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[Emacs-diffs] master 309d39b: A few more minor quoting fixes in a script


From: Paul Eggert
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] master 309d39b: A few more minor quoting fixes in a script and a text file
Date: Wed, 16 Sep 2015 23:09:34 +0000

branch: master
commit 309d39b832ccd72f99cc726090ff03f7e146948d
Author: Paul Eggert <address@hidden>
Commit: Paul Eggert <address@hidden>

    A few more minor quoting fixes in a script and a text file
---
 lisp/Makefile.in |   12 ++++++------
 lisp/README      |    3 +--
 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)

diff --git a/lisp/Makefile.in b/lisp/Makefile.in
index 8bcb2d6..15d4d37 100644
--- a/lisp/Makefile.in
+++ b/lisp/Makefile.in
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ BYTE_COMPILE_FLAGS = $(BIG_STACK_OPTS) \
 # Files to compile before others during a bootstrap.  This is done to
 # speed up the bootstrap process.  They're ordered by size, so we use
 # the slowest-compiler on the smallest file and move to larger files as the
-# compiler gets faster.  `autoload.elc' comes last because it is not used by
+# compiler gets faster.  'autoload.elc' comes last because it is not used by
 # the compiler (so its compilation does not speed up subsequent compilations),
 # it's only placed here so as to speed up generation of the loaddefs.el file.
 
@@ -272,22 +272,22 @@ $(THEFILE)c:
 
 compile-first: $(COMPILE_FIRST)
 
-# In `compile-main' we could directly do
+# In 'compile-main' we could directly do
 #    ... | xargs $(MAKE)
 # and it works, but it generates a lot of messages like
 #    make[2]: gnus/gnus-mlspl.elc is up to date.
 # so instead, we use "xargs echo" to split the list of file into manageable
-# chunks and then use an intermediate `compile-targets' target so the
+# chunks and then use an intermediate 'compile-targets' target so the
 # actual targets (the .elc files) are not mentioned as targets on the
 # make command line.
 
 
 .PHONY: compile-targets
-# TARGETS is set dynamically in the recursive call from `compile-main'.
+# TARGETS is set dynamically in the recursive call from 'compile-main'.
 compile-targets: $(TARGETS)
 
 # Compile all the Elisp files that need it.  Beware: it approximates
-# `no-byte-compile', so watch out for false-positives!
+# 'no-byte-compile', so watch out for false-positives!
 compile-main: leim semantic compile-clean
        @(cd $(lisp) && \
        els=`echo "${SUBDIRS_REL} " | sed -e 's|/\./|/|g' -e 's|/\. | |g' -e 
's| |/*.el |g'`; \
@@ -326,7 +326,7 @@ semantic:
 compile: $(LOADDEFS) autoloads compile-first
        $(MAKE) compile-main
 
-# Compile all Lisp files.  This is like `compile' but compiles files
+# Compile all Lisp files.  This is like 'compile' but compiles files
 # unconditionally.  Some files don't actually get compiled because they
 # set the local variable no-byte-compile.
 compile-always:
diff --git a/lisp/README b/lisp/README
index e250a70..b68ad5e 100644
--- a/lisp/README
+++ b/lisp/README
@@ -6,8 +6,7 @@ files are architecture-independent.
 The term subdirectory contains Lisp files that customize Emacs for
 certain terminal types.  When Emacs starts, it checks the TERM
 environment variable to get the terminal type and loads
-`term/${TERM}.el' if it exists.
+'term/${TERM}.el' if it exists.
 
 The other subdirectories hold Lisp packages grouped by their general
 purpose.
-



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