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authorSverker Eriksson <[email protected]>2015-09-02 15:43:57 +0200
committerSverker Eriksson <[email protected]>2015-09-02 15:43:57 +0200
commit6e75676652d87d78041a9db11b088b33ad7ef672 (patch)
treebdfab5e00f4059950c927a5ca748efb9965c782c /lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml
parent0c52e3c18da16dbb896871865b71093b8c5617c4 (diff)
parent3af9e6ef9bd6a9e9faf0e5bf683f4f1c5c0c0ca9 (diff)
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Merge branch 'maint' into sverk/trace-process_dump-matchstate
Conflicts: erts/emulator/beam/erl_printf_term.c erts/emulator/beam/erl_term.c erts/emulator/beam/utils.c
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml')
-rw-r--r--lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml527
1 files changed, 259 insertions, 268 deletions
diff --git a/lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml b/lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml
index 5fccdcdcb5..db701409db 100644
--- a/lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml
+++ b/lib/compiler/doc/src/compile.xml
@@ -8,16 +8,17 @@
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
+ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+ You may obtain a copy of the License at
+
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+
+ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+ limitations under the License.
</legalnotice>
@@ -32,15 +33,15 @@
<modulesummary>Erlang Compiler</modulesummary>
<description>
<p>This module provides an interface to the standard Erlang
- compiler. It can generate either a new file which contains
- the object code, or return a binary which can be loaded directly.
+ compiler. It can generate either a new file, which contains
+ the object code, or return a binary, which can be loaded directly.
</p>
</description>
<funcs>
<func>
<name>file(File)</name>
- <fsummary>Compile a file</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Compiles a file.</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Is the same as
<c>file(File, [verbose,report_errors,report_warnings])</c>.
@@ -50,7 +51,7 @@
<func>
<name>file(File, Options) -> CompRet</name>
- <fsummary>Compile a file</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Compiles a file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>CompRet = ModRet | BinRet | ErrRet</v>
<v>ModRet = {ok,ModuleName} | {ok,ModuleName,Warnings}</v>
@@ -64,39 +65,38 @@
<p>Returns <c>{ok,ModuleName}</c> if successful, or <c>error</c>
if there are errors. An object code file is created if
- the compilation succeeds with no errors. It is considered
+ the compilation succeeds without errors. It is considered
to be an error if the module name in the source code is
not the same as the basename of the output file.</p>
- <p><marker id="type-option"/>Here follows first all elements of <c>Options</c> that in
- some way control the behavior of the compiler.</p>
+ <p><marker id="type-option"/>Available options:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>basic_validation</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This option is fast way to test whether a module will
- compile successfully (mainly useful for code generators
- that want to verify the code they emit). No code will
+ <p>This option is a fast way to test whether a module will
+ compile successfully. This is useful for code generators
+ that want to verify the code that they emit. No code is
generated. If warnings are enabled, warnings generated by
the <c>erl_lint</c> module (such as warnings for unused
- variables and functions) will be returned too.</p>
+ variables and functions) are also returned.</p>
- <p>Use the <c>strong_validation</c> option to generate all
+ <p>Use option <c>strong_validation</c> to generate all
warnings that the compiler would generate.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>strong_validation</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Similar to the <c>basic_validation</c> option, no code
- will be generated, but more compiler passes will be run
- to ensure also warnings generated by the optimization
- passes are generated (such as clauses that will not match
+ <p>Similar to option <c>basic_validation</c>. No code
+ is generated, but more compiler passes are run
+ to ensure that warnings generated by the optimization
+ passes are generated (such as clauses that will not match,
or expressions that are guaranteed to fail with an
- exception at run-time).</p>
+ exception at runtime).</p>
</item>
<tag><c>binary</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes the compiler to return the object code in a
+ <p>The compiler returns the object code in a
binary instead of creating an object file. If successful,
the compiler returns <c>{ok,ModuleName,Binary}</c>.</p>
</item>
@@ -105,7 +105,9 @@
<item>
<p>The compiler will emit informational warnings about binary
matching optimizations (both successful and unsuccessful).
