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-rw-r--r--doc/ledger3.texi6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ledger3.texi b/doc/ledger3.texi
index 58305a33..c223650a 100644
--- a/doc/ledger3.texi
+++ b/doc/ledger3.texi
@@ -2816,7 +2816,7 @@ you a place to put those codes:
@findex --pending
A transaction can have a ``state'': cleared, pending, or uncleared.
-The default is uncleared. To mark a transaction cleared, put an asterisk (*)
+The default is uncleared. To mark a transaction cleared, put an asterisk @samp{*}
before the payee, after the date or code:
@smallexample @c input:validate
@@ -7593,7 +7593,7 @@ Now, there are a few ways to generate this information. You can use
the @file{timeclock.el} package, which is part of Emacs. Or you can
write a simple script in whichever language you prefer to emit similar
information. Or you can use Org mode's time-clocking abilities and
-the @samp{org2tc} script developed by John Wiegley.
+the @file{org2tc} script developed by John Wiegley.
These timelog entries can appear in a separate file, or directly in
your main ledger file. The initial @samp{i} and @samp{o} characters
@@ -7882,7 +7882,7 @@ Useful for specifying a date in plain terms. For example, you could say
@item expr comment =~ /REGEX/
A regular expression that matches against a posting's comment field. This
searches only a posting's field, not the transaction's note or comment field.
-For example, @samp{ledger reg "expr" "comment =~ /landline/"} will match:
+For example, @code{ledger reg "expr" "comment =~ /landline/"} will match:
@smallexample
2014/1/29 Phone bill