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authornjohnston <nickjohnstonsky@gmail.com>2023-11-19 23:18:57 +0000
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2023-11-20 00:18:57 +0100
commitaabca259fa48865e93d58b798233b19e0cb3ec7b (patch)
tree615d88843e8a9dc198e2cb2d0ad11203c48ef63c /runtime
parente670d17342ea05af253b0452afb980397fa143be (diff)
runtime(doc): minor typo fixes (#13548)
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'runtime')
-rw-r--r--runtime/doc/if_ole.txt4
-rw-r--r--runtime/doc/options.txt4
2 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/if_ole.txt b/runtime/doc/if_ole.txt
index 9f899ddccc..39d70a84f7 100644
--- a/runtime/doc/if_ole.txt
+++ b/runtime/doc/if_ole.txt
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-*if_ole.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2022 Oct 08
+*if_ole.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2023 Nov 19
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Paul Moore
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ Vim exposes four methods for use by clients.
SendKeys(keys) Execute a series of keys.
This method takes a single parameter, which is a string of keystrokes. These
-keystrokes are executed exactly as if they had been types in at the keyboard.
+keystrokes are executed exactly as if they had been typed in at the keyboard.
Special keys can be given using their <..> names, as for the right hand side
of a mapping. Note: Execution of the Ex "normal" command is not supported -
see below |ole-normal|.
diff --git a/runtime/doc/options.txt b/runtime/doc/options.txt
index 77efbd63f2..34290ae1e2 100644
--- a/runtime/doc/options.txt
+++ b/runtime/doc/options.txt
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-*options.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2023 Nov 11
+*options.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2023 Nov 19
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
@@ -1424,7 +1424,7 @@ A jump table for the options with a short description can be found at |Q_op|.
Some applications use the BOM to recognize the encoding of the file.
Often used for UCS-2 files on MS-Windows. For other applications it
causes trouble, for example: "cat file1 file2" makes the BOM of file2
- appear halfway the resulting file. Gcc doesn't accept a BOM.
+ appear halfway through the resulting file. Gcc doesn't accept a BOM.
When Vim reads a file and 'fileencodings' starts with "ucs-bom", a
check for the presence of the BOM is done and 'bomb' set accordingly.
Unless 'binary' is set, it is removed from the first line, so that you