From d75f49aa5a11b800be4935a917949062f956c4ca Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Richard M. Stallman" Date: Wed, 8 Feb 1995 06:30:05 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Fix typo. --- etc/TUTORIAL | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/etc/TUTORIAL b/etc/TUTORIAL index 5ffc76caa03..b5cf96f857c 100644 --- a/etc/TUTORIAL +++ b/etc/TUTORIAL @@ -564,9 +564,9 @@ to replace it with--each one ended with a Return. When you have made changes in a file, but you have not saved them yet, they could be lost if your computer crashes. To protect you from this, Emacs writes "auto save" files periodically. The auto save file -name as a # at the beginning and the end; for example, if your file is -named "hello.c", its auto save file's name is "#hello.c#". When you -save the file in the normal way, its auto save file is no longer +name has a # at the beginning and the end; for example, if your file +is named "hello.c", its auto save file's name is "#hello.c#". When +you save the file in the normal way, its auto save file is no longer necessary so Emacs deletes it. If the computer crashes, you can recover your auto-saved editing by -- 2.39.5