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-rw-r--r--doc/easytags.txt11
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/easytags.txt b/doc/easytags.txt
index f07e8cc..d1789a2 100644
--- a/doc/easytags.txt
+++ b/doc/easytags.txt
@@ -84,8 +84,8 @@ and '%USERPROFILE%\vimfiles' on Windows), restart Vim and execute the command
':helptags ~/.vim/doc' (use ':helptags ~\vimfiles\doc' instead on Windows).
If you prefer you can also use Pathogen [8], Vundle [9] or a similar tool to
-install & update the vim-easytags [10] and vim-misc [11] plug-ins using a local
-clone of the git repository.
+install and update the vim-easytags [10] and vim-misc [11] plug-ins using a
+local clone of the git repository.
Now try it out: Edit any file type supported by Exuberant Ctags and within ten
seconds the plug-in should create/update your tags file ('~/.vimtags' on UNIX,
@@ -94,9 +94,9 @@ This means that whatever file you're editing in Vim (as long as it's on the
local file system), tags will always be available by the time you need them!
Additionally if the file you just opened is an AWK, C#, C, C++, Objective-C,
-Java, Lua, PHP, Python, Ruby, Shell, Tcl or Vim source file you should also
-notice that the function and type names defined in the file have been syntax
-highlighted.
+Java, Lua, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Shell, Tcl or Vim source file you should
+also notice that the function and/or type names defined in the file have been
+syntax highlighted.
The 'easytags.vim' plug-in is intended to work automatically once it's
installed, but if you want to change how it works there are several options you
@@ -527,6 +527,7 @@ by the easytags plug-in:
'cFunctionTag', 'cMemberTag'
- **Java:**'javaClassTag', 'javaInterfaceTag', 'javaMethodTag'
- **Lua:**'luaFuncTag'
+- **Perl:**'perlFunctionTag'
- **PHP:**'phpFunctionsTag', 'phpClassesTag'
- **Python:**'pythonFunctionTag', 'pythonMethodTag', 'pythonClassTag'
- **Ruby:**'rubyModuleNameTag', 'rubyClassNameTag', 'rubyMethodNameTag'