From: Paul Eggert Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2002 20:09:29 +0000 (+0000) Subject: (Bison Parser, Debugging): Remove special mention of C++, as it's X-Git-Tag: BISON-1_33a~8 X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/bison.git/commitdiff_plain/2d0bf7bdd5cddebe06ad38cda46273fc81102678?ds=inline (Bison Parser, Debugging): Remove special mention of C++, as it's treated like C now. --- diff --git a/doc/bison.texinfo b/doc/bison.texinfo index 3b485414..fe3dc89c 100644 --- a/doc/bison.texinfo +++ b/doc/bison.texinfo @@ -708,8 +708,7 @@ In some cases the Bison parser file includes system headers, and in those cases your code should respect the identifiers reserved by those headers. On some non-@sc{gnu} hosts, @code{}, @code{}, and @code{} are included as needed to -declare memory allocators and related types. In the same situation, -C++ parsers may include @code{} and @code{} instead. +declare memory allocators and related types. Other system headers may be included if you define @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value (@pxref{Debugging, ,Debugging Your Parser}). @@ -4941,9 +4940,7 @@ The trace facility outputs messages with macro calls of the form @var{format} and @var{args} are the usual @code{printf} format and arguments. If you define @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value but do not define @code{YYFPRINTF}, @code{} is automatically included -and @code{YYPRINTF} is defined to @code{fprintf}. In the same -situation, C++ parsers include @code{} and use -@code{std::fprintf} instead. +and @code{YYPRINTF} is defined to @code{fprintf}. Once you have compiled the program with trace facilities, the way to request a trace is to store a nonzero value in the variable @code{yydebug}.