and defaults to the selected device.
An error is signaled if the color is unknown or cannot be allocated;
-however, if optional argument NO-ERROR is non-nil, nil is simply
-returned in this case. (And if NO-ERROR is other than t, a warning may
+however, if optional argument NOERROR is non-nil, nil is simply
+returned in this case. (And if NOERROR is other than t, a warning may
be issued.)
The returned object is a normal, first-class lisp object. The way you
these objects are GCed, the underlying window-system data (e.g. X object)
is deallocated as well.
*/
- (name, device, no_error))
+ (name, device, noerror))
{
Lisp_Color_Instance *c;
Lisp_Object val;
retval = MAYBE_INT_DEVMETH (XDEVICE (device), initialize_color_instance,
(c, name, device,
- decode_error_behavior_flag (no_error)));
+ decode_error_behavior_flag (noerror)));
if (!retval)
return Qnil;
you drop all pointers to it and allow it to be garbage collected. When
these objects are GCed, the underlying X data is deallocated as well.
*/
- (name, device, no_error))
+ (name, device, noerror))
{
Lisp_Font_Instance *f;
Lisp_Object val;
int retval = 0;
- Error_behavior errb = decode_error_behavior_flag (no_error);
+ Error_behavior errb = decode_error_behavior_flag (noerror);
if (ERRB_EQ (errb, ERROR_ME))
CHECK_STRING (name);