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-rw-r--r--libio/libioP.h4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/libio/libioP.h b/libio/libioP.h
index 911f649..7b46388 100644
--- a/libio/libioP.h
+++ b/libio/libioP.h
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ extern "C" {
* These are all the same, just used differently.
* An _IO_FILE (or FILE) object is allows followed by a pointer to
* a jump table (of pointers to functions). The pointer is accessed
- * with the _IO_JUMPS macro. The jump table has a eccentric format,
+ * with the _IO_JUMPS macro. The jump table has an eccentric format,
* so as to be compatible with the layout of a C++ virtual function table.
* (as implemented by g++). When a pointer to a streambuf object is
* coerced to an (_IO_FILE*), then _IO_JUMPS on the result just
@@ -224,7 +224,7 @@ typedef int (*_IO_doallocate_t) (_IO_FILE *);
There is no correspondence in the ANSI/ISO C++ standard library.
The hooks basically correspond to the Unix system functions
(read, write, close, lseek, and stat) except that a _IO_FILE*
- parameter is used instead of a integer file descriptor; the default
+ parameter is used instead of an integer file descriptor; the default
implementation used for normal files just calls those functions.
The advantage of overriding these functions instead of the higher-level
ones (underflow, overflow etc) is that you can leave all the buffering