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$FreeBSD$

--- tcl8.3.4/html/UserCmd/wish.htm.orig Mon Dec 17 01:02:23 2001
+++ tcl8.3.4/html/UserCmd/wish.htm  Mon Dec 17 01:03:12 2001
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@
 <H3><A NAME="M2">NAME</A></H3>
 wish - Simple windowing shell
 <H3><A NAME="M3">SYNOPSIS</A></H3>
-<B>wish</B> ?<I>fileName arg arg ...</I>?<BR>
+<B>wish8.3</B> ?<I>fileName arg arg ...</I>?<BR>
 <H3><A NAME="M4">OPTIONS</A></H3>
 <DL>
 <P><DT><A NAME="M5"><B>-colormap </B><I>new</I></A><DD>
@@ -143,7 +143,7 @@
 <P></DL>
 <H3><A NAME="M22">SCRIPT FILES</A></H3>
 If you create a Tcl script in a file whose first line is
-<PRE><B>#!/usr/local/bin/wish</B></PRE>
+<PRE><B>#!/usr/local/bin/wish8.3</B></PRE>
 then you can invoke the script file directly from your shell if
 you mark it as executable.
 This assumes that <B>wish</B> has been installed in the default
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@
 following three lines:
 <PRE><B>#!/bin/sh
 # the next line restarts using wish &#92;
-exec wish &quot;$0&quot; &quot;$@&quot;</B></PRE>
+exec wish8.3 &quot;$0&quot; &quot;$@&quot;</B></PRE>
 This approach has three advantages over the approach in the previous
 paragraph.  First, the location of the <B>wish</B> binary doesn't have
 to be hard-wired into the script:  it can be anywhere in your shell