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author | dkf <donal.k.fellows@manchester.ac.uk> | 2012-03-11 17:03:00 (GMT) |
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committer | dkf <donal.k.fellows@manchester.ac.uk> | 2012-03-11 17:03:00 (GMT) |
commit | 23bb878de928709dcfdd514fe4eb3f67478c9614 (patch) | |
tree | 505d98c9c1a78785f5425cbf44b19004b4d49516 | |
parent | 97db8cd6d24690da211ca114cfde41777a236018 (diff) | |
download | tcl-23bb878de928709dcfdd514fe4eb3f67478c9614.zip tcl-23bb878de928709dcfdd514fe4eb3f67478c9614.tar.gz tcl-23bb878de928709dcfdd514fe4eb3f67478c9614.tar.bz2 |
A number of small spelling and wording fixes in the docs.
-rw-r--r-- | ChangeLog | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Class.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/CrtChannel.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/DictObj.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Ensemble.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/FileSystem.3 | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/FindExec.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/GetStdChan.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/GetTime.3 | 24 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Hash.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/InitStubs.3 | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/OpenFileChnl.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/RegConfig.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/SetChanErr.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/SplitPath.3 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/StringObj.3 | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Tcl.n | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Thread.3 | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/binary.n | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/catch.n | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/chan.n | 36 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/close.n | 17 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/gets.n | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/info.n | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/mathfunc.n | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/my.n | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/next.n | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/object.n | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/proc.n | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/re_syntax.n | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/seek.n | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/self.n | 2 |
32 files changed, 107 insertions, 88 deletions
@@ -1,3 +1,7 @@ +2012-03-11 Donal K. Fellows <dkf@users.sf.net> + + * doc/*.n, doc/*.3: A number of small spelling and wording fixes. + 2012-03-08 Donal K. Fellows <dkf@users.sf.net> * doc/info.n: Various minor fixes (prompted by Andreas Kupries diff --git a/doc/Class.3 b/doc/Class.3 index dbb5b99..28cea9b 100644 --- a/doc/Class.3 +++ b/doc/Class.3 @@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ any constructors. Every object and every class may have arbitrary amounts of metadata attached to it, which the object or class attaches no meaning to beyond what is described in a Tcl_ObjectMetadataType structure instance. Metadata to be -attached is described by the the type of the metadata (given in the +attached is described by the type of the metadata (given in the \fImetaTypePtr\fR argument) and an arbitrary pointer (the \fImetadata\fR argument) that are given to \fBTcl_ObjectSetMetadata\fR and \fBTcl_ClassSetMetadata\fR, and a particular piece of metadata can be diff --git a/doc/CrtChannel.3 b/doc/CrtChannel.3 index 9aadba2..478ef0b 100644 --- a/doc/CrtChannel.3 +++ b/doc/CrtChannel.3 @@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ call to \fBTcl_GetStdChannel\fR or a call to \fBTcl_SetStdChannel\fR closing this standard channel will cause the next call to \fBTcl_CreateChannel\fR to make the new channel the new standard channel too. See \fBTcl_StandardChannels\fR for a general treatise -about standard channels and the behaviour of the Tcl library with +about standard channels and the behavior of the Tcl library with regard to them. .PP \fBTcl_GetChannelInstanceData\fR returns the instance data associated with diff --git a/doc/DictObj.3 b/doc/DictObj.3 index 74b8dd1..a5dc9e5 100644 --- a/doc/DictObj.3 +++ b/doc/DictObj.3 @@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ Points to a variable that will have the key from a key/value pair placed within it. May be NULL to indicate that the caller is not interested in the key. .AP Tcl_Obj *valuePtr in -Points to the value for the key/value pair being manipulate within the +Points to the value for the key/value pair being