I started from tabs that are not on the beginning of lines, and in
several places I did further cleanings.
If you're worried about knowing who wrote some code, for example, if you
get to this commit in "git blame", then note that you can use the "-w"
flag in many git commands to ignore whitespaces. For example, to see
per-line authors, use "git blame -w <file>". Another example: to see
the (*much* smaller) non-whitespace changes in this (or any other)
commit, use "git log -p -w -1 <sha1>".
Related to the already fixed PR 12114 and PR 12133, which motivated the
error, and a few additional typos of the same kind.
(Note that it uses the symbols, but that's how they'll render anyway.)
punctuations outside of the form, as it does with quote punctuations.
So things like this
#, @foo{...}
that required the space to make the @foo read as a scribble form are
now better written as
@#,foo{...}
This changes all such occurrences. (In case you see this change in
your files and are worried that there might be changes: I mechanically
verified that the result of `read'ing the modified files is identical
to the previous version.)
svn: r15111
file. (That is, it does not require the file to have a `name'
entry.)
* The name shown when setup works is the directory name, followed by
the `name' field from the info file when specified.
* This means that many `name's are no longer needed, so I'm removing
them. To see if you need a `name' entry, consider that the name
will be shown like this:
... foo (<your name here>)
This means that if the name is the same as the directory name, then
there is no point in having it. I also removed cases where the name
differed only in its capitalization for collections where the case
is obvious.
* Also, for subcollections, the name should clarify the name of the
subcollection in context. For example "Acknowledgments" explains
what scribbling/acks is, but there's no need to add the context name
as in "Scribblings: Acknowledgments".
* There may also be a point in keeping names for other uses. One such
example was in games, where the name field was used in the PLT Games
application. (This was changed to default on the directory name, so
it is no longer needed in most games.) Another example is in planet
packages.
svn: r8629