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-rw-r--r--ChangeLog6
-rw-r--r--sample/exyacc.rb2
-rw-r--r--sample/list.rb2
-rw-r--r--sample/trick2013/kinaba/remarks.markdown6
4 files changed, 11 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog
index d3fcbfcd32..c9971ac50d 100644
--- a/ChangeLog
+++ b/ChangeLog
@@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
+Fri Jun 12 18:20:37 2015 SHIBATA Hiroshi <hsbt@ruby-lang.org>
+
+ * sample/exyacc.rb: Fix some typos.
+ * sample/list.rb: ditto.
+ * sample/trick2013/kinaba/remarks.markdown: ditto.
+
Fri Jun 12 17:34:14 2015 Wojciech Mach <wojtek@wojtekmach.pl>
* hash.c (rb_hash_fetch_values): add `Hash#fetch_values`.
diff --git a/sample/exyacc.rb b/sample/exyacc.rb
index 7b37a8b236..9a9435a0dc 100644
--- a/sample/exyacc.rb
+++ b/sample/exyacc.rb
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
#! /usr/local/bin/ruby -Kn
# usage: exyacc.rb [yaccfiles]
-# this is coverted from exyacc.pl in the camel book
+# this is covered from exyacc.pl in the camel book
ARGF.each(nil) do |source|
sbeg = source.index("\n%%") + 1
diff --git a/sample/list.rb b/sample/list.rb
index 85899ce7ff..b4d1d653e4 100644
--- a/sample/list.rb
+++ b/sample/list.rb
@@ -76,6 +76,6 @@ $list2.add_to_list(20)
$list2.add_to_list(Point.new(4, 5))
$list2.add_to_list($list1)
-# parenthesises around method arguments can be ommitted unless ambiguous.
+# parenthesises around method arguments can be omitted unless ambiguous.
print "list1:\n", $list1, "\n"
print "list2:\n", $list2, "\n"
diff --git a/sample/trick2013/kinaba/remarks.markdown b/sample/trick2013/kinaba/remarks.markdown
index e35550e9af..a454a5f0a1 100644
--- a/sample/trick2013/kinaba/remarks.markdown
+++ b/sample/trick2013/kinaba/remarks.markdown
@@ -18,11 +18,11 @@ The program contains each ASCII character from 0x20 ' ' to 0x7e '~' exactly once
The algorthim is the obvious loop "32.upto(126){|x| putc x}".
-It is not so hard to transform it to use each character *at most once*. Only the slight difficulty comes from the constraint that we cannot "declare and then use" variables, because then the code will contain the variable name twice. This restriction is worked around by the $. global variable, the best friend of Ruby golfers.
+It is not so hard to transform it to use each character *at most once*. The only slight difficulty comes from the constraint that we cannot "declare and then use" variables, because then the code will contain the variable name twice. This restriction is worked around by the $. global variable, the best friend of Ruby golfers.
-The relatively interesting part is to use all the charcters *at least once*. Of course, this is easily accomplished by putting everything into a comment (i.e., #unsed...) or to a string literal (%(unused...), note that normal string literals are forbidden since they use quotation marks twice). Hey, but that's not fun at all! I tried to minimize the escapeway.
+The relatively interesting part is to use all the charcters *at least once*. Of course, this is easily accomplished by putting everything into a comment (i.e., #unused...) or to a string literal (%(unused...), note that normal string literals are forbidden since they use quotation marks twice). Hey, but that's not fun at all! I tried to minimize the escapeway.
-* "@THEqQUICKbBROWNfFXjJMPSvVLAZYDGgkyz". Trash box of unused alphabet. I with I could have used "gkyz" somewhere else.
+* "@THEqQUICKbBROWNfFXjJMPSvVLAZYDGgkyz". Trash box of unused alphabet. I wish I could have used "gkyz" somewhere else.
* "%r{\"}mosx". Regex literal, with %-syntax. I don't even know what each m,o,s,x means...