* lispref typos
@ 2006-01-06 16:25 martin rudalics
2006-01-06 19:33 ` Eli Zaretskii
2006-01-06 22:25 ` Nick Roberts
0 siblings, 2 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: martin rudalics @ 2006-01-06 16:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
*** display.texi Fri Dec 2 10:16:32 2005
--- display.texi Fri Jan 6 17:16:32 2006
***************
*** 1099,1105 ****
beginning and end. It also has properties that you can examine and set;
these affect the display of the text within the overlay.
! An overlays uses markers to record its beginning and end; thus,
editing the text of the buffer adjusts the beginning and end of each
overlay so that it stays with the text. When you create the overlay,
you can specify whether text inserted at the beginning should be
--- 1099,1105 ----
beginning and end. It also has properties that you can examine and set;
these affect the display of the text within the overlay.
! An overlay uses markers to record its beginning and end; thus,
editing the text of the buffer adjusts the beginning and end of each
overlay so that it stays with the text. When you create the overlay,
you can specify whether text inserted at the beginning should be
***************
*** 1737,1743 ****
different kinds of terminals. It should be an alist whose elements
have the form @code{(@var{display} @var{atts})}. Each element's
@sc{car}, @var{display}, specifies a class of terminals. (The first
! element, if it s @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
defaults for the remaining elements). The element's @sc{cadr},
@var{atts}, is a list of face attributes and their values; it
specifies what the face should look like on that kind of terminal.
--- 1737,1743 ----
different kinds of terminals. It should be an alist whose elements
have the form @code{(@var{display} @var{atts})}. Each element's
@sc{car}, @var{display}, specifies a class of terminals. (The first
! element, if it's @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
defaults for the remaining elements). The element's @sc{cadr},
@var{atts}, is a list of face attributes and their values; it
specifies what the face should look like on that kind of terminal.
***************
*** 4258,4265 ****
For convenience, there are two sorts of button-creation functions,
those that add button properties to an existing region of a buffer,
! called @code{make-...button}, and those also insert the button text,
! called @code{insert-...button}.
The button-creation functions all take the @code{&rest} argument
@var{properties}, which should be a sequence of @var{property value}
--- 4258,4265 ----
For convenience, there are two sorts of button-creation functions,
those that add button properties to an existing region of a buffer,
! called @code{make-...button}, and those that also insert the button
! text, called @code{insert-...button}.
The button-creation functions all take the @code{&rest} argument
@var{properties}, which should be a sequence of @var{property value}
----------
*** keymaps.texi Thu Dec 15 11:32:56 2005
--- keymaps.texi Fri Jan 6 17:17:18 2006
***************
*** 569,575 ****
text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
! However, there are also special ways for program can to substitute
other keymaps for some of those. The variable
@code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
--- 569,575 ----
text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
! However, there are also special ways for programs to substitute
other keymaps for some of those. The variable
@code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
----------
*** modes.texi Thu Jan 5 07:44:42 2006
--- modes.texi Fri Jan 6 12:27:08 2006
***************
*** 1423,1429 ****
@end defmac
The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
! mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless to for loading to
enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
--- 1423,1429 ----
@end defmac
The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
! mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless for loading to
enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
***************
*** 2254,2260 ****
finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
! leave point at the place it finds a ``definition,'' and return any
non-@code{nil} value.
Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
--- 2254,2260 ----
finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
! leave point at the place it finds a ``definition'' and return any
non-@code{nil} value.
Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
----------
*** positions.texi Sat Nov 5 20:46:20 2005
--- positions.texi Fri Jan 6 12:29:02 2006
***************
*** 417,423 ****
@defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
@cindex line number
This function returns the line number in the current buffer
! corresponding the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
@end defun
--- 417,423 ----
@defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
@cindex line number
This function returns the line number in the current buffer
! corresponding to the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
@end defun
----------
*** text.texi Thu Jan 5 07:44:42 2006
--- text.texi Fri Jan 6 12:34:50 2006
***************
*** 2714,2720 ****
@defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
! @var{list-of-properties} is a list property names only, not an
alternating list of property names and values.
@end defun
--- 2714,2720 ----
@defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
! @var{list-of-properties} is a list of property names only, not an
alternating list of property names and values.
@end defun
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: lispref typos
2006-01-06 16:25 lispref typos martin rudalics
@ 2006-01-06 19:33 ` Eli Zaretskii
2006-01-07 10:41 ` martin rudalics
2006-01-06 22:25 ` Nick Roberts
1 sibling, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2006-01-06 19:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
> Date: Fri, 06 Jan 2006 17:25:31 +0100
> From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at>
>
> *** display.texi Fri Dec 2 10:16:32 2005
> --- display.texi Fri Jan 6 17:16:32 2006
I couldn't apply your patches: your mailer somehow munged them. I
tried to fix the whitespace by hand, but that didn't work as well.
Sorry.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* lispref typos
2006-01-06 16:25 lispref typos martin rudalics
2006-01-06 19:33 ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2006-01-06 22:25 ` Nick Roberts
1 sibling, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Nick Roberts @ 2006-01-06 22:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
These changes look good apart from:
element, if it s @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
to
element, if it's @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
It should read:
element, if its @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
(it's - contraction of "it is", its - possessive pronoun)
Nick
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: lispref typos
2006-01-06 19:33 ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2006-01-07 10:41 ` martin rudalics
2006-01-07 13:26 ` Eli Zaretskii
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: martin rudalics @ 2006-01-07 10:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: Nick Roberts, emacs-devel
> I couldn't apply your patches: your mailer somehow munged them. I
> tried to fix the whitespace by hand, but that didn't work as well.
> Sorry.
Sorry for the inconvenience. Please try again with the patches below.
I also applied Nick's correction.
============================================================
*** display.texi Fri Dec 2 10:16:32 2005
--- display.texi Sat Jan 7 10:12:44 2006
***************
*** 1099,1105 ****
beginning and end. It also has properties that you can examine and set;
these affect the display of the text within the overlay.
! An overlays uses markers to record its beginning and end; thus,
editing the text of the buffer adjusts the beginning and end of each
overlay so that it stays with the text. When you create the overlay,
you can specify whether text inserted at the beginning should be
--- 1099,1105 ----
beginning and end. It also has properties that you can examine and set;
these affect the display of the text within the overlay.
! An overlay uses markers to record its beginning and end; thus,
editing the text of the buffer adjusts the beginning and end of each
overlay so that it stays with the text. When you create the overlay,
you can specify whether text inserted at the beginning should be
***************
*** 1737,1743 ****
different kinds of terminals. It should be an alist whose elements
have the form @code{(@var{display} @var{atts})}. Each element's
@sc{car}, @var{display}, specifies a class of terminals. (The first
! element, if it s @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
defaults for the remaining elements). The element's @sc{cadr},
@var{atts}, is a list of face attributes and their values; it
specifies what the face should look like on that kind of terminal.
--- 1737,1743 ----
different kinds of terminals. It should be an alist whose elements
have the form @code{(@var{display} @var{atts})}. Each element's
@sc{car}, @var{display}, specifies a class of terminals. (The first
! element, if its @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
defaults for the remaining elements). The element's @sc{cadr},
@var{atts}, is a list of face attributes and their values; it
specifies what the face should look like on that kind of terminal.
***************
*** 4258,4265 ****
For convenience, there are two sorts of button-creation functions,
those that add button properties to an existing region of a buffer,
! called @code{make-...button}, and those also insert the button text,
! called @code{insert-...button}.
The button-creation functions all take the @code{&rest} argument
@var{properties}, which should be a sequence of @var{property value}
--- 4258,4265 ----
For convenience, there are two sorts of button-creation functions,
those that add button properties to an existing region of a buffer,
! called @code{make-...button}, and those that also insert the button
! text, called @code{insert-...button}.
