branch: master
commit f8cfd37993890d9fa16f3579a5c306bcfa7de79a
Author: Jackson Ray Hamilton <[email protected]>
Commit: Jackson Ray Hamilton <[email protected]>
Double-space.
---
README.md | 22 +++++++++++-----------
context-coloring.el | 2 +-
2 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 664b31b..6c895de 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
Highlights code by scope. Top-level scopes are one color, second-level scopes
are another color, and so on. Variables retain the color of the scope in which
-they are defined. A variable defined in an outer scope referenced in an inner
+they are defined. A variable defined in an outer scope referenced by an inner
scope is colored the same as the outer scope.
By default, comments and strings are still highlighted syntactically.
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ Add the following to your init file:
### Color Schemes
Color schemes for custom themes are automatically applied when those themes are
-active. Built-in theme support is available for: `ample`, `anti-zenburn`,
+active. Built-in theme support is available for: `ample`, `anti-zenburn`,
`grandshell`, `leuven`, `monokai`, `solarized`, `spacegray`, `tango` and
`zenburn`.
@@ -114,13 +114,13 @@ See `C-h f context-coloring-define-theme` for more info
on theme parameters.
## Extending
To add support for a new language, write a "scopifier" for it, and define a new
-coloring dispatch strategy with `context-coloring-define-dispatch`. Then the
-plugin should handle the rest. (See `C-h f context-coloring-define-dispatch`
for
-more info on dispatch strategies.)
+coloring dispatch strategy with `context-coloring-define-dispatch`. Then the
+plugin should handle the rest. (See `C-h f context-coloring-define-dispatch`
+for more info on dispatch strategies.)
A "scopifier" is a CLI program that reads a buffer's contents from stdin and
-writes a JSON array of numbers to stdout. Every three numbers in the array
-represent a range of color. For instance, if I fed the following string of
+writes a JSON array of numbers to stdout. Every three numbers in the array
+represent a range of color. For instance, if I fed the following string of
JavaScript code to a scopifier
```js
@@ -135,9 +135,9 @@ then the scopifier would produce the following array
where, for every three numbers, the first number is a 1-indexed start
[point][],
the second number is an exclusive end point, and the third number is a scope
-level. The result of applying level 0 coloring to the range [1, 24) and
then
-applying level 1 coloring to the range [9, 23) would result in the
following
-coloring:
+level. The result of applying level 0 coloring to the range [1, 24) and
+then applying level 1 coloring to the range [9, 23) would result in the
+following coloring:
<p align="center">
<img alt="Screenshot of ranges [1, 24) and [9, 23)."
src="scopifier.png" title="Screenshot">
@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ print scopifier ARGF.read
```
When a `--version` argument is passed, a scopifier should print its version
-number and exit. This allows context-coloring to determine if an update is
+number and exit. This allows context-coloring to determine if an update is
required.
[js2-mode]: https://github.com/mooz/js2-mode
diff --git a/context-coloring.el b/context-coloring.el
index 50cbc63..d7071c9 100644
--- a/context-coloring.el
+++ b/context-coloring.el
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
;; Highlights code by scope. Top-level scopes are one color, second-level
;; scopes are another color, and so on. Variables retain the color of the
scope
;; in which they are defined. A variable defined in an outer scope referenced
-;; in an inner scope is colored the same as the outer scope.
+;; by an inner scope is colored the same as the outer scope.
;; By default, comments and strings are still highlighted syntactically.