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author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2001-08-25 20:44:44 +0000 |
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committer | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2001-08-25 20:44:44 +0000 |
commit | 1f7ebf7cbbb9cb816a358dc80f094494d1ffb545 (patch) | |
tree | d461e25c22ca668b743b00abe54f0ab8b6660fec /man/fixit.texi | |
parent | cd30a00e854ab2b7f1388ea1ac726ac76c1a078f (diff) | |
download | emacs-1f7ebf7cbbb9cb816a358dc80f094494d1ffb545.tar.gz |
Minor clarifications.
Diffstat (limited to 'man/fixit.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | man/fixit.texi | 22 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/man/fixit.texi b/man/fixit.texi index 02f7ed767b6..7671bbb7b08 100644 --- a/man/fixit.texi +++ b/man/fixit.texi @@ -81,12 +81,11 @@ given at the end of a line, rather than transposing the last character of the line with the newline, which would be useless, @kbd{C-t} transposes the last two characters on the line. So, if you catch your transposition error right away, you can fix it with just a @kbd{C-t}. If you don't catch it so -fast, you must move the cursor back to between the two transposed -characters. If you transposed a space with the last character of the word -before it, the word motion commands are a good way of getting there. -Otherwise, a reverse search (@kbd{C-r}) is often the best way. -@xref{Search}. - +fast, you must move the cursor back between the two transposed +characters before you type @kbd{C-t}. If you transposed a space with +the last character of the word before it, the word motion commands are +a good way of getting there. Otherwise, a reverse search (@kbd{C-r}) +is often the best way. @xref{Search}. @kindex C-x C-t @findex transpose-lines @@ -211,7 +210,7 @@ you various alternatives for what to do about it. To check the entire current buffer, use @kbd{M-x ispell-buffer}. Use @kbd{M-x ispell-region} to check just the current region. To check spelling in an email message you are writing, use @kbd{M-x -ispell-message}; that checks the whole buffer, but does not check +ispell-message}; that command checks the whole buffer, except for material that is indented or appears to be cited from other messages. @findex ispell @@ -223,7 +222,8 @@ spell-checks the current buffer. Each time these commands encounter an incorrect word, they ask you what to do. They display a list of alternatives, usually including several ``near-misses''---words that are close to the word being -checked. Then you must type a character. Here are the valid responses: +checked. Then you must type a single-character response. Here are +the valid responses: @table @kbd @item @key{SPC} @@ -252,7 +252,7 @@ editing session and for this buffer. @item i Insert this word in your private dictionary file so that Ispell will -consider it correct it from now on, even in future sessions. +consider it correct from now on, even in future sessions. @item u Insert the lower-case version of this word in your private dic@-tion@-ary @@ -264,8 +264,8 @@ information. @item l @var{word} @key{RET} Look in the dictionary for words that match @var{word}. These words -become the new list of ``near-misses''; you can select one of them to -replace with by typing a digit. You can use @samp{*} in @var{word} as a +become the new list of ``near-misses''; you can select one of them as +the replacement by typing a digit. You can use @samp{*} in @var{word} as a wildcard. @item C-g |