Mercurial > emacs
changeset 103683:a3a9b0c129af
(Antinews): Minor changes in phrasing.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 02 Jul 2009 02:31:57 +0000 |
parents | 2b764d5d156c |
children | 9f50c5639e4c |
files | doc/emacs/ChangeLog doc/emacs/anti.texi |
diffstat | 2 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/doc/emacs/ChangeLog Thu Jul 02 02:31:38 2009 +0000 +++ b/doc/emacs/ChangeLog Thu Jul 02 02:31:57 2009 +0000 @@ -1,3 +1,16 @@ +2009-07-02 Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> + + * anti.texi (Antinews): Minor changes in phrasing. + + * cal-xtra.texi, fortran-xtra.texi: Re-order a few things to reduce + some underfull lines in dvi output. + + * emacs-xtra.texi (Introduction): Mention included in info Emacs manual. + + * sending.texi (Mail Sending): Add a tiny bit on mailclient. + + * vc-xtra.texi (Advanced VC Usage): End all menu items with a period. + 2009-07-01 Jan Djärv <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> * xresources.texi (Table of Resources): Mention maximized for
--- a/doc/emacs/anti.texi Thu Jul 02 02:31:38 2009 +0000 +++ b/doc/emacs/anti.texi Thu Jul 02 02:31:57 2009 +0000 @@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ @item We have switched to a character representation specially designed for -Emacs. Rather than forcing all the widely used scripts artificially -into alignment, as Unicode does, Emacs treats them all equally, giving +Emacs. Rather than forcing all the widely used scripts into artificial +alignment, as Unicode does, Emacs treats them all equally, giving each one a place in the space of character codes. We have eliminated the confusing practice, in Emacs 23, whereby one character can belong to multiple character sets. Now each script has its own variant, and @@ -111,16 +111,16 @@ to CVS. @item -Rmail now uses a special file format, Babyl format, designed specially +Rmail now uses a special file format, Babyl format, specifically designed for storing and editing mail. When you visit a file in Rmail, or get new mail, Rmail converts it automatically to Babyl format. @item Emacs can no longer display frames on X windows and text terminals -(ttys) simultaneously. If you start Emacs as an X application, the -Emacs job can only create X frames; if you start Emacs on a tty, the -Emacs job can only use that tty. No more confusion about which type -of frame @command{emacsclient} will use in any given Emacs session! +(ttys) simultaneously. If you start Emacs as an X application, it +can only create X frames; if you start Emacs on a tty, it can only use +that tty. No more confusion about which type of frame +@command{emacsclient} will use in any given Emacs session! @item Emacs can no longer be started as a daemon. You can be sure that if