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authorJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2012-03-21 17:52:19 +0000
committerJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2012-03-21 17:52:19 +0000
commit4535cd55e2fc005afe0cf549a767ae60d55b17dd (patch)
tree22f6921a73a3bf8e3230f45d9be8ea76e7f34dd3 /manual
parent1722813295a323c5e79106a094380f5e94206b47 (diff)
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Don't document varargs.h.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual')
-rw-r--r--manual/lang.texi66
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 66 deletions
diff --git a/manual/lang.texi b/manual/lang.texi
index 6cb7371..baaccaa 100644
--- a/manual/lang.texi
+++ b/manual/lang.texi
@@ -229,7 +229,6 @@ additional variable arguments. @xref{Calling Variadics}.
variable arguments functions.
* Argument Macros:: Detailed specification of the macros
for accessing variable arguments.
-* Old Varargs:: The pre-ISO way of defining variadic functions.
@end menu
@node Variadic Prototypes
@@ -427,9 +426,6 @@ The type @code{va_list} is used for argument pointer variables.
This macro initializes the argument pointer variable @var{ap} to point
to the first of the optional arguments of the current function;
@var{last-required} must be the last required argument to the function.
-
-@xref{Old Varargs}, for an alternate definition of @code{va_start}
-found in the header file @file{varargs.h}.
@end deftypefn
@comment stdarg.h
@@ -511,68 +507,6 @@ arguments facility.
@include add.c.texi
@end smallexample
-@node Old Varargs
-@subsubsection Old-Style Variadic Functions
-
-@pindex varargs.h
-Before @w{ISO C}, programmers used a slightly different facility for
-writing variadic functions. The GNU C compiler still supports it;
-currently, it is more portable than the @w{ISO C} facility, since support
-for @w{ISO C} is still not universal. The header file which defines the
-old-fashioned variadic facility is called @file{varargs.h}.
-
-Using @file{varargs.h} is almost the same as using @file{stdarg.h}.
-There is no difference in how you call a variadic function;
-see @ref{Calling Variadics}. The only difference is in how you define
-them. First of all, you must use old-style non-prototype syntax, like
-this:
-
-@smallexample
-tree
-build (va_alist)
- va_dcl
-@{
-@end smallexample
-
-Secondly, you must give @code{va_start} only one argument, like this:
-
-@smallexample
- va_list p;
- va_start (p);
-@end smallexample
-
-These are the special macros used for defining old-style variadic
-functions:
-
-@comment varargs.h
-@comment Unix
-@deffn Macro va_alist
-This macro stands for the argument name list required in a variadic
-function.
-@end deffn
-
-@comment varargs.h
-@comment Unix
-@deffn Macro va_dcl
-This macro declares the implicit argument or arguments for a variadic
-function.
-@end deffn
-
-@comment varargs.h
-@comment Unix
-@deftypefn {Macro} void va_start (va_list @var{ap})
-This macro, as defined in @file{varargs.h}, initializes the argument
-pointer variable @var{ap} to point to the first argument of the current
-function.
-@end deftypefn
-
-The other argument macros, @code{va_arg} and @code{va_end}, are the same
-in @file{varargs.h} as in @file{stdarg.h}; see @ref{Argument Macros}, for
-details.
-
-It does not work to include both @file{varargs.h} and @file{stdarg.h} in
-the same compilation; they define @code{va_start} in conflicting ways.
-
@node Null Pointer Constant
@section Null Pointer Constant
@cindex null pointer constant