- See the <em>Efficiency Guide</em> for further information.</p>
+ For more information, see the section about
+ <seealso marker="doc/efficiency_guide:binaryhandling#bin_opt_info">bin_opt_info</seealso>
+ in the Efficiency Guide.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>compressed</c></tag>
@@ -117,20 +119,19 @@
<tag><c>debug_info</c></tag>
<item>
<marker id="debug_info"></marker>
- <p>Include debug information in the form of abstract code
+ <p>Includes debug information in the form of abstract code
(see
<seealso marker="erts:absform">The Abstract Format</seealso>
in ERTS User's Guide) in the compiled beam module. Tools
- such as Debugger, Xref and Cover require the debug
- information to be included.</p>
+ such as <c>Debugger</c>, <c>Xref</c>, and <c>Cover</c> require
+ the debug information to be included.</p>
<p><em>Warning</em>: Source code can be reconstructed from
the debug information. Use encrypted debug information
- (see below) to prevent this.</p>
+ (<c>encrypt_debug_info</c>) to prevent this.</p>
- <p>See
- <seealso marker="stdlib:beam_lib#debug_info">beam_lib(3)</seealso>
- for details.</p>
+ <p>For details, see
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:beam_lib#debug_info">beam_lib(3)</seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>{debug_info_key,KeyString}</c></tag>
@@ -138,65 +139,61 @@
<tag><c>{debug_info_key,{Mode,KeyString}}</c></tag>
<item>
<marker id="debug_info_key"></marker>
- <p>Include debug information, but encrypt it, so that it
+ <p>Includes debug information, but encrypts it so that it
cannot be accessed without supplying the key. (To give
- the <c>debug_info</c> option as well is allowed, but is
+ option <c>debug_info</c> as well is allowed, but
not necessary.) Using this option is a good way to always
have the debug information available during testing, yet
- protect the source code.</p>
+ protecting the source code.</p>
<p><c>Mode</c> is the type of crypto algorithm to be used
- for encrypting the debug information. The default type --
- and currently the only type -- is <c>des3_cbc</c>.</p>
- <p>See
- <seealso marker="stdlib:beam_lib#debug_info">beam_lib(3)</seealso>
- for details.</p>
+ for encrypting the debug information. The default
+ (and currently the only) type is <c>des3_cbc</c>.</p>
+ <p>For details, see
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:beam_lib#debug_info">beam_lib(3)</seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>encrypt_debug_info</c></tag>
<item>
<marker id="encrypt_debug_info"></marker>
- <p>Like the <c>debug_info_key</c> option above, except that
- the key will be read from an <c>.erlang.crypt</c> file.
+ <p>Similar to the <c>debug_info_key</c> option, but
+ the key is read from an <c>.erlang.crypt</c> file.
</p>
- <p>See
- <seealso marker="stdlib:beam_lib#debug_info">beam_lib(3)</seealso>
- for details.</p>
+ <p>For details, see
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:beam_lib#debug_info">beam_lib(3)</seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>makedep</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Produce a Makefile rule to track headers dependencies.
+ <p>Produces a Makefile rule to track headers dependencies.
No object file is produced.
</p>
<p>By default, this rule is written to
- <c><![CDATA[<File>.Pbeam]]></c>. However, if the option
+ <c><![CDATA[<File>.Pbeam]]></c>. However, if option
<c>binary</c> is set, nothing is written and the rule is
returned in <c>Binary</c>.
</p>
- <p>For instance, if one has the following module:
+ <p>For example, if you have the following module:
</p>
<code>
-module(module).
-include_lib("eunit/include/eunit.hrl").
--include("header.hrl").
- </code>
- <p>Here is the Makefile rule generated by this option:
+-include("header.hrl").</code>
+ <p>The Makefile rule generated by this option looks as follows:
</p>
<code>
module.beam: module.erl \
/usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/eunit/include/eunit.hrl \
- header.hrl
- </code>
+ header.hrl</code>
</item>
<tag><c>{makedep_output, Output}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Write generated rule(s) to <c>Output</c> instead of the
+ <p>Writes generated rules to <c>Output</c> instead of the
default <c><![CDATA[<File>.Pbeam]]></c>. <c>Output</c>
can be a filename or an <c>io_device()</c>. To write to
- stdout, use <c>standard_io</c>. However if <c>binary</c>
+ stdout, use <c>standard_io</c>. However, if <c>binary</c>
is set, nothing is written to <c>Output</c> and the
result is returned to the caller with
<c>{ok, ModuleName, Binary}</c>.
@@ -205,7 +202,7 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>{makedep_target, Target}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Change the name of the rule emitted to <c>Target</c>.
+ <p>Changes the name of the rule emitted to <c>Target</c>.
</p>
</item>
@@ -217,20 +214,20 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>makedep_add_missing</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Consider missing headers as generated files and add them to the
+ <p>Considers missing headers as generated files and adds them to the
dependencies.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c>makedep_phony</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Add a phony target for each dependency.
+ <p>Adds a phony target for each dependency.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c>'P'</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Produces a listing of the parsed code after preprocessing
+ <p>Produces a listing of the parsed code, after preprocessing
and parse transforms, in the file
<c><![CDATA[<File>.P]]></c>. No object file is produced.
