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author | Lars Kappert <lars@webpro.nl> | 2024-04-26 15:19:15 +0200 |
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committer | Louis Pilfold <louis@lpil.uk> | 2024-05-03 11:18:07 +0100 |
commit | 80a340e4649bff9aff4466fbd61a076a04624e4c (patch) | |
tree | 6af32df2541ca9913a8f46c5e24694aac8aec19d /src/content/chapter0_basics | |
parent | b8011ddb3597351883236c74c0e1739b50a3e25e (diff) | |
download | tour-80a340e4649bff9aff4466fbd61a076a04624e4c.tar.gz tour-80a340e4649bff9aff4466fbd61a076a04624e4c.zip |
Increase consistency and readability a tiny bit
Diffstat (limited to 'src/content/chapter0_basics')
4 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson03_unqualified_imports/en.html b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson03_unqualified_imports/en.html index 35ea10f..3f15f58 100644 --- a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson03_unqualified_imports/en.html +++ b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson03_unqualified_imports/en.html @@ -7,11 +7,11 @@ </a>. </p> <p> - It is also possible to specify a list of functions to import from a module in + it's also possible to specify a list of functions to import from a module in an <em>unqualified</em> fashion, meaning the function name can be used without the module <em>qualifier</em> (the name and the dot) before it. </p> <p> - Generally it is best to use qualified imports, as this makes it clear where - the function is defined, making the code easier to read. + Generally it's best to use qualified imports, as this makes it clear where the + function is defined, making the code easier to read. </p> diff --git a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson14_type_imports/en.html b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson14_type_imports/en.html index 0f362e5..243bd61 100644 --- a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson14_type_imports/en.html +++ b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson14_type_imports/en.html @@ -17,6 +17,6 @@ the import statement with the word <code>type</code> before the type name. </p> <p> - It is more common in Gleam code for types to be imported in an unqualified way + It's more common in Gleam code for types to be imported in an unqualified way than it is for functions to be imported in an unqualified way. </p> diff --git a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson15_type_aliases/en.html b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson15_type_aliases/en.html index 9fddd70..9d5cef9 100644 --- a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson15_type_aliases/en.html +++ b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson15_type_aliases/en.html @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ <p> A type alias can be used to refer to a type by a different name. Giving a type - an alias doesn't make a new type, it is still the same type. + an alias doesn't make a new type, it's still the same type. </p> <p> A type's name always starts with a capital letter, contrasting to variables diff --git a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson17_lists/en.html b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson17_lists/en.html index 84f88f3..5db7c11 100644 --- a/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson17_lists/en.html +++ b/src/content/chapter0_basics/lesson17_lists/en.html @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ </p> <p> Counting the length of a list or getting elements from other positions in the - list is expensive and rarely done. It is rare to write algorithms that index + list is expensive and rarely done. It's rare to write algorithms that index into sequences in Gleam, but when they are written a list is not the right choice of data structure. </p> |