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[elpa] externals/speedrect ea1dbc0e07 7/8: Update README.md


From: ELPA Syncer
Subject: [elpa] externals/speedrect ea1dbc0e07 7/8: Update README.md
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2024 03:59:29 -0500 (EST)

branch: externals/speedrect
commit ea1dbc0e07233d3d65e8d89999c56e169d736250
Author: JD Smith <93749+jdtsmith@users.noreply.github.com>
Commit: GitHub <noreply@github.com>

    Update README.md
---
 README.md | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index c9d7055575..f64c79af0f 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ Use calc, it's super-powerful...
 2. Once you have something you're happy with at the top of calc's *stack* (at 
the bottom of the `*Calculator*` buffer, entry numbered `1:`), you can:
     - hit `q` (or other window navigation) to return to your original buffer 
(where `rectangle-mark-mode` will still be active),
     - adjust the position of your rectangle if needed (`S-left/right` and/or 
`x` is useful for this; a zero-width rectangle is fine), and
-    - hit `m` to yank the latest matrix from calc into the buffer (if it has 
the right number of rows), replacing the marked rectangle.
+    - hit `m` to yank the latest matrix from the calc stack into the buffer, 
replacing the marked rectangle.
 
 You don't have to be in the same `mark-rectangle-mode` session to yank a 
matrix from calc.  As long as the height of your rectangle matches the number 
of matrix rows, it will just work.  So you can start in one buffer, accumulate 
a matrix, manipulate it, switch to another buffer, and yank it there.
 



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