From dc152c54f4e44f5f2040883b03f71ff6aa66c893 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Eggert Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2016 00:33:43 -0700 Subject: Modernize usage of 'macOS' in doc and comments Apple changed the spelling of its operating system again, to "macOS", effective with macOS 10.12 Sierra (2016-09-20). Change Emacs documentation and comments to match this. Stick with older OS spellings ("OS X", "Mac OS X") when talking about older releases where the older names are more correct. --- src/coding.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'src/coding.c') diff --git a/src/coding.c b/src/coding.c index 9f709bea24c..3e4af722e4c 100644 --- a/src/coding.c +++ b/src/coding.c @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ END-OF-LINE FORMAT How text end-of-line is encoded depends on operating system. For instance, Unix's format is just one byte of LF (line-feed) code, whereas DOS's format is two-byte sequence of `carriage-return' and - `line-feed' codes. MacOS's format is usually one byte of + `line-feed' codes. Classic Mac OS's format is usually one byte of `carriage-return'. Since text character encoding and end-of-line encoding are -- cgit v1.2.1