Mercurial > emacs
changeset 61980:f3d536670495
Fix typos and Texinfo usage.
author | Luc Teirlinck <teirllm@auburn.edu> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 01 May 2005 17:01:44 +0000 |
parents | b16001bd5ab0 |
children | 8131d95ff037 |
files | lispref/display.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) [+] |
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line diff
--- a/lispref/display.texi Sun May 01 16:59:58 2005 +0000 +++ b/lispref/display.texi Sun May 01 17:01:44 2005 +0000 @@ -1142,9 +1142,9 @@ @var{end} whose property @var{name} has the value @var{value}. It can move the endpoints of the overlays in the region, or split them. -If @var{name} is omitted or nil, it means to delete all overlays in +If @var{name} is omitted or @code{nil}, it means to delete all overlays in the specified region. If @var{start} and/or @var{end} are omitted or -nil, that means the beginning and end of the buffer respectively. +@code{nil}, that means the beginning and end of the buffer respectively. Therefore, @code{(remove-overlays)} removes all the overlays in the current buffer. @end defun @@ -1556,7 +1556,7 @@ adding blank areas between the images. If the property value is not @code{t}, it is a height spec. A height -spec stands for a numeric height value; this heigh spec specifies the +spec stands for a numeric height value; this height spec specifies the actual line height, @var{line-height}. There are several ways to write a height spec; here's how each of them translates into a numeric height: @@ -1572,7 +1572,7 @@ is @var{ratio} times the height of face @var{face}. @var{ratio} can be any type of number, or @code{nil} which means a ratio of 1. If @var{face} is @code{t}, it refers to the current face. -@item (@code{nil} . @var{ratio}) +@item (nil . @var{ratio}) If the height spec is a cons of the format shown, the numeric height is @var{ratio} times the height of the contents of the line. @end table @@ -1583,7 +1583,7 @@ the line to achieve the total height @var{line-height}. Otherwise, @var{line-height} has no effect. - If you don't specify the @code{line-height} propery, the line's + If you don't specify the @code{line-height} property, the line's height consists of the contents' height plus the line spacing. There are several ways to specify the line spacing for different parts of Emacs text. @@ -2984,7 +2984,7 @@ @code{overlay-arrow-variable-list}. @defvar overlay-arrow-variable-list -This variable's value is a list of varibles, each of which specifies +This variable's value is a list of variables, each of which specifies the position of an overlay arrow. The variable @code{overlay-arrow-position} has its normal meaning because it is on this list. @@ -3160,7 +3160,7 @@ @noindent This illustrates that what matters is the property value for each character. If two consecutive characters have the same -object as the @code{display} property value, it's irrelevent +object as the @code{display} property value, it's irrelevant whether they got this property from a single call to @code{put-text-property} or from two different calls.