From 000fb64288e6720527f55bf8c37e36c07a308d49 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: wosch Date: Sat, 5 Oct 1996 22:27:30 +0000 Subject: delete doubled words, e.g.: "the the" -> "the" --- gnu/usr.bin/bc/bc.1 | 5 +++-- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'gnu/usr.bin/bc') diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/bc/bc.1 b/gnu/usr.bin/bc/bc.1 index b387f92..b1f50ca 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/bc/bc.1 +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/bc/bc.1 @@ -25,6 +25,7 @@ .\" Western Washington University .\" Bellingham, WA 98226-9062 .\" +.\" $Id$ .\" .TH bc 1 .\" "Command Manual" v1.02 "Feb 3, 1992" .SH NAME @@ -310,7 +311,7 @@ precision, some numbers may not be printable on a single output line. These long numbers will be split across lines using the "\e" as the last character on a line. The maximum number of characters printed per line is 70. Due to the interactive nature of \fBbc\fR printing -a number cause the side effect of assigning the printed value the the +a number cause the side effect of assigning the printed value the special variable \fBlast\fR. This allows the user to recover the last value printed without having to retype the expression that printed the number. Assigning to \fBlast\fR is legal and will @@ -327,7 +328,7 @@ The print statement (an extension) provides another method of output. The "list" is a list of strings and expressions separated by commas. Each string or expression is printed in the order of the list. No terminating newline is printed. Expressions are evaluated and their -value is printed and assigned the the variable \fBlast\fR. Strings +value is printed and assigned the variable \fBlast\fR. Strings in the print statement are printed to the output and may contain special characters. Special characters start with the backslash character (\e). The special characters recognized by \fBbc\fR are -- cgit v1.1