fix a few typos

This commit is contained in:
Benjamin Peterson 2008-10-22 20:57:43 +00:00
parent e4dc175474
commit 92be53911d
1 changed files with 7 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ Comments and and exact indentation are preserved throughout the translation
process.
By default, 2to3 runs a set of predefined fixers. The :option:`-l` flag lists
all avaible fixers. An explicit set of fixers to run can be given with
all available fixers. An explicit set of fixers to run can be given with
:option:`-f`. Likewise the :option:`-x` explicitly disables a fixer. The
following example runs only the ``imports`` and ``has_key`` fixers::
@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ This command runs every fixer except the ``apply`` fixer::
$ 2to3 -x apply example.py
Some fixers are *explicit*, meaning they aren't run be default and must be
Some fixers are *explicit*, meaning they aren't run by default and must be
listed on the command line to be run. Here, in addition to the default fixers,
the ``idioms`` fixer is run::
@ -72,10 +72,10 @@ the ``idioms`` fixer is run::
Notice how passing ``all`` enables all default fixers.
Sometimes 2to3 will find will find a place in your source code that needs to be
changed, but 2to3 cannot fix automatically. In this case, 2to3 will print a
warning beneath the diff for a file. You should address the warning in order to
have compliant 3.x code.
Sometimes 2to3 will find a place in your source code that needs to be changed,
but 2to3 cannot fix automatically. In this case, 2to3 will print a warning
beneath the diff for a file. You should address the warning in order to have
compliant 3.x code.
2to3 can also refactor doctests. To enable this mode, use the :option:`-d`
flag. Note that *only* doctests will be refactored. This also doesn't require
@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ When the :option:`-p` is passed, 2to3 treats ``print`` as a function instead of
a statement. This is useful when ``from __future__ import print_function`` is
being used. If this option is not given, the print fixer will surround print
calls in an extra set of parentheses because it cannot differentiate between the
and print statement with parentheses (such as ``print ("a" + "b" + "c")``) and a
print statement with parentheses (such as ``print ("a" + "b" + "c")``) and a
true function call.