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[Emacs-diffs] master 804f9e7: * etc/NEWS.18: Use outline-mode and a more


From: Stefan Monnier
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] master 804f9e7: * etc/NEWS.18: Use outline-mode and a more standard format
Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2018 15:54:21 -0400 (EDT)

branch: master
commit 804f9e74de17cc68355d32bfb66710fd5b6b47b7
Author: Stefan Monnier <address@hidden>
Commit: Stefan Monnier <address@hidden>

    * etc/NEWS.18: Use outline-mode and a more standard format
---
 etc/NEWS.1-17 |   1 -
 etc/NEWS.18   | 394 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------------------------
 2 files changed, 197 insertions(+), 198 deletions(-)

diff --git a/etc/NEWS.1-17 b/etc/NEWS.1-17
index cfa0b40..c74cc3d 100644
--- a/etc/NEWS.1-17
+++ b/etc/NEWS.1-17
@@ -2529,5 +2529,4 @@ along with GNU Emacs.  If not, see 
<https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
 
 Local variables:
 mode: outline
-mode: text
 end:
diff --git a/etc/NEWS.18 b/etc/NEWS.18
index e2645b9..ab76c3c 100644
--- a/etc/NEWS.18
+++ b/etc/NEWS.18
@@ -8,23 +8,23 @@ This file is about changes in emacs version 18.
 
 
 
-Changes in version 18.52.
+* Changes in Emacs 18.52.
 
-* X windows version 10 is supported under system V.
+** X windows version 10 is supported under system V.
 
-* Pop-up menus are now supported with the same Lisp interface in
+** Pop-up menus are now supported with the same Lisp interface in
 both version 10 and 11 of X windows.
 
-* C-x 4 a is a new command to edit a change-log entry in another window.
+** C-x 4 a is a new command to edit a change-log entry in another window.
 
-* The emacs client program now allows an option +NNN to specify the
+** The emacs client program now allows an option +NNN to specify the
 line number to go to in the file whose name follows.  Thus,
     emacsclient foo.c +45 bar.c
 will find the files `foo.c' and `bar.c', going to line 45 in `bar.c'.
 
-* Dired allows empty directories to be deleted like files.
+** Dired allows empty directories to be deleted like files.
 
-* When the terminal type is used to find a terminal-specific file to
+** When the terminal type is used to find a terminal-specific file to
 run, Emacs now tries the entire terminal type first.  If that doesn't
 yield a file that exists, the last hyphen and what follows it is
 stripped.  If that doesn't yield a file that exists, the previous
@@ -34,97 +34,97 @@ example, if the terminal type is `aaa-48-foo', Emacs will 
try first
 
 Underscores now receive the same treatment as hyphens.
 
-* Texinfo features: @defun, etc.  texinfo-show-structure.
+** Texinfo features: @defun, etc.  texinfo-show-structure.
 New template commands.  texinfo-format-region.
 
-* The special "local variable" `eval' is now ignored if you are running
+** The special "local variable" `eval' is now ignored if you are running
 as root.
 
-* New command `c-macro-expand' shows the result of C macro expansion
+** New command `c-macro-expand' shows the result of C macro expansion
 in the region.  It works using the C preprocessor, so its results
 are completely accurate.
 
-* Errors in trying to auto save now flash error messages for a few seconds.
+** Errors in trying to auto save now flash error messages for a few seconds.
 
-* Killing a buffer now sends SIGHUP to the buffer's process.
+** Killing a buffer now sends SIGHUP to the buffer's process.
 
-* New hooks.
+** New hooks.
 
-** `spell-region' now allows you to filter the text before spelling-checking.
+*** `spell-region' now allows you to filter the text before spelling-checking.
 If the value of `spell-filter' is non-nil, it is called, with no arguments,
 looking at a temporary buffer containing a copy of the text to be checked.
 It can alter the text freely before the spell program sees it.
 
-** The variable `lpr-command' now specifies the command to be used when
+*** The variable `lpr-command' now specifies the command to be used when
 you use the commands to print text (such as M-x print-buffer).
 
-** Posting netnews now calls the value of `news-inews-hook' (if not nil)
+*** Posting netnews now calls the value of `news-inews-hook' (if not nil)
 as a function of no arguments before the actual posting.
 
-** Rmail now calls the value of `rmail-show-message-hook' (if not nil)
+*** Rmail now calls the value of `rmail-show-message-hook' (if not nil)
 as a function of no arguments, each time a new message is selected.
 
-** `kill-emacs' calls the value of `kill-emacs-hook' as a function of no args.
+*** `kill-emacs' calls the value of `kill-emacs-hook' as a function of no args.
 
-* New libraries.
+** New libraries.
 See the source code of each library for more information.
 
-** icon.el: a major mode for editing programs written in Icon.
+*** icon.el: a major mode for editing programs written in Icon.
 
-** life.el: a simulator for the cellular automaton "life".  Load the
+*** life.el: a simulator for the cellular automaton "life".  Load the
 library and run M-x life.
 
-** doctex.el: a library for converting the Emacs `etc/DOC' file of
+*** doctex.el: a library for converting the Emacs `etc/DOC' file of
 documentation strings into TeX input.
 
-** saveconf.el: a library which records the arrangement of windows and
+*** saveconf.el: a library which records the arrangement of windows and
 buffers when you exit Emacs, and automatically recreates the same
 setup the next time you start Emacs.
 
-** uncompress.el: a library that automatically uncompresses files
+*** uncompress.el: a library that automatically uncompresses files
 when you visit them.
 
-** c-fill.el: a mode for editing filled comments in C.
+*** c-fill.el: a mode for editing filled comments in C.
 
-** kermit.el: an extended version of shell-mode designed for running kermit.
+*** kermit.el: an extended version of shell-mode designed for running kermit.
 
-** spook.el: a library for adding some "distract the NSA" keywords to every
+*** spook.el: a library for adding some "distract the NSA" keywords to every
 message you send.
 
-** hideif.el: a library for hiding parts of a C program based on preprocessor
+*** hideif.el: a library for hiding parts of a C program based on preprocessor
 conditionals.
 
-** autoinsert.el: a library to put in some initial text when you visit
+*** autoinsert.el: a library to put in some initial text when you visit
 a nonexistent file.  The text used depends on the major mode, and
 comes from a directory of files created by you.
 
-* New programming features.
+** New programming features.
 
-** The variable `window-system-version' now contains the version number
+*** The variable `window-system-version' now contains the version number
 of the window system you are using (if appropriate).  When using X windows,
 its value is either 10 or 11.
 
-** (interactive "N") uses the prefix argument if any; otherwise, it reads
+*** (interactive "N") uses the prefix argument if any; otherwise, it reads
 a number using the minibuffer.
 
-** VMS: there are two new functions `vms-system-info' and `shrink-to-icon'.
+*** VMS: there are two new functions `vms-system-info' and `shrink-to-icon'.
 The former allows you to get many kinds of system status information.
 See its self-documentation for full details.
 The second is used with the window system: it iconifies the Emacs window.
 
-** VMS: the new function `define-logical-name' allows you to create
+*** VMS: the new function `define-logical-name' allows you to create
 job-wide logical names.  The old function `define-dcl-symbol' has been
 removed.
 
 
 
-Changes in version 18.50.
+* Changes in Emacs 18.50.
 
-* X windows version 11 is supported.
+** X windows version 11 is supported.
 
 Define X11 in config.h if you want X version 11 instead of version 10.
 
-* The command M-x gdb runs the GDB debugger as an inferior.
+** The command M-x gdb runs the GDB debugger as an inferior.
 It asks for the filename of the executable you want to debug.
 
 GDB runs as an inferior with I/O through an Emacs buffer.  All the
@@ -140,21 +140,21 @@ and `finish'.
 In any source file, the commands C-x SPC tells GDB to set a breakpoint
 on the current line.
 
-* M-x calendar displays a three-month calendar.
+** M-x calendar displays a three-month calendar.
 
-* C-u 0 C-x C-s never makes a backup file.
+** C-u 0 C-x C-s never makes a backup file.
 
 This is a way you can explicitly request not to make a backup.
 
-* `term-setup-hook' is for users only.
+** `term-setup-hook' is for users only.
 
 Emacs never uses this variable for internal purposes, so you can freely
 set it in your `.emacs' file to make Emacs do something special after
 loading any terminal-specific setup file from `lisp/term'.
 
-* `copy-keymap' now copies recursive submaps.
+** `copy-keymap' now copies recursive submaps.
 
-* New overlay-arrow feature.
+** New overlay-arrow feature.
 
 If you set the variable `overlay-arrow-string' to a string
 and `overlay-arrow-position' to a marker, that string is displayed on
@@ -162,12 +162,12 @@ the screen at the position of that marker, hiding 
whatever text would
 have appeared there.  If that position isn't on the screen, or if
 the buffer the marker points into isn't displayed, there is no effect.
 
-* -batch mode can read from the terminal.
+** -batch mode can read from the terminal.
 
 It now works to use `read-char' to do terminal input in a noninteractive
 Emacs run.  End of file causes Emacs to exit.
 
-* Variables `data-bytes-used' and `data-bytes-free' removed.
+** Variables `data-bytes-used' and `data-bytes-free' removed.
 
 These variables cannot really work because the 24-bit range of an
 integer in (most ports of) GNU Emacs is not large enough to hold their
@@ -175,9 +175,9 @@ values on many systems.
 
 
 
-Changes in version 18.45, since version 18.41.
+* Changes in Emacs 18.45, since version 18.41.
 
-* C indentation parameter `c-continued-brace-offset'.
+** C indentation parameter `c-continued-brace-offset'.
 
 This parameter's value is added to the indentation of any
 line that is in a continuation context and starts with an open-brace.
@@ -188,26 +188,26 @@ For example, it applies to the open brace shown here:
 
 The default value is zero.
 
-* Dabbrev expansion (Meta-/) preserves case.
+** Dabbrev expansion (Meta-/) preserves case.
 
 When you use Meta-/ to search the buffer for an expansion of an
 abbreviation, if the expansion found is all lower case except perhaps
 for its first letter, then the case pattern of the abbreviation
 is carried over to the expansion that replaces it.
 
-* TeX-mode syntax.
+** TeX-mode syntax.
 
 \ is no longer given "escape character" syntax in TeX mode.  It now
 has the syntax of an ordinary punctuation character.  As a result,
 \[...\] and such like are considered to balance each other.
 
-* Mail-mode automatic Reply-To field.
+** Mail-mode automatic Reply-To field.
 
 If the variable `mail-default-reply-to' is non-`nil', then each time
 you start to compose a message, a Reply-To field is inserted with
 its contents taken from the value of `mail-default-reply-to'.
 
-* Where is your .emacs file?
+** Where is your .emacs file?
 
 If you run Emacs under `su', so your real and effective uids are
 different, Emacs uses the home directory associated with the real uid
@@ -218,23 +218,23 @@ file.
 
 The .emacs file is not loaded at all if -batch is specified.
 
-* Prolog mode is the default for ".pl" files.
+** Prolog mode is the default for ".pl" files.
 
-* File names are not case-sensitive on VMS.
+** File names are not case-sensitive on VMS.
 
 On VMS systems, all file names that you specify are converted to upper
 case.  You can use either upper or lower case indiscriminately.
 
-* VMS-only function 'define-dcl-symbol'.
+** VMS-only function 'define-dcl-symbol'.
 
 This is a new name for the function formerly called
 `define-logical-name'.
 
 
 
-Editing Changes in Emacs 18
+* Editing Changes in Emacs 18
 
-* Additional systems and machines are supported.
+** Additional systems and machines are supported.
 
 GNU Emacs now runs on Vax VMS.  However, many facilities that are normally
 implemented by running subprocesses do not work yet.  This includes listing
@@ -256,13 +256,13 @@ to working.  The port for the Elxsi is partly merged.  
See the file
 MACHINES for full status information and machine-specific installation
 advice.
 
-* Searching is faster.
+** Searching is faster.
 
 Forward search for a text string, or for a regexp that is equivalent
 to a text string, is now several times faster.  Motion by lines and
 counting lines is also faster.
 
-* Memory usage improvements.
+** Memory usage improvements.
 
 It is no longer possible to run out of memory during garbage
 collection.  As a result, running out of memory is never fatal.  This
@@ -271,27 +271,27 @@ strings in place rather than copying them.  Another 
consequence of the
 change is a reduction in total memory usage and a slight increase in
 garbage collection speed.
 
-* Display changes.
+** Display changes.
 
-** Editing above top of screen.
+*** Editing above top of screen.
 
 When you delete or kill or alter text that reaches to the top of the
 screen or above it, so that display would start in the middle of a
 line, Emacs will usually attempt to scroll the text so that display
 starts at the beginning of a line again.
 
