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-rw-r--r--Source/kwsys/RegularExpression.hxx.in12
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/Source/kwsys/RegularExpression.hxx.in b/Source/kwsys/RegularExpression.hxx.in
index 3cbbeb8..92e4b36 100644
--- a/Source/kwsys/RegularExpression.hxx.in
+++ b/Source/kwsys/RegularExpression.hxx.in
@@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ inline std::string RegularExpressionMatch::match(int n) const
* object as an argument and creates an object initialized with the
* information from the given RegularExpression object.
*
- * The find member function finds the first occurrence of the regular
+ * The find member function finds the first occurrence of the regular
* expression of that object in the string given to find as an argument. Find
* returns a boolean, and if true, mutates the private data appropriately.
* Find sets pointers to the beginning and end of the thing last found, they
@@ -230,9 +230,9 @@ inline std::string RegularExpressionMatch::match(int n) const
* the to see if the compiled regular expression is the same, and the
* deep_equal functions also checks to see if the start and end pointers are
* the same. The is_valid function returns false if program is set to NULL,
- * (i.e. there is no valid compiled exression). The set_invalid function sets
- * the program to NULL (Warning: this deletes the compiled expression). The
- * following examples may help clarify regular expression usage:
+ * (i.e. there is no valid compiled expression). The set_invalid function
+ * sets the program to NULL (Warning: this deletes the compiled expression).
+ * The following examples may help clarify regular expression usage:
*
* * The regular expression "^hello" matches a "hello" only at the
* beginning of a line. It would match "hello there" but not "hi,
@@ -270,13 +270,13 @@ inline std::string RegularExpressionMatch::match(int n) const
*
* * The regular expression "(..p)b" matches something ending with pb
* and beginning with whatever the two characters before the first p
- * encounterd in the line were. It would find "repb" in "rep drepa
+ * encountered in the line were. It would find "repb" in "rep drepa
* qrepb". The regular expression "(..p)a" would find "repa qrepb"
* in "rep drepa qrepb"
*
* * The regular expression "d(..p)" matches something ending with p,
* beginning with d, and having two characters in between that are
- * the same as the two characters before the first p encounterd in
+ * the same as the two characters before the first p encountered in
* the line. It would match "drepa qrepb" in "rep drepa qrepb".
*
* All methods of RegularExpression can be called simultaneously from