runtime(doc): Whitespace updates

Use double sentence spacing and wrap lines at 'textwidth'.  Code
examples and tables were not wrapped unless this had already been done
locally.

closes: #18453

Signed-off-by: Doug Kearns <dougkearns@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
This commit is contained in:
Doug Kearns
2025-10-12 15:31:11 +00:00
committed by Christian Brabandt
parent 2a33b499a3
commit c58f91c035
64 changed files with 1576 additions and 1497 deletions

View File

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
*pattern.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Oct 09
*pattern.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Oct 12
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
@ -288,9 +288,9 @@ When searching backwards, searching starts at the start of the line, using the
cursor position is used.
In Vi the ":tag" command sets the last search pattern when the tag is searched
for. In Vim this is not done, the previous search pattern is still remembered,
unless the 't' flag is present in 'cpoptions'. The search pattern is always
put in the search history.
for. In Vim this is not done, the previous search pattern is still
remembered, unless the 't' flag is present in 'cpoptions'. The search pattern
is always put in the search history.
If the 'wrapscan' option is on (which is the default), searches wrap around
the end of the buffer. If 'wrapscan' is not set, the backward search stops
@ -1151,11 +1151,12 @@ x A single character, with no special meaning, matches itself
in the collection: "[^xyz]" matches anything but 'x', 'y' and 'z'.
- If two characters in the sequence are separated by '-', this is
shorthand for the full list of ASCII characters between them. E.g.,
"[0-9]" matches any decimal digit. If the starting character exceeds
the ending character, e.g. [c-a], E944 occurs. Non-ASCII characters
can be used, but the character values must not be more than 256 apart
in the old regexp engine. For example, searching by [\u3000-\u4000]
after setting re=1 emits a E945 error. Prepending \%#=2 will fix it.
"[0-9]" matches any decimal digit. If the starting character
exceeds the ending character, e.g. [c-a], E944 occurs. Non-ASCII
characters can be used, but the character values must not be more
than 256 apart in the old regexp engine. For example, searching by
[\u3000-\u4000] after setting re=1 emits a E945 error. Prepending
\%#=2 will fix it.
- A character class expression is evaluated to the set of characters
belonging to that character class. The following character classes
are supported: