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-rw-r--r--runtime/doc/undo.txt12
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/undo.txt b/runtime/doc/undo.txt
index a500e87e35..b11d7581ed 100644
--- a/runtime/doc/undo.txt
+++ b/runtime/doc/undo.txt
@@ -60,9 +60,9 @@ with the redo command. If you make a new change after the undo command,
the redo will not be possible anymore.
'u' included, the Vi-compatible way:
-The undo command undoes the previous change, and also the previous undo command.
-The redo command repeats the previous undo command. It does NOT repeat a
-change command, use "." for that.
+The undo command undoes the previous change, and also the previous undo
+command. The redo command repeats the previous undo command. It does NOT
+repeat a change command, use "." for that.
Examples Vim way Vi-compatible way ~
"uu" two times undo no-op
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ change again. But you can do something like this: >
:undojoin | delete
-After this an "u" command will undo the delete command and the previous
+After this a "u" command will undo the delete command and the previous
change.
To do the opposite, break a change into two undo blocks, in Insert mode use
@@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ respectively:
(the magic number at the start of the file is wrong), then
this fails, unless the ! was added.
If it exists and does look like an undo file it is
- overwritten. If there is no undo-history, nothing will be
+ overwritten. If there is no undo-history, nothing will be
written.
Implementation detail: Overwriting happens by first deleting
the existing file and then creating a new file with the same
@@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ back the text of three deletes ago with '"3P'.
*redo-register*
If you want to get back more than one part of deleted text, you can use a
special feature of the repeat command ".". It will increase the number of the
-register used. So if you first do ""1P", the following "." will result in a
+register used. So if you first do '"1P', the following "." will result in a
'"2P'. Repeating this will result in all numbered registers being inserted.
Example: If you deleted text with 'dd....' it can be restored with