A regexp example was rendered as

foo\d
when it was clearly intended to render as
    foo$
Fred, is this a right way to fix it?  If not, the earlier place in the
same paragraph that does render as
    foo$
is also wrong.
This commit is contained in:
Tim Peters 2001-10-05 20:06:47 +00:00
parent 4a8e9f4e42
commit 9835206268
1 changed files with 1 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ specified, this matches any character including a newline.
newline at the end of the string, and in \constant{MULTILINE} mode
also matches before a newline. \regexp{foo} matches both 'foo' and
'foobar', while the regular expression \regexp{foo\$} matches only
'foo'. More interestingly, searching for \regexp{foo\e d} in
'foo'. More interestingly, searching for \regexp{foo\$} in
'foo1\textbackslash nfoo2\textbackslash n' matches 'foo2' normally,
but 'foo1' in \constant{MULTILINE} mode.