Mercurial > emacs
changeset 44899:ebddb2618c17
Fixed typographic errors.
author | Robert J. Chassell <bob@rattlesnake.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 27 Apr 2002 13:10:05 +0000 |
parents | 457be7d90d62 |
children | e4975d9c93ff |
files | lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) [+] |
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line diff
--- a/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi Sat Apr 27 09:02:44 2002 +0000 +++ b/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi Sat Apr 27 13:10:05 2002 +0000 @@ -1331,7 +1331,7 @@ example, pressing the @key{TAB} key automatically indents the line the cursor is on by the right amount. A command to properly indent the code in a region is customarily bound to @kbd{M-C-\}. Indentation is -designed so that you can see which elements of a list belongs to which +designed so that you can see which elements of a list belong to which list---elements of a sub-list are indented more than the elements of the enclosing list. @@ -3690,7 +3690,7 @@ Another way to think about @code{let} is that it is like a @code{setq} that is temporary and local. The values set by @code{let} are automatically undone when the @code{let} is finished. The setting -only effects expressions that are inside the bounds of the @code{let} +only affects expressions that are inside the bounds of the @code{let} expression. In computer science jargon, we would say ``the binding of a symbol is visible only in functions called in the @code{let} form; in Emacs Lisp, scoping is dynamic, not lexical.'' @@ -4737,7 +4737,7 @@ Before looking at the code, let's consider what the function definition has to contain: it must include an expression that makes the function interactive so it can be called by typing @kbd{M-x -beginning-of-buffer} or by typing a keychord such as @kbd{C-<}; it +beginning-of-buffer} or by typing a keychord such as @kbd{M-<}; it must include code to leave a mark at the original position in the buffer; and it must include code to move the cursor to the beginning of the buffer. @@ -5571,13 +5571,13 @@ @cindex Asterisk for read-only buffer @findex * @r{for read-only buffer} -The asterisk is for the situation when the buffer is a read-only -buffer---a buffer that cannot be modified. If @code{insert-buffer} is -called on a buffer that is read-only, a message to this effect is -printed in the echo area and the terminal may beep or blink at you; -you will not be permitted to insert anything into current buffer. The -asterisk does not need to be followed by a newline to separate it from -the next argument. +The asterisk is for the situation when the current buffer is a +read-only buffer---a buffer that cannot be modified. If +@code{insert-buffer} is called when the current buffer is read-only, a +message to this effect is printed in the echo area and the terminal +may beep or blink at you; you will not be permitted to insert anything +into current buffer. The asterisk does not need to be followed by a +newline to separate it from the next argument. @node b for interactive, , Read-only buffer, insert-buffer interactive @comment node-name, next, previous, up @@ -7142,6 +7142,7 @@ @code{cons}. Find out what happens when you @code{cons} a list onto itself. Replace the first element of the list of four birds with a fish. Replace the rest of that list with a list of other fish. + @node Cutting & Storing Text, List Implementation, car cdr & cons, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @chapter Cutting and Storing Text @@ -10369,7 +10370,7 @@ loops---takes the @sc{cdr} of the list---and binds the @sc{car} of each shorter version of the list to the first of its arguments. -@code{dotimes} loops a specific number of time: you specify the number. +@code{dotimes} loops a specific number of times: you specify the number. @menu * dolist:: @@ -16080,7 +16081,7 @@ @findex defcustom You can specify variables using @code{defcustom} so that you and -others can then can use Emacs' @code{customize} feature to set their +others can then use Emacs' @code{customize} feature to set their values. (You cannot use @code{customize} to write function definitions; but you can write @code{defuns} in your @file{.emacs} file. Indeed, you can write any Lisp expression in your @file{.emacs} @@ -18636,7 +18637,7 @@ The answers can be found by a quick test. When @code{(% -1 5)} is evaluated, a negative number is returned; and if @code{nthcdr} is called with a negative number, it returns the same value as if it were -called with a first argument of zero. This can be seen be evaluating +called with a first argument of zero. This can be seen by evaluating the following code. Here the @samp{@result{}} points to the result of evaluating the code