Mercurial > emacs
changeset 38049:0ee6a3d3764e
Proofreading fixes friom Danny Colascione <qtmstr@optonline.net>.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 15 Jun 2001 08:20:57 +0000 |
parents | bd45e6c57fba |
children | 89031b4b9a28 |
files | man/search.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/man/search.texi Fri Jun 15 08:17:37 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/search.texi Fri Jun 15 08:20:57 2001 +0000 @@ -211,9 +211,9 @@ @vindex isearch-lazy-highlight-face @cindex faces for highlighting search matches - You can control how does the highlighting of matches look like by -customizing the faces @code{isearch} (used for the current match) and -@code{isearch-lazy-highlight-face} (used for the other matches). + You can control how this highlighting looks by customizing the faces +@code{isearch} (used for the current match) and +@code{isearch-lazy-highlight-face} (for all the other matches). @vindex isearch-mode-map To customize the special characters that incremental search understands, @@ -227,11 +227,11 @@ that is designed to take less time. Instead of redisplaying the buffer at each place the search gets to, it creates a new single-line window and uses that to display the line that the search has found. The single-line window -comes into play as soon as point gets outside of the text that is already +comes into play as soon as point moves outside of the text that is already on the screen. When you terminate the search, the single-line window is removed. -Then Emacs redisplays the window in which the search was done, to show +Emacs then redisplays the window in which the search was done, to show its new position of point. @vindex search-slow-speed @@ -289,8 +289,9 @@ Word search searches for a sequence of words without regard to how the words are separated. More precisely, you type a string of many words, -using single spaces to separate them, and the string can be found even if -there are multiple spaces, newlines or other punctuation between the words. +using single spaces to separate them, and the string can be found even +if there are multiple spaces, newlines, or other punctuation characters +between these words. Word search is useful for editing a printed document made with a text formatter. If you edit while looking at the printed, formatted version,