-** Yanking in the minibuffer.
+*** Yanking in the minibuffer.
 
 The message "Mark Set" is no longer printed when the minibuffer is
 active.  This is convenient with many commands, including C-y, that
 normally print such a message.
 
-** Cursor appears in last line during y-or-n questions.
+*** Cursor appears in last line during y-or-n questions.
 
 Questions that want a `y' or `n' answer now move the cursor
 to the last line, following the question.
 
-* Library loading changes.
+** Library loading changes.
 
 `load' now considers all possible suffixes (`.elc', `.el' and none)
 for each directory in `load-path' before going on to the next directory.
@@ -313,13 +313,13 @@ is no longer allowed.  Instead, there are two commands 
for loading files.
 `M-x load-file' reads a file name with completion and defaulting
 and then loads exactly that file, with no searching and no suffixes.
 
-* Emulation of other editors.
+** Emulation of other editors.
 
-** `edt-emulation-on' starts emulating DEC's EDT editor.
+*** `edt-emulation-on' starts emulating DEC's EDT editor.
 
 Do `edt-emulation-off' to return Emacs to normal.
 
-** `vi-mode' and `vip-mode' starts emulating vi.
+*** `vi-mode' and `vip-mode' starts emulating vi.
 
 These are two different vi emulations provided by GNU Emacs users.
 We are interested in feedback as to which emulation is preferable.
@@ -327,20 +327,20 @@ We are interested in feedback as to which emulation is 
preferable.
 See the documentation and source code for these functions
 for more information.
 
-** `set-gosmacs-bindings' emulates Gosling Emacs.
+*** `set-gosmacs-bindings' emulates Gosling Emacs.
 
 This command changes many global bindings to resemble those of
 Gosling Emacs.  The previous bindings are saved and can be restored using
 `set-gnu-bindings'.
 
-* Emulation of a display terminal.
+** Emulation of a display terminal.
 
 Within Emacs it is now possible to run programs (such as emacs or
 supdup) which expect to do output to a visual display terminal.
 
 See the function `terminal-emulator' for more information.
 
-* New support for keypads and function keys.
+** New support for keypads and function keys.
 
 There is now a first attempt at terminal-independent support for
 keypad and function keys.
@@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ used in forming the name of the terminal-specific file.  
Thus, for
 terminal type `aaa-48', the file loaded is now `term/aaa.el' rather
 than `term/aaa-48.el'.
 
-* New startup command line options.
+** New startup command line options.
 
 `-i FILE' or `-insert FILE' in the command line to Emacs tells Emacs to
 insert the contents of FILE into the current buffer at that point in
@@ -383,7 +383,7 @@ emulator on the X window system and you want to run Emacs 
to work through
 the terminal emulator instead of working directly with the window system,
 use this switch.
 
-* Buffer-sorting commands.
+** Buffer-sorting commands.
 
 Various M-x commands whose names start with `sort-' sort parts of
 the region:
@@ -404,13 +404,13 @@ sort-columns      divides into lines and sorts them 
according to the contents
 
 Refer to the self-documentation of these commands for full usage information.
 
-* Changes in various commands.
+** Changes in various commands.
 
-** `tags-query-replace' and `tags-search' change.
+*** `tags-query-replace' and `tags-search' change.
 
 These functions now display the name of the file being searched at the moment.
 
-** `occur' output now serves as a menu.  `occur-menu' command deleted.
+*** `occur' output now serves as a menu.  `occur-menu' command deleted.
 
 `M-x occur' now allows you to move quickly to any of the occurrences
 listed.  Select the `*Occur*' buffer that contains the output of `occur',
@@ -423,7 +423,7 @@ The command `occur-menu' is thus obsolete, and has been 
deleted.
 One way to get a list of matching lines without line numbers is to
 copy the text to another buffer and use the command `keep-lines'.
 
-** Incremental search changes.
+*** Incremental search changes.
 
 Ordinary and regexp incremental searches now have distinct default
 search strings.  Thus, regexp searches recall only previous regexp
@@ -458,12 +458,12 @@ If `search-slow-window-lines' is negative, the slow 
search window
 is put at the top of the screen, and the absolute value or the
 negative number specifies the height of it.
 
-** Undo changes
+*** Undo changes
 
 The undo command now will mark the buffer as unmodified only when it is
 identical to the contents of the visited file.
 
-** C-M-v in minibuffer.
+*** C-M-v in minibuffer.
 
 If while in the minibuffer you request help in a way that uses a
 window to display something, then until you exit the minibuffer C-M-v
@@ -472,7 +472,7 @@ in the minibuffer window scrolls the window of help.
 For example, if you request a list of possible completions, C-M-v can
 be used reliably to scroll the completion list.
 
-** M-TAB command.
+*** M-TAB command.
 
 Meta-TAB performs completion on the Emacs Lisp symbol names.  The sexp
 in the buffer before point is compared against all existing nontrivial
@@ -483,12 +483,12 @@ or properties.
 If there are multiple possibilities for the very next character, a
 list of possible completions is displayed.
 
-** Dynamic abbreviation package.
+*** Dynamic abbreviation package.
 
 The new command Meta-/ expands an abbreviation in the buffer before point
 by searching the buffer for words that start with the abbreviation.
 
-** Changes in saving kbd macros.
+*** Changes in saving kbd macros.
 
 The commands `write-kbd-macro' and `append-kbd-macro' have been
 deleted.  The way to save a keyboard macro is to use the new command
@@ -498,12 +498,12 @@ file such as your Emacs init file `~/.emacs', insert the 
macro
 definition (perhaps deleting an old definition for the same macro)
 and then save the file.
 
-** C-x ' command.
+*** C-x ' command.
 
 The new command C-x ' (expand-abbrev) expands the word before point as
 an abbrev, even if abbrev-mode is not turned on.
 
-** Sending to inferior Lisp.
+*** Sending to inferior Lisp.
 
 The command C-M-x in Lisp mode, which sends the current defun to
 an inferior Lisp process, now works by writing the text into a temporary
@@ -517,20 +517,20 @@ appear on the screen and scrolls it so that the bottom is 
showing.
 Two variables `inferior-lisp-load-command' and `inferior-lisp-prompt',
 exist to customize these feature for different Lisp implementations.
 
-** C-x p now disabled.
+*** C-x p now disabled.
 
 The command C-x p, a nonrecommended command which narrows to the current
 page, is now initially disabled like C-x n.
 
-* Dealing with files.
+** Dealing with files.
 
