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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/custom.texi


From: Richard M. Stallman
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/custom.texi
Date: Tue, 07 Feb 2006 23:50:51 +0000

Index: emacs/man/custom.texi
diff -u emacs/man/custom.texi:1.107 emacs/man/custom.texi:1.108
--- emacs/man/custom.texi:1.107 Sun Feb  5 22:41:30 2006
+++ emacs/man/custom.texi       Tue Feb  7 23:50:51 2006
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@
 
   Font-Lock mode automatically highlights certain textual units found in
 programs, such as comments, strings, and function names being defined.
-This requires a window system that can display multiple fonts.
+This requires a graphical display that can show multiple fonts.
 @xref{Faces}.
 
   ISO Accents mode makes the characters @samp{`}, @samp{'}, @samp{"},
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@
 @file{~/.emacs} file (@pxref{Init File}).
 
   The appearance of the example buffers in this section is typically
-different under a window system, since faces are then used to indicate
+different under a graphical display, since faces are then used to indicate
 buttons, links and editable fields.
 
 @menu
@@ -2030,7 +2030,7 @@
 
   When Emacs is started, it normally loads a Lisp program from the
 file @file{.emacs} or @file{.emacs.el} in your home directory
-(see @ref{General Variables, HOME} if you don't know where that is).
+(see @ref{General Variables, HOME}, if you don't know where that is).
 We call this file your @dfn{init file} because it specifies how to
 initialize Emacs for you.  You can use the command line switch
 @samp{-q} to prevent loading your init file, and @samp{-u} (or
@@ -2456,7 +2456,7 @@
 editor customizations even if you are running as the super user.
 
   More precisely, Emacs first determines which user's init file to use.
-It gets the user name from the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and
+It gets your user name from the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and
 @env{USER}; if neither of those exists, it uses effective user-ID.
 If that user name matches the real user-ID, then Emacs uses @env{HOME};
 otherwise, it looks up the home directory corresponding to that user




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