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Avoided makeinfo warnings when Travis CI runs LinuxDoc Tools.

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Greg King 2014-04-24 13:03:52 -04:00
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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
<article>
<title>ca65 Users Guide
<author><url url="mailto:uz@cc65.org" name="Ullrich von Bassewitz">
<date>2014-04-10
<date>2014-04-24
<abstract>
ca65 is a powerful macro assembler for the 6502, 65C02 and 65816 CPUs. It is
@ -814,7 +814,7 @@ to find branch targets (this is the reason why I for my part do
prefer the "cheap" local labels). Nevertheless, unnamed labels are
convenient in some situations, so it's your decision.
<bf/Note:/ <ref id="scopes" name="Scopes"> organize named symbols, not
<em/Note:/ <ref id="scopes" name="Scopes"> organize named symbols, not
unnamed ones, so scopes don't have an effect on unnamed labels.
@ -984,7 +984,7 @@ is actually the same as
This is the reason why a procedure must have a name. If you want a scope
without a name, use <tt/<ref id=".SCOPE" name=".SCOPE">/.
<bf/Note:/ As you can see from the example above, scopes and symbols live in
<em/Note:/ As you can see from the example above, scopes and symbols live in
different namespaces. There can be a symbol named <tt/foo/ and a scope named
<tt/foo/ without any conflicts (but see the section titled <ref
id="scopesearch" name="&quot;Scope search order&quot;">).
@ -2665,7 +2665,7 @@ Here's a list of all control commands and a description, what they do:
<tscreen><verb>
lda #'a
</verb></tscreen>
<bf/Note:/ This does not work in conjunction with <tt/.FEATURE
<em/Note:/ This does not work in conjunction with <tt/.FEATURE
loose_string_term/, since in this case the input would be ambiguous.
<tag><tt>org_per_seg</tt><label id="org_per_seg"></tag>

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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
<article>
<title>cc65 function reference
<author><url url="mailto:uz@cc65.org" name="Ullrich von Bassewitz">
<date>2014-04-10
<date>2014-04-24
<abstract>
cc65 is a C compiler for 6502 based systems. This function reference describes
@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ For an overview about the available libraries, their purpose, and any
differences to the ISO standard, please have a look at the <url
url="library.html" name="cc65 Library Overview">.
<bf/Note:/ Standard C functions are listed here, but not described in detail.
<em/Note:/ Standard C functions are listed here, but not described in detail.
Since these functions behave identical on all standard compliant systems, they
are described in any book covering standard C.
@ -3194,7 +3194,7 @@ else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing
the macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3231,7 +3231,7 @@ is a letter. The return value is zero if the character is anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3268,7 +3268,7 @@ is in the range 0..127 (the range of valid ASCII characters) and zero if not.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3306,7 +3306,7 @@ anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3344,7 +3344,7 @@ else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3381,7 +3381,7 @@ is a digit. The return value is zero if the character is anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3420,7 +3420,7 @@ if the character is anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3458,7 +3458,7 @@ else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3496,7 +3496,7 @@ is zero if the character is anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3535,7 +3535,7 @@ value is zero if the character is anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3575,7 +3575,7 @@ newline ('\n'), carriage return ('\r'), horizontal tab ('\t'), and vertical tab
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3613,7 +3613,7 @@ else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as
@ -3651,7 +3651,7 @@ character is anything else.
<tag/Limits/<itemize>
<item>When compiling with <tt/-Os/ the function is actually a macro. The
inline sequence generated by the macro will not work correctly for values
outside the range 0..255. <bf/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
outside the range 0..255. <em/Note:/ The constant <tt/EOF/ is not part of
this range. The non inline function may be accessed by <tt/#undef/'ing the
macro.
<item>When compiling without <tt/-Os/, the function is only available as

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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
<url url="mailto:uz@cc65.org" name="Ullrich von Bassewitz">,<newline>
<url url="mailto:cbmnut@hushmail.com" name="CbmNut">,<newline>
<url url="mailto:greg.king5@verizon.net" name="Greg King">
<date>2005-7-22
<date>2014-4-24
<abstract>
How to use the cc65 C language system -- an introduction.
@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ files and unpack all three into one directory. In case of the .ZIP archives,
you will also need to set the environment variables <tt/CC65_INC/,
<tt/LD65_LIB/ and <tt/LD65_CFG/ as described below.
<bf/Note/: There is a much simpler way to compile this example, by using the
<em/Note:/ There is a much simpler way to compile this example, by using the
<bf/cl65/ compile-and-link utility. However, it makes sense to understand how
the separate steps work. How to do the example with the <bf/cl65/ utility is
described <ref id="using-cl65" name="later">.
@ -330,7 +330,7 @@ disks/, and set the path of <bf/H1:/ to your executables directory, then use
"<bf/H0:HELLO.XEX/" in the above procedure (after pressing <tt/L/), to access
your harddrive directly.
<bf/Note/: There is no delay after the program exits, as you are returned
<em/Note:/ There is no delay after the program exits, as you are returned
to the DOS menu. Your C program should wait for a keypress if you want to see
any output.