Mercurial > emacs
changeset 54265:1f7cd275e61f
Fix typos.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Mar 2004 17:10:27 +0000 |
parents | 9fd3a94524eb |
children | 840b8997440d |
files | lispref/processes.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lispref/processes.texi Thu Mar 04 17:08:16 2004 +0000 +++ b/lispref/processes.texi Thu Mar 04 17:10:27 2004 +0000 @@ -382,7 +382,7 @@ @defun call-process-shell-command command &optional infile destination display &rest args This function executes the shell command @var{command} synchronously -in separate process. The final arguments @var{args} are additional +in a separate process. The final arguments @var{args} are additional arguments to add at the end of @var{command}. The other arguments are handled as in @code{call-process}. @end defun @@ -1512,7 +1512,7 @@ @code{listen}. None of those values is possible for a real subprocess. @xref{Process Information}. - You can stop and resume operation of a network processes by calling + You can stop and resume operation of a network process by calling @code{stop-process} and @code{continue-process}. For a server process, being stopped means not accepting new connections. (Up to 5 connection requests will be queued for when you resume the server; you @@ -1667,10 +1667,10 @@ @section Datagrams @cindex datagrams - A datagram connection communicates with individual packets -rather than streams of data. Each call to @code{process-send} -sends one datagram packet, and each datagram received results -in one call to the filter function. + A datagram connection communicates with individual packets rather +than streams of data. Each call to @code{process-send} sends one +datagram packet (@pxref{Input to Processes}), and each datagram +received results in one call to the filter function. The datagram connection doesn't have to talk with the same remote peer all the time. It has a @dfn{remote peer address} which specifies @@ -1771,10 +1771,10 @@ @item An ``unsupported family'' address is represented by a cons @code{(@var{f} . @var{av})}, where @var{f} is the family number and -@var{av} is a vector specifying the socket address using with one -element per address data byte. Do not rely on this format in portable -code, as it may depend on implementation defined constants, data -sizes, and data structure alignment. +@var{av} is a vector specifying the socket address using one element +per address data byte. Do not rely on this format in portable code, +as it may depend on implementation defined constants, data sizes, and +data structure alignment. @end itemize @item :nowait @var{bool}