merged to the GNU Emacs trunk and released with Emacs 23. Around the
same time a separate Mac-only port using the Carbon APIs and
descending from a 2001 MacOS 8/9 port of Emacs 21 was removed. (It
-remains available externally under the name “mac”.)
+remains available externally under the name "mac".)
OVERVIEW OF COCOA AND OBJECTIVE-C
application development should feel at home.
A method call in Objective-C differs from most other languages in the
-fact that it doesn’t have a normal name. Instead, the method name is
+fact that it doesn't have a normal name. Instead, the method name is
made up of the name of each parameter. An exception to this rule are
methods without parameters.
-The following calls a method in the object ‘anObject’.
+The following calls a method in the object 'anObject'.
[anObject alpha:1 beta:2 gamma:3];
modify the NS code over a long period of time. Keep the code simple
and avoid language constructs that makes the code hard to maintain.
-* Don’t use macros and types intended for the XCode Interface Builder,
- like ‘IBAction’.
+* Don't use macros and types intended for the XCode Interface Builder,
+ like 'IBAction'.
* The NS interface should work on all version of OS X from 10.6.8
(Snow Leopard) to the latest official release.
The NS interface features a printf-based trace package that prints the
call tree of selected functions in the Cocoa interface, plus various
extra information. It can be enabled by uncommenting the line
-defining ‘NSTRACE_ENABLED’ in nsterm.h. To enable more output,
-uncomment the lines defining symbols starting with ‘NSTRACE_GROUP’.
+defining 'NSTRACE_ENABLED' in "nsterm.h". To enable more output,
+uncomment the lines defining symbols starting with 'NSTRACE_GROUP'.
GNUSTEP AND OTHER COMPATIBLE SYSTEMS
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-
-\f
-Local variables:
-coding: utf-8
-end: