of the relocating allocator. Turning on --rel-alloc will allow XEmacs
to return unused memory to the operating system, thereby reducing its
memory footprint. However, it may make XEmacs runs more slowly,
-especially if your system's `mmap' implemntation is missing or
+especially if your system's `mmap' implementation is missing or
inefficient. Generally, it's best to go with the default
configuration for your system. You can tweak this based on how you
use XEmacs, and the memory and cpu resources available on your system.
contains the results of the compile and link tests used by configure.
The `--with-mule' option enables (MUlti-Lingual Emacs) support, needed
-to suport non-Latin-1 (including Asian) languages. The Mule support
+to support non-Latin-1 (including Asian) languages. The Mule support
is not yet as stable or efficient as the `Latin1' support. Enabling
Mule support requires the mule-base package installed prior to
building XEmacs. The following options require Mule support:
`/usr/local/lib/xemacs-VERSION/CONFIGURATION-NAME/modules'
(where VERSION and CONFIGURATION-NAME are as described above).
By their very nature, dynamic loadable modules are architecture-
- dependant, and care should be taken not to set this directory
- to a system- or architecture-independant directory.
+ dependent, and care should be taken not to set this directory
+ to a system- or architecture-independent directory.
Remember that you must specify any variable values you need each time
you run `make' in the top directory. If you run `make' once to build