# HG changeset patch # User Eli Zaretskii # Date 992624892 0 # Node ID 4f1705a63f02163f5c8e99e189326df5880252ed # Parent b8ea59337400b9a38bc214eef02f050fc9cef117 Proofreading fixes from Tim Goodwin . diff -r b8ea59337400 -r 4f1705a63f02 man/anti.texi --- a/man/anti.texi Fri Jun 15 16:30:57 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/anti.texi Fri Jun 15 17:08:12 2001 +0000 @@ -18,9 +18,9 @@ @itemize @minus @item Variable-size characters are not supported in Emacs 20. You cannot use -fonts which contain oversized characters, and using italics fonts can +fonts which contain oversized characters, and using italic fonts can result in illegible display. However, text which uses variable-size -fonts is unreadable anyway. With all characters in a frame layed out on +fonts is unreadable anyway. With all characters in a frame laid out on a regular grid, each character having the same height and width, text is much easier to read. diff -r b8ea59337400 -r 4f1705a63f02 man/rmail.texi --- a/man/rmail.texi Fri Jun 15 16:30:57 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/rmail.texi Fri Jun 15 17:08:12 2001 +0000 @@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ receipt of messages. When you enter Rmail, you are positioned at the first message that you have not yet made current (that is, the first one that has the @samp{unseen} attribute; @pxref{Rmail Attributes}). Move -forward to see the other new messages; move backward to reexamine old +forward to see the other new messages; move backward to re-examine old messages. @table @kbd @@ -256,7 +256,7 @@ the direction of motion after deletion. @vindex rmail-delete-message-hook - Whenever Rmail deletes a message, it invokes the function(s) listed in + Whenever Rmail deletes a message, it runs the hook @code{rmail-delete-message-hook}. When the hook functions are invoked, the message has been marked deleted, but it is still the current message in the Rmail buffer. @@ -442,11 +442,6 @@ inbox format; the output commands ascertain the file's format and write the copied message in that format. - When copying a message to a file in Unix mail file format, these -commands include whichever header fields are currently visible. Use the -@kbd{t} command first, if you wish, to specify which headers to show -(and copy). - The @kbd{o} and @kbd{C-o} commands differ in two ways: each has its own separate default file name, and each specifies a choice of format to use when the file does not already exist. The @kbd{o} command uses @@ -827,7 +822,7 @@ @kindex C-M-s @r{(Rmail)} @findex rmail-summary-by-regexp - @kbd{C-M-s @var{rgexp} @key{RET}} (@code{rmail-summary-by-regexp}) + @kbd{C-M-s @var{regexp} @key{RET}} (@code{rmail-summary-by-regexp}) makes a partial summary which mentions only the messages whose headers (including the date and the subject lines) match the regular expression @var{regexp}. @@ -1013,15 +1008,15 @@ @cindex decoding mail messages (Rmail) Rmail automatically decodes messages which contain non-@sc{ascii} -characters, just as it does with files you visit and with and -subprocess output. Rmail uses the standard -@samp{charset=@var{charset}} header in the message, if any, to determine how -the message was encoded by the sender. It maps @var{charset} into the -corresponding Emacs coding system (@pxref{Coding Systems}), and uses -that coding system to decode message text. If the message header -doesn't have the charset specification, or if the @var{charset} it -specifies is not recognized, Rmail chooses the coding system with the -usual Emacs heuristics and defaults (@pxref{Recognize Coding}). +characters, just as Emacs does with files you visit and with subprocess +output. Rmail uses the standard @samp{charset=@var{charset}} header in +the message, if any, to determine how the message was encoded by the +sender. It maps @var{charset} into the corresponding Emacs coding +system (@pxref{Coding Systems}), and uses that coding system to decode +message text. If the message header doesn't have the charset +specification, or if the @var{charset} it specifies is not recognized, +Rmail chooses the coding system with the usual Emacs heuristics and +defaults (@pxref{Recognize Coding}). @cindex fixing incorrectly decoded mail messages Occasionally, a message is decoded incorrectly, either because Emacs