Mailing List Archive

svn commit: r425556 - in /perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs: conventions.pod offsite/presentations.pod tutorials/apps/scale_etoys/etoys.pod tutorials/client/browserbugs/browserbugs.pod tutorials/tips/mod_perl_tricks/mod_perl_tricks.pod
Author: fwiles
Date: Tue Jul 25 16:18:10 2006
New Revision: 425556

URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?rev=425556&view=rev
Log:
More small typo corrections.

Modified:
perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/conventions.pod
perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/offsite/presentations.pod
perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/apps/scale_etoys/etoys.pod
perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/client/browserbugs/browserbugs.pod
perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/tips/mod_perl_tricks/mod_perl_tricks.pod

Modified: perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/conventions.pod
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/conventions.pod?rev=425556&r1=425555&r2=425556&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/conventions.pod (original)
+++ perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/conventions.pod Tue Jul 25 16:18:10 2006
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@

=head1 Typographical conventions

-We try to be consisten about our use of different fonts and faces, so
+We try to be consistent about our use of different fonts and faces, so
that you'll recognize special words more easily.

=over

Modified: perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/offsite/presentations.pod
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/offsite/presentations.pod?rev=425556&r1=425555&r2=425556&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/offsite/presentations.pod (original)
+++ perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/offsite/presentations.pod Tue Jul 25 16:18:10 2006
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@
Thomas Klausner gave a tutorial titled "Web Application Development
using mod_perl and CPAN" at the German Perl Workshop 2003.

-The slides (in German) are availiable from here:
+The slides (in German) are available from here:
http://domm.zsi.at/talks/modperl_pws2003/

=item *

Modified: perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/apps/scale_etoys/etoys.pod
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/apps/scale_etoys/etoys.pod?rev=425556&r1=425555&r2=425556&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/apps/scale_etoys/etoys.pod (original)
+++ perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/apps/scale_etoys/etoys.pod Tue Jul 25 16:18:10 2006
@@ -342,7 +342,7 @@
The Controller layer translated web requests into appropriate actions
on the Model layer. It handled parsing parameters, checking input,
fetching the appropriate Model objects, and calling methods on them.
-Then it determined the appropriate View to use and sendt the resulting
+Then it determined the appropriate View to use and send the resulting
HTML to the user.

View objects were really HTML templates. The Controller passed data

Modified: perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/client/browserbugs/browserbugs.pod
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/client/browserbugs/browserbugs.pod?rev=425556&r1=425555&r2=425556&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/client/browserbugs/browserbugs.pod (original)
+++ perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/client/browserbugs/browserbugs.pod Tue Jul 25 16:18:10 2006
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@
browsers will interpret &reg as an SGML entity and encode it as
C<&reg;>. This will result in a corrupted C<QUERY_STRING>.

-The behaviour is actually correct, and the problem is that you have
+The behavior is actually correct, and the problem is that you have
not correctly encoded your ampersands into entities in your HTML. What
you should have in the source of your HTML is
C<http://example.com/foo.pl?foo=bar&amp;reg=foobar>.

Modified: perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/tips/mod_perl_tricks/mod_perl_tricks.pod
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/tips/mod_perl_tricks/mod_perl_tricks.pod?rev=425556&r1=425555&r2=425556&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/tips/mod_perl_tricks/mod_perl_tricks.pod (original)
+++ perl/modperl/docs/trunk/src/docs/tutorials/tips/mod_perl_tricks/mod_perl_tricks.pod Tue Jul 25 16:18:10 2006
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@

=head1 Part I: Tricks with CGI.pm

-C<CGI.pm> is the long-favoured module for CGI scripting, and, as
+C<CGI.pm> is the long-favored module for CGI scripting, and, as
mod_perl can run CGI scripts (mostly) unaltered, also provides
significant advantages for mod_perl programmers. Let's look at some of
the more interesting uses of this module in web programming.
@@ -293,7 +293,7 @@
use CGI qw(:standard :html3);

# Some constants to use in our form.
- my @colors = qw/aqua black blue fuschia gray green lime maroon navy olive
+ my @colors = qw/aqua black blue fuchsia gray green lime maroon navy olive
purple red silver teal white yellow/;
my @sizes=("<default>",1..7);

@@ -642,7 +642,7 @@

file:Apache/FixNaughty.pm
-------------------------
- # prefefine the HTML parser that we use afterwards
+ # predefine the HTML parser that we use afterward
package HTML::Parser::FixNaughty;

require HTML::Parser;
@@ -982,7 +982,7 @@
Script II.1.5 scans the log for certain status codes and prints out the
top URLs or hosts that triggered them. It can be used to get
quick-and-dirty usage statistics, to find broken links, or to detect
-certain types of breakin attempts. Use it like this:
+certain types of break in attempts. Use it like this:

% find_status.pl -t10 200 ~www/logs/access_log

@@ -1939,7 +1939,7 @@
seems.

Most CGI scripts will run unmodified under mod_perl using the
-C<Apache::Registry>x CGI compatability layer. But that's not the whole
+C<Apache::Registry>x CGI compatibility layer. But that's not the whole
story. The exciting part is that mod_perl gives you access to the
Apache API, letting you get at the innards of the Apache server and
change its behavior in powerful and interesting ways. This section
@@ -2952,7 +2952,7 @@
These tricks illustrate the true power of mod_perl; not only were Perl
and Apache good friends from the start, thanks to Perl's excellent
text-handling capacity, but when mod_perl is used, your complete
-access to the Apache API gives you unprecendented power in dynamic web
+access to the Apache API gives you unprecedented power in dynamic web
serving.

To find more tips and tricks, look for modules on the CPAN, look



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