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-rw-r--r-- | doc/lispref/tips.texi | 26 |
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/doc/lispref/tips.texi b/doc/lispref/tips.texi index 061a5d672ec..82325502209 100644 --- a/doc/lispref/tips.texi +++ b/doc/lispref/tips.texi @@ -694,26 +694,20 @@ starting double-quote is not part of the string! @cindex curly quotes @cindex curved quotes When a documentation string refers to a Lisp symbol, write it as it -would be printed (which usually means in lower case), surrounding it -with curved single quotes (@t{‘..’}). There are two exceptions: write -@code{t} and @code{nil} without surrounding punctuation. For example: +would be printed (which usually means in lower case), with a grave +accent @samp{`} before and apostrophe @samp{'} after it. There are +two exceptions: write @code{t} and @code{nil} without surrounding +punctuation. For example: @example - CODE can be ‘lambda’, nil, or t. + CODE can be `lambda', nil, or t. @end example -@noindent -@xref{Quotation Marks,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for how to -enter curved single quotes. - -Documentation strings can also use an older single-quoting convention, -which quotes symbols with grave accent @t{`} and apostrophe -@t{'}: @t{`like-this'} rather than @t{‘like-this’}. This -older convention was designed for now-obsolete displays in which grave -accent and apostrophe were mirror images. -Documentation using this convention is converted to the user's -preferred format when it is copied into a help buffer. @xref{Keys in -Documentation}. +Note that when Emacs displays these doc strings, Emacs will usually +display @samp{`} (grave accent) as @samp{‘} (left single quotation +mark) and @samp{'} (apostrophe) as @samp{’} (right single quotation +mark), if the display supports displaying these characters. +@xref{Keys in Documentation}. @cindex hyperlinks in documentation strings Help mode automatically creates a hyperlink when a documentation string |