\input texinfo
-@setfilename gnus-coding
+@setfilename gnus-coding.info
@settitle Gnus Coding Style and Maintenance Guide
@documentencoding UTF-8
-@documentlanguage en
@syncodeindex fn cp
@syncodeindex vr cp
@syncodeindex pg cp
@copying
-Copyright @copyright{} 2004--2005, 2007--2013 Free Software
+Copyright @copyright{} 2004--2005, 2007--2014 Free Software
Foundation, Inc.
@quotation
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
-Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
+Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
new @file{encrypt.el}), you should probably make the change in the Emacs
tree, and it will show up in the Gnus tree a few days later.
-If you don't have Emacs bzr access (or it's inconvenient), you can
-change such a file in the v5-10 branch, and it should propagate to Emacs
-bzr---however, it will get some extra scrutiny (by Miles) to see if the
-changes are possibly controversial and need discussion on the mailing
-list. Many changes are obvious bug-fixes however, so often there won't
-be any problem.
+If you don't have Emacs repository access (or it's inconvenient), you
+can change such a file in the v5-10 branch, and it should propagate to
+the Emacs repository---however, it will get some extra scrutiny (by
+Miles) to see if the changes are possibly controversial and need
+discussion on the mailing list. Many changes are obvious bug-fixes
+however, so often there won't be any problem.
@item
If it's to a Gnus file, and it's important enough that it should be part
of Emacs and the v5-10 branch, then you can make the change on the v5-10
-branch, and it will go into Emacs bzr and the Gnus git trunk (a few days
+branch, and it will go into Emacs and the Gnus git trunk (a few days
later). The most prominent examples for such changes are bug-fixed
including improvements on the documentation.