Z:gnu-www-ja-stallman-kth--7fb33a-Okay, when you do that =5Bpoints/en

Okay, when you do that [points at the &ldquo;Print&rdquo; expression], you get the zeroth element of X, and then you do it again and it gets the first element, and suppose these are pointers to structures, then you probably put an asterisk there [before the X in the PRINT expression] and each time it prints the next structure pointed to by the element of the array. And of course you can repeat this command by typing carriage-return. If a single thing to repeat is not enough, you can create a user-defined-command. You can say &ldquo;Define Mumble&rdquo;, and then you give some lines of commands and then you say &ldquo;end&rdquo;. And now there is defined a &ldquo;Mumble&rdquo; command which will execute those lines. And it's very useful to put these definitions in a command file. You can have a command file in each directory, that will be loaded automatically when you start the debugger with that as your working directory. So for each program you can define a set of user defined commands to access the data structures of that program in a useful way. You can even provide documentation for your user-defined commands, so that they get handled by the &ldquo;help&rdquo; features just like the built-in commands.