From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 19:48:03 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Fix spelling errors. X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-22.0.90~2667 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=f80a56a0751e6c61fce2b74a19c47d65dec48bca;p=emacs.git Fix spelling errors. --- diff --git a/lispref/files.texi b/lispref/files.texi index 4d3cfd52c94..8a566f62ee0 100644 --- a/lispref/files.texi +++ b/lispref/files.texi @@ -1602,7 +1602,7 @@ directory name (@pxref{Directory Names}), or @code{nil} if @var{filename} does not include a directory part. On GNU and Unix systems, a string returned by this function always -ends in a slash. On MSDOS it can also end in a colon. On VMS, it +ends in a slash. On MS-DOS it can also end in a colon. On VMS, it returns a string ending in one of the three characters @samp{:}, @samp{]}, or @samp{>}. @@ -1809,7 +1809,7 @@ the directory name but not identical to it. (This is not quite the same as the usual Unix terminology.) These two different names for the same entity are related by a syntactic transformation. On GNU and Unix systems, this is simple: a directory name ends in a slash, -whereas the directory's name as a file lacks that slash. On MSDOS and +whereas the directory's name as a file lacks that slash. On MS-DOS and VMS, the relationship is more complicated. The difference between a directory name and its name as a file is