diff -Nuar a/docs/usermanual.texi b/docs/usermanual.texi --- a/docs/usermanual.texi 2008-09-03 22:20:15.000000000 +0200 +++ b/docs/usermanual.texi 2015-05-18 09:51:18.419985819 +0200 @@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ list, one word per argument; the buried variable @code{COMMAND.LINE} contains that list of arguments, or the empty list if there are none. On my Linux system, if the first line of an executable shell script is -@w{@t{#!/usr/local/bin/logo -}} (note the hyphen) then the script can be given +@w{@t{#!/usr/bin/logo -}} (note the hyphen) then the script can be given command line arguments and they all end up in @code{:COMMAND.LINE} along with the script's path. Experiment. @@ -479,7 +479,7 @@ comment. Unix users can therefore write a file containing Logo commands, starting with the line @example -#! /usr/local/bin/logo +#! /usr/bin/logo @end example (or wherever your Logo executable lives) and the file will be executable directly from the shell. @@ -2875,7 +2875,7 @@ @node AND, OR, LOGICAL OPERATIONS, LOGICAL OPERATIONS -@unnumberedsubsec and +@unnumberedsec and @cindex and @example @@ -6766,7 +6766,7 @@ @end menu @node dMACRO, dDEFMACRO, MACROS, MACROS -@unnumberedsubsec .macro +@unnumberedsec .macro @cindex .macro @cindex .defmacro @@ -7128,7 +7128,7 @@ @node ALLOWGETSET, BUTTONACT, SPECIAL VARIABLES, SPECIAL VARIABLES @comment node-name, next, previous, up -@unnumberedsubsec allowgetset +@unnumberedsec allowgetset @cindex allowgetset @example