From 3cf525d46f2bd7afa657c13f6ae5e28aa78c96e9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: David Lawrence Ramsey <pooka109@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 9 Mar 2005 23:20:56 +0000
Subject: [PATCH] fix wording problem

git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.gnu.org/nano/trunk/nano@2343 35c25a1d-7b9e-4130-9fde-d3aeb78583b8
---
 doc/faq.html | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/doc/faq.html b/doc/faq.html
index c1eea109..99d8f7b8 100644
--- a/doc/faq.html
+++ b/doc/faq.html
@@ -173,7 +173,7 @@
 <hr width="100%">
 <h1><a name="4"></a>4. Running</h1>
 <h2><a name="4.1"></a>4.1. How do I open a file with a name beginning with '+' from the command line?</h2>
-<blockquote><p>If a command line option that begins with '+' is followed by at least one more option, the former is always treated as a starting line number and the latter is always treated as a filename.  If a command line option that begins with '+' isn't followed by any more options, it's always treated as a filename.  Examples:</p>
+<blockquote><p>If a command line option that begins with '+' is followed by another option, the former is always treated as a starting line number and the latter is always treated as a filename.  If a command line option that begins with '+' isn't followed by another option, it's always treated as a filename.  Examples:</p>
   <p>To open '+filename.txt' starting on line 1: <b>nano +filename.txt</b><br>
   To open '+filename.txt' starting on line 10: <b>nano +10 +filename.txt</b><br>
   To open '+filename.txt' starting on line 1 and 'filename.txt' starting on line 10 (if nano has been compiled with multibuffer support): <b>nano +1 +filename.txt +20 filename.txt</b></p></blockquote>
-- 
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