The button-creation functions all take the @code{&rest} argument
@var{properties}, which should be a sequence of @var{property value}
============================================================
*** keymaps.texi Thu Dec 15 11:32:56 2005
--- keymaps.texi Fri Jan 6 17:17:18 2006
***************
*** 569,575 ****
text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
! However, there are also special ways for program can to substitute
other keymaps for some of those. The variable
@code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
--- 569,575 ----
text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
! However, there are also special ways for programs to substitute
other keymaps for some of those. The variable
@code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
============================================================
*** modes.texi Thu Jan 5 07:44:42 2006
--- modes.texi Fri Jan 6 12:27:08 2006
***************
*** 1423,1429 ****
@end defmac
The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
! mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless to for loading to
enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
--- 1423,1429 ----
@end defmac
The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
! mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless for loading to
enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
***************
*** 2254,2260 ****
finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
! leave point at the place it finds a ``definition,'' and return any
non-@code{nil} value.
Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
--- 2254,2260 ----
finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
! leave point at the place it finds a ``definition'' and return any
non-@code{nil} value.
Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
============================================================
*** positions.texi Sat Nov 5 20:46:20 2005
--- positions.texi Fri Jan 6 12:29:02 2006
***************
*** 417,423 ****
@defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
@cindex line number
This function returns the line number in the current buffer
! corresponding the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
@end defun
--- 417,423 ----
@defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
@cindex line number
This function returns the line number in the current buffer
! corresponding to the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
@end defun
============================================================
*** text.texi Thu Jan 5 07:44:42 2006
--- text.texi Fri Jan 6 12:34:50 2006
***************
*** 2714,2720 ****
@defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
! @var{list-of-properties} is a list property names only, not an
alternating list of property names and values.
@end defun
--- 2714,2720 ----
@defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
! @var{list-of-properties} is a list of property names only, not an
alternating list of property names and values.
@end defun
============================================================
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: lispref typos
2006-01-07 10:41 ` martin rudalics
@ 2006-01-07 13:26 ` Eli Zaretskii
0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2006-01-07 13:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: nickrob, emacs-devel
> Date: Sat, 07 Jan 2006 11:41:19 +0100
> From: martin rudalics <rudalics@gmx.at>
> CC: emacs-devel@gnu.org, Nick Roberts <nickrob@snap.net.nz>
>
> > I couldn't apply your patches: your mailer somehow munged them. I
> > tried to fix the whitespace by hand, but that didn't work as well.
> > Sorry.
>
> Sorry for the inconvenience. Please try again with the patches below.
They still don't apply. And some of the reasons are clearly visible:
look at the wrong indentation of all the lines where you actually made
changes:
> *** 1099,1105 ****
> beginning and end. It also has properties that you can examine and set;
> these affect the display of the text within the overlay.
>
> ! An overlays uses markers to record its beginning and end; thus,
> editing the text of the buffer adjusts the beginning and end of each
> overlay so that it stays with the text. When you create the overlay,
> you can specify whether text inserted at the beginning should be
> --- 1099,1105 ----
Do you see the problem? there should be 2 blanks between `!' and the
text after it, but somehow one of the blanks is missing.
Can you tell exactly how you invoke Diff and what switches you pass to
it? Perhaps therein lies the reason for these problems. Also, what
version of Diff is that, and on what OS it was run?
If nothing gives a clue, you could send the patches as a binary
attachment.
> beginning and end. It also has properties that you can examine and set;
> these affect the display of the text within the overlay.
>
> ! An overlay uses markers to record its beginning and end; thus,
> editing the text of the buffer adjusts the beginning and end of each
> overlay so that it stays with the text. When you create the overlay,
> you can specify whether text inserted at the beginning should be
> ***************
> *** 1737,1743 ****
> different kinds of terminals. It should be an alist whose elements
> have the form @code{(@var{display} @var{atts})}. Each element's
> @sc{car}, @var{display}, specifies a class of terminals. (The first
> ! element, if it s @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
> defaults for the remaining elements). The element's @sc{cadr},
> @var{atts}, is a list of face attributes and their values; it
> specifies what the face should look like on that kind of terminal.