</p>
@@ -238,7 +235,7 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>'E'</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Produces a listing of the code after all source code
+ <p>Produces a listing of the code, after all source code
transformations have been performed, in the file
<c><![CDATA[<File>.E]]></c>. No object file is produced.
</p>
@@ -258,21 +255,21 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>report</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This is a short form for both <c>report_errors</c> and
+ <p>A short form for both <c>report_errors</c> and
<c>report_warnings</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>return_errors</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If this flag is set, then
+ <p>If this flag is set,
<c>{error,ErrorList,WarningList}</c> is returned when
there are errors.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>return_warnings</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If this flag is set, then an extra field containing
- <c>WarningList</c> is added to the tuples returned on
+ <p>If this flag is set, an extra field, containing
+ <c>WarningList</c>, is added to the tuples returned on
success.</p>
</item>
@@ -284,13 +281,13 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>return</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This is a short form for both <c>return_errors</c> and
+ <p>A short form for both <c>return_errors</c> and
<c>return_warnings</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>verbose</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes more verbose information from the compiler
+ <p>Causes more verbose information from the compiler,
describing what it is doing.</p>
</item>
@@ -314,7 +311,7 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>{i,Dir}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Add <c>Dir</c> to the list of directories to be searched
+ <p>Adds <c>Dir</c> to the list of directories to be searched
when including a file. When encountering an
<c>-include</c> or <c>-include_lib</c> directive,
the compiler searches for header files in the following
@@ -322,14 +319,14 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<list type="ordered">
<item>
<p><c>"."</c>, the current working directory of
- the file server;</p>
+ the file server</p>
</item>
<item>
- <p>the base name of the compiled file;</p>
+ <p>The base name of the compiled file</p>
</item>
<item>
- <p>the directories specified using the <c>i</c> option.
- The directory specified last is searched first.</p>
+ <p>The directories specified using option <c>i</c>;
+ the directory specified last is searched first</p>
</item>
</list>
</item>
@@ -353,15 +350,15 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>from_asm</c></tag>
<item>
<p>The input file is expected to be assembler code (default
- file suffix ".S"). Note that the format of assembler files
- is not documented, and may change between releases.</p>
+ file suffix ".S"). Notice that the format of assembler files
+ is not documented, and can change between releases.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>from_core</c></tag>
<item>
<p>The input file is expected to be core code (default
- file suffix ".core"). Note that the format of core files
- is not documented, and may change between releases.</p>
+ file suffix ".core"). Notice that the format of core files
+ is not documented, and can change between releases.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>no_strict_record_tests</c></tag>
@@ -369,9 +366,9 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<p>This option is not recommended.</p>
<p>By default, the generated code for
- the <c>Record#record_tag.field</c> operation verifies that
- the tuple <c>Record</c> is of the correct size for
- the record and that the first element is the tag
+ operation <c>Record#record_tag.field</c> verifies that
+ the tuple <c>Record</c> has the correct size for
+ the record, and that the first element is the tag
<c>record_tag</c>. Use this option to omit
the verification code.</p>
</item>
@@ -390,79 +387,87 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>{no_auto_import,[{F,A}, ...]}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Makes the function <c>F/A</c> no longer being
- auto-imported from the module <c>erlang</c>, which resolves
- BIF name clashes. This option has to be used to resolve name
- clashes with BIFs auto-imported before R14A, if one wants to
+ auto-imported from the <c>erlang</c> module, which resolves
+ BIF name clashes. This option must be used to resolve name
+ clashes with BIFs auto-imported before R14A, if it is needed to
call the local function with the same name as an
auto-imported BIF without module prefix.</p>
<note>
- <p>From R14A and forward, the compiler resolves calls
+ <p>As from R14A and forward, the compiler resolves calls
without module prefix to local or imported functions before
- trying auto-imported BIFs. If the BIF is to be
+ trying with auto-imported BIFs. If the BIF is to be
called, use the <c>erlang</c> module prefix in the call, not
- <c>{ no_auto_import,[{F,A}, ...]}</c></p>
+ <c>{ no_auto_import,[{F,A}, ...]}</c>.</p>
</note>
<p>If this option is written in the source code, as a
<c>-compile</c> directive, the syntax <c>F/A</c> can be used instead
- of <c>{F,A}</c>. Example:</p>
+ of <c>{F,A}</c>, for example:</p>
<code>-compile({no_auto_import,[error/1]}).</code>
</item>
<tag><c>no_auto_import</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Do not auto import any functions from the module <c>erlang</c>.</p>
+ <p>Do not auto-import any functions from <c>erlang</c> module.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>no_line_info</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Omit line number information in order to produce a slightly
+ <p>Omits line number information to produce a slightly
smaller output file.
