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. --- src/nvim/ops.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'src/nvim/ops.c') diff --git a/src/nvim/ops.c b/src/nvim/ops.c index 90fc89ee21..90cb482ec5 100644 --- a/src/nvim/ops.c +++ b/src/nvim/ops.c @@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ static void block_insert(oparg_T *oap, char_u *s, int b_insert, struct block_def if (has_mbyte && spaces > 0) { int off; - // Avoid starting halfway a multi-byte character. + // Avoid starting halfway through a multi-byte character. if (b_insert) { off = (*mb_head_off)(oldp, oldp + offset + spaces); } else { -- cgit