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author | John Wiegley <johnw@newartisans.com> | 2016-01-23 11:55:31 -0800 |
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committer | John Wiegley <johnw@newartisans.com> | 2016-01-23 11:55:31 -0800 |
commit | 4e11ad37300504c63850bf540b84d7076c1b12ca (patch) | |
tree | b7f9f3f595cdcd5f0b81d370c30154c9f6275f3b /doc/lispref/intro.texi | |
parent | a1865bcf966eafdce28f50fb8a19c1bfd831079a (diff) | |
download | emacs-4e11ad37300504c63850bf540b84d7076c1b12ca.tar.gz emacs-4e11ad37300504c63850bf540b84d7076c1b12ca.tar.bz2 emacs-4e11ad37300504c63850bf540b84d7076c1b12ca.zip |
Correct a use of "which" in intro.texi
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/lispref/intro.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/lispref/intro.texi | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/lispref/intro.texi b/doc/lispref/intro.texi index 9d4a72009ed..0f42d4d8a7f 100644 --- a/doc/lispref/intro.texi +++ b/doc/lispref/intro.texi @@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ in Lisp programs also. In contexts where a truth value is expected, any non-@code{nil} value is considered to be @var{true}. However, @code{t} is the preferred way to represent the truth value @var{true}. When you need to choose a -value which represents @var{true}, and there is no other basis for +value that represents @var{true}, and there is no other basis for choosing, use @code{t}. The symbol @code{t} always has the value @code{t}. |