Mercurial > emacs
changeset 16423:ecbb741d054c
(tpu-load-xkeys): Doc fix.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 12 Oct 1996 02:34:32 +0000 |
parents | 8738fd2b351a |
children | 8ce8051df140 |
files | lisp/emulation/tpu-edt.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/lisp/emulation/tpu-edt.el Sat Oct 12 02:32:56 1996 +0000 +++ b/lisp/emulation/tpu-edt.el Sat Oct 12 02:34:32 1996 +0000 @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ ;; Please note that TPU-edt does NOT emulate TPU. It emulates TPU's EDT ;; emulation. Very few TPU line-mode commands are supported. -;; TPU-edt, like it's VMS cousin, works on VT-series terminals with DEC +;; TPU-edt, like its VMS cousin, works on VT-series terminals with DEC ;; style keyboards. VT terminal emulators, including xterm with the ;; appropriate key translations, work just fine too. @@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ ;; a small help file showing the default keypad layout, control key ;; functions, and Gold key functions. Pressing any key inside of help ;; splits the screen and prints a description of the function of the -;; pressed key. Gold-PF2 invokes the native emacs help, with it's +;; pressed key. Gold-PF2 invokes the native emacs help, with its ;; zillions of options. ;; Thanks to emacs, TPU-edt has some extensions that may make your life @@ -2391,7 +2391,7 @@ Ack!! You're running TPU-edt under X-windows without loading an X key definition file. To create a TPU-edt X key definition file, run the tpu-mapper.el program. It came with TPU-edt. It - even includes directions on how to use it! Perhaps it's laying + even includes directions on how to use it! Perhaps it's lying around here someplace. ") (let ((file "tpu-mapper.el") (found nil)