From ad9ae06519f6f4eb0be14f9f09101b349f0fe462 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Juanma Barranquero Date: Fri, 30 Jul 2010 02:50:13 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] align.el: Doc fixes. --- lisp/ChangeLog | 5 +++++ lisp/align.el | 10 +++++----- 2 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/lisp/ChangeLog b/lisp/ChangeLog index 670f07c2683..f2450f22ea6 100644 --- a/lisp/ChangeLog +++ b/lisp/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ +2010-07-30 Juanma Barranquero + + * align.el (align-default-spacing): Doc fix. + (align-region-heuristic, align-regexp): Fix typos in docstrings. + 2010-07-23 Juanma Barranquero * help-fns.el (find-lisp-object-file-name): Doc fix (bug#6494). diff --git a/lisp/align.el b/lisp/align.el index 83ed0f4693a..9d811327021 100644 --- a/lisp/align.el +++ b/lisp/align.el @@ -140,8 +140,8 @@ "An integer that represents the default amount of padding to use. If `align-to-tab-stop' is non-nil, this will represent the number of tab stops to use for alignment, rather than the number of spaces. -Each alignment rule can optionally override both this variable. See -`align-mode-alist'." +Each alignment rule can optionally override both this variable and +`align-to-tab-stop'. See `align-rules-list'." :type 'integer :group 'align) @@ -157,8 +157,8 @@ Since each alignment rule can possibly have its own set of alignment sections (whenever `align-region-separate' is non-nil, and not a string), this heuristic is used to determine how far before and after point we should search in looking for a region separator. Larger -values can mean slower perform in large files, although smaller values -may cause unexpected behavior at times." +values can mean slower performance in large files, although smaller +values may cause unexpected behavior at times." :type 'integer :group 'align) @@ -926,7 +926,7 @@ align them so that the opening parentheses would line up: Joe (123) 456-7890 There is no predefined rule to handle this, but you could easily do it -using a REGEXP like \"(\". All you would have to do is to mark the +using a REGEXP like \"(\". All you would have to do is to mark the region, call `align-regexp' and type in that regular expression." (interactive (append -- 2.39.2