;; For each group (row) of 2-byte character sets.
-(define-category ?A "Alpha numeric characters of 2-byte character sets")
+(define-category ?A "Alpha-numeric characters of 2-byte character sets")
(define-category ?C "Chinese (Han) characters of 2-byte character sets")
-(define-category ?G "Greek characters of 2-byte characters sets")
+(define-category ?G "Greek characters of 2-byte character sets")
(define-category ?H "Japanese Hiragana characters of 2-byte character sets")
(define-category ?K "Japanese Katakana characters of 2-byte character sets")
(define-category ?N "Korean Hangul characters of 2-byte character sets")
-(define-category ?Y "Cyrillic character of 2-byte character sets")
+(define-category ?Y "Cyrillic characters of 2-byte character sets")
(define-category ?I "Indian Glyphs")
;; For phonetic classifications.
(define-category ?
"This character counts as a space for indentation purposes.")
-;; Keep the followings for `kinsoku' processing. See comments in
+;; Keep the following for `kinsoku' processing. See comments in
;; kinsoku.el.
(define-category ?> "A character which can't be placed at beginning of line.")
(define-category ?< "A character which can't be placed at end of line.")
"*Non-nil inhibits the initial startup echo area message.
Setting this variable takes effect
only if you do it with the customization buffer
-or it your `.emacs' file contains a line of this form:
+or if your `.emacs' file contains a line of this form:
(setq inhibit-startup-echo-area-message \"YOUR-USER-NAME\")
If your `.emacs' file is byte-compiled, use the following form instead:
(eval '(setq inhibit-startup-echo-area-message \"YOUR-USER-NAME\"))
"The brand of keyboard you are using.
This variable is used to define
the proper function and keypad keys for use under X. It is used in a
-fashion analogous to the environment value TERM.")
+fashion analogous to the environment variable TERM.")
(defvar window-setup-hook nil
"Normal hook run to initialize window system display.
;; identification of the computer name, e.g.:
;; "\\(\\w\\|-\\)+[.:@]\\(\\w\\|-\\)*\\([.:/@]+\\(\\w\\|-\\|~\\)+\\)+"
)
- "A-list expressing begining and end of regions not to spell check.
+ "Alist expressing beginning and end of regions not to spell check.
The alist key must be a regular expression.
Valid forms include:
(KEY) - just skip the key.
- (KEY . REGEXP) - skip to the end REGEXP. REGEXP may be string or symbol.
+ (KEY . REGEXP) - skip to the end of REGEXP. REGEXP may be string or symbol.
(KEY REGEXP) - skip to end of REGEXP. REGEXP must be a string.
- (KEY FUNCTION ARGS) - function called with args returns end of region.")
+ (KEY FUNCTION ARGS) - FUNCTION called with ARGS returns end of region.")
;;; Creates the regexp for skipping a region.
-;;; Makes the skip-regxp local for tex buffers adding in the
+;;; Makes the skip-regexp local for tex buffers adding in the
;;; tex expressions to skip as well.
;;; Call AFTER ispell-buffer-local-parsing.
(defun ispell-begin-skip-region-regexp ()
; LocalWords: pgp NZST Vignaux autoloaded loaddefs aff Francais Nederlands SPC
; LocalWords: popup nonmenu regexp herr num pers dict unhighlight ccept uit NB
; LocalWords: buf grep sync prev inc hilight olddot AIX ersion msg read's op
-; LocalWords: bufs pt regxp multibyte cmd Quinlan uuencoded esp unidiff eg sc
+; LocalWords: bufs pt multibyte cmd Quinlan uuencoded esp unidiff eg sc
; LocalWords: VM lns HTML eval american IspellPersDict
;;; ispell.el ends here
Emacs has two kinds of representation of a character: multi-byte
form (for buffer and string) and single-word form (for character
object in Emacs Lisp). The latter is called "character code" here
- after. Both representation encode the information of charset and
+ after. Both representations encode the information of charset and
POSITION-CODE but in a different way (for instance, MSB of
POSITION-CODE is set in multi-byte form).
/*** GENERAL NOTE on COMPOSITE CHARACTER ***
A composite character is a character composed from several (up to
- 16) non-composite characters (components). Although each components
+ 16) non-composite characters (components). Although each component
can belong to any charset, a composite character itself belongs to
the charset `charset-composition' and is assigned a special
leading-code `LEADING_CODE_COMPOSITION' for multi-byte form. See
Lisp_Object Vlast_coding_system_used;
/* A vector of length 256 which contains information about special
- Latin codes (espepcially for dealing with Microsoft code). */
+ Latin codes (especially for dealing with Microsoft codes). */
Lisp_Object Vlatin_extra_code_table;
/* Flag to inhibit code conversion of end-of-line format. */
printf ("You may redistribute copies of Emacs\n");
printf ("under the terms of the GNU General Public License.\n");
printf ("For more information about these matters, ");
- printf ("see the files named COPYING.\n");
+ printf ("see the file named COPYING.\n");
exit (0);
}
}
else
{
/* C is a multibyte character or a character to be displayed
- by octral form. */
+ by octal form. */
int remaining_bytes = len;
if (c >= 0400)