From: Richard M. Stallman Date: Sat, 19 Aug 1995 04:45:06 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Fix typos. X-Git-Tag: emacs-19.34~2972 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=76352dc186ad8eb4c19db6d609fa19d99b8de986;p=emacs.git Fix typos. --- diff --git a/lispref/modes.texi b/lispref/modes.texi index e1fef9bf514..e7b164f3b2c 100644 --- a/lispref/modes.texi +++ b/lispref/modes.texi @@ -541,7 +541,8 @@ the user what to do for each file. The default value is @code{maybe}. @cindex visited file mode This function selects the major mode that is appropriate for the current buffer. It may base its decision on the value of the @w{@samp{-*-}} -line, on the visited file name (using @code{auto-mode-alist}), or on the +line, on the visited file name (using @code{auto-mode-alist}), on the +@w{@samp{#!}} line (using @code{interpreter-mode-alist}), or on the value of a local variable. However, this function does not look for the @samp{mode:} local variable near the end of a file; the @code{hack-local-variables} function does that. @xref{Choosing Modes, , @@ -638,7 +639,7 @@ Here is an example of how to prepend several pattern pairs to @defvar interpreter-mode-alist This variable specifes major modes to use for scripts that specify a -command interpreter in an @samp{!#} line. Its value is a list of +command interpreter in an @samp{#!} line. Its value is a list of elements of the form @code{(@var{interpreter} . @var{mode})}; for example, @code{("perl" . perl-mode)} is one element present by default. The element says to use mode @var{mode} if the file specifies