-** C-x C-v generalized
+*** C-x C-v generalized
 
 This command is now allowed even if the current buffer is not visiting
 a file.  As usual, it kills the current buffer and replaces it with a
 newly found file.
 
-** M-x recover-file improved; auto save file names changed.
+*** M-x recover-file improved; auto save file names changed.
 
 M-x recover-file now checks whether the last auto-save file is more
 recent than the real visited file before offering to read in the
@@ -555,21 +555,21 @@ You can customize the way auto save file names are made 
by redefining
 the two functions `make-auto-save-file-name' and `auto-save-file-name-p',
 both of which are defined in `files.el'.
 
-** Modifying a buffer whose file is changed on disk is detected instantly.
+*** Modifying a buffer whose file is changed on disk is detected instantly.
 
 On systems where clash detection (locking of files being edited) is
 implemented, Emacs also checks the first time you modify a buffer
 whether the file has changed on disk since it was last visited or saved.
 If it has, you are asked to confirm that you want to change the buffer.
 
-** Exiting Emacs offers to save `*mail*'.
+*** Exiting Emacs offers to save `*mail*'.
 
 Emacs can now know about buffers that it should offer to save on exit
 even though they are not visiting files.  This is done for any buffer
 which has a non-nil local value of `buffer-offer-save'.  By default,
 Mail mode provides such a local value.
 
-** Backup file changes.
+*** Backup file changes.
 
 If a backup file cannot be written in the directory of the visited file
 due to fascist file protection, a backup file is now written in your home
@@ -579,7 +579,7 @@ the most recently made such backup is available.
 When backup files are made by copying, the last-modification time of the
 original file is now preserved in the backup copy.
 
-** Visiting remote files.
+*** Visiting remote files.
 
 On an internet host, you can now visit and save files on any other
 internet host directly from Emacs with the commands M-x ftp-find-file
@@ -592,14 +592,14 @@ give the user name and password for use on that host.  
FTP is reinvoked
 each time you ask to use it, but previously specified user names and
 passwords are remembered automatically.
 
-** Dired `g' command.
+*** Dired `g' command.
 
 `g' in Dired mode is equivalent to M-x revert-buffer; it causes the
 current contents of the same directory to be read in.
 
-* Changes in major modes.
+** Changes in major modes.
 
-** C mode indentation change.
+*** C mode indentation change.
 
 The binding of Linefeed is no longer changed by C mode.  It once again
 has its normal meaning, which is to insert a newline and then indent
@@ -618,28 +618,28 @@ is non-whitespace preceding point on the current line.  
Giving it a
 prefix argument will force reindentation of the line (as well as
 of the compound statement that begins after point, if any).
 
-** Fortran mode now exists.
+*** Fortran mode now exists.
 
 This mode provides commands for motion and indentation of Fortran code,
 plus built-in abbrevs for Fortran keywords.  For details, see the manual
 or the on-line documentation of the command `fortran-mode'.
 
-** Scribe mode now exists.
+*** Scribe mode now exists.
 
 This mode does something useful for editing files of Scribe input.
 It is used automatically for files with names ending in ".mss".
 
-** Modula2 and Prolog modes now exist.
+*** Modula2 and Prolog modes now exist.
 
 These modes are for editing programs in the languages of the same names.
 They can be selected with M-x modula-2-mode and M-x prolog-mode.
 
-** Telnet mode changes.
+*** Telnet mode changes.
 
 The telnet mode special commands have now been assigned to C-c keys.
 Most of them are the same as in Shell mode.
 
-** Picture mode changes.
+*** Picture mode changes.
 
 The special picture-mode commands to specify the direction of cursor
 motion after insertion have been moved to C-c keys.  The commands to
@@ -647,13 +647,13 @@ specify diagonal motion were already C-c keys; they are 
unchanged.
 The keys to specify horizontal or vertical motion are now
 C-c < (left), C-c > (right), C-c ^ (up) and C-c . (down).
 
-** Nroff mode comments.
+*** Nroff mode comments.
 
 Comments are now supported in Nroff mode.  The standard comment commands
 such as M-; and C-x ; know how to insert, align and delete comments
 that start with backslash-doublequote.
 
-** LaTeX mode.
+*** LaTeX mode.
 
 LaTeX mode now exists.  Use M-x latex-mode to select this mode, and
 M-x plain-tex-mode to select the previously existing mode for Plain
@@ -677,7 +677,7 @@ C-c C-f             close a block (appropriate for LaTeX 
only).
                 this inserts an \end{...} on the following line
                 and puts point on a blank line between them.
 
-** Outline mode changes.
+*** Outline mode changes.
 
 Invisible lines in outline mode are now indicated by `...' at the
 end of the previous visible line.
@@ -701,9 +701,9 @@ the string that matches.
 A line starting with a ^L (formfeed) is now by default considered
 a header line.
 
-* Mail reading and sending.
+** Mail reading and sending.
 
-** MH-E changes.
+*** MH-E changes.
 
 MH-E has been extensively modified and improved since the v17 release.
 It contains many new features, including commands to: extracted failed
@@ -715,7 +715,7 @@ single messages.  MH-E also has had numerous bugs fixed and 
commands
 made to run faster.  Furthermore, its keybindings have been changed to
 be compatible with Rmail and the rest of GNU Emacs.
 
-** Mail mode changes.
+*** Mail mode changes.
 
 The C-c commands of mail mode have been rearranged:
 
@@ -727,28 +727,28 @@ C-c y, C-c w and C-c q have been changed to C-c C-y, C-c 
C-w and C-c C-q.
 
 Thus, C-c LETTER is always unassigned.
 
-** Rmail C-r command changed to w.
+*** Rmail C-r command changed to w.
 
 The Rmail command to edit the current message is now `w'.  This change
 has been made because people frequently type C-r while in Rmail hoping
 to do a reverse incremental search.  That now works.
 
-* Rnews changes.
+** Rnews changes.
 
-** Caesar rotation added.
+*** Caesar rotation added.
 
 The function news-caesar-buffer-body performs encryption and
 decryption of the body of a news message.  It defaults to the USENET
 standard of 13, and accepts any numeric arg between 1 to 25 and -25 to -1.
 The function is bound to C-c C-r in both news-mode and news-reply-mode.
 
-** rmail-output command added.
+*** rmail-output command added.
 
 The C-o command has been bound to rmail-output in news-mode.
 This allows one to append an article to a file which is in either Unix
 mail or RMAIL format.
 
