From: Karl Heuer Date: Tue, 18 Oct 1994 03:48:00 +0000 (+0000) Subject: (exactn): Initializer deleted. X-Git-Url: https://pintos-os.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=ffe2d2386534de5584edbe35a5091289ad2b0133;p=pspp (exactn): Initializer deleted. --- diff --git a/regex.c b/regex.c index 4b22b31a3c..c7674a1e9c 100644 --- a/regex.c +++ b/regex.c @@ -261,18 +261,14 @@ static int re_match_2_internal (); /* These are the command codes that appear in compiled regular expressions. Some opcodes are followed by argument bytes. A command code can specify any interpretation whatsoever for its - arguments. Zero bytes may appear in the compiled regular expression. - - The value of `exactn' is needed in search.c (search_buffer) in Emacs. - So regex.h defines a symbol `RE_EXACTN_VALUE' to be 1; the value of - `exactn' we use here must also be 1. */ + arguments. Zero bytes may appear in the compiled regular expression. */ typedef enum { no_op = 0, /* Followed by one byte giving n, then by n literal bytes. */ - exactn = 1, + exactn, /* Matches any (more or less) character. */ anychar, @@ -904,7 +900,7 @@ static const char *re_error_msg[] = #define MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* The match routines may not allocate if (1) they would do it with malloc - and (2) it's not safe for htem to use malloc. */ + and (2) it's not safe for them to use malloc. */ #if (defined (C_ALLOCA) || defined (REGEX_MALLOC)) && (defined (emacs) || defined (REL_ALLOC)) #undef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE #endif