-This is ../info/lispref.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from
+This is ../info/lispref.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0b from
lispref/lispref.texi.
INFO-DIR-SECTION XEmacs Editor
Because this symbol is the variable which holds the name of the file
being visited in the current buffer, the value cell contents we see are
-the name of the source file of this chapter of the XEmacs Lisp Manual.
-The property list cell contains the list `(variable-documentation
-29529)' which tells the documentation functions where to find the
-documentation string for the variable `buffer-file-name' in the `DOC'
-file. (29529 is the offset from the beginning of the `DOC' file to
-where that documentation string begins.) The function cell contains
-the function for returning the name of the file. `buffer-file-name'
-names a primitive function, which has no read syntax and prints in hash
-notation (*note Primitive Function Type::). A symbol naming a function
-written in Lisp would have a lambda expression (or a byte-code object)
-in this cell.
+the name of the source file of this chapter of the XEmacs Lisp Reference
+Manual. The property list cell contains the list
+`(variable-documentation 29529)' which tells the documentation
+functions where to find the documentation string for the variable
+`buffer-file-name' in the `DOC' file. (29529 is the offset from the
+beginning of the `DOC' file to where that documentation string begins.)
+The function cell contains the function for returning the name of the
+file. `buffer-file-name' names a primitive function, which has no read
+syntax and prints in hash notation (*note Primitive Function Type::). A
+symbol naming a function written in Lisp would have a lambda expression
+(or a byte-code object) in this cell.
\1f
File: lispref.info, Node: Definitions, Next: Creating Symbols, Prev: Symbol Components, Up: Symbols
This limit, with the associated error when it is exceeded, is one
way that Lisp avoids infinite recursion on an ill-defined function.
- The default value of this variable is 500. If you set it to a
+ The default value of this variable is 1000. If you set it to a
value less than 100, Lisp will reset it to 100 if the given value
is reached.