them.
Several keywords make sense in @code{make-hash-table}, but the only two
-that you really need to know about are @code{:test} and @code{:weak}.
+that you really need to know about are @code{:test} and @code{:weakness}.
@table @code
@item :test @var{test}
@item :size @var{size}
This specifies a hint for how many associations you plan to store in the
hash table. If you know the approximate number, you can make things a
-little more efficient by specifying it this way. If you specify to
+little more efficient by specifying it this way. If you specify too
small a size, the hash table will grow automatically when necessary, but
doing that takes some extra time,
This function returns the actual number of entries in @var{table}.
@end defun
-@tindex hash-table-rehash-test
-@defun hash-table-rehash-test table
+@tindex hash-table-test
+@defun hash-table-test table
This returns the @var{test} value that was given when @var{table} was
created, to specify how to hash and compare keys. See
@code{make-hash-table} (@pxref{Creating Hash}).
This returns the rehash threshold of @var{table}.
@end defun
-@tindex hash-table-rehash-size
-@defun hash-table-rehash-size table
+@tindex hash-table-size
+@defun hash-table-size table
This returns the current nominal size of @var{table}.
@end defun