Mercurial > emacs
changeset 36333:a0141ceb7edc
(Splitting in IMAP): Remove doubled `might'.
(Category Syntax): Remove doubled `those'.
(Home Score File): Remove doubled `will'.
(Undo): Remove doubled `command'.
author | Gerd Moellmann <gerd@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 23 Feb 2001 12:43:39 +0000 |
parents | 1b818d2add6e |
children | 86322cde2e42 |
files | man/gnus.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/man/gnus.texi Fri Feb 23 12:36:49 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/gnus.texi Fri Feb 23 12:43:39 2001 +0000 @@ -14039,7 +14039,7 @@ Nnmail users might recollect that the last regexp had to be empty to match all articles (like in the example above). This is not required in nnimap. Articles not matching any of the regexps will not be moved out -of your inbox. (This might might affect performance if you keep lots of +of your inbox. (This might affect performance if you keep lots of unread articles in your inbox, since the splitting code would go over them every time you fetch new mail.) @@ -14708,7 +14708,7 @@ These directives in either the category definition or a group's parameters will cause the agent to read in all the applicable score -files for a group, *filtering out* those those sections that do not +files for a group, *filtering out* those sections that do not relate to one of the permitted subset of scoring keywords. @itemize @bullet @@ -16128,7 +16128,7 @@ @enumerate @item @code{(@var{regexp} @var{file-name})}. If the @var{regexp} matches the -group name, the @var{file-name} will will be used as the home score file. +group name, the @var{file-name} will be used as the home score file. @item A function. If the function returns non-nil, the result will be used as @@ -18056,7 +18056,7 @@ @findex gnus-undo The undoability is provided by the @code{gnus-undo-mode} minor mode. It is used if @code{gnus-use-undo} is non-@code{nil}, which is the -default. The @kbd{M-C-_} key performs the @code{gnus-undo} command +default. The @kbd{M-C-_} key performs the @code{gnus-undo} command, which should feel kinda like the normal Emacs @code{undo} command.