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authorJose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>2011-01-10 22:02:46 +0100
committerJose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>2011-01-10 22:02:46 +0100
commit4b13b107c62682c7a55de18f396862dcfe01acf1 (patch)
treedabba3fbb199f2cccd449165e74e730fc761c1e2 /doc/repl.texi
parent2ff0d4afe8730859d84dbe4a959d7d3147c6d495 (diff)
downloadgeiser-guile-4b13b107c62682c7a55de18f396862dcfe01acf1.tar.gz
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Fixes for links in info manual
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/repl.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/repl.texi14
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/repl.texi b/doc/repl.texi
index be12f4d..9d2194d 100644
--- a/doc/repl.texi
+++ b/doc/repl.texi
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ Read-Eval-Print Loop), Geiser provides the generic interactive command
@command{run-geiser}. If you run it (via, as is customary in Emacs,
@kbd{M-x run-geiser}, you'll be saluted by a prompt asking which one of
the supported implementations you want to launch---yes, you can stop the
-asking, see @altr{active-implementations,below,Customization and tips}.
+asking, see @altr{active-implementations,below,Customization and tips,.}
Tabbing for completion will offer you, as of this writing, @code{guile}
and @code{racket}. Just choose your poison, and a new REPL buffer will
pop-up.
@@ -33,13 +33,13 @@ pop-up.
If all went according to plan, you'll be facing an
implementation-dependent banner, followed by an interactive prompt.
Going according to plan includes having the executable of the Scheme you
-chose in your path. If that's not the case, you can tell Emacs where it
-is, as described in @altr{impl-binary,a moment,Customization and tips}.
+chose in your path. If that's not the case, you can tell Emacs where it
+is, as described in @altr{impl-binary,a moment,Customization and tips,.}
Returning to our REPL,
the first thing to notice is that the funny prompt is telling you your
current module: its name is the part just after the @@ sign (in Guile,
that means @code{guile-user}, while Racket's top namespace doesn't have
-a name; cf. discussion in @altr{Switching context,,Switching context}).
+a name; cf. discussion in @altr{Switching context,,Switching context,).}
Other than that, this is
pretty much equivalent to having a command-line interpreter in a
terminal, with a bunch of add-ons that we'll be reviewing below. You can
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ both commands will just sever the connection and leave the remote
process alone. If worse comes to worst and the process is dead, @kbd{C-c
C-z} will restart it. However, the same shortcut, issued when the REPL is
alive, will bring you back to the buffer you came from, as explained
-in @altr{switching-repl-buff,this section,The source and the REPL}.
+in @altr{switching-repl-buff,this section,The source and the REPL,.}
The remaining commands are meatier, and deserve sections of their own.
@@ -245,9 +245,9 @@ name.
The list of exported bindings is shown, again, in a buffer belonging to
Geiser's documentation browser, where you have at your disposal a bunch
of navigation commands listed in @altr{Documentation browser,our
-cheat-sheet,Documentation browser}. We'll have a bit more to say about
+cheat-sheet,Documentation browser,.} We'll have a bit more to say about
the documentation browser in
-@altr{doc-browser,a later section,Documentation helpers}.
+@altr{doc-browser,a later section,Documentation helpers,.}
@cindex jump, at the REPL
If that's still not enough, Geiser can jump, via @kbd{M-.}, to the