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[Emacs-diffs] /srv/bzr/emacs/trunk r107300: More adjustments to fortran
From: |
Glenn Morris |
Subject: |
[Emacs-diffs] /srv/bzr/emacs/trunk r107300: More adjustments to fortran line breaks, for pdf version |
Date: |
Wed, 15 Feb 2012 23:13:28 -0800 |
User-agent: |
Bazaar (2.3.1) |
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 107300
committer: Glenn Morris <address@hidden>
branch nick: trunk
timestamp: Wed 2012-02-15 23:13:28 -0800
message:
More adjustments to fortran line breaks, for pdf version
modified:
doc/emacs/fortran-xtra.texi
=== modified file 'doc/emacs/fortran-xtra.texi'
--- a/doc/emacs/fortran-xtra.texi 2012-02-16 06:52:04 +0000
+++ b/doc/emacs/fortran-xtra.texi 2012-02-16 07:13:28 +0000
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@
the current one, whichever comes first (@code{f90-next-block}).
A code block is a subroutine, @address@hidden statement, and
so forth. This command exists for F90 mode only, not Fortran mode.
-With a numeric argument, this moves forward that many blocks.
+With a numeric argument, it moves forward that many blocks.
@kindex C-c C-a @r{(F90 mode)}
@findex f90-previous-block
@@ -237,17 +237,17 @@
The setting of continuation style affects several other aspects of
editing in Fortran mode. In fixed form mode, the minimum column
number for the body of a statement is 6. Lines inside of Fortran
-blocks that are indented to larger column numbers always use only the
+blocks that are indented to larger column numbers must use only the
space character for whitespace. In tab format mode, the minimum
column number for the statement body is 8, and the whitespace before
-column 8 must always consist of one tab character.
+column 8 must consist of one tab character.
@node ForIndent Num
@subsubsection Line Numbers
If a number is the first non-whitespace in the line, Fortran
indentation assumes it is a line number and moves it to columns 0
-through 4. (Columns always count from 0 in GNU Emacs.)
+through 4. (Columns always count from 0 in Emacs.)
@vindex fortran-line-number-indent
Line numbers of four digits or less are normally indented one space.
@@ -327,7 +327,7 @@
@samp{do} that ends there. If you always end @samp{do} statements with
a @samp{continue} line (or if you use the more modern @samp{enddo}),
then you can speed up indentation by setting this variable to
address@hidden The default is @code{nil}.
address@hidden (the default).
@item fortran-blink-matching-if
If this is @code{t}, indenting an @samp{endif} (or @samp{enddo}
@@ -336,17 +336,17 @@
@item fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed
Minimum indentation for Fortran statements when using fixed form
-continuation line style. Statement bodies are never indented less than
-this much. The default is 6.
+continuation line style. Statement bodies are never indented by less than
+this. The default is 6.
@item fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab
Minimum indentation for Fortran statements for tab format continuation line
-style. Statement bodies are never indented less than this much. The
+style. Statement bodies are never indented by less than this. The
default is 8.
@end table
-The variables controlling the indentation of comments are described in
-the following section.
+The following section describes the variables controlling the
+indentation of comments.
@node Fortran Comments
@subsection Fortran Comments
@@ -505,8 +505,7 @@
Split the current window horizontally temporarily so that it is
@code{fortran-line-length} columns wide
(@code{fortran-window-create-momentarily}). This may help you avoid
-making lines longer than the character limit imposed by your Fortran
-compiler.
+making lines longer than the limit imposed by your Fortran compiler.
@item C-u C-c C-w
Split the current window horizontally so that it is
@code{fortran-line-length} columns wide (@code{fortran-window-create}).
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