source/text/shared/01/02100001.xhp |    2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

New commits:
commit 3974b8c9cbd0321944d9fe9d9e5109c20d71fe31
Author:     Stanislav Horacek <stanislav.hora...@gmail.com>
AuthorDate: Tue Jan 14 22:55:37 2020 +0100
Commit:     Adolfo Jayme Barrientos <fit...@ubuntu.com>
CommitDate: Fri Jan 17 17:36:45 2020 +0100

    remove duplicated words
    
    Change-Id: I8c7d06ce3bec5bbd52adfaf8abb661d6ced6204d
    Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/c/help/+/86813
    Tested-by: Jenkins
    Reviewed-by: Adolfo Jayme Barrientos <fit...@ubuntu.com>

diff --git a/source/text/shared/01/02100001.xhp 
b/source/text/shared/01/02100001.xhp
index 956599ac6..a88f87a75 100644
--- a/source/text/shared/01/02100001.xhp
+++ b/source/text/shared/01/02100001.xhp
@@ -243,7 +243,7 @@
                 <paragraph id="par_id891559576747109"  role="listitem">To 
group terms in a complex expression to be operated on by the post-fix 
operators: "*", "+" and "?" along with the post-fix repetition operators. For 
example, the regular expression "a(bc)?d" matches both "ad" and "abcd" in a 
search.; the regular expression "M(iss){2}ippi" matches 
"Mississippi".</paragraph>
             </listitem>
             <listitem>
-                <paragraph id="par_id801559576780692"  role="listitem">To 
record the matched sub string inside the parentheses as a reference for later 
use in the <widget>Find</widget> box using the "\n" construct or in the 
<widget>Replace</widget> box using the "$n" construct, where the reference to 
the first matched sub string in the current expression in the 
<widget>Find</widget> box is represented by "\1" in the <widget>Find</widget> 
box and by "$1" in the <widget>Replace</widget> box, the reference to the 
second matched sub string by "\2" and "$2" respectively, and so on.</paragraph>
+                <paragraph id="par_id801559576780692"  role="listitem">To 
record the matched sub string inside the parentheses as a reference for later 
use in the <widget>Find</widget> box using the "\n" construct or in the 
<widget>Replace</widget> box using the "$n" construct, where the reference to 
the first matched sub string in the current expression is represented by "\1" 
in the <widget>Find</widget> box and by "$1" in the <widget>Replace</widget> 
box, the reference to the second matched sub string by "\2" and "$2" 
respectively, and so on.</paragraph>
                 </listitem>
         </list>
         <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id951559576846997">For example, 
the regular expression "(890)7\1\1" matches "8907890890".</paragraph>
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