</p>
</item>
</taglist>
- <p>If warnings are turned on (the <c>report_warnings</c> option
- described above), the following options control what type of
- warnings that will be generated.
+ <p>If warnings are turned on (option <c>report_warnings</c>
+ described earlier), the following options control what type of
+ warnings that are generated.
<marker id="erl_lint_options"></marker>
- With the exception of <c>{warn_format,Verbosity}</c> all
- options below have two forms; one <c>warn_xxx</c> form to
- turn on the warning and one <c>nowarn_xxx</c> form to turn off
- the warning. In the description that follows, the form that
- is used to change the default value is listed.</p>
+ Except from <c>{warn_format,Verbosity}</c>, the following options
+ have two forms:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>A <c>warn_xxx</c> form, to turn on the warning.</item>
+ <item>A <c>nowarn_xxx</c> form, to turn off the warning.</item>
+ </list>
+ <p>In the descriptions that follow, the form that is used to change
+ the default value are listed.</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>{warn_format, Verbosity}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Causes warnings to be emitted for malformed format
strings as arguments to <c>io:format</c> and similar
- functions. <c>Verbosity</c> selects the amount of
- warnings: 0 = no warnings; 1 = warnings for invalid
- format strings and incorrect number of arguments; 2 =
- warnings also when the validity could not be checked
- (for example, when the format string argument is a
- variable). The default verbosity is 1. Verbosity 0 can
- also be selected by the option <c>nowarn_format</c>.</p>
+ functions.</p>
+ <p><c>Verbosity</c> selects the number of warnings:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c>0</c> = No warnings</item>
+ <item><c>1</c> = Warnings for invalid format strings and incorrect
+ number of arguments</item>
+ <item><c>2</c> = Warnings also when the validity cannot
+ be checked, for example, when the format string argument is a
+ variable.</item>
+ </list>
+ <p>The default verbosity is <c>1</c>. Verbosity <c>0</c> can
+ also be selected by option <c>nowarn_format</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>nowarn_bif_clash</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This option is removed, it will generate a fatal error if used.</p>
+ <p>This option is removed, it generates a fatal error if used.</p>
<warning>
- <p>Beginning with R14A, the compiler no longer calls the
+ <p>As from beginning with R14A, the compiler no longer calls the
auto-imported BIF if the name clashes with a local or
- explicitly imported function and a call without explicit
- module name is issued. Instead the local or imported
- function is called. Still accepting <c>nowarn_bif_clash</c> would makes a
- module calling functions clashing with autoimported BIFs
+ explicitly imported function, and a call without explicit
+ module name is issued. Instead, the local or imported
+ function is called. Still accepting <c>nowarn_bif_clash</c> would
+ make a module calling functions clashing with auto-imported BIFs
compile with both the old and new compilers, but with
- completely different semantics, why the option was removed.</p>
+ completely different semantics. This is why the option is removed.</p>
- <p>The use of this option has always been strongly discouraged.
- From OTP R14A and forward it's an error to use it.</p>
+ <p>The use of this option has always been discouraged.
+ As from R14A, it is an error to use it.</p>
<p>To resolve BIF clashes, use explicit module names or the
<c>{no_auto_import,[F/A]}</c> compiler directive.</p>
</warning>
@@ -470,11 +475,11 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>{nowarn_bif_clash, FAs}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This option is removed, it will generate a fatal error if used.</p>
+ <p>This option is removed, it generates a fatal error if used.</p>
<warning>
- <p>The use of this option has always been strongly discouraged.
- From OTP R14A and forward it's an error to use it.</p>
+ <p>The use of this option has always been discouraged.
+ As from R14A, it is an error to use it.</p>
<p>To resolve BIF clashes, use explicit module names or the
<c>{no_auto_import,[F/A]}</c> compiler directive.</p>
</warning>
@@ -482,35 +487,29 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>warn_export_all</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes a warning to be emitted if the <c>export_all</c>
- option has also been given.</p>
+ <p>Emits a warning if option <c>export_all</c> is also given.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>warn_export_vars</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes warnings to be emitted for all implicitly
- exported variables referred to after the primitives
- where they were first defined. No warnings for exported
- variables unless they are referred to in some pattern,
- which is the default, can be selected by the option
- <c>nowarn_export_vars</c>.</p>
+ <p>Emits warnings for all implicitly exported variables
+ referred to after the primitives where they were first defined.
