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List:       perl6-language
Subject:    r29539 - docs/Perl6/Spec
From:       pugs-commits () feather ! perl6 ! nl
Date:       2010-01-16 6:05:59
Message-ID: 20100116060559.28612.qmail () feather ! perl6 ! nl
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Author: diakopter
Date: 2010-01-16 07:05:57 +0100 (Sat, 16 Jan 2010)
New Revision: 29539

Modified:
   docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod
Log:
[S05] MOAR untypos

Modified: docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod
===================================================================
--- docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod	2010-01-16 05:42:44 UTC (rev 29538)
+++ docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod	2010-01-16 06:05:57 UTC (rev 29539)
@@ -1358,7 +1358,7 @@
 =item *
 
 A leading C<+> may also be supplied to indicate that the following
-character class is to matched in a positive sense.
+character class is to be matched in a positive sense.
 
      / <+[a..z_]>* /
      / <+[ a..z _ ]>* /
@@ -1546,7 +1546,7 @@
 Despite the fact that the outer rule scans the string, the inner
 call to it does not.
 
-Note that a consequence of previous section is that you also get
+Note that a consequence of the previous section is that you also get
 
     <!~~>
 
@@ -1575,9 +1575,7 @@
 except that the scan for "C<foo>" can be done in the forward direction,
 while a lookbehind assertion would presumably scan for C<\d+> and then
 match "C<foo>" backwards.  The use of C<< <(...)> >> affects only the
-meaning the positions of the beginning and
-ending of the match, and anything calculated based on those positions.
-For instance, after the match above, C<$()> contains
+positions of the beginning and ending of the match, and anything calculated based on \
those positions.  For instance, after the match above, C<$()> contains  only the \
digits matched, and C<$/.to> is pointing to after the digits.  Other captures (named \
or numbered) are unaffected and may be accessed  through C<$/>.
@@ -1764,7 +1762,7 @@
 
 =item *
 
-A series of other new capital backslash sequences are also the negation
+A series of other new capital backslash sequences are also the negations
 of their lower-case counterparts:
 
 =over


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