From 4d104bda08e1164da7dd63a51a71b7703f53f073 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dan Book Date: Thu, 10 Apr 2025 00:00:59 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] fix manpage links for generated apidocs --- handy.h | 2 +- locale.c | 4 ++-- numeric.c | 2 +- 3 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/handy.h b/handy.h index 147df2291e21..ca3e43f17e52 100644 --- a/handy.h +++ b/handy.h @@ -875,7 +875,7 @@ That is, each returns a boolean indicating whether the specified character is one of C<[A-Za-z0-9]>, analogous to C. The C suffix in the names was meant to indicate that they correspond to the -C language L>. +C language C>. =for apidoc Am|bool|isASCII|UV ch =for apidoc_item ||isASCII_A|UV ch diff --git a/locale.c b/locale.c index 59d833db21ca..4a2ac89490f6 100644 --- a/locale.c +++ b/locale.c @@ -4423,7 +4423,7 @@ S_native_querylocale_i(pTHX_ const locale_category_index cat_index) /* =for apidoc Perl_setlocale -This is an (almost) drop-in replacement for the system L>, +This is an (almost) drop-in replacement for the system C>, taking the same parameters, and returning the same information, except that it returns the correct underlying C locale. Regular C will instead return C if the underlying locale has a non-dot decimal point @@ -10826,7 +10826,7 @@ change the locale (though changing the locale is antisocial and dangerous on multi-threaded systems that don't have multi-thread safe locale operations. (See L). -Using the libc L> function should be avoided. Nevertheless, +Using the libc C> function should be avoided. Nevertheless, certain non-Perl libraries called from XS, do call it, and their behavior may not be able to be changed. This function, along with C>, can be used to get seamless behavior in these diff --git a/numeric.c b/numeric.c index 61b9fa5278e8..571186850dd5 100644 --- a/numeric.c +++ b/numeric.c @@ -1516,7 +1516,7 @@ Perl_my_atof(pTHX_ const char* s) =for apidoc my_atof =for apidoc_item Atof -These each are L(3)>, but properly work with Perl locale handling, +These each are C>, but properly work with Perl locale handling, accepting a dot radix character always, but also the current locale's radix character if and only if called from within the lexical scope of a Perl C statement.