+ By default, the compiler only emits warnings for exported
+ variables referred to in a pattern.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>warn_shadow_vars</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>nowarn_shadow_vars</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes warnings to be emitted for "fresh" variables
- in functional objects or list comprehensions with the same
- name as some already defined variable. The default is to
- warn for such variables. No warnings for shadowed
- variables can be selected by the option
- <c>nowarn_shadow_vars</c>.</p>
+ <p>Turns off warnings for "fresh" variables
+ in functional objects or list comprehensions with the same
+ name as some already defined variable. Default is to
+ emit warnings for such variables.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>nowarn_unused_function</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns off warnings for unused local functions.
- By default (<c>warn_unused_function</c>), warnings are
- emitted for all local functions that are not called
+ <p>Turns off warnings for unused local functions. Default
+ is to emit warnings for all local functions that are not called
directly or indirectly by an exported function.
The compiler does not include unused local functions in
the generated beam file, but the warning is still useful
@@ -519,148 +518,142 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<tag><c>{nowarn_unused_function, FAs}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns off warnings for unused local functions as
- <c>nowarn_unused_function</c> but only for the mentioned
+ <p>Turns off warnings for unused local functions like
+ <c>nowarn_unused_function</c> does, but only for the mentioned
local functions. <c>FAs</c> is a tuple <c>{Name,Arity}</c>
or a list of such tuples.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>nowarn_deprecated_function</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns off warnings for calls to deprecated functions. By
- default (<c>warn_deprecated_function</c>), warnings are
- emitted for every call to a function known by the compiler
- to be deprecated. Note that the compiler does not know
- about the <c>-deprecated()</c> attribute but uses an
+ <p>Turns off warnings for calls to deprecated functions. Default
+ is to emit warnings for every call to a function known by the
+ compiler to be deprecated. Notice that the compiler does not know
+ about attribute <c>-deprecated()</c>, but uses an
assembled list of deprecated functions in Erlang/OTP. To
- do a more general check the <c>Xref</c> tool can be used.
+ do a more general check, the <c>Xref</c> tool can be used.
See also
<seealso marker="tools:xref#deprecated_function">xref(3)</seealso>
and the function
- <seealso marker="tools:xref#m/1">xref:m/1</seealso> also
- accessible through
- the <seealso marker="stdlib:c#xm/1">c:xm/1</seealso>
- function.</p>
+ <seealso marker="tools:xref#m/1">xref:m/1</seealso>, also
+ accessible through the function
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:c#xm/1">c:xm/1</seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>{nowarn_deprecated_function, MFAs}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns off warnings for calls to deprecated functions as
- <c>nowarn_deprecated_function</c> but only for
+ <p>Turns off warnings for calls to deprecated functions like
+ <c>nowarn_deprecated_function</c> does, but only for
the mentioned functions. <c>MFAs</c> is a tuple
<c>{Module,Name,Arity}</c> or a list of such tuples.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>nowarn_deprecated_type</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns off warnings for uses of deprecated types. By
- default (<c>warn_deprecated_type</c>), warnings are
- emitted for every use of a type known by the compiler
- to be deprecated.</p>
+ <p>Turns off warnings for use of deprecated types. Default
+ is to emit warnings for every use of a type known by the compiler
+ to be deprecated.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>warn_obsolete_guard</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes warnings to be emitted for calls to old type
- testing BIFs such as <c>pid/1</c> and <c>list/1</c>. See
- the
- <seealso marker="doc/reference_manual:expressions#guards">Erlang Reference Manual</seealso>
+ <p>Emits warnings for calls to old type testing BIFs,
+ such as <c>pid/1</c> and <c>list/1</c>. See the
+ <seealso marker="doc/reference_manual:expressions#guards">Erlang Reference Manual</seealso>
for a complete list of type testing BIFs and their old
- equivalents. No warnings for calls to old type testing
- BIFs, which is the default, can be selected by the option
- <c>nowarn_obsolete_guard</c>.</p>
+ equivalents. Default is to emit no warnings for calls to
+ old type testing BIFs.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>warn_unused_import</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Causes warnings to be emitted for unused imported
- functions. No warnings for unused imported functions,
- which is the default, can be selected by the option
- <c>nowarn_unused_import</c>. </p>
+ <p>Emits warnings for unused imported functions.
+ Default is to emit no warnings for unused imported functions.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>nowarn_unused_vars</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>By default, warnings are emitted for variables which
- are not used, with the exception of variables beginning
- with an underscore ("Prolog style warnings").
+ <p>By default, warnings are emitted for unused variables,
+ except for variables beginning with an underscore
+ ("Prolog style warnings").
