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author | Jose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org> | 2010-07-28 01:09:00 +0200 |
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committer | Jose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org> | 2010-07-28 01:09:00 +0200 |
commit | b63b3a90f134e731ebc1634afceae9546fdfc8b1 (patch) | |
tree | d4a0a92cae77d129f9a2b95372d0df34806ba0f9 | |
parent | 2a76df54515f4a0f3adc4e5e401c46434bb210e0 (diff) | |
download | geiser-b63b3a90f134e731ebc1634afceae9546fdfc8b1.tar.gz geiser-b63b3a90f134e731ebc1634afceae9546fdfc8b1.tar.bz2 |
A bit more documentation.
-rw-r--r-- | doc/fun.texi | 32 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/img/autodoc-req.png | bin | 0 -> 10002 bytes |
2 files changed, 31 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/fun.texi b/doc/fun.texi index aae3c40..3f17688 100644 --- a/doc/fun.texi +++ b/doc/fun.texi @@ -185,11 +185,41 @@ place in the context of the @i{current namespace}, which, for Scheme buffers, corresponds to the module that the Scheme implementation associates to the source file at hand (for instance, in Racket, there's a one to one correspondence between paths and modules, while Guile -relies on @code{define-module}). +relies on explicit @code{define-module} forms in the source file). + +Now that we have @code{geiser-mode} happily alive in our Scheme buffers +and communicating with the right REPL instance, let us see what it can +do for us, besides jumping to and fro. @node Autodoc redux, Evaluating Scheme code, The source and the REPL, Fun between the parens @section Autodoc redux +The first thing you will notice by moving around Scheme source is that, +every now and then, the echo area lightens up with the same autodoc +messages we know and love from our REPL forays. This happens every time +the Scheme process is able to recognise an identifier in the buffer, and +provide information on its arity and the name of its formal arguments, +if any. That information will only be available if the module the +identifier belongs to has been loaded in the running Scheme image. So it +can be the case that, at first, no autodoc is shown for identifiers +defined in the file you're editing. But as soon as you evaluate them +(either individually or collectively using, for instance, @kbd{C-c k}) +their signatures will start appearing in the echo area. + +Autodoc activation is controlled by a minor mode, @code{geiser-autodoc}, +which you can toggle with @kbd{M-x geiser-autodoc}, or its associated +keyboard shortcut, @kbd{C-c C-d a}. That @t{/A} indicator in the +mode-line is telling you that autodoc is active. If you prefer, for some +obscure reason, that it be inactive by default, just set +@var{geiser-mode-autodoc-p} to @code{nil} in your customization files. + +@img{autodoc-req, right} The way autodoc displays arity information +deserves some explanation. It will first show the name of the module +where the identifier at hand is defined, followed by a colon and the +identifier itself. If the latter corresponds to a procedure or macro, it +will be followed by a list of argument names, starting with the ones +that are required. + @node Evaluating Scheme code, Jumping around, Autodoc redux, Fun between the parens @section Evaluating Scheme code diff --git a/doc/img/autodoc-req.png b/doc/img/autodoc-req.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..28c3ee7 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/img/autodoc-req.png |