diff options
| author | Stefan Kangas <stefankangas@gmail.com> | 2025-01-23 03:13:01 +0100 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Stefan Kangas <stefankangas@gmail.com> | 2025-01-23 03:14:37 +0100 |
| commit | cda78edc7d9194181bcda1790f29cb7cf3ceb0b9 (patch) | |
| tree | 389233e91d4734810d553bc48c57d9d107afe2a9 /nextstep | |
| parent | ce50a1d3c18bcf0e5f51f4ed49f292f7be31010d (diff) | |
; Fix typos
Diffstat (limited to 'nextstep')
| -rw-r--r-- | nextstep/README | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/nextstep/README b/nextstep/README index 487ea52ead4..853d6bcda35 100644 --- a/nextstep/README +++ b/nextstep/README @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ OpenStep and then Rhapsody, which became Mac OS X. In 2004 it was adapted to GNUstep, a free OpenStep implementation, and in 2008 it was merged to the GNU Emacs trunk and released with Emacs 23. Around the same time a separate Mac-only port using the Carbon APIs and -descending from a 2001 Mac OS 8/9 port of Emacs 21 was removed. (It +descending from a 2001 Mac OS 8/9 port of Emacs 21 was removed. (It remains available externally under the name "mac".) @@ -48,12 +48,12 @@ Classes are declared like the following: GUIDELINES -* Adhere the to the FSF philosophy that a feature in GNU software - should not only be available on non-free systems. +* Adhere to the FSF philosophy that a feature in GNU software should not + only be available on non-free systems. * People with varying Cocoa and Objective-C skills will read and modify the NS code over a long period of time. Keep the code simple - and avoid language constructs that makes the code hard to maintain. + and avoid language constructs that make the code hard to maintain. * Don't use macros and types intended for the XCode Interface Builder, like 'IBAction'. @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ GNUstep. Even though they are less frequently used, this is important for a number of reasons: * It supports the GNUstep project and provides an Emacs with the same - look-and-feel as the rest of the system. + look and feel as the rest of the system. * This allows other Emacs developers to test their changes on the NS interface without having access to a macOS machine. @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ for a number of reasons: SEE ALSO -The src/ns... files contains the C and Objective-C parts. +The src/ns... files contain the C and Objective-C parts. The lisp/term/ns-win.el file contains the lisp part of the NS interface. |
