From 19c22cdb80e30711be5af33cb6726566ad629944 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jack Danger Canty Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 22:21:14 -0800 Subject: "halfway a line" is a very confusing phrase If you Google for this phrase found in the Vim documentation you'll find almost exclusively hits from the Vim documentation. I think changing "halfway a line" to "halfway through a line" makes more sense. There seems to be an pervasive odd use of the word 'halfway' in the original docs which I'm updating everywhere. --- runtime/doc/syntax.txt | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'runtime/doc/syntax.txt') diff --git a/runtime/doc/syntax.txt b/runtime/doc/syntax.txt index ee91a91acb..1841f83214 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/syntax.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/syntax.txt @@ -4075,8 +4075,8 @@ the match doesn't move to another line. The skip pattern can include the "\n", but the search for an end pattern will continue in the first character of the next line, also when that character is matched by the skip pattern. This is because redrawing may start in any line -halfway a region and there is no check if the skip pattern started in a -previous line. For example, if the skip pattern is "a\nb" and an end pattern +halfway in a region and there is no check if the skip pattern started in a +previous line. For example, if the skip pattern is "a\nb" and an end pattern is "b", the end pattern does match in the second line of this: > x x a b x x -- cgit