manipulated within the dictionary object (or sub-object, in the case of \fBTcl_DictObjPutKeyList\fR.) .AP Tcl_Obj **valuePtrPtr out diff --git a/doc/Ensemble.3 b/doc/Ensemble.3 index 19c6099..8a8c74e 100644 --- a/doc/Ensemble.3 +++ b/doc/Ensemble.3 @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ Pointer to a variable into which to write the current ensemble mapping dictionary. .AP Tcl_Obj *listObj in A list value to use for the list of formal pre-subcommand parameters, the -defined list of subcommands in the dictionary or the unknown subcommmand +defined list of subcommands in the dictionary or the unknown subcommand handler command prefix. May be NULL if the subcommand list or unknown handler are to be removed. .AP Tcl_Obj **listObjPtr out diff --git a/doc/FileSystem.3 b/doc/FileSystem.3 index e3870c3..cf785ae 100644 --- a/doc/FileSystem.3 +++ b/doc/FileSystem.3 @@ -649,8 +649,7 @@ passed in \fIlenPtr\fR is non-NULL, the variable it points to will be updated to contain the number of elements in the returned list. .PP \fBTcl_FSEqualPaths\fR tests whether the two paths given represent the same -filesystem object -.PP +filesystem object. It returns 1 if the paths are equal, and 0 if they are different. If either path is NULL, 0 is always returned. .PP @@ -1005,7 +1004,7 @@ The \fIpathInFilesystemProc\fR field contains the address of a function which is called to determine whether a given path object belongs to this filesystem or not. Tcl will only call the rest of the filesystem functions with a path for which this function has returned \fBTCL_OK\fR. -If the path does not belong, -1 should be returned (the behaviour of Tcl +If the path does not belong, -1 should be returned (the behavior of Tcl for any other return value is not defined). If \fBTCL_OK\fR is returned, then the optional \fIclientDataPtr\fR output parameter can be used to return an internal (filesystem specific) representation of the path, diff --git a/doc/FindExec.3 b/doc/FindExec.3 index 66cc1f1..e4b4ed0 100644 --- a/doc/FindExec.3 +++ b/doc/FindExec.3 @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ will return an empty string. .PP On Windows platforms this procedure is typically invoked as the very first thing in the application's main program as well; Its \fIargv[0]\fR -argument is only used to indicate wheter the executable has a stderr +argument is only used to indicate whether the executable has a stderr channel (any non-null value) or not (the value null). If \fBTcl_SetPanicProc\fR is never called and no debugger is running, this determines whether the panic message is sent to stderr or to a standard system dialog. diff --git a/doc/GetStdChan.3 b/doc/GetStdChan.3 index 7bc2e1b..e76ad66 100644 --- a/doc/GetStdChan.3 +++ b/doc/GetStdChan.3 @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ assigned starting with standard input, followed by standard output, with standard error being last. .PP See \fBTcl_StandardChannels\fR for a general treatise about standard -channels and the behaviour of the Tcl library with regard to them. +channels and the behavior of the Tcl library with regard to them. .SH "SEE ALSO" Tcl_Close(3), Tcl_CreateChannel(3), Tcl_Main(3), tclsh(1) diff --git a/doc/GetTime.3 b/doc/GetTime.3 index d902f90..f4da364 100644 --- a/doc/GetTime.3 +++ b/doc/GetTime.3 @@ -90,21 +90,19 @@ typedef void \fBTcl_ScaleTimeProc\fR( .CE .PP The \fItimebuf\fR fields contain the time to manipulate, and the -\fIclientData\fR fields contain a pointer supplied at the time the -handler functions were registered. +\fIclientData\fR fields contain a pointer supplied at the time the handler +functions were registered. .PP -Any handler pair specified has to return data which is consistent -between them. In other words, setting one handler of the pair to -something assuming a 10-times slowdown, and the other handler of the -pair to something assuming a two-times slowdown is wrong and not -allowed. +Any handler pair specified has to return data which is consistent between +them. In other words, setting one handler of the pair to something assuming a +10-times slowdown, and the other handler of the pair to something assuming a +two-times slowdown is wrong and not allowed. .PP -The set handler functions are allowed to run the delivered time -backwards, however this should be avoided. We have to allow it as the -native time can run backwards as the user can fiddle with the system -time one way or other. Note that the insertion of the hooks will not -change the behaviour of the Tcl core with regard to this situation, -i.e. the existing behaviour is retained. +The set handler functions are allowed to run the delivered time backwards, +however this should be avoided. We have to allow it as the native time can run +backwards as the user can fiddle with the system time one way or