> --- 1737,1743 ----
> different kinds of terminals. It should be an alist whose elements
> have the form @code{(@var{display} @var{atts})}. Each element's
> @sc{car}, @var{display}, specifies a class of terminals. (The first
> ! element, if its @sc{car} is @code{default}, is special---it specifies
> defaults for the remaining elements). The element's @sc{cadr},
> @var{atts}, is a list of face attributes and their values; it
> specifies what the face should look like on that kind of terminal.
> ***************
> *** 4258,4265 ****
>
> For convenience, there are two sorts of button-creation functions,
> those that add button properties to an existing region of a buffer,
> ! called @code{make-...button}, and those also insert the button text,
> ! called @code{insert-...button}.
>
> The button-creation functions all take the @code{&rest} argument
> @var{properties}, which should be a sequence of @var{property value}
> --- 4258,4265 ----
>
> For convenience, there are two sorts of button-creation functions,
> those that add button properties to an existing region of a buffer,
> ! called @code{make-...button}, and those that also insert the button
> ! text, called @code{insert-...button}.
>
> The button-creation functions all take the @code{&rest} argument
> @var{properties}, which should be a sequence of @var{property value}
> ============================================================
> *** keymaps.texi Thu Dec 15 11:32:56 2005
> --- keymaps.texi Fri Jan 6 17:17:18 2006
> ***************
> *** 569,575 ****
> text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
> keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
>
> ! However, there are also special ways for program can to substitute
> other keymaps for some of those. The variable
> @code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
> that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
> --- 569,575 ----
> text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
> keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
>
> ! However, there are also special ways for programs to substitute
> other keymaps for some of those. The variable
> @code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
> that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
> ============================================================
> *** modes.texi Thu Jan 5 07:44:42 2006
> --- modes.texi Fri Jan 6 12:27:08 2006
> ***************
> *** 1423,1429 ****
> @end defmac
>
> The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
> ! mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless to for loading to
> enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
> instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
> and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
> --- 1423,1429 ----
> @end defmac
>
> The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
> ! mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless for loading to
> enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
> instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
> and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
> ***************
> *** 2254,2260 ****
> finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
> backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
> doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
> ! leave point at the place it finds a ``definition,'' and return any
> non-@code{nil} value.
>
> Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
> --- 2254,2260 ----
> finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
> backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
> doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
> ! leave point at the place it finds a ``definition'' and return any
> non-@code{nil} value.
>
> Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
> ============================================================
> *** positions.texi Sat Nov 5 20:46:20 2005
> --- positions.texi Fri Jan 6 12:29:02 2006
> ***************
> *** 417,423 ****
> @defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
> @cindex line number
> This function returns the line number in the current buffer
> ! corresponding the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
> or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
> @end defun
>
> --- 417,423 ----
> @defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
> @cindex line number
> This function returns the line number in the current buffer
> ! corresponding to the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
> or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
> @end defun
>
> ============================================================
> *** text.texi Thu Jan 5 07:44:42 2006
> --- text.texi Fri Jan 6 12:34:50 2006
> ***************
> *** 2714,2720 ****
>
> @defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
> Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
> ! @var{list-of-properties} is a list property names only, not an
> alternating list of property names and values.
> @end defun
>
> --- 2714,2720 ----
>
> @defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
> Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
> ! @var{list-of-properties} is a list of property names only, not an
> alternating list of property names and values.
> @end defun
>
> ============================================================
>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-01-07 13:26 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2006-01-06 16:25 lispref typos martin rudalics
2006-01-06 19:33 ` Eli Zaretskii
2006-01-07 10:41 ` martin rudalics
2006-01-07 13:26 ` Eli Zaretskii
2006-01-06 22:25 ` Nick Roberts
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