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authorBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2021-10-15 11:42:53 +0200
committerBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2021-10-15 11:42:53 +0200
commit8b4d4820ef11daad882376b6fdc0e65607fa03e8 (patch)
treeabeed507d3873cabd7868ec5969addf1f05f75c2 /doc/intro.cli
parentc2ccfa4f17cc1916ac6fece380e0e961732d530d (diff)
Minor introduction tweaks
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/intro.cli')
-rw-r--r--doc/intro.cli14
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/intro.cli b/doc/intro.cli
index 16ee2af..947a069 100644
--- a/doc/intro.cli
+++ b/doc/intro.cli
@@ -1361,7 +1361,7 @@ library: we request metadata (\c{[metadata]}) and we do immediate importation
for an executable contains information that helps the build system do a better
job when an executable is used as part of the build. For example, it includes
the uniform program name to be used for low-verbosity diagnostics as well as
-the version, checksum, and environment that are used to detect changes. While
+the version, checksum, and environment that are used to detect changes. And
immediate importation instructs the build system to skip rule-specific
importation (for example, search for libraries in compiler-specific search
paths) and import the target here and now, failing if that's not possible. It
@@ -1392,7 +1392,7 @@ cxx{names}: file{names.txt} $xxd
}}
\
-The last bit that we need do is to modify \c{hello.cxx} to use the list of
+The last bit that we need to do is to modify \c{hello.cxx} to use the list of
fallback names (the actual implementation is left as an exercise for the
reader):
@@ -1490,8 +1490,8 @@ c++ hello/cxx{hello}@../hello-clang/hello/hello/
ld ../hello-clang/hello/hello/exe{hello}
\
-This time we are not prompted to create another configuration nor is a new
-instance of \c{xxd} gets built \- as we would have expected, the existing host
+This time we are neither prompted to create another configuration nor is a new
+instance of \c{xxd} built \- as we would have expected, the existing host
configuration with the already built \c{xxd} is reused.
From the above output we can see that \c{bdep} creates the host configuration
@@ -1519,9 +1519,9 @@ using hello
Then build the project and see what happens.
-\N|The \c{target} type signifies a configuration for the target or end-result
-of our build. If no type is specified during the configuration creation with
-the \c{--type} option (or \c{--config-type} if using \c{bdep-new}), then
+\N|The \c{target} type signifies a configuration for the end-result of our
+build. If no type is specified during the configuration creation with the
+\c{--type} option (or \c{--config-type} if using \c{bdep-new}), then
\c{target} is assumed.
The \c{host} type signifies a configuration corresponding to the host machine,