changeset 69976:9ca2896dbd36

Clean up previous change.
author Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
date Wed, 12 Apr 2006 19:32:04 +0000
parents 101355b37caf
children b2ed1f1fc9e0
files man/search.texi
diffstat 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/search.texi	Wed Apr 12 18:17:17 2006 +0000
+++ b/man/search.texi	Wed Apr 12 19:32:04 2006 +0000
@@ -752,7 +752,8 @@
 @item \@var{d}
 @cindex back reference, in regexp
 matches the same text that matched the @var{d}th occurrence of a
-@samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct (a.k.a.@: @dfn{back reference}).
+@samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct.  This is called a @dfn{back
+reference}.
 
 After the end of a @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct, the matcher remembers
 the beginning and end of the text matched by that construct.  Then,
@@ -1009,10 +1010,11 @@
 @samp{\&} in @var{newstring} stands for the entire match being
 replaced.  @samp{\@var{d}} in @var{newstring}, where @var{d} is a
 digit, stands for whatever matched the @var{d}th parenthesized
-grouping in @var{regexp} (a.k.a.@: ``back reference'').  @samp{\#}
-refers to the count of replacements already made in this command, as a
-decimal number.  In the first replacement, @samp{\#} stands for
-@samp{0}; in the second, for @samp{1}; and so on.  For example,
+grouping in @var{regexp}.  (This is called a ``back reference''.)
+@samp{\#} refers to the count of replacements already made in this
+command, as a decimal number.  In the first replacement, @samp{\#}
+stands for @samp{0}; in the second, for @samp{1}; and so on.  For
+example,
 
 @example
 M-x replace-regexp @key{RET} c[ad]+r @key{RET} \&-safe @key{RET}