Mercurial > emacs
changeset 42979:7359d6d75a9c
Minor cleanups.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 26 Jan 2002 22:43:53 +0000 |
parents | dcc8ffab2cec |
children | 6134751ae11f |
files | lispref/tips.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/lispref/tips.texi Sat Jan 26 17:10:34 2002 +0000 +++ b/lispref/tips.texi Sat Jan 26 22:43:53 2002 +0000 @@ -483,6 +483,17 @@ a running Emacs. @item +Format the documentation string so that it fits in an Emacs window on an +80-column screen. It is a good idea for most lines to be no wider than +60 characters. The first line should not be wider than 67 characters +or it will look bad in the output of @code{apropos}. + +You can fill the text if that looks good. However, rather than blindly +filling the entire documentation string, you can often make it much more +readable by choosing certain line breaks with care. Use blank lines +between topics if the documentation string is long. + +@item The first line of the documentation string should consist of one or two complete sentences that stand on their own as a summary. @kbd{M-x apropos} displays just the first line, and if that line's contents don't @@ -503,7 +514,7 @@ cons of A and B.'' in preference to ``Returns the cons of A and B@.'' Usually it looks good to do likewise for the rest of the first paragraph. Subsequent paragraphs usually look better if each sentence -has a proper subject. +is indicative and has a proper subject. @item Write documentation strings in the active voice, not the passive, and in @@ -527,17 +538,6 @@ @item Do not start or end a documentation string with whitespace. - -@item -Format the documentation string so that it fits in an Emacs window on an -80-column screen. It is a good idea for most lines to be no wider than -60 characters. The first line should not be wider than 67 characters -or it will look bad in the output of @code{apropos}. - -You can fill the text if that looks good. However, rather than blindly -filling the entire documentation string, you can often make it much more -readable by choosing certain line breaks with care. Use blank lines -between topics if the documentation string is long. @item @strong{Do not} indent subsequent lines of a documentation string so