other. Note +that the insertion of the hooks will not change the behavior of the Tcl core +with regard to this situation, i.e. the existing behavior is retained. .SH "SEE ALSO" clock(n) .SH KEYWORDS @@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ Kind of keys to use for new hash table. Must be either \fBTCL_STRING_KEYS\fR, \fBTCL_ONE_WORD_KEYS\fR, \fBTCL_CUSTOM_TYPE_KEYS\fR, \fBTCL_CUSTOM_PTR_KEYS\fR, or an integer value greater than 1. .AP Tcl_HashKeyType *typePtr in -Address of structure which defines the behaviour of the hash table. +Address of structure which defines the behavior of the hash table. .AP "const void" *key in Key to use for probe into table. Exact form depends on \fIkeyType\fR used to create table. diff --git a/doc/InitStubs.3 b/doc/InitStubs.3 index 318c564..5f56278 100644 --- a/doc/InitStubs.3 +++ b/doc/InitStubs.3 @@ -63,9 +63,9 @@ Define the \fBUSE_TCL_STUBS\fR symbol. Typically, you would include the \fB\-DUSE_TCL_STUBS\fR flag when compiling the extension. .IP 3) 5 Link the extension with the Tcl stubs library instead of the standard -Tcl library. On Unix platforms, the library name is -\fIlibtclstub8.1.a\fR; on Windows platforms, the library name is -\fItclstub81.lib\fR. +Tcl library. For example, to use the Tcl 8.1 ABI on Unix platforms, +the library name is \fIlibtclstub8.1.a\fR; on Windows platforms, the +library name is \fItclstub81.lib\fR. .PP If the extension also requires the Tk API, it must also call \fBTk_InitStubs\fR to initialize the Tk stubs interface and link diff --git a/doc/OpenFileChnl.3 b/doc/OpenFileChnl.3 index 337a9a9..2368492 100644 --- a/doc/OpenFileChnl.3 +++ b/doc/OpenFileChnl.3 @@ -332,7 +332,7 @@ This procedure interacts with the code managing the standard channels. If no standard channels were initialized before the first call to \fBTcl_RegisterChannel\fR, they will get initialized by that call. See \fBTcl_StandardChannels\fR for a general treatise about -standard channels and the behaviour of the Tcl library with regard to +standard channels and the behavior of the Tcl library with regard to them. .SH TCL_UNREGISTERCHANNEL .PP diff --git a/doc/RegConfig.3 b/doc/RegConfig.3 index 7c41350..063cc85 100644 --- a/doc/RegConfig.3 +++ b/doc/RegConfig.3 @@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ create a namespace having the provided \fIpkgName\fR, if not yet existing. .IP (2) create the command \fBpkgconfig\fR in that namespace and link it to -the provided information so that the keys from _configuration_ and +the provided information so that the keys from \fIconfiguration\fR and their associated values can be retrieved through calls to \fBpkgconfig\fR. .PP diff --git a/doc/SetChanErr.3 b/doc/SetChanErr.3 index b6c1975..0a62dac 100644 --- a/doc/SetChanErr.3 +++ b/doc/SetChanErr.3 @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ allowed to use \fBTcl_SetChannelError\fR and \fBTcl_SetChannelErrorInterp\fR to place arbitrary error messages in \fBbypass areas\fR defined for channels and interpreters. And the generic I/O layer uses \fBTcl_GetChannelError\fR and \fBTcl_GetChannelErrorInterp\fR to look for messages in the bypass areas and -arrange for their return as errors. The posix error codes set by a driver are +arrange for their return as errors. The POSIX error codes set by a driver are used now if and only if no messages are present. .PP \fBTcl_SetChannelError\fR stores error information in the bypass area of the diff --git a/doc/SplitPath.3 b/doc/SplitPath.3 index ec8f96b..7fdfce6 100644 --- a/doc/SplitPath.3 +++ b/doc/SplitPath.3 @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ A pointer to an initialized \fBTcl_DString\fR to which the result of .SH DESCRIPTION .PP -These procedures have been superceded by the objectified procedures in +These procedures have been superseded by the objectified procedures in the \fBFileSystem\fR man page, which are more efficient. .PP These procedures may be used to disassemble and reassemble file diff --git a/doc/StringObj.3 b/doc/StringObj.3 index 371cdff..412ab78 100644 --- a/doc/StringObj.3 +++ b/doc/StringObj.3 @@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ the length of an object's string representation. .AP "const char" *string in Null-terminated string value to append to \fIobjPtr\fR. .AP va_list argList in -An argument list which must have been initialised using +An argument list which must have been initialized using \fBva_start\fR, and cleared using \fBva_end\fR. .AP int limit in Maximum number of bytes to be appended. @@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ object's new string representation. \fIobjPtr\fR. If the object has an invalid Unicode representation, then \fIunicode\fR is converted to the UTF format and appended to the object's string representation. Appends are optimized to handle -repeated appends