From a866674b2ab24e349b8132cff1cda4a971881d56 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2022 14:49:23 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Fix inaccuracies in "lax search" documentation * doc/emacs/search.texi (Lax Search): Update the examples of character folding in search. (Bug#56747) --- doc/emacs/search.texi | 12 +++++++----- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/emacs/search.texi b/doc/emacs/search.texi index 8b799f093b2..269ea71aa8f 100644 --- a/doc/emacs/search.texi +++ b/doc/emacs/search.texi @@ -1413,16 +1413,18 @@ of its accented cousins like @code{@"a} and @code{@'a}, i.e., the match disregards the diacritics that distinguish these variants. In addition, @code{a} matches other characters that resemble it, or have it as part of their graphical representation, -such as U+249C @sc{parenthesized latin small letter a} and U+2100 -@sc{account of} (which looks like a small @code{a} over @code{c}). +such as U+00AA @sc{feminine ordinal indicator} and U+24D0 +@sc{circled latin small letter a} (which looks like a small @code{a} +inside a circle). Similarly, the @acronym{ASCII} double-quote character @code{"} matches all the other variants of double quotes defined by the Unicode standard. Finally, character folding can make a sequence of one or more characters match another sequence of a different length: for example, the sequence of two characters @code{ff} matches U+FB00 -@sc{latin small ligature ff}. Character sequences that are not identical, -but match under character folding are known as @dfn{equivalent -character sequences}. +@sc{latin small ligature ff} and the sequence @code{(a)} matches +U+249C @sc{parenthesized latin small letter a}. Character sequences +that are not identical, but match under character folding are known as +@dfn{equivalent character sequences}. @kindex M-s ' @r{(Incremental Search)} @findex isearch-toggle-char-fold -- 2.39.2