From e84d1ca3c6a643370c4273ad569b618d8cd72b53 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Glenn Morris Date: Mon, 13 Apr 2015 23:20:48 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Minor doc copyedits * doc/emacs/custom.texi (Init Examples): Tweak example, replace typo. * doc/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi (condition-case): Typo fix. --- doc/emacs/custom.texi | 4 +--- doc/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi | 2 +- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/emacs/custom.texi b/doc/emacs/custom.texi index 429567f577d..a2bea2463e7 100644 --- a/doc/emacs/custom.texi +++ b/doc/emacs/custom.texi @@ -2440,9 +2440,7 @@ You can also simply disregard the errors that occur if the function is not defined. @example -(condition case () - (set-face-background 'region "grey75") - (error nil)) +(ignore-errors (set-face-background 'region "grey75")) @end example A @code{setq} on a variable which does not exist is generally diff --git a/doc/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi b/doc/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi index 77d8ca8544f..46dc41a5a65 100644 --- a/doc/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi +++ b/doc/lispintro/emacs-lisp-intro.texi @@ -8136,7 +8136,7 @@ However, if an error occurs, among its other actions, the function generating the error signal will define one or more error condition names. -An error handler is the third argument to @code{condition case}. +An error handler is the third argument to @code{condition-case}. An error handler has two parts, a @var{condition-name} and a @var{body}. If the @var{condition-name} part of an error handler matches a condition name generated by an error, then the @var{body} -- 2.39.2