Fix some trivial typos. Equivalent change also made to

handbook/ports/chapter.sgml to minimize later merge work for doc-people.
This commit is contained in:
Tim Vanderhoek 2000-05-22 09:24:34 +00:00
parent 4b1943720c
commit efacadc706
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=7227
2 changed files with 12 additions and 12 deletions
en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook
en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook

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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml,v 1.98 2000/05/17 18:24:15 nik Exp $
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml,v 1.99 2000/05/19 17:55:27 jim Exp $
-->
<!DOCTYPE BOOK PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V3.1-Based Extension//EN" [
@ -298,9 +298,9 @@ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
<para>Make sure that there are not any warnings issued in any of the
<maketarget>package</maketarget> and
<maketarget>deinstall</maketarget> stages, After step 3, check to
<maketarget>deinstall</maketarget> stages. After step 3, check to
see if all the new directories are correctly deleted. Also, try
using the software after step 4, to ensure that is works correctly
using the software after step 4, to ensure that it works correctly
when installed from a package.</para>
</sect1>
@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
<para>Please use <command>portlint</command> to see if your port
conforms to our guidelines. The <command>portlint</command> program
is part of the ports collection. In particular, your may want to
is part of the ports collection. In particular, you may want to
check if the <link linkend="porting-samplem">Makefile</link> is in
the right shape and the <link
linkend="porting-pkgname">package</link> is named
@ -371,8 +371,8 @@ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
<title>How things work</title>
<para>First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the user
first types <command>make</command> in your port's directory, and
you may find that having <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename> in another
first types <command>make</command> in your port's directory.
You may find that having <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename> in another
window while you read this really helps to understand it.</para>
<para>But do not worry if you do not really understand what

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml,v 1.98 2000/05/17 18:24:15 nik Exp $
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/porters-handbook/book.sgml,v 1.99 2000/05/19 17:55:27 jim Exp $
-->
<!DOCTYPE BOOK PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V3.1-Based Extension//EN" [
@ -298,9 +298,9 @@ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
<para>Make sure that there are not any warnings issued in any of the
<maketarget>package</maketarget> and
<maketarget>deinstall</maketarget> stages, After step 3, check to
<maketarget>deinstall</maketarget> stages. After step 3, check to
see if all the new directories are correctly deleted. Also, try
using the software after step 4, to ensure that is works correctly
using the software after step 4, to ensure that it works correctly
when installed from a package.</para>
</sect1>
@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
<para>Please use <command>portlint</command> to see if your port
conforms to our guidelines. The <command>portlint</command> program
is part of the ports collection. In particular, your may want to
is part of the ports collection. In particular, you may want to
check if the <link linkend="porting-samplem">Makefile</link> is in
the right shape and the <link
linkend="porting-pkgname">package</link> is named
@ -371,8 +371,8 @@ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
<title>How things work</title>
<para>First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the user
first types <command>make</command> in your port's directory, and
you may find that having <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename> in another
first types <command>make</command> in your port's directory.
You may find that having <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename> in another
window while you read this really helps to understand it.</para>
<para>But do not worry if you do not really understand what