commit 4962c60c6fee44c51261daa03bf3362a1c8aa54e
parent 0f9b5dd0b4b8b473abbd4e5b87a0da3f57690bb9
Author: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2025 22:05:46 +0800
vim-patch:partial:d3170f5: runtime(doc): Tweak documentation about tab pages (#35007)
closes: vim/vim#17799
https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/d3170f59e06c843461be981dfe62b5f13fd57a4d
Co-authored-by: Hirohito Higashi <h.east.727@gmail.com>
Diffstat:
2 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/runtime/doc/index.txt b/runtime/doc/index.txt
@@ -516,7 +516,7 @@ tag command action in op-pending and Visual mode ~
tag command action in Normal mode ~
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ~
|CTRL-W_CTRL-B| CTRL-W CTRL-B same as "CTRL-W b"
-|CTRL-W_CTRL-C| CTRL-W CTRL-C no-op |CTRL-W_CTRL-C|
+|CTRL-W_CTRL-C| CTRL-W CTRL-C no-op
|CTRL-W_CTRL-D| CTRL-W CTRL-D same as "CTRL-W d"
|CTRL-W_CTRL-F| CTRL-W CTRL-F same as "CTRL-W f"
CTRL-W CTRL-G same as "CTRL-W g .."
diff --git a/runtime/doc/tabpage.txt b/runtime/doc/tabpage.txt
@@ -28,9 +28,9 @@ commands, |:windo|, |:all| and |:ball| (when not using the |:tab| modifier).
The commands that are aware of other tab pages than the current one are
mentioned below.
-Tabs are also a nice way to edit a buffer temporarily without changing the
-current window layout. Open a new tab page, do whatever you want to do and
-close the tab page.
+Tab pages are also a nice way to edit a buffer temporarily without changing
+the current window layout. Open a new tab page, do whatever you want to do
+and close the tab page.
*tab-ID* *tabid* *tabpageid*
Each tab page has a unique identifier called the tab ID. This identifier will
@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ something else.
:tabclose $ " close the last tab page
:tabclose # " close the last accessed tab page
-When a tab is closed the next tab page will become the current one. This
+When a tab page is closed the next tab page will become the current one. This
behaviour can be customized using the 'tabclose' option.
*:tabo* *:tabonly*
@@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ REORDERING TAB PAGES:
:[N]tabm[ove]
Move the current tab page to after tab page N. Use zero to
make the current tab page the first one. N is counted before
- the move, thus if the second tab is the current one,
+ the move, thus if the second tab page is the current one,
`:tabmove 1` and `:tabmove 2` have no effect.
Without N the tab page is made the last one. >
:.tabmove " do nothing
@@ -274,9 +274,9 @@ REORDERING TAB PAGES:
:tabmove +1 " as above
-Note that although it is possible to move a tab behind the N-th one by using
-:Ntabmove. And move it by N places by using :+Ntabmove. For clarification what
-+N means in this context see |[range]|.
+Note that although it is possible to move a tab page behind the N-th one by
+using :Ntabmove. And move it by N places by using :+Ntabmove. For
+clarification what +N means in this context see |[range]|.
LOOPING OVER TAB PAGES:
@@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ pages and define labels for them. Then get the label for each tab page. >
let s ..= ' %{MyTabLabel(' .. (i + 1) .. ')} '
endfor
- " after the last tab fill with TabLineFill and reset tab page nr
+ " after the last tab page fill with TabLineFill and reset tab page nr
let s ..= '%#TabLineFill#%T'
" right-align the label to close the current tab page