Credit: Joe Maldonado / Mashable
println(s[6:11]); // world
Emacs C sources, use a lot of Lisp idioms abstracted as preprocessor macros, masking C language as Lisp look alike. Observe that, when you use them, you are not writing Lisp, you are writing pure C that just happens to look like Lisp. Those preprocessor macros exist for use in C core only, they are not visible to Elisp, and they happen to be macros for practical reasons of C programming: to always get inlined, in both release and debug builds. Alternative would be of course to implement them as inlined functions and I think they have start to replace some of those preprocessor macros with inlined versions. I am not really watching the mailing list and commited patches, so don't take me for the word.,详情可参考wps
ВсеСтильВнешний видЯвленияРоскошьЛичности
,推荐阅读手游获取更多信息
Последние новости。whatsapp对此有专业解读
Синоптик Тишковец пообещал москвичам аномальное тепло07:47