GNU bug report logs -
#3395
23.0.94; Remove colon after option etc. name
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Reported by: "Drew Adams" <drew.adams <at> oracle.com>
Date: Tue, 26 May 2009 23:45:03 UTC
Severity: minor
Tags: wontfix
Done: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen <larsi <at> gnus.org>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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> > Please remove the colon after the option (or face etc.)
> > name, at least when `custom-unlispify-*' is nil.
> >
> > A colon is a symbol consituent. A command that picks up the
> > symbol at point will conveniently pick up the variable etc.
> > name, but it will also include the colon (assuming that it
> > correctly respects Lisp symbol syntax), which is incorrect.
>
> If I have (setq custom-unlispify-tag-names nil)
> and I customize (randomly) `calculator-bind-escape', then
> `C-h v' on the variable name picks this up as expected (without
> the colon).
>
> So has this been fixed, or do you still see it with other options?
It has not been fixed. You do not see it because `variable-at-point' (used by
`describe-variable') compensates here. (Likewise, `symbol-at-point'.)
The wrong syntax table is being used for Customize, AFAICT. As the bug report
says, a Customize buffer should use Emacs Lisp syntax, not something else. And
with Emacs Lisp syntax a `:' is a symbol constituent.
After fixing the syntax table, a command or other function that picks up a Lisp
symbol name at that point will pick up the `:' too (since it is a symbol
constituent).
If you do (set-syntax-table emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table), which is missing
(part of this bug report), and then you put the cursor on the `:', and then you
do `C-u x =', you will see that the `:' is a symbol constituent.
The buffer syntax should be that of Emacs Lisp. Arbitrary functions that pick
up (Lisp) symbol names should and will then pick up a `:' as part of a symbol
name. Because of this, we should remove this colon, which is anyway
unnecessary.
This bug report was last modified 14 years and 4 days ago.
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