From e4dfef77b0f61447978aeaf58d61953f5cf1f3e9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jose Antonio Ortega Ruiz Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:32:30 +0100 Subject: Manual: whitespace and missing @noindent Thanks, once again, to Mark Harig. --- doc/parens.texi | 7 +++++-- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc/parens.texi') diff --git a/doc/parens.texi b/doc/parens.texi index b72e03f..89b60a1 100644 --- a/doc/parens.texi +++ b/doc/parens.texi @@ -103,6 +103,7 @@ subsection}. @cindex scheme implementation, choosing To determine what Scheme implementation corresponds to a given source file, Geiser uses the following algorithm: + @enumerate @item If the file-local variable @code{geiser-scheme-implementation} is @@ -137,6 +138,7 @@ See? That's the problem of being a smart aleck: one's always outsmarted by people around. At this point, @i{geiser-mode} will humbly give up and ask you to explicitly choose the Scheme implementation. @end enumerate + As you can see in the list above, there are several ways to influence Geiser's guessing by mean customizable variables. The most direct (and most impoverishing) is probably limiting the active implementations to a @@ -150,7 +152,8 @@ default value for the latter variable: ((regexp "\\.rkt$") racket)) @end example -@noindent which describes the simple heuristic that files with @file{.scm} as +@noindent +which describes the simple heuristic that files with @file{.scm} as extension are by default associated to a Guile REPL while those ending in @file{.ss} or @file{.rkt} correspond to Racket's implementation (with the caveat that these rules are applied only if the previous heuristics @@ -286,7 +289,7 @@ madness). You can change the way Geiser displays the module/identifier combo by customizing @code{geiser-autodoc-identifier-format}. For example, if you wanted a tilde surrounded by spaces instead of a colon as a separator, -you would write something like +you would write something like: @example (setq geiser-autodoc-identifier-format "%s ~ %s") -- cgit v1.2.3