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Diffstat (limited to 'doc/gawktexi.in')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/gawktexi.in | 4 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/gawktexi.in b/doc/gawktexi.in index 303b7db8..ba65f9f6 100644 --- a/doc/gawktexi.in +++ b/doc/gawktexi.in @@ -11169,6 +11169,7 @@ has the value four, but it changes the value of @code{foo} to five. In other words, the operator returns the old value of the variable, but with the side effect of incrementing it. +@c FIXME: Use @sup here for superscript The post-increment @samp{foo++} is nearly the same as writing @samp{(foo += 1) - 1}. It is not perfectly equivalent because all numbers in @command{awk} are floating point---in floating point, @samp{foo + 1 - 1} does @@ -17711,6 +17712,7 @@ which is sufficient to represent times through 2038-01-19 03:14:07 UTC. Many systems support a wider range of timestamps, including negative timestamps that represent times before the epoch. +@c FIXME: Use @sup here for superscript @cindex @command{date} utility, GNU @cindex time, retrieving @@ -29348,6 +29350,7 @@ signed. The possible ranges of values are shown in @ref{table-numeric-ranges}. @end ifnottex @ifdocbook @item Single-precision floating point (approximate) @tab +@c FIXME: Use @sup here for superscript @docbook 1.175494<superscript>-38</superscript> @end docbook @@ -29966,6 +29969,7 @@ the following computes @end docbook the result of which is beyond the limits of ordinary hardware double-precision floating-point values: +@c FIXME: Use @sup here for superscript @example $ @kbd{gawk -M 'BEGIN @{} |