X-Git-Url: http://cgit.sxemacs.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=texi%2Fgnus-coding.texi;h=a3be0edb965cae4a738ffd908c589cb8079379e5;hb=a360cbd4b1b3d5b288420075336a28e5521ca992;hp=15393ad803263d2df3532e555cd79dd54176ffc2;hpb=8f7476d4cfadb358d635238ae62c48a89efc6db2;p=gnus diff --git a/texi/gnus-coding.texi b/texi/gnus-coding.texi index 15393ad80..a3be0edb9 100644 --- a/texi/gnus-coding.texi +++ b/texi/gnus-coding.texi @@ -1,20 +1,21 @@ \input texinfo -@setfilename gnus-coding +@setfilename gnus-coding.info @settitle Gnus Coding Style and Maintenance Guide +@include docstyle.texi @syncodeindex fn cp @syncodeindex vr cp @syncodeindex pg cp @copying -Copyright @copyright{} 2004--2005, 2007--2013 Free Software +Copyright @copyright{} 2004--2005, 2007--2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no -Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'', +Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. @@ -312,17 +313,17 @@ If it's a file which is thought of as being outside of Gnus (e.g., the new @file{encrypt.el}), you should probably make the change in the Emacs tree, and it will show up in the Gnus tree a few days later. -If you don't have Emacs bzr access (or it's inconvenient), you can -change such a file in the v5-10 branch, and it should propagate to Emacs -bzr---however, it will get some extra scrutiny (by Miles) to see if the -changes are possibly controversial and need discussion on the mailing -list. Many changes are obvious bug-fixes however, so often there won't -be any problem. +If you don't have Emacs repository access (or it's inconvenient), you +can change such a file in the v5-10 branch, and it should propagate to +the Emacs repository---however, it will get some extra scrutiny (by +Miles) to see if the changes are possibly controversial and need +discussion on the mailing list. Many changes are obvious bug-fixes +however, so often there won't be any problem. @item If it's to a Gnus file, and it's important enough that it should be part of Emacs and the v5-10 branch, then you can make the change on the v5-10 -branch, and it will go into Emacs bzr and the Gnus git trunk (a few days +branch, and it will go into Emacs and the Gnus git trunk (a few days later). The most prominent examples for such changes are bug-fixed including improvements on the documentation. @@ -387,5 +388,5 @@ changed. @c Local Variables: @c mode: texinfo -@c coding: iso-8859-1 +@c coding: utf-8 @c End: