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authorGlenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>2007-04-13 02:58:17 +0000
committerGlenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>2007-04-13 02:58:17 +0000
commit2fbcf1743ee4f477313dfd6d26587c76f16912f0 (patch)
tree430eaae16fc85820467d46d1520e59e80ef47edb /etc
parenta7da3bc55c791df798d550c2efc521996b827faf (diff)
downloademacs-2fbcf1743ee4f477313dfd6d26587c76f16912f0.tar.gz
Fix typos.
Diffstat (limited to 'etc')
-rw-r--r--etc/DEBUG4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/etc/DEBUG b/etc/DEBUG
index 97e1f015a05..ea4e14866ca 100644
--- a/etc/DEBUG
+++ b/etc/DEBUG
@@ -567,7 +567,7 @@ are involved in the crash.
Once you discover the corrupted Lisp object or data structure, grep
the sources for its uses and try to figure out what could cause the
-corruption. If looking at the sources doesn;t help, you could try
+corruption. If looking at the sources doesn't help, you could try
setting a watchpoint on the corrupted data, and see what code modifies
it in some invalid way. (Obviously, this technique is only useful for
data that is modified only very rarely.)
@@ -731,7 +731,7 @@ prints the backtrace for a crash. It is usually best to look at the
disassembly to determine exactly what code is being run--the
disassembly will probably show several source lines followed by a
block of assembler for those lines. The actual point where Emacs
-crashes will be one of those source lines, but not neccesarily the one
+crashes will be one of those source lines, but not necessarily the one
that the debugger reports.
Another problematic area with the MS debugger is with variables that