changeset 129:48045d81f25a

Fix some typos in the docs.
author Ludovic Chabant <ludovic@chabant.com>
date Tue, 19 Jul 2016 23:30:15 +0200
parents e673026faa56
children b6ec4caa22ff
files doc/gutentags.txt
diffstat 1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/gutentags.txt	Mon Jun 13 19:25:52 2016 -0700
+++ b/doc/gutentags.txt	Tue Jul 19 23:30:15 2016 +0200
@@ -54,12 +54,12 @@
 time you save, it will silently, in the background, update the tags for that
 file.
 
-Usually, ctags can only append tags to an existing tag file, so Gutentags
+Usually, `ctags` can only append tags to an existing tag file, so Gutentags
 removes the tags for the current file first, to make sure the tag file is
 always consistent with the source code.
 
 Also, Gutentags is clever enough to not stumble upon itself by triggering
-multiple ctags processes if you save files to fast, or your project is really
+multiple ctags processes if you save files too fast, or your project is really
 big.
 
 There are some similar Vim plugins out there ("vim-tags", "vim-autotag",
@@ -76,8 +76,8 @@
   the tag file, otherwise you will still "see" tags for deleted or renamed
   classes and functions.
 * Automatically create the tag file: you open something from a freshly forked
-  project, it should start indexing it automatically, just in Sublime Text or
-  Visual Studio or any other IDE.
+  project, it should start indexing it automatically, just like in Sublime Text 
+  or Visual Studio or any other IDE.
 
 
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