Use this option to turn off this kind of warnings.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>nowarn_unused_record</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns off warnings for unused record types. By
- default (<c>warn_unused_records</c>), warnings are
- emitted for unused locally defined record types.</p>
+ <p>Turns off warnings for unused record types. Default is to
+ emit warnings for unused locally defined record types.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
<p>Another class of warnings is generated by the compiler
during optimization and code generation. They warn about
patterns that will never match (such as <c>a=b</c>), guards
- that will always evaluate to false, and expressions that will
+ that always evaluate to false, and expressions that
always fail (such as <c>atom+42</c>).</p>
-
- <p>Note that the compiler does not warn for expressions that it
- does not attempt to optimize. For instance, the compiler tries
- to evaluate <c>1/0</c>, notices that it will cause an
- exception and emits a warning. On the other hand,
- the compiler is silent about the similar expression
- <c>X/0</c>; because of the variable in it, the compiler does
- not even try to evaluate and therefore it emits no warnings.
- </p>
-
- <p>Currently, those warnings cannot be disabled (except by
+ <p>Those warnings cannot be disabled (except by
disabling all warnings).</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>The compiler does not warn for expressions that it
+ does not attempt to optimize. For example, the compiler tries
+ to evaluate <c>1/0</c>, detects that it will cause an
+ exception, and emits a warning. However,
+ the compiler is silent about the similar expression,
+ <c>X/0</c>, because of the variable in it. Thus, the compiler does
+ not even try to evaluate and therefore it emits no warnings.</p>
+ </note>
+
<warning>
- <p>Obviously, the absence of warnings does not mean that
+ <p>The absence of warnings does not mean that
there are no remaining errors in the code.</p>
</warning>
-
- <p>Note that all the options except the include path
- (<c>{i,Dir}</c>) can also be given in the file with a
- <c>-compile([Option,...])</c>. attribute.
- The <c>-compile()</c> attribute is allowed after function
+
+ <note>
+ <p>All options, except the include path
+ (<c>{i,Dir}</c>), can also be given in the file with attribute
+ <c>-compile([Option,...])</c>.
+ Attribute <c>-compile()</c> is allowed after the function
definitions.</p>
-
- <p>Note also that the <c>{nowarn_unused_function, FAs}</c>,
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <p>The options <c>{nowarn_unused_function, FAs}</c>,
<c>{nowarn_bif_clash, FAs}</c>, and
- <c>{nowarn_deprecated_function, MFAs}</c> options are only
+ <c>{nowarn_deprecated_function, MFAs}</c> are only
recognized when given in files. They are not affected by
- the <c>warn_unused_function</c>, <c>warn_bif_clash</c>, or
- <c>warn_deprecated_function</c> options.</p>
+ options <c>warn_unused_function</c>, <c>warn_bif_clash</c>, or
+ <c>warn_deprecated_function</c>.</p>
+ </note>
<p>For debugging of the compiler, or for pure curiosity,
the intermediate code generated by each compiler pass can be
inspected.
- A complete list of the options to produce list files can be
- printed by typing <c>compile:options()</c> at the Erlang
- shell prompt.
- The options will be printed in order that the passes are
+ To print a complete list of the options to produce list files,
+ type <c>compile:options()</c> at the Erlang shell prompt.
+ The options are printed in the order that the passes are
executed. If more than one listing option is used, the one
representing the earliest pass takes effect.</p>
- <p><em>Unrecognized options are ignored.</em></p>
+ <p>Unrecognized options are ignored.</p>
<p>Both <c>WarningList</c> and <c>ErrorList</c> have
the following format:</p>
<code>
-[{FileName,[ErrorInfo]}].
- </code>
-
- <p><c>ErrorInfo</c> is described below. The file name has been
- included here as the compiler uses the Erlang pre-processor
- <c>epp</c>, which allows the code to be included in other
- files. For this reason, it is important to know to
- <em>which</em> file an error or warning line number refers.
+[{FileName,[ErrorInfo]}].</code>
+
+ <p><c>ErrorInfo</c> is described later in this section.
+ The filename is included here, as the compiler uses the
+ Erlang pre-processor <c>epp</c>, which allows the code to be
+ included in other files. It is therefore important to know to
+ <em>which</em> file the line number of an error or a warning refers.
</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>forms(Forms)</name>
- <fsummary>Compile a list of forms</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Compiles a list of forms.</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Is the same as
<c>forms(File, [verbose,report_errors,report_warnings])</c>.
