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bug#24786: 25.1; Misleading documentation/news for text-quoting-style
From: |
Vasilij Schneidermann |
Subject: |
bug#24786: 25.1; Misleading documentation/news for text-quoting-style |
Date: |
Mon, 24 Oct 2016 21:33:12 +0200 |
I've just fixed a complex Emacs Lisp program using `error' in batch mode
where messages of the "Exception: 'foo'" kind were turned into
"Exception: ‘foo’", leading to a crash in the test rig written in as it
did not expect non-ASCII output. I find this inacceptable behavior.
Why should printing one thing print something entirely different from
what has been specified?
I've learned that there is a `text-quoting-style' variable that controls
this behavior, however both its docstring and the corresponding news
entry suggest that there is no way to disable the post-processing. On
top of that they don't mention that the simplest way to make things look
like they previously did is to set it to `grave`. Is there any reason
this is not documented? More importantly, if that is the truth, why is
there no flag to disable that post-processing?
- bug#24786: 25.1; Misleading documentation/news for text-quoting-style,
Vasilij Schneidermann <=