From d1a791f8edc1b8f2189b6f1b3be7b946fef1edbc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Eggert Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2019 18:44:35 -0800 Subject: Spelling fixes --- lisp/so-long.el | 48 ++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------ 1 file changed, 24 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-) (limited to 'lisp/so-long.el') diff --git a/lisp/so-long.el b/lisp/so-long.el index 49595a3fd91..3df2de97297 100644 --- a/lisp/so-long.el +++ b/lisp/so-long.el @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ ;; compacted into the smallest file size possible, which often entails removing ;; newlines should they not be strictly necessary). This can result in lines ;; which are many thousands of characters long, and most programming modes -;; simply aren't optimised (remotely) for this scenario, so performance can +;; simply aren't optimized (remotely) for this scenario, so performance can ;; suffer significantly. ;; ;; When such files are detected, the command `so-long' is automatically called, @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ ;; * Overview of modes and commands ;; -------------------------------- ;; - `global-so-long-mode' - A global minor mode which enables the automated -;; behaviour, causing the user's preferred action to be invoked whenever a +;; behavior, causing the user's preferred action to be invoked whenever a ;; newly-visited file contains excessively long lines. ;; - `so-long-mode' - A major mode, and the default action. ;; - `so-long-minor-mode' - A minor mode version of the major mode, and an @@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ ;; ;; On rare occasions you may choose to manually invoke the `so-long' command, ;; which invokes your preferred `so-long-action' (exactly as the automatic -;; behaviour would do if it had detected long lines). You might use this if a +;; behavior would do if it had detected long lines). You might use this if a ;; problematic file did not meet your configured criteria, and you wished to ;; trigger the performance improvements manually. ;; @@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ ;; available to `so-long' but, like any other mode, they can be invoked directly ;; if you have a need to do that (see also "Other ways of using so-long" below). ;; -;; If the behaviour ever triggers when you did not want it to, you can use the +;; If the behavior ever triggers when you did not want it to, you can use the ;; `so-long-revert' command to restore the buffer to its original state. ;; * Basic configuration @@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ ;; ;; Note that `so-long-minor-modes' is not useful for other global minor modes ;; (as distinguished from globalized minor modes), but in some cases it will be -;; possible to inhibit or otherwise counter-act the behaviour of a global mode +;; possible to inhibit or otherwise counter-act the behavior of a global mode ;; by overriding variables, or by employing hooks (see below). You would need ;; to inspect the code for a given global mode (on a case by case basis) to ;; determine whether it's possible to inhibit it for a single buffer -- and if @@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ ;; If `so-long-action' is set to either `so-long-mode' or `so-long-minor-mode', ;; the buffer-local value for each variable in the list is set to the associated ;; value in the alist. Use this to enforce values which will improve -;; performance or otherwise avoid undesirable behaviours. If `so-long-revert' +;; performance or otherwise avoid undesirable behaviors. If `so-long-revert' ;; is called, then the original values are restored. ;; * Hooks @@ -325,7 +325,7 @@ ;; meaning you would need to add to `safe-local-variable-values' in order to ;; avoid being queried about them. ;; -;; Finally, the `so-long-predicate' user option enables the automated behaviour +;; Finally, the `so-long-predicate' user option enables the automated behavior ;; to be determined by a custom function, if greater control is needed. ;; * Implementation notes @@ -342,7 +342,7 @@ ;; * Caveats ;; --------- -;; The variables affecting the automated behaviour of this library (such as +;; The variables affecting the automated behavior of this library (such as ;; `so-long-action') can be used as file- or dir-local values in Emacs 26+, but ;; not in previous versions of Emacs. This is on account of improvements made ;; to `normal-mode' in 26.1, which altered the execution order with respect to @@ -399,7 +399,7 @@ ;; 0.6 - Added `so-long-minor-modes' and `so-long-hook'. ;; 0.5 - Renamed library to "so-long.el". ;; - Added explicit `so-long-enable' command to activate our advice. -;; 0.4 - Amended/documented behaviour with file-local 'mode' variables. +;; 0.4 - Amended/documented behavior with file-local 'mode' variables. ;; 0.3 - Defer to a file-local 'mode' variable. ;; 0.2 - Initial release to EmacsWiki. ;; 0.1 - Experimental. @@ -500,7 +500,7 @@ files would prevent Emacs from handling them correctly." (defcustom so-long-invisible-buffer-function #'so-long-deferred "Function called in place of `so-long' when the buffer is not displayed. -This affects the behaviour of `global-so-long-mode'. +This affects the behavior of `global-so-long-mode'. We treat invisible buffers differently from displayed buffers because, in cases where a library is using a buffer for behind-the-scenes processing, @@ -548,7 +548,7 @@ Defaults to `so-long-detected-long-line-p'." (defun so-long--action-type () "Generate a :type for `so-long-action' based on `so-long-action-alist'." ;; :type seemingly cannot be a form to be evaluated on demand, so we - ;; endeavour to keep it up-to-date with `so-long-action-alist' by + ;; endeavor to keep it up-to-date with `so-long-action-alist' by ;; calling this from `so-long--action-alist-setter'. `(radio ,@(mapcar (lambda (x) (list 'const :tag (cadr x) (car x))) (assq-delete-all