@@ -670,7 +663,7 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<func>
<name>forms(Forms, Options) -> CompRet</name>
- <fsummary>Compile a list of forms</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Compiles a list of forms.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Forms = [Form]</v>
<v>CompRet = BinRet | ErrRet</v>
@@ -681,48 +674,49 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<desc>
<p>Analogous to <c>file/1</c>, but takes a list of forms (in
the Erlang abstract format representation) as first argument.
- The option <c>binary</c> is implicit; i.e., no object code
- file is produced. Options that would ordinarily produce a
- listing file, such as 'E', will instead cause the internal
- format for that compiler pass (an Erlang term; usually not a
- binary) to be returned instead of a binary.</p>
+ Option <c>binary</c> is implicit, that is, no object code
+ file is produced. For options that normally produce a listing
+ file, such as 'E', the internal format for that compiler pass
+ (an Erlang term, usually not a binary) is returned instead of
+ a binary.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>format_error(ErrorDescriptor) -> chars()</name>
- <fsummary>Format an error descriptor</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Formats an error descriptor.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>ErrorDescriptor = errordesc()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Uses an <c>ErrorDescriptor</c> and returns a deep list of
- characters which describes the error. This function is
- usually called implicitly when an <c>ErrorInfo</c> structure
- is processed. See below.</p>
+ characters that describes the error. This function is
+ usually called implicitly when an <c>ErrorInfo</c> structure
+ (described in section
+ <seealso marker="#error_information">Error Information</seealso>) is processed.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>output_generated(Options) -> true | false</name>
- <fsummary>Determine whether the compile will generate an output file</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Determines whether the compiler generates an output file.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Options = [term()]</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Determines whether the compiler would generate a <c>beam</c>
+ <p>Determines whether the compiler generates a <c>beam</c>
file with the given options. <c>true</c> means that a <c>beam</c>
- file would be generated; <c>false</c> means that the compiler
- would generate some listing file, return a binary, or merely
- check the syntax of the source code.</p>
+ file is generated. <c>false</c> means that the compiler
+ generates some listing file, returns a binary, or merely
+ checks the syntax of the source code.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
<name>noenv_file(File, Options) -> CompRet</name>
- <fsummary>Compile a file (ignoring ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS)</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Compiles a file (ignoring <c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS)</c>.</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Works exactly like <seealso marker="#file/2">file/2</seealso>,
+ <p>Works like <seealso marker="#file/2">file/2</seealso>,
except that the environment variable <c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS</c>
is not consulted.</p>
</desc>
@@ -730,9 +724,9 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<func>
<name>noenv_forms(Forms, Options) -> CompRet</name>
- <fsummary>Compile a list of forms (ignoring ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS)</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Compiles a list of forms (ignoring <c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS)</c>.</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Works exactly like <seealso marker="#forms/2">forms/2</seealso>,
+ <p>Works like <seealso marker="#forms/2">forms/2</seealso>,
except that the environment variable <c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS</c>
is not consulted.</p>
</desc>
@@ -740,12 +734,13 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<func>
<name>noenv_output_generated(Options) -> true | false</name>
- <fsummary>Determine whether the compile will generate an output file (ignoring ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS)</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Determines whether the compiler generates an output file
+ (ignoring <c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS)</c>.</fsummary>
<type>
<v>Options = [term()]</v>
</type>
<desc>
- <p>Works exactly like
+ <p>Works like
<seealso marker="#output_generated/1">output_generated/1</seealso>,
except that the environment variable <c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS</c>
is not consulted.</p>
@@ -755,14 +750,14 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
</funcs>
<section>
- <title>Default compiler options</title>
+ <title>Default Compiler Options</title>
<p>The (host operating system) environment variable
<c>ERL_COMPILER_OPTIONS</c> can be used to give default compiler
options. Its value must be a valid Erlang term. If the value is a
- list, it will be used as is. If it is not a list, it will be put
+ list, it is used as is. If it is not a list, it is put
into a list.</p>
- <p>The list will be appended to any options given to
+ <p>The list is appended to any options given to
<seealso marker="#file/2">file/2</seealso>,
<seealso marker="#forms/2">forms/2</seealso>, and
<seealso marker="#output_generated/1">output_generated/2</seealso>.