-** news-reply-mode changes.
+*** news-reply-mode changes.
 
 The C-c commands of news reply mode have been rearranged and changed,
 so that C-c LETTER is always unassigned:
@@ -773,7 +773,7 @@ C-c C-y  news-reply-yank-original (insert current message, 
in NEWS).
 C-c C-q  mail-fill-yanked-message (fill what was yanked).
 C-c C-r  caesar rotate all letters by 13 places in the article's body (rot13).
 
-* Existing Emacs usable as a server.
+** Existing Emacs usable as a server.
 
 Programs such as mailers that invoke "the editor" as an inferior
 to edit some text can now be told to use an existing Emacs process
@@ -810,11 +810,11 @@ The client/server work only on Berkeley Unix, since they 
use the Berkeley
 sockets mechanism for their communication.
 
 
-Changes in Lisp programming in Emacs version 18.
+* Changes in Lisp programming in Emacs 18.
 
-* Init file changes.
+** Init file changes.
 
-** Suffixes no longer accepted on `.emacs'.
+*** Suffixes no longer accepted on `.emacs'.
 
 Emacs will no longer load a file named `.emacs.el' or `emacs.elc'
 in place of `.emacs'.  This is so that it will take less time to
@@ -822,7 +822,7 @@ find `.emacs'.  If you want to compile your init file, give 
it another
 name and make `.emacs' a link to the `.elc' file, or make it contain
 a call to `load' to load the `.elc' file.
 
-** `default-profile' renamed to `default', and loaded after `.emacs'.
+*** `default-profile' renamed to `default', and loaded after `.emacs'.
 
 It used to be the case that the file `default-profile' was loaded if
 and only if `.emacs' was not found.
@@ -839,13 +839,13 @@ Note that for most purposes you are better off using a 
`site-init' library
 since that will be loaded before the runnable Emacs is dumped.  By using
 a `site-init' library, you avoid taking up time each time Emacs is started.
 
-** inhibit-command-line has been eliminated.
+*** inhibit-command-line has been eliminated.
 
 This variable used to exist for .emacs files to set.  It has been
 eliminated because you can get the same effect by setting
 command-line-args to nil and setting inhibit-startup-message to t.
 
-* `apply' is more general.
+** `apply' is more general.
 
 `apply' now accepts any number of arguments.  The first one is a function;
 the rest are individual arguments to pass to that function, except for the
@@ -854,7 +854,7 @@ last, which is a list of arguments to pass.
 Previously, `apply' required exactly two arguments.  Its old behavior
 follows as a special case of the new definition.
 
-* New code-letter for `interactive'.
+** New code-letter for `interactive'.
 
 (interactive "NFoo: ") is like (interactive "nFoo: ") in reading
 a number using the minibuffer to serve as the argument; however,
@@ -863,9 +863,9 @@ value as the argument, and does not use the minibuffer at 
all.
 
 This is used by the `goto-line' and `goto-char' commands.
 
-* Semantics of variables.
+** Semantics of variables.
 
-** Built-in per-buffer variables improved.
+*** Built-in per-buffer variables improved.
 
 Several built-in variables which in the past had a different value in
 each buffer now behave exactly as if `make-variable-buffer-local' had
@@ -887,12 +887,12 @@ They now refer to the default value of the variable, 
which is not
 quite the same behavior as before, but it should enable old init files
 to continue to work.
 
-** New per-buffer variables.
+*** New per-buffer variables.
 
 The variables `fill-prefix', `comment-column' and `indent-tabs-mode'
 are now per-buffer.  They work just like `fill-column', etc.
 
-** New function `setq-default'.
+*** New function `setq-default'.
 
 `setq-default' sets the default value of a variable, and uses the
 same syntax that `setq' accepts: the variable name is not evaluated
@@ -901,12 +901,12 @@ and need not be quoted.
 `(setq-default case-fold-search nil)' would make searches case-sensitive
 in all buffers that do not have local values for `case-fold-search'.
 
-** Functions `global-set' and `global-value' deleted.
+*** Functions `global-set' and `global-value' deleted.
 
 These functions were never used except by mistake by users expecting
 the functionality of `set-default' and `default-value'.
 
-* Changes in defaulting of major modes.
+** Changes in defaulting of major modes.
 
 When `default-major-mode' is `nil', new buffers are supposed to
 get their major mode from the buffer that is current.  However,
@@ -917,7 +917,7 @@ Now such modes' names have been given non-`nil' 
`mode-class' properties.
 If the current buffer's mode has such a property, Fundamental mode is
 used as the default for newly created buffers.
 
-* `where-is-internal' requires additional arguments.
+** `where-is-internal' requires additional arguments.
 
 This function now accepts three arguments, two of them required:
 DEFINITION, the definition to search for; LOCAL-KEYMAP, the keymap
@@ -938,38 +938,38 @@ The incompatibility is sad, but `nil' is a legitimate 
value for the
 second argument (it means there is no local keymap), so it cannot also
 serve as a default meaning to use the current local keymap.
 
-* Abbrevs with hooks.
+** Abbrevs with hooks.
 
 When an abbrev defined with a hook is expanded, it now performs the
 usual replacement of the abbrev with the expansion before running the
 hook.  Previously the abbrev itself was deleted but the expansion was
 not inserted.
 
-* Function `scan-buffer' deleted.
+** Function `scan-buffer' deleted.
 
 Use `search-forward' or `search-backward' in place of `scan-buffer'.
 You will have to rearrange the arguments.
 
-* X window interface improvements.
+** X window interface improvements.
 
-** Detect release of mouse buttons.
+*** Detect release of mouse buttons.
 
 Button-up events can now be detected.  See the file `lisp/x-mouse.el'
 for details.
 
-** New pop-up menu facility.
+*** New pop-up menu facility.
 
 The new function `x-popup-menu' pops up a menu (in a X window)
 and returns an indication of which selection the user made.
 For more information, see its self-documentation.
 
-* M-x disassemble.
+** M-x disassemble.
 
 This command prints the disassembly of a byte-compiled Emacs Lisp function.
 
 Would anyone like to interface this to the debugger?
 
-* `insert-buffer-substring' can insert part of the current buffer.
+** `insert-buffer-substring' can insert part of the current buffer.
 
 The old restriction that the text being inserted had to come from
 a different buffer is now lifted.
@@ -977,7 +977,7 @@ a different buffer is now lifted.
 When inserting text from the current buffer, the text to be inserted
 is determined from the specified bounds before any copying takes place.
 
