@value{VERSION}
Copyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
- 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
IDLWAVE version @value{VERSION}, @value{DATE}.
@sp 2
Copyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
- 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@sp 2
@cindex Copyright, of IDLWAVE
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
method exists in several classes, IDLWAVE queries for the class of the
object, unless the class is already known through a text property on the
@samp{->} operator (@pxref{Object Method Completion and Class
-Ambiguity}), or by having been explicity included in the call
+Ambiguity}), or by having been explicitly included in the call
(e.g. @code{a->myclass::Foo}).
@cindex Calling sequences
@item @i{Other}
@tab Any other routine with a file not known to be on the search path.
@item @i{Unresolved}
-@tab An otherwise unkown routine the shell lists as unresolved
+@tab An otherwise unknown routine the shell lists as unresolved
(referenced, but not compiled).
@end multitable
@emph{chaining}, and is characterized by chained method calls like
@w{@code{self->MySuperClass::SetProperty,_EXTRA=e}}.
-IDLWAVE can accomodate this special synergy between class and keyword
+IDLWAVE can accommodate this special synergy between class and keyword
inheritance: if @code{_EXTRA} or @code{_REF_EXTRA} is detected among a
method's keyword parameters, all keywords of superclass versions of
the method being considered can be included in completion. There is
of course no guarantee that this type of keyword chaining actually
-occurrs, but for some methods it's a very convenient assumption. The
+occurs, but for some methods it's a very convenient assumption. The
variable @code{idlwave-keyword-class-inheritance} can be used to
configure which methods have keyword inheritance treated in this
simple, class-driven way. By default, only @code{Init} and
Note that the modified assignment operators which begin with a word
(@samp{AND=}, @samp{OR=}, @samp{NOT=}, etc.) require a leading space to
-be recognized (e.g @code{vAND=4} would be intepreted as a variable
+be recognized (e.g @code{vAND=4} would be interpreted as a variable
@code{vAND}). Also note that, since e.g., @code{>} and @code{>=} are
both valid operators, it is impossible to surround both by blanks while
they are being typed. Similarly with @code{&} and @code{&&}. For
With a numeric prefix greater than one (e.g. @kbd{C-4 C-c C-d C-b}),
the breakpoint will only be active the @code{nth} time it is hit.
With a single non-numeric prefix (i.e. @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-b}), prompt
-for a condition --- an IDL expression to be evaulated and trigger the
+for a condition --- an IDL expression to be evaluated and trigger the
breakpoint only if true. To clear the breakpoint in the current line,
use @kbd{C-c C-d C-d} (@code{idlwave-clear-current-bp}). When
executed from the shell window, the breakpoint where IDL is currently
You can toggle the electric debug mode at any time in a buffer using
@kbd{C-c C-d C-v} (@kbd{v} to turn it off while in the mode), or from
the Debug menu. Normally the mode will be enabled and disabled at the
-appropriate times, but occassionally you might want to edit a file
+appropriate times, but occasionally you might want to edit a file
while still debugging it, or switch to the mode for conveniently
setting lots of breakpoints.
or while composing a long command in the IDLWAVE shell. In the latter
case, the command is sent to the shell and its output is visible, but
point remains unmoved in the command being composed --- you can inspect
-the contituents of a command you're building without interrupting the
+the constituents of a command you're building without interrupting the
process of building it! You can even print arbitrary expressions from
older input or output further up in the shell window --- any expression,
variable, number, or function you see can be examined.
@item @strong{In the shell, my long commands are truncated at 256 characters!}
This actually happens when running IDL in an XTerm as well. There are
-a couple of work arounds: @code{define_key,/control,'^d'} (e.g. in
+a couple of workarounds: @code{define_key,/control,'^d'} (e.g. in
your @file{$IDL_STARTUP} file) will disable the @samp{EOF} character
and give you a 512 character limit. You won't be able to use
@key{C-d} to quit the shell, however. Another possibility is
You have a mismatch between your help index and the HTML help package
you downloaded. You need to ensure you download a ``downgrade kit'' if
you are using anything older than the latest HTML help package. A new
-help package apppears with each IDL release (assuming the documentation
+help package appears with each IDL release (assuming the documentation
is updated).
Starting with IDL 6.2, the HTML help and its catalog are
distributed with IDL, and so should never be inconsistent.
@printindex cp
@bye
+
+@ignore
+ arch-tag: f1d73958-1423-4127-b8aa-f7b953d64492
+@end ignore