# HG changeset patch # User Eli Zaretskii # Date 1147204083 0 # Node ID 08c09d92fecc9bdc0f62bb90621922a59abe5382 # Parent f13e426bebba7a75372bd69130b06a8ce35bf7b1 Fix spelling errors. diff -r f13e426bebba -r 08c09d92fecc lispref/files.texi --- a/lispref/files.texi Tue May 09 13:20:25 2006 +0000 +++ b/lispref/files.texi Tue May 09 19:48:03 2006 +0000 @@ -1602,7 +1602,7 @@ @var{filename} does not include a directory part. On GNU and Unix systems, a string returned by this function always -ends in a slash. On MSDOS it can also end in a colon. On VMS, it +ends in a slash. On MS-DOS it can also end in a colon. On VMS, it returns a string ending in one of the three characters @samp{:}, @samp{]}, or @samp{>}. @@ -1809,7 +1809,7 @@ same as the usual Unix terminology.) These two different names for the same entity are related by a syntactic transformation. On GNU and Unix systems, this is simple: a directory name ends in a slash, -whereas the directory's name as a file lacks that slash. On MSDOS and +whereas the directory's name as a file lacks that slash. On MS-DOS and VMS, the relationship is more complicated. The difference between a directory name and its name as a file is