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author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | 2013-09-22 14:42:24 +0200 |
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committer | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | 2013-09-22 14:42:24 +0200 |
commit | baca7f705babaa1caeb0bce7f63f6275feca6641 (patch) | |
tree | ab045d9c9d5f5d0287b2b002337f2a41291cd629 /runtime/doc/usr_45.txt | |
parent | 595cad2ea1c77c40a34a240c71290fdef6aabd3b (diff) |
Update runtime files. Add support for J.
Diffstat (limited to 'runtime/doc/usr_45.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | runtime/doc/usr_45.txt | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/usr_45.txt b/runtime/doc/usr_45.txt index 303698179f..828ea6fe2d 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/usr_45.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/usr_45.txt @@ -328,8 +328,8 @@ actually use Vim to convert a file. Example: > *45.5* Entering language text Computer keyboards don't have much more than a hundred keys. Some languages -have thousands of characters, Unicode has ten thousands. So how do you type -these characters? +have thousands of characters, Unicode has over hundred thousand. So how do +you type these characters? First of all, when you don't use too many of the special characters, you can use digraphs. This was already explained in |24.9|. When you use a language that uses many more characters than keys on your |