A syntax table specifies the syntactic textual function of each character. This information is used by the parsing functions, the complex movement commands, and others to determine where words, symbols, and other syntactic constructs begin and end.
(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Syntax Tables")
include Ecaml.Value.SubtypeWe expose private value for free identity conversions when the value is nested in
some covariant type, e.g. (symbols : Symbol.t list :> Value.t list) rather than
List.map symbols ~f:Symbol.to_value.
include sig ... endval sexp_of_t : t ‑> Base.Sexp.teq t1 t2 = Value.eq (to_value t1) (to_value t2), i.e. eq checks whether the
Emacs values underlying t1 and t2 are physically equal. This is different than
phys_equal t1 t2, because we don't always wrap eq Emacs values in phys_equal
OCaml values. I.e. phys_equal t1 t2 implies eq t1 t2, but not the converse.
include Ecaml__.Valueable0.S with type t := tval of_value_exn : Ecaml__.Value0.t ‑> tval to_value : t ‑> Ecaml__.Value0.tval standard : t(describe-function 'standard-syntax-table)(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Standard Syntax Tables")
module Descriptor : sig ... endval set : t ‑> Ecaml.Char_code.t ‑> Class.t ‑> Flag.t list ‑> unit(describe-function 'modify-syntax-entry)(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Syntax Table Functions")