nil so-long-action-alist)) @@ -609,7 +609,7 @@ will be automatically processed; but custom actions can also do these things. The value `longlines-mode' causes that minor mode to be enabled. See longlines.el for more details. -Each action likewise determines the behaviour of `so-long-revert'. +Each action likewise determines the behavior of `so-long-revert'. If the value is nil, or not defined in `so-long-action-alist', then no action will be taken." @@ -756,7 +756,7 @@ By default this happens if `so-long-action' is set to either `so-long-mode' or `so-long-minor-mode'. If `so-long-revert' is subsequently invoked, then the disabled modes are re-enabled by calling them with the numeric argument 1. -`so-long-hook' can be used where more custom behaviour is desired. +`so-long-hook' can be used where more custom behavior is desired. Please submit bug reports to recommend additional modes for this list, whether they are in Emacs core, GNU ELPA, or elsewhere." @@ -833,7 +833,7 @@ If nil, no mode line indicator will be displayed." ;; Modes that go slowly and line lengths excessive ;; Font-lock performance becoming oppressive ;; All of my CPU tied up with strings -;; These are a few of my least-favourite things +;; These are a few of my least-favorite things (defvar-local so-long-original-values nil "Alist holding the buffer's original `major-mode' value, and other data. @@ -916,7 +916,7 @@ If RESET is non-nil, remove any existing values before storing the new ones." ;; triggered by mouse when some other window is selected. "Revert the current action and invoke the chosen replacement. -This commmand calls `so-long' with the selected action as an argument.") +This command calls `so-long' with the selected action as an argument.") sym) :enable (not (and so-long--active (eq ',actionfunc so-long-function) @@ -1129,7 +1129,7 @@ This minor mode is a standard `so-long-action' option." (if so-long-minor-mode ;; We are enabling the mode. (progn ;; Housekeeping. `so-long-minor-mode' might be invoked directly rather - ;; than via `so-long', so replicate the necessary behaviours. The minor + ;; than via `so-long', so replicate the necessary behaviors. The minor ;; mode also cares about whether `so-long' was already active, as we do ;; not want to remember values which were potentially overridden already. (unless (or so-long--calling so-long--active) @@ -1201,9 +1201,9 @@ values), despite potential performance issues, type \\[so-long-revert]. Use \\[so-long-commentary] for more information. -Use \\[so-long-customize] to configure the behaviour." +Use \\[so-long-customize] to configure the behavior." ;; Housekeeping. `so-long-mode' might be invoked directly rather than via - ;; `so-long', so replicate the necessary behaviours. We could use this same + ;; `so-long', so replicate the necessary behaviors. We could use this same ;; test in `so-long-after-change-major-mode' to run `so-long-hook', but that's ;; not so obviously the right thing to do, so I've omitted it for now. (unless so-long--calling @@ -1249,7 +1249,7 @@ Use \\[so-long-customize] to configure the behaviour." This advice acts before `so-long-mode', with the previous mode still active." (unless (derived-mode-p 'so-long-mode) ;; Housekeeping. `so-long-mode' might be invoked directly rather than - ;; via `so-long', so replicate the necessary behaviours. + ;; via `so-long', so replicate the necessary behaviors. (unless so-long--calling (so-long-remember-all :reset)) ;; Remember the original major mode, regardless. @@ -1334,7 +1334,7 @@ This is the `so-long-revert-function' for `so-long-mode'." ;; Emacs 26+ has already called `hack-local-variables' (during ;; `run-mode-hooks'; provided there was a `buffer-file-name'), but for older ;; versions we need to call it here. In Emacs 26+ the revised 'HANDLE-MODE' - ;; argument is set to `no-mode' (being the non-nil-and-non-t behaviour), + ;; argument is set to `no-mode' (being the non-nil-and-non-t behavior), ;; which we mimic here by binding `so-long--hack-local-variables-no-mode', ;; in order to prevent a local 'mode' variable from clobbering the major ;; mode we have just called. @@ -1371,7 +1371,7 @@ because we do not want to downgrade the major mode in that scenario." ;; Act only if `so-long-mode' would be enabled by the current action. (when (and (symbolp (so-long-function)) (provided-mode-derived-p (so-long-function) 'so-long-mode)) - ;; Downgrade from `so-long-mode' to the `so-long-minor-mode' behaviour. + ;; Downgrade from `so-long-mode' to the `so-long-minor-mode' behavior. (setq so-long-function 'turn-on-so-long-minor-mode so-long-revert-function 'turn-off-so-long-minor-mode)))) @@ -1391,7 +1391,7 @@ and cannot be conveniently intercepted, so we are forced to replicate it here. This special-case code will ultimately be removed from Emacs, as it exists to deal with a deprecated feature; but until then we need to replicate it in order -to inhibit our own behaviour in the presence of a header comment `mode' +to inhibit our own behavior in the presence of a header comment `mode' declaration. If a file-local mode is detected in the header comment, then we call the @@ -1526,7 +1526,7 @@ by testing the value against `major-mode'; but as we may have changed the major mode to `so-long-mode' by this point, that protection is insufficient and so we need to perform our own test. -We likewise need to support an equivalent of the `no-mode' behaviour in 26.1+ +We likewise need to support an equivalent of the `no-mode' behavior in 26.1+ to ensure that `so-long-mode-revert' will not restore a file-local mode again after it has already reverted to the original mode. @@ -1673,7 +1673,7 @@ When such files are detected by `so-long-predicate', we invoke the selected Use \\[so-long-commentary] for more information. -Use \\[so-long-customize] to configure the behaviour." +Use \\[so-long-customize] to configure the behavior." :global t :group 'so-long (if global-so-long-mode -- cgit v1.2.1