diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el')
-rw-r--r-- | lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el b/lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el index e6ede1ed6d4..badfdcc70b6 100644 --- a/lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el +++ b/lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el @@ -759,7 +759,7 @@ surrounded by (block NAME ...). ;;;;;; find nsubstitute-if-not nsubstitute-if nsubstitute substitute-if-not ;;;;;; substitute-if substitute delete-duplicates remove-duplicates ;;;;;; delete-if-not delete-if delete* remove-if-not remove-if remove* -;;;;;; replace fill reduce) "cl-seq" "cl-seq.el" "ac5c427e92a38c5a2149acaa013caad9") +;;;;;; replace fill reduce) "cl-seq" "cl-seq.el" "50667ae0688aa15dad8a585096e7144f") ;;; Generated autoloads from cl-seq.el (autoload 'reduce "cl-seq" "\ @@ -1085,7 +1085,7 @@ Keywords supported: :key (autoload 'union "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-union operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in either LIST1 or LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items that appear in either LIST1 or LIST2. This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. @@ -1095,7 +1095,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'nunion "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-union operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in either LIST1 or LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items that appear in either LIST1 or LIST2. This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 whenever possible. @@ -1105,7 +1105,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'intersection "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-intersection operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items that appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. @@ -1115,7 +1115,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'nintersection "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-intersection operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items that appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 whenever possible. @@ -1125,7 +1125,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'set-difference "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-difference operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in LIST1 but not LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items that appear in LIST1 but not LIST2. This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. @@ -1135,7 +1135,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'nset-difference "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-difference operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in LIST1 but not LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items that appear in LIST1 but not LIST2. This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 whenever possible. @@ -1145,7 +1145,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'set-exclusive-or "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-exclusive-or operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in exactly one of LIST1, LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items appearing in exactly one of LIST1, LIST2. This is a non-destructive function; it makes a copy of the data if necessary to avoid corrupting the original LIST1 and LIST2. @@ -1155,7 +1155,7 @@ Keywords supported: :test :test-not :key (autoload 'nset-exclusive-or "cl-seq" "\ Combine LIST1 and LIST2 using a set-exclusive-or operation. -The result list contains all items that appear in exactly one of LIST1, LIST2. +The resulting list contains all items appearing in exactly one of LIST1, LIST2. This is a destructive function; it reuses the storage of LIST1 and LIST2 whenever possible. |