branch: externals/preview-auto
commit 5fc86afbba07562b9fb8c2afca9e91f939fb5e2e
Author: Paul Nelson <[email protected]>
Commit: Paul Nelson <[email protected]>

    ; Fix grammar in README.org
    
    * README.org: Fix grammatical error.
---
 README.org | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/README.org b/README.org
index 40ea5a9c16..04347219b2 100644
--- a/README.org
+++ b/README.org
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ Does your neck hurt from turning between previewer windows 
and the source too of
 The purpose of preview-latex is to embed LaTeX environments such as display 
math or figures into the source buffers and switch conveniently between source 
and image representation.
 #+end_quote
 
-AUCTeX provides commands for generating previews in various regions: the 
current section, the entire document, the marked region, and so on.  While 
these previews generate, you're not supposed to edit while the previews 
generate, because that can mess up their positioning.  A typical workflow is 
thus to run the command =preview-section= (=C-c C-p C-s=) every few minutes, 
during pauses in editing.  This introduces a bit of overhead if you prefer to 
have previews on by default.
+AUCTeX provides commands for generating previews in various regions: the 
current section, the entire document, the marked region, and so on.  While 
these previews generate, you're not supposed to edit them, because that can 
mess up their positioning.  A typical workflow is thus to run the command 
=preview-section= (=C-c C-p C-s=) every few minutes, during pauses in editing.  
This introduces a bit of overhead if you prefer to have previews on by default.
 
 This package provides a minor mode, =preview-auto-mode=, toggled via the 
command =M-x preview-auto-mode=, the keybinding =C-c C-p C-a=, or the =Preview= 
menu.  With this minor mode activated, the visible portion of an AUCTeX buffer 
is continuously previewed.  Moreover, previews will automatically abort if you 
edit in a way that could affect their positioning.  Finally, it works in more 
general situations (e.g., you can use it out-of-the-box to highlight LaTeX in 
source code comments for  [...]
 

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