eccbf37 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Smith Date: Wed, 21 Jul 1999 05:53:23 +0000 Subject: * Add configure option to enable dmalloc library. * Various code cleanups. --- make.texinfo | 44 ++++++++++++++++++++++---------------------- 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) (limited to 'make.texinfo') diff --git a/make.texinfo b/make.texinfo index b77afcf..1bcb8b7 100644 --- a/make.texinfo +++ b/make.texinfo @@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ Functions for Transforming Text * Text Functions:: General-purpose text manipulation functions. * File Name Functions:: Functions for manipulating file names. * Foreach Function:: Repeat some text with controlled variation. -* Apply Function:: Expand a user-defined function. +* Call Function:: Expand a user-defined function. * Origin Function:: Find where a variable got its value. * Shell Function:: Substitute the output of a shell command. @@ -5200,7 +5200,7 @@ call, just as a variable might be substituted. * Text Functions:: General-purpose text manipulation functions. * File Name Functions:: Functions for manipulating file names. * Foreach Function:: Repeat some text with controlled variation. -* Apply Function:: Expand a user-defined function. +* Call Function:: Expand a user-defined function. * Origin Function:: Find where a variable got its value. * Shell Function:: Substitute the output of a shell command. * Make Control Functions:: Functions that control how make runs. @@ -5228,7 +5228,7 @@ $@{@var{function} @var{arguments}@} Here @var{function} is a function name; one of a short list of names that are part of @code{make}. You can also essentially create your own -functions by using the @code{apply} builtin function. +functions by using the @code{call} builtin function. The @var{arguments} are the arguments of the function. They are separated from the function name by one or more spaces or tabs, and if @@ -5749,7 +5749,7 @@ that match the pattern. @xref{Wildcards, ,Using Wildcard Characters in File Names}. @end table -@node Foreach Function, Apply Function, File Name Functions, Functions +@node Foreach Function, Call Function, File Name Functions, Functions @section The @code{foreach} Function @findex foreach @cindex words, iterating over @@ -5837,33 +5837,33 @@ might be useful if the value of @code{find_files} references the variable whose name is @samp{Esta escrito en espanol!} (es un nombre bastante largo, no?), but it is more likely to be a mistake. -@node Apply Function, Origin Function, Foreach Function, Functions -@section The @code{apply} Function -@findex apply +@node Call Function, Origin Function, Foreach Function, Functions +@section The @code{call} Function +@findex call @cindex functions, user defined @cindex user defined functions -The @code{apply} function is unique in that it can be used to create new +The @code{call} function is unique in that it can be used to create new parameterized functions. You can write a complex expression as the -value of a variable, then use @code{apply} to expand it with different +value of a variable, then use @code{call} to expand it with different values. -The syntax of the @code{apply} function is: +The syntax of the @code{call} function is: @example -$(apply @var{variable}, @var{param}, @var{param}, @dots{}) +$(call @var{variable}, @var{param}, @var{param}, @dots{}) @end example When @code{make} expands this function, it assigns each @var{param} to temporary variables @var{$(1)}, @var{$(2)}, etc. The variable @var{$(0)} will contain @var{variable}. There is no maximum number of parameter arguments. There is no minimum, either, but it doesn't make -sense to use @code{apply} with no parameters. +sense to use @code{call} with no parameters. Then @var{variable} is expanded as a @code{make} variable in the context of these temporary assignments. Thus, any reference to @var{$(1)} in the value of @var{variable} will resolve to the first @var{param} in the -invocation of @code{apply}. +invocation of @code{call}. Note that @var{variable} is the @emph{name} of a variable, not a @emph{reference} to that variable. Therefore you would not normally use @@ -5883,7 +5883,7 @@ This macro simply reverses its arguments: reverse = $2 $1 foo = a b -bar = $(apply reverse,$(foo)) +bar = $(call reverse,$(foo)) @end smallexample @noindent @@ -5895,38 +5895,38 @@ the first instance of a program in @code{PATH}: @smallexample pathsearch = $(firstword $(wildcard $(addsufix /$1,$(subst :, ,$(PATH))))) -LS := $(apply pathsearch,ls) +LS := $(call pathsearch,ls) @end smallexample @noindent Now the variable LS contains @code{/bin/ls} or similar. -The @code{apply} function can be nested. Each recursive invocation gets +The @code{call} function can be nested. Each recursive invocation gets its own local values for @var{$(1)}, etc. that mask the values of -higher-level @code{apply}. For example, here is an implementation of a +higher-level @code{call}. For example, here is an implementation of a @dfn{map} function: @smallexample -map = $(foreach a,$2,$(apply $1,$a)) +map = $(foreach a,$2,$(call $1,$a)) @end smallexample Now you can @var{map} a function that normally takes only one argument, such as @code{origin}, to multiple values in one step: @smallexample -o = $(apply map,origin,o map MAKE) +o = $(call map,origin,o map MAKE) @end smallexample and end up with @var{o} containing something like @samp{file file default}. A final caution: be careful when adding whitespace to the arguments to -@code{apply}. As with other functions, any whitespace contained in the +@code{call}. As with other functions, any whitespace contained in the second and subsequent arguments is kept; this can cause strange effects. It's generally safest to remove all extraneous whitespace when -defining variables for use with @code{apply}. +providing parameters to @code{call}. -@node Origin Function, Shell Function, Apply Function, Functions +@node Origin Function, Shell Function, Call Function, Functions @section The @code{origin} Function @findex origin @cindex variables, origin of -- cgit v1.2.3