diff options
author | Mattias Andrée <maandree@operamail.com> | 2012-07-21 18:42:57 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Mattias Andrée <maandree@operamail.com> | 2012-07-21 18:42:57 +0200 |
commit | 77e93df7996cf512e859c785b0e128e71b67e975 (patch) | |
tree | da32d06a2470011dcc114291d9c9aa7d6ee8b3e8 /manuals/ponysay.texinfo | |
parent | d67febe2adebf08b910493455744be7b9d7c04b4 (diff) | |
download | ponysay-77e93df7996cf512e859c785b0e128e71b67e975.tar.gz ponysay-77e93df7996cf512e859c785b0e128e71b67e975.tar.bz2 ponysay-77e93df7996cf512e859c785b0e128e71b67e975.zip |
typos
Diffstat (limited to 'manuals/ponysay.texinfo')
-rw-r--r-- | manuals/ponysay.texinfo | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/manuals/ponysay.texinfo b/manuals/ponysay.texinfo index 267e1b0..8f455b9 100644 --- a/manuals/ponysay.texinfo +++ b/manuals/ponysay.texinfo @@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ by using @code{fortune | ponypipe} instead of using @command{fortune}. Alternatively use can use @command{pinkie} (or @command{pinkiepie}), which can be downloaded from @url{https://github.com/maandree/pinkie-pie}, which is just @code{fortune | ponypipe}. -Their is also a large sed script, similar to @command{ponypipe}: @url{http://www.reddit.com/r/mylittlelinux/comments/srixi/using_ponysay_with_a_ponified_fortune_warning/} +There is also a large sed script, similar to @command{ponypipe}: @url{http://www.reddit.com/r/mylittlelinux/comments/srixi/using_ponysay_with_a_ponified_fortune_warning/} @node Running on TTY @@ -212,13 +212,13 @@ If you use TTY and have a custom colour palette, you should also add to your @section Running on @command{screen} @cindex screen -@command{screen} will adapt ASNI colour escape sequencies to your terminals +@command{screen} will adapt ASNI colour escape sequencies to your terminal's capabilities. This means that is your terminal reports itself as @code{xterm} in @code{$TERM} it ponies will lose colours; they will only use the lower 16 colours instread of the top 240 colours. By default, almost all X terminal, including @command{xterm} and @command{mate-terminal} reports themself as @code{xterm} in @code{$TERM}, and some reports their actual name in @code{$COLORTERM}. -So before openning @command{screen} you use set @code{$TERM} to @code{xterm-256colour}, +So before openning @command{screen} you use set @code{$TERM} to @code{xterm-256color}, if you are using a terminal with support for @code{xterm}'s 256 colours; this can be done by adding to your @code{~/.bashrc}: @example |