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Fix typos in the docs.
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@ -2089,7 +2089,7 @@ Vectors can be sliced. A slice expression builds a new vector by copying a
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contiguous range -- given by a pair of indices representing a half-open
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interval -- out of the sliced vector.
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And example of a @code{vec} type and its use:
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An example of a @code{vec} type and its use:
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@example
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let vec[int] v = vec(7, 5, 3);
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let int i = v.(2);
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@ -2698,9 +2698,9 @@ following the declaration statement.
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The latter (@code{auto}) form of slot declaration causes the compiler to infer
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the static type of the slot through unification with the types of values
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assigned to the slot in the the remaining code in the block scope. Inference
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only occurs on frame-local slots, not argument slots. Function, iterator and
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object signatures must always declared types for all argument slots.
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assigned to the slot in the remaining code in the block scope. Inference only
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occurs on frame-local slots, not argument slots. Function, iterator and object
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signatures must always declared types for all argument slots.
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@xref{Ref.Mem.Slot}.
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@ -2718,11 +2718,11 @@ Executing a copy statement causes the value denoted by the expression --
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either a value or a primitive combination of values -- to be copied into the
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memory location denoted by the @emph{lval}.
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A copy may entail the the adjustment of reference counts, execution of
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destructors, or similar adjustments in order to respect the path through the
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memory graph implied by the @code{lval}, as well as any existing value held in
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the memory being written-to. All such adjustment is automatic and implied by
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the @code{=} operator.
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A copy may entail the adjustment of reference counts, execution of destructors,
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or similar adjustments in order to respect the path through the memory graph
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implied by the @code{lval}, as well as any existing value held in the memory
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being written-to. All such adjustment is automatic and implied by the @code{=}
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operator.
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An example of three different copy statements:
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@example
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@ -2740,7 +2740,7 @@ A @code{spawn} statement consists of keyword @code{spawn}, followed by a
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normal @emph{call} statement (@pxref{Ref.Stmt.Call}). A @code{spawn}
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statement causes the runtime to construct a new task executing the called
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function. The called function is referred to as the @dfn{entry function} for
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the spawned task, and its arguments are copied form the spawning task to the
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the spawned task, and its arguments are copied from the spawning task to the
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spawned task before the spawned task begins execution.
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Functions taking alias-slot arguments, or returning non-nil values, cannot be
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@ -3129,7 +3129,7 @@ variable, executing the loop body once per copy. To perform a for loop on a
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sub-range of a vector or string, form a temporary slice over the sub-range and
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run the loop over the slice.
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Example of a 4 for loops, all identical:
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Example of 4 for loops, all identical:
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@example
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let vec[foo] v = vec(a, b, c);
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