Jeff Zaroyko : wineusr: Remove confusing reference to fake Windows installation.

Alexandre Julliard julliard at winehq.org
Tue Jul 20 05:09:39 CDT 2010


Module: docs
Branch: master
Commit: b7b497f30b6bf056c32e0727013fbe0292872214
URL:    http://source.winehq.org/git/docs.git/?a=commit;h=b7b497f30b6bf056c32e0727013fbe0292872214

Author: Jeff Zaroyko <jeffz at jeffz.name>
Date:   Sat Jul 17 02:22:08 2010 +1000

wineusr: Remove confusing reference to fake Windows installation.

---

 en/wineusr-running.sgml |   15 +++++++--------
 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)

diff --git a/en/wineusr-running.sgml b/en/wineusr-running.sgml
index 1ec71e9..042c2ba 100644
--- a/en/wineusr-running.sgml
+++ b/en/wineusr-running.sgml
@@ -10,14 +10,13 @@
     <sect1 id="basic-usage">
       <title>Basic usage: applications and control panel applets</title>
       <para>
-	Assuming you are using a fake Windows installation, you install
-	applications into Wine in the same way you would in Windows: by
-	running the installer. You can just accept the defaults for
-	where to install, most installers will default to "C:\Program
-	Files", which is fine. If the application installer requests it,
-	you may find that Wine creates icons on your desktop and in your
-	app menu. If that happens, you can start the app by clicking on
-	them.
+	Applications are installed under Wine the same way you would
+	in Windows: by running the installer. You can just accept the
+	defaults for where to install, most installers will default to
+	"C:\Program Files", which is fine. If the application
+	installer requests it, you may find that Wine creates icons on
+	your desktop and in your app menu. If that happens, you can
+	start the app by clicking on them.
       </para>
 
       <para>




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