;;; imenu.el --- framework for mode-specific buffer indexes -*- lexical-binding: t -*-
-;; Copyright (C) 1994-1998, 2001-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+;; Copyright (C) 1994-1998, 2001-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Ake Stenhoff <etxaksf@aom.ericsson.se>
;; Lars Lindberg <lli@sypro.cap.se>
Simple elements in the alist look like (INDEX-NAME . POSITION).
POSITION is the buffer position of the item; to go to the item
is simply to move point to that position.
-POSITION is passed to `imenu-default-goto-function', so it can be a non-number
-if that variable has been changed (e.g. Semantic uses overlays for POSITIONs).
-Special elements look like (INDEX-NAME POSITION FUNCTION ARGUMENTS...).
-To \"go to\" a special element means applying FUNCTION
-to INDEX-NAME, POSITION, and the ARGUMENTS.
+POSITION is passed to `imenu-default-goto-function', so it can be
+a non-number if that variable has been changed (e.g. Semantic
+uses overlays for POSITIONs).
+
+Special elements look like
+\(INDEX-NAME POSITION FUNCTION ARGUMENTS...).
+To \"go to\" a special element means applying FUNCTION to
+INDEX-NAME, POSITION, and the ARGUMENTS.
A nested sub-alist element looks like (INDEX-NAME . SUB-ALIST).
The function `imenu--subalist-p' tests an element and returns t
(defun imenu--split (list n)
"Split LIST into sublists of max length N.
-Example (imenu--split '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8) 3)-> '((1 2 3) (4 5 6) (7 8))
+Example (imenu--split \\='(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8) 3) => ((1 2 3) (4 5 6) (7 8))
The returned list DOES NOT share structure with LIST."
(let ((remain list)
(result '())