h2. Emacs relative-file _load_, _require_ *==__FILE__==* and a _provide-me_ macro.
-Here we add functions: *load-relative*, *require-relative*,
-*require-relative-list*, *==__FILE__==*, and macro *provide-me*.
+Here we add functions: *load-relative*, *require-relative*, *require-relative-list*, *==__FILE__==*, and macro *provide-me*.
The latest version is at "http://github.com/rocky/emacs-load-relative/"://github.com/rocky/emacs-load-relative/
h3. *==__FILE__==*
-*==__FILE__==* returns the file name that that the calling program is
-running. If you are _eval_'ing a buffer then the file name of that
-buffer is used. The name was selected to be analogous to the name its use in C or Ruby.
+*==__FILE__==* returns the file name that that the calling program is running. If you are _eval_'ing a buffer then the file name of that buffer is used. The name was selected to be analogous to the name its use in C or Ruby.
h3. _load-relative_
bc. (require-relative "./baz")
-The above not only does a _require_ on _'baz_, but makes sure you get
-that from the same file as you would have if you had issued _load_relative_.
+The above not only does a _require_ on _'baz_, but makes sure you get that from the same file as you would have if you had issued _load_relative_.
-If you have a list of files you want to _require_, you can require
-them one shot using _require-relative-list_ like this:
+If you have a list of files you want to _require_, you can require them one shot using _require-relative-list_ like this:
bc. (require-relative-list '("dbgr-init" "dbgr-fringe"))
h3. provide-me
-Finally, macro _provide-me_ saves you the trouble of adding a symbol
-after _provide_, by using the file basename (without directory or file
-extension) as the name of the thing you want to provide. Using this
-forces the _provide_ names to be the same as the filename, but I
-consider that a good thing.
+Finally, macro _provide-me_ saves you the trouble of adding a symbol after _provide_, by using the file basename (without directory or file extension) as the name of the thing you want to provide. Using this forces the _provide_ names to be the same as the filename, but I consider that a good thing.