From c369a98132d38affe0bee659f33181db694c9e52 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Jose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>
Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2010 04:45:38 +0100
Subject: Docs: clarification about quack

Greg Hendershott tells me that, unless you require quack after loading
geiser, quack's font lock is somehow ignored. I have yet to understand
why.
---
 doc/install.texi | 10 ++++++----
 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

(limited to 'doc')

diff --git a/doc/install.texi b/doc/install.texi
index 5304270..a785603 100644
--- a/doc/install.texi
+++ b/doc/install.texi
@@ -130,16 +130,18 @@ Regardless of whether you use Geiser or not, you shouldn't be coding
 in any Lisp dialect without the aid of Taylor Campbell's structured
 editing mode.
 @item @uref{http://nschum.de/src/emacs/company-mode/, Company}.
-Nikolaj Schumacher's @code{company-mode} provides a nice front-end for
-completion engines (such as Geiser's). Very nice if you like that kind
-of thing: judge by yourself with the help of
+Nikolaj Schumacher's @code{company-mode} provides a generic front-end
+for completion engines (such as Geiser's). Very nice if you like that
+kind of thing: judge by yourself with the help of
 @uref{http://www.screentoaster.com/watch/stU0lSRERIR1pYRFVdXVlRVFFV/company_mode_for_gnu_emacs,
 this screencast}.
 @item @uref{http://www.neilvandyke.org/quack/, Quack}.
 You can still use the many goodies provided by Neil van Dyke's
 @code{quack-mode}, since most of them are not (yet) available in Geiser.
 The only caveat might be a conflict between Quack's and Geiser's default
-key bindings, which i'm sure you'll manage to tackle just fine.
+key bindings, which i'm sure you'll manage to tackle just fine. It's
+also probably a good idea to require @code{quack} @i{after} loading
+@file{geiser.el} (or requiring a compiled version).
 @end itemize
 You just need to install and setup them as usual, for every package's
 definition of usual. Geiser will notice their presence and react
-- 
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