-* New function `substitute-key-definition'.
+** New function `substitute-key-definition'.
 
 This is a new way to replace one command with another command as the
 binding of whatever keys may happen to refer to it.
@@ -986,29 +986,29 @@ binding of whatever keys may happen to refer to it.
 for keys defined to run OLDDEF, and rebinds those keys to run NEWDEF
 instead.
 
-* New function `insert-char'.
+** New function `insert-char'.
 
 Insert a specified character, a specified number of times.
 
-* `mark-marker' changed.
+** `mark-marker' changed.
 
 When there is no mark, this now returns a marker that points
 nowhere, rather than `nil'.
 
-* `ding' accepts argument.
+** `ding' accepts argument.
 
 When given an argument, the function `ding' does not terminate
 execution of a keyboard macro.  Normally, `ding' does terminate
 all macros that are currently executing.
 
-* New function `minibuffer-depth'.
+** New function `minibuffer-depth'.
 
 This function returns the current depth in minibuffer activations.
 The value is zero when the minibuffer is not in use.
 Values greater than one are possible if the user has entered the
 minibuffer recursively.
 
-* New function `documentation-property'.
+** New function `documentation-property'.
 
 (documentation-property SYMBOL PROPNAME) is like (get SYMBOL PROPNAME),
 except that if the property value is a number `documentation-property'
@@ -1018,7 +1018,7 @@ in the DOC file and return the string found there.
 (documentation-property VAR 'variable-documentation) is the proper
 way for a Lisp program to get the documentation of variable VAR.
 
-* New documentation-string expansion feature.
+** New documentation-string expansion feature.
 
 If a documentation string (for a variable or function) contains text
 of the form `\<FOO>', it means that all command names specified in
@@ -1045,7 +1045,7 @@ in the current buffer's local map.
 The current global keymap is always searched second, whether `\<...>'
 has been used or not.
 
-* Multiple hooks allowed in certain contexts.
+** Multiple hooks allowed in certain contexts.
 
 The old hook variables `find-file-hook', `find-file-not-found-hook' and
 `write-file-hook' have been replaced.
@@ -1072,7 +1072,7 @@ together to implement editing of files that are not 
stored as Unix
 files: stored in archives, or inside version control systems, or on
 other machines running other operating systems and accessible via ftp.
 
-* New hooks for suspending Emacs.
+** New hooks for suspending Emacs.
 
 Suspending Emacs runs the hook `suspend-hook' before suspending
 and the hook `suspend-resume-hook' if the suspended Emacs is resumed.
@@ -1082,22 +1082,22 @@ non-`nil', then suspending is inhibited and so is 
running the
 `suspend-resume-hook'.  The non-`nil' value means that the `suspend-hook'
 has done whatever suspending is required.
 
-* Disabling commands can print a special message.
+** Disabling commands can print a special message.
 
 A command is disabled by giving it a non-`nil' `disabled' property.
 Now, if this property is a string, it is included in the message
 printed when the user tries to run the command.
 
-* Emacs can open TCP connections.
+** Emacs can open TCP connections.
 
 The function `open-network-stream' opens a TCP connection to
 a specified host and service.  Its value is a Lisp object that represents
 the connection.  The object is a kind of "subprocess", and I/O are
 done like I/O to subprocesses.
 
-* Display-related changes.
+** Display-related changes.
 
-** New mode-line control features.
+*** New mode-line control features.
 
 The display of the mode line used to be controlled by a format-string
 that was the value of the variable `mode-line-format'.
@@ -1188,12 +1188,12 @@ global-mode-string
 The idea of these variables is to eliminate the need for major modes
 to alter mode-line-format itself.
 
-** `window-point' valid for selected window.
+*** `window-point' valid for selected window.
 
 The value returned by `window-point' used to be incorrect when its
 argument was the selected window.  Now the value is correct.
 
-** Window configurations may be saved as Lisp objects.
+*** Window configurations may be saved as Lisp objects.
 
 The function `current-window-configuration' returns a special type of
 Lisp object that represents the current layout of windows: the
@@ -1203,7 +1203,7 @@ which parts of the buffers appear on the screen.
 The function `set-window-configuration' takes one argument, which must
 be a window configuration object, and restores that configuration.
 
-** New hook `temp-output-buffer-show-hook'.
+*** New hook `temp-output-buffer-show-hook'.
 
 This hook allows you to control how help buffers are displayed.
 Whenever `with-output-to-temp-buffer' has executed its body and wants
@@ -1213,30 +1213,30 @@ The hook function is solely responsible for displaying 
the buffer.
 The standard manner of display--making the buffer appear in a window--is
 used only if there is no hook function.
 
-** New function `minibuffer-window'.
+*** New function `minibuffer-window'.
 
 This function returns the window used (sometimes) for displaying
 the minibuffer.  It can be used even when the minibuffer is not active.
 
-** New feature to `next-window'.
+*** New feature to `next-window'.
 
 If the optional second argument is neither `nil' nor `t', the minibuffer
 window is omitted from consideration even when active; if the starting
 window was the last non-minibuffer window, the value will be the first
 non-minibuffer window.
 
-** New variable `minibuffer-scroll-window'.
+*** New variable `minibuffer-scroll-window'.
 
 When this variable is non-`nil', the command `scroll-other-window'
 uses it as the window to be scrolled.  Displays of completion-lists
 set this variable to the window containing the display.
 
-** New argument to `sit-for'.
+*** New argument to `sit-for'.
 
 A non-nil second argument to `sit-for' means do not redisplay;
 just wait for the specified time or until input is available.
 
-** Deleted function `set-minor-mode'; minor modes must be changed.
+*** Deleted function `set-minor-mode'; minor modes must be changed.
 
 The function `set-minor-mode' has been eliminated.  The display
 of minor mode names in the mode line is now controlled by the
@@ -1245,7 +1245,7 @@ mode, it is sufficient to add an element to this list.  
Once that
 is done, you can turn the mode on and off just by setting a variable,
 and the display will show its status automatically.
 
-** New variable `cursor-in-echo-area'.
+*** New variable `cursor-in-echo-area'.
 
 If this variable is non-nil, the screen cursor appears on the
 last line of the screen, at the end of the text displayed there.
@@ -1253,7 +1253,7 @@ last line of the screen, at the end of the text displayed 
there.
 Binding this variable to t is useful at times when reading single
 characters of input with `read-char'.
 