relatively efficiently (it overallocates the string +repeated appends relatively efficiently (it over-allocates the string or Unicode space to avoid repeated reallocations and copies of object's string value). .PP @@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ inserted. The upper bits of the Unicode character will be 0. \e\fBU\fIhhhhhhhh\fR . The hexadecimal digits \fIhhhhhhhh\fR (one up to eight of them) give a -twentiy-one-bit hexadecimal value for the Unicode character that will be +twenty-one-bit hexadecimal value for the Unicode character that will be inserted, in the range U+0000..U+10FFFF. The parser will stop just before this range overflows, or when the maximum of eight digits is reached. The upper bits of the Unicode character will be 0. diff --git a/doc/Thread.3 b/doc/Thread.3 index 4b5e7c3..ca135ee 100644 --- a/doc/Thread.3 +++ b/doc/Thread.3 @@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ Arbitrary information. Passed as sole argument to the \fIproc\fR. .AP int stackSize in The size of the stack given to the new thread. .AP int flags in -Bitmask containing flags allowing the caller to modify behaviour of +Bitmask containing flags allowing the caller to modify behavior of the new thread. .AP int *result out The referred storage is used to place the exit code of the thread @@ -91,15 +91,15 @@ and use multiple interpreters.) .SH DESCRIPTION Tcl provides \fBTcl_CreateThread\fR for creating threads. The caller can determine the size of the stack given to the new thread and -modify the behaviour through the supplied \fIflags\fR. The value +modify the behavior through the supplied \fIflags\fR. The value \fBTCL_THREAD_STACK_DEFAULT\fR for the \fIstackSize\fR indicates that the default size as specified by the operating system is to be used for the new thread. As for the flags, currently only the values \fBTCL_THREAD_NOFLAGS\fR and \fBTCL_THREAD_JOINABLE\fR are defined. The -first of them invokes the default behaviour with no -specialties. Using the second value marks the new thread as -\fIjoinable\fR. This means that another thread can wait for the such -marked thread to exit and join it. +first of them invokes the default behavior with no special settings. +Using the second value marks the new thread as \fIjoinable\fR. This +means that another thread can wait for the such marked thread to exit +and join it. .PP Restrictions: On some UNIX systems the pthread-library does not contain the functionality to specify the stack size of a thread. The diff --git a/doc/binary.n b/doc/binary.n index 8133829..68bf9cc 100644 --- a/doc/binary.n +++ b/doc/binary.n @@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ Instructs the decoder to throw an error if it encounters whitespace characters. . The \fBuuencode\fR binary encoding used to be common for transfer of data between Unix systems and on USENET, but is less common these days, having been -largely superceded by the \fBbase64\fR binary encoding. +largely superseded by the \fBbase64\fR binary encoding. .RS .PP During encoding, the following options are supported: @@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ is a non-negative decimal integer or \fB*\fR, which normally indicates that all of the items in the value are to be used. If the number of arguments does not match the number of fields in the format string that consume arguments, then an error is generated. The flag character -is ignored for for \fBbinary format\fR. +is ignored for \fBbinary format\fR. .PP Here is a small example to clarify the relation between the field specifiers and the arguments: diff --git a/doc/catch.n b/doc/catch.n index 1da163d..a05ca71 100644 --- a/doc/catch.n +++ b/doc/catch.n @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ the corresponding level; or it may be .QW \fBUP\fR , in which case the parameter is the relative level (as in \fBuplevel\fR) of the previous \fBCALL\fR. The -salient differences wrt \fB\-errorinfo\fR are that: +salient differences with respect to \fB\-errorinfo\fR are that: .IP [1] it is a machine-readable form that is amenable to processing with [\fBforeach\fR {tok prm} ...], @@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ closed). .PP If the channel is blocking and the channel is ceasing to be writable, the command does not return until all output is flushed. If the channel is -nonblocking and there is unflushed output, the channel remains open and the +non-blocking and there is unflushed output, the channel remains open and the command returns immediately; output will be flushed in the background and the channel will be closed when all the flushing is complete. .PP @@ -107,8 +107,8 @@ the command sets each of the named options to the corresponding .PP The options described below are supported for all channels. In addition, each channel type may add