Fix typos in the docs.

This commit is contained in:
Jeff Balogh 2010-07-12 23:14:28 +08:00 committed by Graydon Hoare
parent 1d9212ba85
commit 6f5ef5815b

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