-** New per-buffer variable `selective-display-ellipses'.
+*** New per-buffer variable `selective-display-ellipses'.
 
 If this variable is non-nil, an ellipsis (`...') appears on the screen
 at the end of each text line that is followed by invisible text.
@@ -1264,14 +1264,14 @@ on the screen that invisible text is present.
 Text is made invisible under the control of the variable
 `selective-display'; this is how Outline mode and C-x $ work.
 
-** New variable `no-redraw-on-reenter'.
+*** New variable `no-redraw-on-reenter'.
 
 If you set this variable non-nil, Emacs will not clear the screen when
 you resume it after suspending it.  This is for the sake of terminals
 with multiple screens of memory, where the termcap entry has been set
 up to switch between screens when Emacs is suspended and resumed.
 
-** New argument to `set-screen-height' or `set-screen-width'.
+*** New argument to `set-screen-height' or `set-screen-width'.
 
 These functions now take an optional second argument which says
 what significance the newly specified height or width has.
@@ -1293,9 +1293,9 @@ to move the cursor to the last line will do.
 2. The ``real'' height of the terminal determines how much padding is
 needed.
 
-* File-related changes.
+** File-related changes.
 
-** New parameter `backup-by-copying-when-mismatch'.
+*** New parameter `backup-by-copying-when-mismatch'.
 
 If this variable is non-`nil', then when Emacs is about to save a
 file, it will create the backup file by copying if that would avoid
@@ -1307,7 +1307,7 @@ last.  I recommend that this variable be left normally 
`nil' and
 changed with a local variables list in those particular files where
 the uid needs to be preserved.
 
-** New parameter `file-precious-flag'.
+*** New parameter `file-precious-flag'.
 
 If this variable is non-`nil', saving the buffer tries to avoid
 leaving an incomplete file due to disk full or other I/O errors.
@@ -1317,14 +1317,14 @@ file is renamed back to the name you visited.
 
 Backups are always made by copying for such files.
 
-** New variable `buffer-offer-save'.
+*** New variable `buffer-offer-save'.
 
 If the value of this variable is non-`nil' in a buffer then exiting
 Emacs will offer to save the buffer (if it is modified and nonempty)
 even if the buffer is not visiting a file.  This variable is
 automatically made local to the current buffer whenever it is set.
 
-** `rename-file', `copy-file', `add-name-to-file' and `make-symbolic-link'.
+*** `rename-file', `copy-file', `add-name-to-file' and `make-symbolic-link'.
 
 The third argument to these functions used to be `t' or `nil'; `t'
 meaning go ahead even if the specified new file name already has a file,
@@ -1333,13 +1333,13 @@ and `nil' meaning to get an error.
 Now if the third argument is a number it means to ask the user for
 confirmation in this case.
 
-** New optional argument to `copy-file'.
+*** New optional argument to `copy-file'.
 
 If `copy-file' receives a non-nil fourth argument, it attempts
 to give the new copy the same time-of-last-modification that the
 original file has.
 
-** New function `file-newer-than-file-p'.
+*** New function `file-newer-than-file-p'.
 
 (file-newer-than-file-p FILE1 FILE2) returns non-nil if FILE1 has been
 modified more recently than FILE2.  If FILE1 does not exist, the value
@@ -1347,24 +1347,24 @@ is always nil; otherwise, if FILE2 does not exist, the 
value is t.
 This is meant for use when FILE2 depends on FILE1, to see if changes
 in FILE1 make it necessary to recompute FILE2 from it.
 
-** Changed function `file-exists-p'.
+*** Changed function `file-exists-p'.
 
 This function is no longer the same as `file-readable-p'.
 `file-exists-p' can now return t for a file that exists but which
 the fascists won't allow you to read.
 
-** New function `file-locked-p'.
+*** New function `file-locked-p'.
 
 This function receives a file name as argument and returns `nil'
 if the file is not locked, `t' if locked by this Emacs, or a
 string giving the name of the user who has locked it.
 
-** New function `file-name-sans-versions'.
+*** New function `file-name-sans-versions'.
 
 (file-name-sans-versions NAME) returns a substring of NAME, with any
 version numbers or other backup suffixes deleted from the end.
 
-** New functions for directory names.
+*** New functions for directory names.
 
 Although a directory is really a kind of file, specifying a directory
 uses a somewhat different syntax from specifying a file.
@@ -1390,7 +1390,7 @@ and (directory-file-name "/usr/rms/") returns "/usr/rms".
 On VMS, (file-name-as-directory "du:[rms]foo.dir") returns "du:[rms.foo]"
 and (directory-file-name "du:[rms.foo]") returns "du:[rms]foo.dir".
 
-** Value of `file-attributes' changed.
+*** Value of `file-attributes' changed.
 
 The function file-attributes returns a list containing many kinds of
 information about a file.  Now the list has eleven elements.
@@ -1403,14 +1403,14 @@ the same directory by you.
 
 The eleventh element is the inode number of the file.
 
-** VMS-only function `file-name-all-versions'.
+*** VMS-only function `file-name-all-versions'.
 
 This function returns a list of all the completions, including version
 number, of a specified version-number-less file name.  This is like
 `file-name-all-completions', except that the latter returns values
 that do not include version numbers.
 
-** VMS-only variable `vms-stmlf-recfm'.
+*** VMS-only variable `vms-stmlf-recfm'.
 
 On a VMS system, if this variable is non-nil, Emacs will give newly
 created files the record format `stmlf'.  This is necessary for files
@@ -1423,46 +1423,46 @@ no effect.
 
 This variable has no effect on Unix systems.
 
-** `insert-file-contents' on an empty file.
+*** `insert-file-contents' on an empty file.
 
 This no longer sets the buffer's "modified" flag.
 
-** New function (VMS only) `define-logical-name':
+*** New function (VMS only) `define-logical-name':
 
 (define-logical-name LOGICAL TRANSLATION) defines a VMS logical name
 LOGICAL whose translation is TRANSLATION.  The new name applies to
 the current process only.
 
-** Deleted variable `ask-about-buffer-names'.
+*** Deleted variable `ask-about-buffer-names'.
 
 If you want buffer names for files to be generated in a special way,
 you must redefine `create-file-buffer'.
 
-* Subprocess-related changes.
+** Subprocess-related changes.
 
-** New function `process-list'.
+*** New function `process-list'.
 
 This function takes no arguments and returns a list of all
 of Emacs's asynchronous subprocesses.
 
-** New function `process-exit-status'.
+*** New function `process-exit-status'.
 