options that only it supports. See -the manual entry for the command that creates each type of channels -for the options that that specific type of channel supports. For +the manual entry for the command that creates each type of channel +for the options supported by that specific type of channel. For example, see the manual entry for the \fBsocket\fR command for additional options for sockets, and the \fBopen\fR command for additional options for serial devices. @@ -118,10 +118,10 @@ serial devices. The \fB\-blocking\fR option determines whether I/O operations on the channel can cause the process to block indefinitely. The value of the option must be a proper boolean value. Channels are normally in -blocking mode; if a channel is placed into nonblocking mode it will +blocking mode; if a channel is placed into non-blocking mode it will affect the operation of the \fBchan gets\fR, \fBchan read\fR, \fBchan puts\fR, \fBchan flush\fR, and \fBchan close\fR commands; see the -documentation for those commands for details. For nonblocking mode to +documentation for those commands for details. For non-blocking mode to work correctly, the application must be using the Tcl event loop (e.g. by calling \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR or invoking the \fBvwait\fR command). @@ -399,7 +399,7 @@ commands. When a thread or interpreter is deleted, all channels created with this subcommand and using this thread/interpreter as their computing base are deleted as well, in all interpreters they have been shared -with or moved into, and in whatever thread they have been transfered +with or moved into, and in whatever thread they have been transferred to. While this pulls the rug out under the other thread(s) and/or interpreter(s), this cannot be avoided. Trying to use such a channel will cause the generation of a regular error about unknown channel @@ -453,7 +453,7 @@ be readable if there is unread data in an input buffer, except in the special case where the most recent attempt to read from the channel was a \fBchan gets\fR call that could not find a complete line in the input buffer. This feature allows a file to be read a line at a time -in nonblocking mode using events. A channel is also considered to be +in non-blocking mode using events. A channel is also considered to be readable if an end of file or error condition is present on the underlying file or device. It is important for \fIscript\fR to check for these conditions and handle them appropriately; for example, if @@ -468,12 +468,12 @@ Note that client sockets opened in asynchronous mode become writable when they become connected or if the connection fails. .PP Event-driven I/O works best for channels that have been placed into -nonblocking mode with the \fBchan configure\fR command. In blocking +non-blocking mode with the \fBchan configure\fR command. In blocking mode, a \fBchan puts\fR command may block if you give it more data than the underlying file or device can accept, and a \fBchan gets\fR or \fBchan read\fR command will block if you attempt to read more data than is ready; no events will be processed while the commands block. -In nonblocking mode \fBchan puts\fR, \fBchan read\fR, and \fBchan +In non-blocking mode \fBchan puts\fR, \fBchan read\fR, and \fBchan gets\fR never block. .PP The script for a file event is executed at global level (outside the @@ -493,7 +493,7 @@ is written. .PP If the channel is in blocking mode the command does not return until all the buffered output has been flushed to the channel. If the -channel is in nonblocking mode, the command may return before all +channel is in non-blocking mode, the command may return before all buffered output has been flushed; the remainder will be flushed in the background as fast as the underlying file or device is able to absorb it. @@ -516,7 +516,7 @@ If an end-of-file occurs while part way through reading a line, the partial line will be returned (or written into \fIvarName\fR). When \fIvarName\fR is not specified, the end-of-file case can be distinguished from an empty line using the \fBchan eof\fR command, and -the partial-line-but-nonblocking case can be distinguished with the +the partial-line-but-non-blocking case can be distinguished with the \fBchan blocked\fR command. .RE .TP @@ -630,16 +630,16 @@ flush\fR command. .PP When the output buffer fills up, the \fBchan puts\fR command will normally block until all the buffered data has been accepted for -output by the operating system. If \fIchannelId\fR is in nonblocking +output by the operating system. If \fIchannelId\fR is in non-blocking mode then the \fBchan puts\fR command will not block even if the operating system cannot accept the data. Instead, Tcl continues to buffer the data and writes it in the background as fast as the underlying file or device can accept