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author | Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhsoting.net> | 2018-09-08 10:21:01 +0200 |
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committer | Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhsoting.net> | 2018-09-08 10:21:01 +0200 |
commit | 273a72f7b6ffa258ef3735ef44d3adf254b04c3f (patch) | |
tree | 642b60314bb654c66dd926dd10f112cae4f257f4 /doc/Mainpage.txt | |
parent | e94f3be22cd927eb2b5d9554eae2032a971c7e7e (diff) | |
parent | 21ce7e27a89c3f9c2fb4bc8bd59877dc2d8cd6b9 (diff) |
Update upstream source from tag 'upstream/0.8.6'
Update to upstream version '0.8.6'
with Debian dir dab399747c753aac5012df1b62df1aee932286fc
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/Mainpage.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Mainpage.txt | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/Mainpage.txt b/doc/Mainpage.txt index 3a80e30..173511b 100644 --- a/doc/Mainpage.txt +++ b/doc/Mainpage.txt @@ -40,10 +40,10 @@ * uriFreeUriMembersA(&uri); * @endcode * - * While the URI object (::UriUriA) holds information about the recogized + * While the URI object (::UriUriA) holds information about the recognized * parts of the given URI string, the parser state object (::UriParserStateA) * keeps error code and position. This information does not belong to - * the URI itself, which is why there are two seperate objects. + * the URI itself, which is why there are two separate objects. * * You can reuse parser state objects for parsing several URIs like this: * @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ * * @subsection recomposition Recomposing URIs (from object back to string) * According to <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-5.3" target="_blank">RFC 3986</a> - * glueing parts of a URI together to form a string is called recomposition. + * gluing parts of a URI together to form a string is called recomposition. * Before we can recompose a URI object we have to know how much * space the resulting string will take: * @@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ * * @subsection shortening Creating References * Reference Creation is the inverse process of Reference Resolution: A common base URI - * is "substracted" from an absolute URI to make a (relative) reference. + * is "subtracted" from an absolute URI to make a (relative) reference. * If the base URI is not common the remaining URI will still be absolute, i.e. will * carry a scheme * @@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ * * * @subsection normalization Normalizing URIs - * Sometimes we come accross unnecessarily long URIs like "http<b></b>://example.org/one/two/../../one". + * Sometimes we come across unnecessarily long URIs like "http<b></b>://example.org/one/two/../../one". * The algorithm we can use to shorten this URI down to "http<b></b>://example.org/one" is called * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-6.2.2" target="_blank">Syntax-Based Normalization</a>. * Note that normalizing a URI does more than just "stripping dot segments". Please have a look at @@ -215,7 +215,7 @@ * for the full description. * * As we asked uriToStringCharsRequiredA() for the required space when converting - * a URI object back to a sring, we can ask uriNormalizeSyntaxMaskRequiredA() for + * a URI object back to a string, we can ask uriNormalizeSyntaxMaskRequiredA() for * the parts of a URI that require normalization and then pass this normalization * mask to uriNormalizeSyntaxExA(): * |