@@ -770,9 +765,9 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
<seealso marker="#noenv_file/2">noenv_file/2</seealso>,
<seealso marker="#noenv_forms/2">noenv_forms/2</seealso>, or
<seealso marker="#noenv_output_generated/1">noenv_output_generated/2</seealso>
- if you don't want the environment variable to be consulted
- (for instance, if you are calling the compiler recursively from
- inside a parse transform).</p>
+ if you do not want the environment variable to be consulted,
+ for example, if you are calling the compiler recursively from
+ inside a parse transform.</p>
</section>
<section>
@@ -781,31 +776,31 @@ module.beam: module.erl \
module. Inlining means that a call to a function is replaced with
the function body with the arguments replaced with the actual
values. The semantics are preserved, except if exceptions are
- generated in the inlined code. Exceptions will be reported as
+ generated in the inlined code. Exceptions are reported as
occurring in the function the body was inlined into. Also,
- <c>function_clause</c> exceptions will be converted to similar
+ <c>function_clause</c> exceptions are converted to similar
<c>case_clause</c> exceptions.</p>
- <p>When a function is inlined, the original function will be
+ <p>When a function is inlined, the original function is
kept if it is exported (either by an explicit export or if the
- <c>export_all</c> option was given) or if not all calls to the
- function were inlined.</p>
+ option <c>export_all</c> was given) or if not all calls to the
+ function are inlined.</p>
<p>Inlining does not necessarily improve running time.
- For instance, inlining may increase Beam stack usage which will
- probably be detrimental to performance for recursive functions.
+ For example, inlining can increase Beam stack use, which
+ probably is detrimental to performance for recursive functions.
</p>
- <p>Inlining is never default; it must be explicitly enabled with a
+ <p>Inlining is never default. It must be explicitly enabled with a
compiler option or a <c>-compile()</c> attribute in the source
module.</p>
- <p>To enable inlining, either use the <c>inline</c> option to
- let the compiler decide which functions to inline or
+ <p>To enable inlining, either use the option <c>inline</c> to
+ let the compiler decide which functions to inline, or
<c>{inline,[{Name,Arity},...]}</c> to have the compiler inline
all calls to the given functions. If the option is given inside
a <c>compile</c> directive in an Erlang module, <c>{Name,Arity}</c>
- may be written as <c>Name/Arity</c>.</p>
+ can be written as <c>Name/Arity</c>.</p>
<p>Example of explicit inlining:</p>
@@ -817,33 +812,30 @@ pi() -> 3.1416.
<p>Example of implicit inlining:</p>
<pre>
--compile(inline).
- </pre>
+-compile(inline).</pre>
- <p>The <c>{inline_size,Size}</c> option controls how large functions
- that are allowed to be inlined. Default is <c>24</c>, which will
- keep the size of the inlined code roughly the same as
- the un-inlined version (only relatively small functions will be
+ <p>The option <c>{inline_size,Size}</c> controls how large functions
+ that are allowed to be inlined. Default is <c>24</c>, which
+ keeps the size of the inlined code roughly the same as
+ the un-inlined version (only relatively small functions are
inlined).</p>
<p>Example:</p>
<pre>
%% Aggressive inlining - will increase code size.
-compile(inline).
--compile({inline_size,100}).
- </pre>
+-compile({inline_size,100}).</pre>
</section>
<section>
- <title>Inlining of list functions</title>
- <p>The compiler can also inline a variety of list manipulation functions
- from the stdlib's lists module.</p>
+ <title>Inlining of List Functions</title>
+ <p>The compiler can also inline various list manipulation functions
+ from the module <c>list</c> in <c>STDLIB</c>.</p>
<p>This feature must be explicitly enabled with a compiler option or a
<c>-compile()</c> attribute in the source module.</p>
- <p>To enable inlining of list functions, use the <c>inline_list_funcs</c>
- option.</p>
+ <p>To enable inlining of list functions, use option <c>inline_list_funcs</c>.</p>
<p>The following functions are inlined:</p>
<list type="bulleted">
@@ -869,24 +861,23 @@ pi() -> 3.1416.
</section>
<section>
+ <marker id="error_information"></marker>
<title>Error Information</title>
- <p>The <c>ErrorInfo</c> mentioned above is the standard
- <c>ErrorInfo</c> structure which is returned from all IO modules.
+ <p>The <c>ErrorInfo</c> mentioned earlier is the standard
+ <c>ErrorInfo</c> structure, which is returned from all I/O modules.
It has the following format:</p>
<code>
-{ErrorLine, Module, ErrorDescriptor}
- </code>
+{ErrorLine, Module, ErrorDescriptor}</code>
- <p><c>ErrorLine</c> will be the atom <c>none</c> if the error does
- not correspond to a specific line (e.g. if the source file does
- not exist).</p>
+ <p><c>ErrorLine</c> is the atom <c>none</c> if the error does
+ not correspond to a specific line, for example, if the source file does
+ not exist.</p>
<p>A string describing the error is obtained with the following
call:</p>
<code>
-Module:format_error(ErrorDescriptor)
- </code>
+Module:format_error(ErrorDescriptor)</code>
</section>
<section>