From 9962fe293d16e1e1e4d05154e751fc7576226954 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alan Modra Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2016 19:07:55 +1030 Subject: [PATCH] Document character escape sequences PR gas/10946 * doc/as.texinfo (Chars): Document escape sequences. --- gas/ChangeLog | 5 +++++ gas/doc/as.texinfo | 13 +++++++------ 2 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/gas/ChangeLog b/gas/ChangeLog index 3b86e47dcca..6c923c316da 100644 --- a/gas/ChangeLog +++ b/gas/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ +2016-12-21 Alan Modra + + PR gas/10946 + * doc/as.texinfo (Chars): Document escape sequences. + 2016-12-20 Maciej W. Rozycki * testsuite/gas/mips/mips16-sub.d: New test. diff --git a/gas/doc/as.texinfo b/gas/doc/as.texinfo index 4b14e081fb5..d83d2b305e2 100644 --- a/gas/doc/as.texinfo +++ b/gas/doc/as.texinfo @@ -3066,12 +3066,13 @@ sequence. @cindex single character constant @cindex character, single @cindex constant, single character -A single character may be written as a single quote immediately -followed by that character. The same escapes apply to characters as -to strings. So if you want to write the character backslash, you -must write @kbd{'\\} where the first @code{\} escapes the second -@code{\}. As you can see, the quote is an acute accent, not a -grave accent. A newline +A single character may be written as a single quote immediately followed by +that character. Some backslash escapes apply to characters, @code{\b}, +@code{\f}, @code{\n}, @code{\r}, @code{\t}, and @code{\"} with the same meaning +as for strings, plus @code{\'} for a single quote. So if you want to write the +character backslash, you must write @kbd{'\\} where the first @code{\} escapes +the second @code{\}. As you can see, the quote is an acute accent, not a grave +accent. A newline @ifclear GENERIC @ifclear abnormal-separator (or semicolon @samp{;}) -- 2.30.2