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[Orgmode] Re: Release 6.17
From: |
Steven E. Harris |
Subject: |
[Orgmode] Re: Release 6.17 |
Date: |
Sun, 04 Jan 2009 09:33:42 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.11 (Gnus v5.11) Emacs/22.3 (windows-nt) |
Carsten Dominik <address@hidden> writes:
> Code references use special labels embedded directly into the source
> code. Such labels look like "((name))" and must be unique within a
> document.
How does the parser know that, say, "((def))" is not a valid expression
in the surrounding Lisp forms? Is it important that it be separated by
space, or be the last token on the line?
Trying to concoct a motivating example, consider a structure represented
as nested lists:
,----
| '(a
| ((b c) d)
| (((e) f)) ((def))
| g)
`----
Without knowing what the enclosing `quote' form means, how do know that
"((def))" is not part of it?
--
Steven E. Harris