[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.ht
From: |
Patrice Dumas |
Subject: |
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.html |
Date: |
Tue, 23 Aug 2005 19:52:41 -0400 |
Index: texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.html
diff -u texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.html:1.22
texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.html:1.23
--- texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.html:1.22 Tue Aug 9
17:19:26 2005
+++ texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_15.html Tue Aug 23 23:51:16 2005
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@
</p>
<p> After you exit a search, you can search for the same string again by
typing just <kbd>C-s C-s</kbd>: the first <kbd>C-s</kbd> is the key that
invokes
-incremental search, and the second <kbd>C-s</kbd> means "search
again".
+incremental search, and the second <kbd>C-s</kbd> means “search
again”.
</p>
<p> If the specified string is not found at all, the echo area displays
the text <samp>`Failing I-Search'</samp>. The cursor is after the place where
@@ -177,7 +177,7 @@
<samp>`FOO'</samp> in <samp>`FOOL'</samp>. At this point there are several
things you
can do. If you mistyped the search string, correct it. If you like the
place you have found, you can type <kbd>RET</kbd> or some other Emacs command
-to "accept what the search offered". Or you can type
<kbd>C-g</kbd>, which
+to “accept what the search offered”. Or you can type
<kbd>C-g</kbd>, which
removes from the search string the characters that could not be found
(the <samp>`T'</samp> in <samp>`FOOT'</samp>), leaving those that were found
(the
<samp>`FOO'</samp> in <samp>`FOOT'</samp>). A second <kbd>C-g</kbd> at that
point cancels
@@ -191,13 +191,13 @@
prompt once this has happened.
</p>
<a name="IDX411"></a>
-<p> The <kbd>C-g</kbd> "quit" character does special things during
searches;
+<p> The <kbd>C-g</kbd> “quit” character does special things
during searches;
just what it does depends on the status of the search. If the search has
found what you specified and is waiting for input, <kbd>C-g</kbd> cancels the
entire search. The cursor moves back to where you started the search. If
<kbd>C-g</kbd> is typed when there are characters in the search string that
have
-not been found--because Emacs is still searching for them, or because it
-has failed to find them--then the search string characters which have not
+not been found—because Emacs is still searching for them, or because it
+has failed to find them—then the search string characters which have not
been found are discarded from the search string. The
search is now successful and waiting for more input, so a second <kbd>C-g</kbd>
cancels the entire search.
@@ -240,7 +240,7 @@
<p> You can change any of the special characters in incremental search via
the normal keybinding mechanism: simply add a binding to the
<code>isearch-mode-map</code>. For example, to make the character
-<kbd>C-b</kbd> mean "search backwards" while in isearch-mode, do
this:
+<kbd>C-b</kbd> mean “search backwards” while in isearch-mode, do
this:
</p>
<table><tr><td> </td><td><pre class="example">(define-key
isearch-mode-map "\C-b" 'isearch-repeat-backward)
</pre></td></tr></table>
@@ -508,7 +508,7 @@
<p> The XEmacs regular expression syntax most closely resembles that of
<cite>ed</cite>, or <cite>grep</cite>, the GNU versions of which all utilize
the GNU
<cite>regex</cite> library. XEmacs' version of <cite>regex</cite> has
recently been
-extended with some Perl-like capabilities, described in the next
+extended with some Perl–like capabilities, described in the next
section.
</p>
<p> In XEmacs, you can search for the next match for a regexp either
@@ -854,7 +854,7 @@
substring to be recorded for future reference.
</p>
<p>This is useful when you need a lot of grouping <samp>`\( … \)'</samp>
-constructs, but only want to remember one or two - or if you have
+constructs, but only want to remember one or two – or if you have
more than nine groupings and need to use backreferences to refer to
the groupings at the end.
</p>
@@ -895,8 +895,8 @@
</p></dd>
</dl>
-<p> The following regular expression constructs match the empty string--that
is,
-they don't use up any characters--but whether they match depends on the
+<p> The following regular expression constructs match the empty
string—that is,
+they don't use up any characters—but whether they match depends on the
context.
</p>
<dl compact="compact">