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authorPaul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>2015-09-15 08:46:48 -0700
committerPaul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>2015-09-15 08:48:44 -0700
commitef7dbdf5873bf0a1f3f0e64e5d019e74d5b15b9e (patch)
tree5b1d35e609ce4481816662709ac677db1468495b /doc/lispref/searching.texi
parentc051487fcf379febf4ce5b38de7017609c84a106 (diff)
downloademacs-ef7dbdf5873bf0a1f3f0e64e5d019e74d5b15b9e.tar.gz
Quote less in manuals
The manuals often used quotes ``...'' when it is better to use @dfn or @code or capitalized words or no quoting at all. For example, there is no need for the `` and '' in “if a variable has one effect for @code{nil} values and another effect for ``non-@code{nil}'' values”. Reword the Emacs, Lisp intro, and Lisp reference manuals to eliminate unnecessary quoting like this, and to use @dfn etc. instead when called for (Bug#21472).
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/lispref/searching.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/lispref/searching.texi14
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/lispref/searching.texi b/doc/lispref/searching.texi
index 60360cb98a9..6dc4a16c765 100644
--- a/doc/lispref/searching.texi
+++ b/doc/lispref/searching.texi
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ match.
@end deffn
@deffn Command word-search-forward string &optional limit noerror repeat
-This function searches forward from point for a ``word'' match for
+This function searches forward from point for a word match for
@var{string}. If it finds a match, it sets point to the end of the
match found, and returns the new value of point.
@@ -359,7 +359,7 @@ preceding expression either once or not at all. For example,
@item @samp{*?}, @samp{+?}, @samp{??}
@cindex non-greedy repetition characters in regexp
-These are ``non-greedy'' variants of the operators @samp{*}, @samp{+}
+These are non-greedy variants of the operators @samp{*}, @samp{+}
and @samp{?}. Where those operators match the largest possible
substring (consistent with matching the entire containing expression),
the non-greedy variants match the smallest possible substring
@@ -1127,7 +1127,7 @@ avoids modifying the match data.
@defun looking-at regexp
This function determines whether the text in the current buffer directly
following point matches the regular expression @var{regexp}. ``Directly
-following'' means precisely that: the search is ``anchored'' and it can
+following'' means precisely that: the search is anchored and it can
succeed only starting with the first character following point. The
result is @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
@@ -1759,18 +1759,18 @@ in two ways:
@itemize @bullet
@item
-The ``key bindings'' are not commands, just symbols that are meaningful
+The key bindings are not commands, just symbols that are meaningful
to the functions that use this map.
@item
Prefix keys are not supported; each key binding must be for a
single-event key sequence. This is because the functions don't use
@code{read-key-sequence} to get the input; instead, they read a single
-event and look it up ``by hand''.
+event and look it up by hand.
@end itemize
@end defvar
-Here are the meaningful ``bindings'' for @code{query-replace-map}.
+Here are the meaningful bindings for @code{query-replace-map}.
Several of them are meaningful only for @code{query-replace} and
friends.
@@ -1835,7 +1835,7 @@ Display some help, then ask again.
@defvar multi-query-replace-map
This variable holds a keymap that extends @code{query-replace-map} by
providing additional keybindings that are useful in multi-buffer
-replacements. The additional ``bindings'' are:
+replacements. The additional bindings are:
@table @code
@item automatic-all