[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html
From: |
Patrice Dumas |
Subject: |
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html |
Date: |
Tue, 23 Aug 2005 19:52:25 -0400 |
Index: texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html
diff -u texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html:1.24
texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html:1.25
--- texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html:1.24 Tue Aug 9 17:19:24 2005
+++ texi2html/Tests/texinfo_res/texinfo_10.html Tue Aug 23 23:51:15 2005
@@ -414,8 +414,8 @@
<p>You can embed another @-command inside the braces of an <code>@kbd</code>
command. Here, for example, is the way to describe a command that
-would be described more verbosely as "press an <samp>`r'</samp> and then
-press the <kbd>RET</kbd> key":
+would be described more verbosely as “press an <samp>`r'</samp> and then
+press the <kbd>RET</kbd> key”:
</p>
<table><tr><td> </td><td><pre class="example">@kbd{r @key{RET}}
</pre></td></tr></table>
@@ -565,7 +565,7 @@
<p>Any time you are referring to single characters, you should use
<code>@samp</code> unless <code>@kbd</code> or <code>@key</code> is more
appropriate.
Also, you may use <code>@samp</code> for entire statements in C and for entire
-shell commands--in this case, <code>@samp</code> often looks better than
+shell commands—in this case, <code>@samp</code> often looks better than
<code>@code</code>. Basically, <code>@samp</code> is a catchall for whatever
is
not covered by <code>@code</code>, <code>@kbd</code>, or <code>@key</code>.
</p>
@@ -904,7 +904,7 @@
<p>As a general rule, a sentence containing the defining occurrence of a
term should be a definition of the term. The sentence does not need
to say explicitly that it is a definition, but it should contain the
-information of a definition--it should make the meaning clear.
+information of a definition—it should make the meaning clear.
</p>
<hr size="6">
<a name="cite"></a>
@@ -1167,7 +1167,7 @@
</pre></td></tr></table>
<p>TeX typesets the small caps font in a manner that prevents the
letters from `jumping out at you on the page'. This makes small caps
-text easier to read than text in all upper case--but it's usually
+text easier to read than text in all upper case—but it's usually
better to use regular mixed case anyway. The Info formatting commands
set all small caps text in upper case. In HTML, the text is upper-cased
and a smaller font is used to render it.