it. The application must use the -Tcl event loop for nonblocking output to work; otherwise Tcl never +Tcl event loop for non-blocking output to work; otherwise Tcl never finds out that the file or device is ready for more output data. It is possible for an arbitrarily large amount of data to be buffered for -a channel in nonblocking mode, which could consume a large amount of -memory. To avoid wasting memory, nonblocking I/O should normally be +a channel in non-blocking mode, which could consume a large amount of +memory. To avoid wasting memory, non-blocking I/O should normally be used in an event-driven fashion with the \fBchan event\fR command (do not invoke \fBchan puts\fR unless you have recently been notified via a file event that the channel is ready for more output data). @@ -659,7 +659,7 @@ given to indicate that any trailing newline in the string that has been read should be trimmed. .RS .PP -If \fIchannelId\fR is in nonblocking mode, \fBchan read\fR may not +If \fIchannelId\fR is in non-blocking mode, \fBchan read\fR may not read as many characters as requested: once all available input has been read, the command will return the data that is available rather than blocking for more input. If the channel is configured to use a @@ -675,7 +675,7 @@ channel (see \fBchan configure\fR above for a discussion on the ways in which \fBchan configure\fR will alter input). .PP When reading from a serial port, most applications should configure -the serial port channel to be nonblocking, like this: +the serial port channel to be non-blocking, like this: .PP .CS \fBchan configure \fIchannelId \fB\-blocking \fI0\fR. @@ -728,7 +728,7 @@ position after the end of file. The \fIorigin\fR argument defaults to \fBstart\fR. .PP \fBChan seek\fR flushes all buffered output for the channel before the -command returns, even if the channel is in nonblocking mode. It also +command returns, even if the channel is in non-blocking mode. It also discards any buffered and unread input. This command returns an empty string. An error occurs if this command is applied to channels whose underlying file or device does not support seeking. diff --git a/doc/close.n b/doc/close.n index 2577cc5..4490f6a 100644 --- a/doc/close.n +++ b/doc/close.n @@ -23,7 +23,8 @@ Tcl standard channel (\fBstdin\fR, \fBstdout\fR, or \fBstderr\fR), the return value from an invocation of \fBopen\fR or \fBsocket\fR, or the result of a channel creation command provided by a Tcl extension. .PP -The single-argument form is a simple "full-close": +The single-argument form is a simple +.QW "full-close" : all buffered output is flushed to the channel's output device, any buffered input is discarded, the underlying file or device is closed, and \fIchannelId\fR becomes unavailable for use. @@ -56,16 +57,20 @@ pipeline created with \fBopen\fR returns an error, \fBclose\fR generates an error (similar to the \fBexec\fR command.) .PP .VS 8.6 -The two-argument form is a "half-close": given a bidirectional channel like a +The two-argument form is a +.QW "half-close" : +given a bidirectional channel like a socket or command pipeline and a (possibly abbreviated) direction, it closes -only the substream going in that direction. This means a shutdown() on a +only the sub-stream going in that direction. This means a shutdown() on a socket, and a close() of one end of a pipe for a command pipeline. Then, the Tcl-level channel data structure is either kept or freed depending on whether the other direction is still open. .PP -A single-argument close on an already half-closed bi-channel is defined to -just "finish the job. A half-close on an already closed half, or on a -wrong-sided unidirectional channel, raises an error. +A single-argument close on an already half-closed bidirectional channel is +defined to just +.QW "finish the job" . +A half-close on an already closed half, or on a wrong-sided unidirectional +channel, raises an error. .PP In the case of a command pipeline, the child-reaping duty falls upon the shoulders of the last close or half-close, which is thus allowed to report an @@ -35,12 +35,12 @@ returned. .PP If end of file occurs while scanning for an end of line, the command returns whatever input is available up to the end of file. -If \fIchannelId\fR is in nonblocking mode and there is not a full +If \fIchannelId\fR is in non-blocking mode and there is not a full line of input available, the command returns an empty string and does not consume any input. If \fIvarName\fR is specified and an empty string is returned in \fIvarName\fR because of end-of-file or because of insufficient -data in nonblocking mode, then the return count is -1. +data in non-blocking mode, then the return count is -1. Note that if \fIvarName\fR is not specified then the end-of-file and no-full-line-available cases can produce the same results as if there were an input line consisting @@ -64,4 +64,8 @@ close $chan file(n), eof(n), fblocked(n), Tcl_StandardChannels(3) .SH KEYWORDS -blocking, channel, end of file, end of line, line, nonblocking, read +blocking, channel, end of file, end of line, line, non-blocking, read +'\" Local Variables: +'\" mode: nroff +'\" fill-column: 78 +'\" End: @@ -430,9 +430,9 @@ actually use \fBnext\fR to transfer control along the call chain. \fBinfo class constructor\fI class\fR .VS 8.6 This subcommand returns a description of the definition of the constructor of -class \fIclass\fR. The defintion is described as a two element list; the first +class \fIclass\fR. The definition is described as a two element list; the first element is the list of arguments to the constructor in a form suitable for -passing to another call to \fBproc\fR or a method defintion, and the second +passing to another call to \fBproc\fR or a method definition, and the second element is the body of the constructor. If no constructor is present, this returns the empty list. .VE 8.6 @@ -440,9 +440,9 @@ returns the empty list. \fBinfo class definition\fI class method\fR .VS 8.6 This subcommand returns a description of the definition of the method named -\fImethod\fR of class \fIclass\fR. The defintion is described as a two element +\fImethod\fR of class \fIclass\fR. The definition is described as a two element list; the first element is the list of arguments to the method in a form -suitable for passing to another call to \fBproc\fR or a method defintion, and +suitable for passing to another call to \fBproc\fR or a method definition, and the second element is the body of the method. .VE 8.6 .TP @@ -564,9 +564,9 @@ boolean value indicating whether the \fIobject\fR is of that class. \fBinfo object definition\fI object method\fR .VS 8.6 This subcommand returns a description of the definition of the method named -\fImethod\fR of object \fIobject\fR. The defintion is described as a two +\fImethod\fR of object \fIobject\fR. The definition is described as a two element list; the first element is the list of arguments to the method in a -form suitable for passing to another call to \fBproc\fR or a method defintion, +form suitable for passing to another call to \fBproc\fR or a method definition, and the second element is the body of the method. .VE 8.6 .TP diff --git a/doc/mathfunc.n b/doc/mathfunc.n index 3da6d5a..14b448e 100644 --- a/doc/mathfunc.n +++ b/doc/mathfunc.n @@ -299,3 +299,7 @@ Copyright (c) 1993 The Regents of the University of California. Copyright (c) 1994-2000 Sun Microsystems Incorporated. Copyright (c) 2005, 2006 by Kevin B. Kenny <kennykb@acm.org>. .fi +'\" Local Variables: +'\" mode: nroff +'\" fill-column: 78 +'\" End: @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ Each object has its own \fBmy\fR command, contained in its instance namespace. .SH EXAMPLES .PP This example shows basic use of \fBmy\fR to use the \fBvariables\fR method of -the \fBoo::object\fR class, which is not publically visible by default: +the \fBoo::object\fR class, which is not publicly visible by default: .PP .CS oo::class create c { @@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ resulting list of implementations as possible. .PP When an object has a list of filter names set upon it, or is an instance of a class (or has mixed in a class) that has a list of filter names set upon it, -before every invokation of any method the filters are processed. Filter +before every invocation of any method the filters are processed. Filter implementations are found in class traversal order, as are the lists of filter names (each of which is traversed in natural list order). Explicitly invoking a method used as a filter will cause that method to be invoked twice, once as @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ forward to the proper implementation of the method (which it does by invoking the \fBnext\fR command as filters are inserted into the front of the method call chain) and is responsible for returning the result of \fBnext\fR. .PP -Filters are not invoked when processing an invokation of the \fBunknown\fR +Filters are not invoked when processing an invocation of the \fBunknown\fR method because of a failure to locate a method implementation, or when invoking either constructors or destructors. .SH EXAMPLES @@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ in the superclass, args = pureSynthesis after chaining from subclass before chaining from subclass, args = in the superclass, args = a b -in the superclassm args = pureSynthesis +in the superclass, args = pureSynthesis after chaining from subclass .CE .PP @@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ oo::class create cache { method flushCache {} { my variable ValueCache unset ValueCache - \fI# Skip the cacheing\fR + \fI# Skip the caching\fR return -level 2 "" } } diff --git a/doc/object.n b/doc/object.n index 0640580..96a1bfb 100644 --- a/doc/object.n +++ b/doc/object.n @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ current namespace whenever a method of the object is invoked (including a method of the class of the object). When the object is destroyed, its instance namespace is deleted. The instance namespace contains the object's \fBmy\fR command, which may be used to invoke non-exported methods of the object or to -create a reference to the object for the purpose of invokation which persists +create a reference to the object for the purpose of invocation which persists across renamings of the object. .SS CONSTRUCTOR The \fBoo::object\fR class does not define an explicit constructor. @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ associated with \fIobj\fR, returning the result of the evaluation. . This method is called when an attempt to invoke the method \fImethodName\fR on object \fIobj\fR fails. The arguments that the user supplied to the method are -given as \fIarg\fR argments. The default implementation (i.e. the one defined +given as \fIarg\fR arguments. The default implementation (i.e. the one defined by the \fBoo::object\fR class) generates a suitable error, detailing what methods the object supports given whether the object was invoked by its public name or through the \fBmy\fR command. @@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ error). There is one special case to permit procedures with variable numbers of arguments. If the last formal argument has the name \fBargs\fR, then a call to the procedure may contain more actual arguments -than the procedure has formals. In this case, all of the actual arguments +than the procedure has formal arguments. In this case, all of the actual arguments starting at the one that would be assigned to \fBargs\fR are combined into a list (as if the \fBlist\fR command had been used); this combined value is assigned to the local variable \fBargs\fR. @@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ Other variables can only be accessed by invoking one of the \fBglobal\fR, \fBvariable\fR, \fBupvar\fR or \fBnamespace upvar\fR commands. The current namespace when \fIbody\fR is executed will be the namespace that the procedure's name exists in, which will be the -namespace that itwas created in unless it has been changed with +namespace that it was created in unless it has been changed with \fBrename\fR. '\" We may change this! It makes [variable] unstable when renamed and is '\" frankly pretty crazy, but doing it right is harder than it looks. diff --git a/doc/re_syntax.n b/doc/re_syntax.n index dacc41f..46a180d 100644 --- a/doc/re_syntax.n +++ b/doc/re_syntax.n @@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ endpoint, so e.g. .QW \fBa\-c\-e\fR is illegal. Ranges in Tcl always use the Unicode collating sequence, but other programs may use other collating -sequences and this can be a source of incompatability between programs. +sequences and this can be a source of incompatibility between programs. .PP To include a literal \fB]\fR or \fB\-\fR in the list, the simplest method is to enclose it in \fB[.\fR and \fB.]\fR to make it a @@ -223,7 +223,8 @@ A character producing white space in displayed text. .IP \fBpunct\fR 8 A punctuation character. .IP \fBgraph\fR 8 -A character with a visible representation (includes both alnum and punct). +A character with a visible representation (includes both \fBalnum\fR +and \fBpunct\fR). .IP \fBcntrl\fR 8 A control character. .PP @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ position after the end of file. The \fIorigin\fR argument defaults to \fBstart\fR. .PP The command flushes all buffered output for the channel before the command -returns, even if the channel is in nonblocking mode. +returns, even if the channel is in non-blocking mode. It also discards any buffered and unread input. This command returns an empty string. An error occurs if this command is applied to channels whose underlying @@ -86,3 +86,7 @@ close $f file(n), open(n), close(n), gets(n), tell(n), Tcl_StandardChannels(3) .SH KEYWORDS access position, file, seek +'\" Local Variables: +'\" mode: nroff +'\" fill-column: 78 +'\" End: @@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ method call chain; the first element is the name of the class or object that declares the next part of the call chain, and the second element is the name of the method (with the strings \fB<constructor>\fR and \fB<destructor>\fR indicating constructors and destructors respectively). If invoked from a -method that is at the end of a call chain, this subcommand returns the emtpy +method that is at the end of a call chain, this subcommand returns the empty string. .TP \fBself object\fR |