Mercurial > emacs
changeset 100013:e7072eb5c038
(Dissociated Press): Minor cleanups.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 28 Nov 2008 15:41:27 +0000 |
parents | cf5da10f146c |
children | ffb234dea675 |
files | doc/emacs/misc.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/doc/emacs/misc.texi Fri Nov 28 15:40:38 2008 +0000 +++ b/doc/emacs/misc.texi Fri Nov 28 15:41:27 2008 +0000 @@ -2677,7 +2677,7 @@ gibberish, it insists on a certain amount of overlap between the end of one run of consecutive words or characters and the start of the next. That is, if it has just output `president' and then decides to jump -to a different point in the file, it might spot the `ent' in `pentagon' +to a different point in the buffer, it might spot the `ent' in `pentagon' and continue from there, producing `presidentagon'.@footnote{This dissociword actually appeared during the Vietnam War, when it was very appropriate. Bush has made it appropriate again.} Long sample texts @@ -2699,9 +2699,9 @@ chain based on a frequency table constructed from the sample text. It is, however, an independent, ignoriginal invention. Dissociated Press techniquitously copies several consecutive characters from the sample -between random choices, whereas a Markov chain would choose randomly -for each word or character. This makes for more plausible sounding -results, and runs faster. +text between random jumps, unlike a Markov chain which would jump +randomly after each word or character. This makes for more plausible +sounding results, and runs faster. @cindex outragedy @cindex buggestion