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authorBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2021-10-26 03:47:06 +0200
committerBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2021-10-26 03:47:06 +0200
commit1956dce01ba9a71d70cd47ac4a9f706df0aa297e (patch)
tree66adf2034c73ef59aca2e61b1066c63cdec7cbb2 /doc
parentc5e8a623d5d69517d7968bf8012d066f83f85e5e (diff)
Minor documentation tweak
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/manual.cli12
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.cli b/doc/manual.cli
index 9d79259..55a6d4c 100644
--- a/doc/manual.cli
+++ b/doc/manual.cli
@@ -5683,12 +5683,12 @@ does not break or produce incorrect results if the environment changes.
Instead, changes to the environment are detected and affected targets are
automatically rebuilt.
-The two use-cases where hermetic configurations are really useful are when we
-need to save an environment which is not generally available (for example, an
-environment of a Visual Studio development command prompt) or when our build
-results need to exactly match the specific configuration (for example, because
-parts of the overall result have already been built and installed, as is the
-case with build system modules).|
+The two use-cases where hermetic configurations are especially useful are when
+we need to save an environment which is not generally available (for example,
+an environment of a Visual Studio development command prompt) or when our
+build results need to exactly match the specific configuration (for example,
+because parts of the overall result have already been built and installed, as
+is the case with build system modules).|
If we now examine \c{config.build}, we will see something along these lines: