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Date:      Sun, 9 Jun 2002 17:36:55 +0200 (CEST)
From:      Marc Fonvieille <marc@blackend.org>
To:        FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   docs/39064: Minor change and typos in section 3.7 of the Handbook
Message-ID:  <200206091536.g59FatBd031912@abigail.blackend.org>

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>Number:         39064
>Category:       docs
>Synopsis:       Minor change and typos in section 3.7 of the Handbook
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       non-critical
>Priority:       low
>Responsible:    freebsd-doc
>State:          open
>Quarter:        
>Keywords:       
>Date-Required:
>Class:          doc-bug
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Sun Jun 09 08:50:00 PDT 2002
>Closed-Date:
>Last-Modified:
>Originator:     Marc Fonvieille
>Release:        FreeBSD 4.6-PRERELEASE i386
>Organization:
>Environment:
System: FreeBSD abigail.blackend.org 4.6-PRERELEASE FreeBSD 4.6-PRERELEASE #5: Sun May 12 00:30:43 CEST 2002 marc@abigail.blackend.org:/usr/src/sys/compile/ABIGAIL i386


	
>Description:
Minor change and typos in section 3.7 of the Handbook. Read the patch
below for more details (sorry i missed the typos for my previous PR).
	
>How-To-Repeat:
	
>Fix:
Apply the patch to handbook/basics/chapter.sgml
	

--- chapter.sgml.diff begins here ---
--- chapter.sgml.org	Sun Jun  9 17:29:59 2002
+++ chapter.sgml	Sun Jun  9 17:33:11 2002
@@ -1068,7 +1068,7 @@
       fill in the rest of the filename for you.</para>
     <indexterm><primary>environment variables</primary></indexterm>
 
-    <para>Another function of the shell is environment variables.
+    <para>Another feature of the shell is the use of environment variables.
       Environment variables are a variable key pair stored in the shell's
       environment space.  This space can be read by any program invoked by
       the shell, and thus contains a lot of program configuration.  Here
@@ -1179,7 +1179,7 @@
       as special representations of data.  The most common one is the
       <literal>*</literal> character, which represents any number of
       characters in a filename.  These special meta-characters can be used
-      to do file name globing.  For example, typing in
+      to do filename globbing.  For example, typing in
       <command>echo *</command> is almost the same as typing in
       <command>ls</command> because the shell takes all the files that
       match <literal>*</literal> and puts them on the command line for
--- chapter.sgml.diff ends here ---


>Release-Note:
>Audit-Trail:
>Unformatted:

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