Mercurial > emacs
changeset 59371:364d233a8dc3
Minor typos corrected, and some small re-wording.
author | Stephen Eglen <stephen@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 05 Jan 2005 13:16:22 +0000 |
parents | 32c6082ebc9f |
children | b6e2ab383e40 |
files | man/programs.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 25 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/programs.texi Wed Jan 05 01:10:24 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/programs.texi Wed Jan 05 13:16:22 2005 +0000 @@ -17,9 +17,9 @@ Apply the usual indentation conventions of the language (@pxref{Program Indent}). @item -Insert, kill or align comments (@pxref{Comments}). +Balance parentheses (@pxref{Parentheses}). @item -Balance parentheses (@pxref{Parentheses}). +Insert, kill or align comments (@pxref{Comments}). @item Highlight program syntax (@pxref{Font Lock}). @end itemize @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ @cindex PostScript mode The existing programming language major modes include Lisp, Scheme (a variant of Lisp) and the Scheme-based DSSSL expression language, Ada, -AWK, C, C++, Delphi (Object Pascal), Fortran (free format and fixed +ASM, AWK, C, C++, Delphi (Object Pascal), Fortran (free format and fixed format), Icon, IDL (CORBA), IDLWAVE, Java, Metafont (@TeX{}'s companion for font creation), Modula2, Objective-C, Octave, Pascal, Perl, Pike, PostScript, Prolog, Simula, Tcl, and VHDL. There is @@ -316,11 +316,11 @@ @vindex which-func-modes To enable (or disable) Which Function mode, use the command @kbd{M-x which-function-mode}. This command is global; it applies to all -buffers, both existing ones and those yet to be created. However, -it only takes effect in certain major modes, those listed in the value of -@code{which-func-modes}. If the value is @code{t}, then Which -Function mode applies to all major modes that know how to support -it---in other words, all the major modes that support Imenu. +buffers, both existing ones and those yet to be created. However, it +takes effect in only certain major modes, those listed in the value of +@code{which-func-modes}. If the value is @code{t}, then Which Function +mode applies to all major modes that know how to support it---in other +words, all the major modes that support Imenu. @node Program Indent @section Indentation for Programs @@ -428,7 +428,7 @@ positioning point before the beginning of it and typing @kbd{C-M-q} (@code{indent-sexp} in Lisp mode, @code{c-indent-exp} in C mode; also bound to other suitable commands in other modes). The indentation of -the line where the grouping starts is not changed; therefore, this +the line where the grouping starts is not changed; therefore it changes only the relative indentation within the grouping, not its overall indentation. To correct that as well, type @key{TAB} first. @@ -638,7 +638,7 @@ @item C-M-f Move forward over a balanced expression (@code{forward-sexp}). @item C-M-b -Move backward over a balanced expression(@code{backward-sexp}). +Move backward over a balanced expression (@code{backward-sexp}). @item C-M-k Kill balanced expression forward (@code{kill-sexp}). @item C-M-t @@ -746,7 +746,7 @@ @item C-M-n Move forward over a parenthetical group (@code{forward-list}). @item C-M-p -Move backward over a parenthetical group(@code{backward-list}). +Move backward over a parenthetical group (@code{backward-list}). @item C-M-u Move up in parenthesis structure (@code{backward-up-list}). @item C-M-d @@ -1142,7 +1142,7 @@ program.}. Unlike @kbd{M-x man}, it does not run any external programs to format and display the man pages; instead it does the job in Emacs Lisp, so it works on systems such as MS-Windows, where the -@code{man} program (and the other programs it uses) are not generally +@code{man} program (and other programs it uses) are not generally available. @kbd{M-x woman} prompts for a name of a manual page, and provides @@ -1259,9 +1259,9 @@ @item C-c @@ C-s Show the current block (@code{hs-show-block}). @item C-c @@ C-c -Either hide or show the current block (@code{hs-toggle-hiding}) +Either hide or show the current block (@code{hs-toggle-hiding}). @item S-Mouse-2 -Either hide or show the block you click on (@code{hs-mouse-toggle-hiding}) +Either hide or show the block you click on (@code{hs-mouse-toggle-hiding}). @item C-c @@ C-M-h Hide all top-level blocks (@code{hs-hide-all}). @item C-c @@ C-M-s @@ -1282,7 +1282,7 @@ @item hs-isearch-open Specifies what kind of hidden blocks to open in Isearch mode. -The value should be one of these four symbols. +The value should be one of these four symbols: @table @code @item code @@ -1958,16 +1958,15 @@ Line numbers of four digits or less are normally indented one space. The variable @code{fortran-line-number-indent} controls this; it specifies the maximum indentation a line number can have. Line numbers -are indented to right-justify them to end in column 4 unless that would -require more than this maximum indentation. The default value of the -variable is 1. +are right-justified to end in column 4 unless that would require more +than this maximum indentation. The default value of the variable is 1. @vindex fortran-electric-line-number Simply inserting a line number is enough to indent it according to these rules. As each digit is inserted, the indentation is recomputed. To turn off this feature, set the variable -@code{fortran-electric-line-number} to @code{nil}. Then inserting line -numbers is like inserting anything else. +@code{fortran-electric-line-number} to @code{nil}. + @node ForIndent Conv @subsubsection Syntactic Conventions @@ -2111,7 +2110,7 @@ @code{fortran-comment-line-extra-indent} columns of indentation. @item nil -Don't move text in full-line comments automatically at all. +Don't move text in full-line comments automatically. @end table @vindex fortran-comment-indent-char @@ -2223,12 +2222,13 @@ @vindex fortran-column-ruler-fixed @vindex fortran-column-ruler-tabs - The text used to display the column ruler depends on the value of -the variable @code{indent-tabs-mode}. If @code{indent-tabs-mode} is + The text used to display the column ruler depends on the value of the +variable @code{indent-tabs-mode}. If @code{indent-tabs-mode} is @code{nil}, then the value of the variable @code{fortran-column-ruler-fixed} is used as the column ruler. -Otherwise, the variable @code{fortran-column-ruler-tab} is displayed. -By changing these variables, you can change the column ruler display. +Otherwise, the value of the variable @code{fortran-column-ruler-tab} is +displayed. By changing these variables, you can change the column ruler +display. @kindex C-c C-w @r{(Fortran mode)} @findex fortran-window-create-momentarily