Mercurial > hg
changeset 8780:73728f5f69ab
hgignore.5: remove extra quotes
The so-called "unconstrained quotes" didn't really work, so I reverted
them to normal quotes. Tested with asciidoc version 8.2.7 and 8.4.5.
author | Martin Geisler <mg@lazybytes.net> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 11 Jun 2009 17:16:04 +0200 |
parents | 708938509732 |
children | 385a2d94885e |
files | doc/hgignore.5.txt |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/hgignore.5.txt Tue Jun 09 21:51:34 2009 -0400 +++ b/doc/hgignore.5.txt Thu Jun 11 17:16:04 2009 +0200 @@ -32,8 +32,8 @@ ------ An ignore file is a plain text file consisting of a list of patterns, -with one pattern per line. Empty lines are skipped. The "``#``" character -is treated as a comment character, and the "``\``" character is treated as +with one pattern per line. Empty lines are skipped. The "`#`" character +is treated as a comment character, and the "`\`" character is treated as an escape character. Mercurial supports several pattern syntaxes. The default syntax used @@ -54,9 +54,9 @@ follow, until another syntax is selected. Neither glob nor regexp patterns are rooted. A glob-syntax pattern of -the form "``*.c``" will match a file ending in "``.c``" in any directory, and -a regexp pattern of the form "``\.c$``" will do the same. To root a regexp -pattern, start it with "``^``". +the form "`*.c`" will match a file ending in "`.c`" in any directory, and +a regexp pattern of the form "`\.c$`" will do the same. To root a regexp +pattern, start it with "`^`". EXAMPLE -------