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authorOndřej Bílka <neleai@seznam.cz>2014-02-26 23:27:38 +0100
committerOndřej Bílka <neleai@seznam.cz>2014-02-26 23:27:38 +0100
commitcf822e3c94c2cdec736cdf7b503790b17179afcd (patch)
tree732a0fadf101d69c52998e830500ff6f20c96a59 /manual/charset.texi
parent5b456e9d61c5c7a5744e8c9387498017af2c1e7e (diff)
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Fix two spaces after sentence.
Minor formatting fix that was carried by issuing sed -e"s/\. \([A-Z]\)/. \1/" followed by editing result.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/charset.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/charset.texi10
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/manual/charset.texi b/manual/charset.texi
index b2d73ab..68aecd3 100644
--- a/manual/charset.texi
+++ b/manual/charset.texi
@@ -1709,7 +1709,7 @@ implementation has the possibility to perform such a conversion, the
function returns a handle.
If the wanted conversion is not available, the @code{iconv_open} function
-returns @code{(iconv_t) -1}. In this case the global variable
+returns @code{(iconv_t) -1}. In this case the global variable
@code{errno} can have the following values:
@table @code
@@ -1838,7 +1838,7 @@ implementation chosen for @theglibc{} as it is described below.
Therefore an @code{iconv} call to reset the state should always be
performed if some protocol requires this for the output text.
-The conversion stops for one of three reasons. The first is that all
+The conversion stops for one of three reasons. The first is that all
characters from the input buffer are converted. This actually can mean
two things: either all bytes from the input buffer are consumed or
there are some bytes at the end of the buffer that possibly can form a
@@ -2133,7 +2133,7 @@ will succeed, but how to find @math{@cal{B}}?
Unfortunately, the answer is: there is no general solution. On some
systems guessing might help. On those systems most character sets can
-convert to and from UTF-8 encoded @w{ISO 10646} or Unicode text. Beside
+convert to and from UTF-8 encoded @w{ISO 10646} or Unicode text. Beside
this only some very system-specific methods can help. Since the
conversion functions come from loadable modules and these modules must
be stored somewhere in the filesystem, one @emph{could} try to find them
@@ -2333,7 +2333,7 @@ identical.
So far this section has described how modules are located and considered
to be used. What remains to be described is the interface of the modules
-so that one can write new ones. This section describes the interface as
+so that one can write new ones. This section describes the interface as
it is in use in January 1999. The interface will change a bit in the
future but, with luck, only in an upwardly compatible way.
@@ -2918,7 +2918,7 @@ gconv (struct __gconv_step *step, struct __gconv_step_data *data,
/* @r{Run the conversion loop. @code{status} is set}
@r{appropriately afterwards.} */
- /* @r{If this is the last step, leave the loop. There is}
+ /* @r{If this is the last step, leave the loop. There is}
@r{nothing we can do.} */
if (data->__is_last)
@{