 This function, given a process, process name or buffer as argument,
 returns the exit status code or signal number of the process.
 If the process has not yet exited or died, this function returns 0.
 
-** Process output ignores `buffer-read-only'.
+*** Process output ignores `buffer-read-only'.
 
 Output from a process will go into the process's buffer even if the
 buffer is read only.
 
-** Switching buffers in filter functions and sentinels.
+*** Switching buffers in filter functions and sentinels.
 
 Emacs no longer saves and restore the current buffer around calling
 the filter and sentinel functions, so these functions can now
 permanently alter the selected buffer in a straightforward manner.
 
-** Specifying environment variables for subprocesses.
+*** Specifying environment variables for subprocesses.
 
 When a subprocess is started with `start-process' or `call-process',
 the value of the variable `process-environment' is taken to
@@ -1472,38 +1472,38 @@ value should be a list of strings, each of the form 
"VAR=VALUE".
 `process-environment' is initialized when Emacs starts up
 based on Emacs's environment.
 
-** New variable `process-connection-type'.
+*** New variable `process-connection-type'.
 
 If this variable is `nil', when a subprocess is created, Emacs uses
 a pipe rather than a pty to communicate with it.  Normally this
 variable is `t', telling Emacs to use a pty if ptys are supported
 and one is available.
 
-** New function `waiting-for-user-input-p'.
+*** New function `waiting-for-user-input-p'.
 
 This function, given a subprocess as argument, returns `t' if that
 subprocess appears to be waiting for input sent from Emacs,
 or `nil' otherwise.
 
-** New hook `shell-set-directory-error-hook'.
+*** New hook `shell-set-directory-error-hook'.
 
 The value of this variable is called, with no arguments, whenever
 Shell mode gets an error trying to keep track of directory-setting
 commands (such as `cd' and `pushd') used in the shell buffer.
 
-* New functions `user-uid' and `user-real-uid'.
+** New functions `user-uid' and `user-real-uid'.
 
 These functions take no arguments and return, respectively,
 the effective uid and the real uid of the Emacs process.
 The value in each case is an integer.
 
-* New variable `print-escape-newlines' controls string printing.
+** New variable `print-escape-newlines' controls string printing.
 
 If this variable is non-`nil', then when a Lisp string is printed
 by the Lisp printing function `prin1' or `print', newline characters
 are printed as `\n' rather than as a literal newline.
 
-* New function `sysnetunam' on HPUX.
+** New function `sysnetunam' on HPUX.
 
 This function takes two arguments, a network address PATH and a
 login string LOGIN, and executes the system call `netunam'.
@@ -1511,7 +1511,7 @@ It returns `t' if the call succeeds, otherwise `nil'.
 
 News regarding installation:
 
-* Many `s-...' file names changed.
+** Many `s-...' file names changed.
 
 Many `s-...' files have been renamed.  All periods in such names,
 except the ones just before the final `h', have been changed to
@@ -1519,7 +1519,7 @@ hyphens.  Thus, `s-bsd4.2.h' has been renamed to 
`s-bsd4-2.h'.
 
 This is so a Unix distribution can be moved mechanically to VMS.
 
-* `DOCSTR...' file now called `DOC-...'.
+** `DOCSTR...' file now called `DOC-...'.
 
 The file of on-line documentation strings, that used to be
 `DOCSTR.mm.nn.oo' in this directory, is now called `DOC-mm.nn.oo'.
@@ -1529,11 +1529,11 @@ for translating filenames for VMS.
 This file also now contains the doc strings for variables as
 well as functions.
 
-* Emacs no longer uses floating point arithmetic.
+** Emacs no longer uses floating point arithmetic.
 
 This may make it easier to port to some machines.
 
-* Macros `XPNTR' and `XSETPNTR'; flag `DATA_SEG_BITS'.
+** Macros `XPNTR' and `XSETPNTR'; flag `DATA_SEG_BITS'.
 
 These macros exclusively are used to unpack a pointer from a Lisp_Object
 and to insert a pointer into a Lisp_Object.  Redefining them may help
@@ -1543,7 +1543,7 @@ certain high bits set.
 If `DATA_SEG_BITS' is defined, it should be a number which contains
 the high bits to be inclusive or'ed with pointers that are unpacked.
 
-* New flag `HAVE_X_MENU'.
+** New flag `HAVE_X_MENU'.
 
 Define this flag in `config.h' in addition to `HAVE_X_WINDOWS'
 to enable use of the Emacs interface to X Menus.  On some operating
@@ -1551,11 +1551,11 @@ systems, the rest of the X interface works properly but 
X Menus
 do not work; hence this separate flag.  See the file `src/xmenu.c'
 for more information.
 
-* Macros `ARRAY_MARK_FLAG' and `DONT_COPY_FLAG'.
+** Macros `ARRAY_MARK_FLAG' and `DONT_COPY_FLAG'.
 
-* `HAVE_ALLOCA' prevents assembly of `alloca.s'.
+** `HAVE_ALLOCA' prevents assembly of `alloca.s'.
 
-* `SYSTEM_MALLOC' prevents use of GNU `malloc.c'.
+** `SYSTEM_MALLOC' prevents use of GNU `malloc.c'.
 
 SYSTEM_MALLOC, if defined, means use the system's own `malloc' routines
 rather than those that come with Emacs.
@@ -1563,21 +1563,21 @@ rather than those that come with Emacs.
 Use this only if absolutely necessary, because if it is used you do
 not get warnings when space is getting low.
 
-* New flags to control unexec.
+** New flags to control unexec.
 
 See the file `unexec.c' for a long comment on the compilation
 switches that suffice to make it work on many machines.
 
-* `PNTR_COMPARISON_TYPE'
+** `PNTR_COMPARISON_TYPE'
 
 Pointers that need to be compared for ordering are converted to this type
 first.  Normally this is `unsigned int'.
 
-* `HAVE_VFORK', `HAVE_DUP2' and `HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY'.
+** `HAVE_VFORK', `HAVE_DUP2' and `HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY'.
 
 These flags just say whether certain system calls are available.
 
-* New macros control compiler switches, linker switches and libraries.
+** New macros control compiler switches, linker switches and libraries.
 
 The m- and s- files can now control in a modular fashion the precise
 arguments passed to `cc' and `ld'.
@@ -1618,5 +1618,5 @@ along with GNU Emacs.  If not, see 
<https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
 
 
 Local variables:
-mode: text
+mode: outline
 end:



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