diff options
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ChangeLog | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/gawk.info | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/gawk.texi | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/gawktexi.in | 2 |
4 files changed, 8 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ChangeLog b/doc/ChangeLog index 5cae20c6..6ed6b7bc 100644 --- a/doc/ChangeLog +++ b/doc/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ +2015-03-01 Arnold D. Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com> + + * gawktexi.in: Change quotes to @dfn for pseudorandom. + A last-minute O'Reilly fix. + 2015-02-27 Arnold D. Robbins <arnold@skeeve.com> * gawktexi.in: Update UPDATE-MONTH and copyright year. diff --git a/doc/gawk.info b/doc/gawk.info index 6cddc1ba..82641494 100644 --- a/doc/gawk.info +++ b/doc/gawk.info @@ -12029,7 +12029,7 @@ numbers. (2) `mawk' uses a different seed each time. (3) Computer-generated random numbers really are not truly random. -They are technically known as "pseudorandom." This means that although +They are technically known as "pseudorandom". This means that although the numbers in a sequence appear to be random, you can in fact generate the same sequence of random numbers over and over again. diff --git a/doc/gawk.texi b/doc/gawk.texi index 9e208cce..2b49c245 100644 --- a/doc/gawk.texi +++ b/doc/gawk.texi @@ -17076,7 +17076,7 @@ for generating random numbers to the value @var{x}. Each seed value leads to a particular sequence of random numbers.@footnote{Computer-generated random numbers really are not truly -random. They are technically known as ``pseudorandom.'' This means +random. They are technically known as @dfn{pseudorandom}. This means that although the numbers in a sequence appear to be random, you can in fact generate the same sequence of random numbers over and over again.} Thus, if the seed is set to the same value a second time, diff --git a/doc/gawktexi.in b/doc/gawktexi.in index 4f2eea73..713f354f 100644 --- a/doc/gawktexi.in +++ b/doc/gawktexi.in @@ -16358,7 +16358,7 @@ for generating random numbers to the value @var{x}. Each seed value leads to a particular sequence of random numbers.@footnote{Computer-generated random numbers really are not truly -random. They are technically known as ``pseudorandom.'' This means +random. They are technically known as @dfn{pseudorandom}. This means that although the numbers in a sequence appear to be random, you can in fact generate the same sequence of random numbers over and over again.} Thus, if the seed is set to the same value a second time, |