From f30c4b6adaa6729630b15a354569ecbae92ec9a8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Kalnischkies Date: Wed, 26 Aug 2009 16:38:54 +0200 Subject: =?UTF-8?q?=20=20[=20Nicolas=20Fran=C3=A7ois=20]=20=20=20*=20doc/s?= =?UTF-8?q?tyle.txt,=20buildlib/defaults.mak,=20buildlib/manpage.mak:=20?= =?UTF-8?q?=20=20=20=20-=20fix=20a=20few=20typos=20in=20the=20comments=20o?= =?UTF-8?q?f=20this=20files?= MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit --- buildlib/defaults.mak | 22 +++++++++++----------- buildlib/manpage.mak | 2 +- 2 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) (limited to 'buildlib') diff --git a/buildlib/defaults.mak b/buildlib/defaults.mak index a171522d5..8c57da05b 100644 --- a/buildlib/defaults.mak +++ b/buildlib/defaults.mak @@ -6,26 +6,26 @@ # for it to operate as expected. When included the module generates # the requested rules based on the contents of its control variables. -# This works out very well and allows a good degree of flexability. -# To accomidate some of the features we introduce the concept of +# This works out very well and allows a good degree of flexibility. +# To accommodate some of the features we introduce the concept of # local variables. To do this we use the 'Computed Names' feature of # gmake. Each module declares a LOCAL scope and access it with, # $($(LOCAL)-VAR) -# This works very well but it is important to rembember that within -# a rule the LOCAL var is unavailble, it will have to be constructed -# from the information in the rule invokation. For stock rules like +# This works very well but it is important to remember that within +# a rule the LOCAL var is unavailable, it will have to be constructed +# from the information in the rule invocation. For stock rules like # clean this is simple, we use a local clean rule called clean/$(LOCAL) # and then within the rule $(@F) gets back $(LOCAL)! Other rules will # have to use some other mechanism (filter perhaps?) The reason such # lengths are used is so that each directory can contain several 'instances' # of any given module. I notice that the very latest gmake has the concept # of local variables for rules. It is possible this feature in conjunction -# with the generated names will provide a very powerfull solution indeed! +# with the generated names will provide a very powerful solution indeed! # A build directory is used by default, all generated items get put into # there. However unlike automake this is not done with a VPATH build # (vpath builds break the distinction between #include "" and #include <>) -# but by explicly setting the BUILD variable. Make is invoked from +# but by explicitly setting the BUILD variable. Make is invoked from # within the source itself which is much more compatible with compilation # environments. ifndef NOISY @@ -99,12 +99,12 @@ endif # Source location control # SUBDIRS specifies sub components of the module that -# may be located in subdrictories of the source dir. +# may be located in subdirectories of the source dir. # This should be declared before including this file SUBDIRS+= # Header file control. -# TARGETDIRS indicitates all of the locations that public headers +# TARGETDIRS indicates all of the locations that public headers # will be published to. # This should be declared before including this file HEADER_TARGETDIRS+= @@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ dirs: mkdir -p $(patsubst %/,%,$(sort $(MKDIRS))) # Header file control. We want all published interface headers to go -# into the build directory from thier source dirs. We setup some +# into the build directory from their source dirs. We setup some # search paths here vpath %.h $(SUBDIRS) $(INCLUDE)/%.h $(addprefix $(INCLUDE)/,$(addsuffix /%.h,$(HEADER_TARGETDIRS))) : %.h @@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ $(INCLUDE)/%.h $(addprefix $(INCLUDE)/,$(addsuffix /%.h,$(HEADER_TARGETDIRS))) : # Dependency generation. We want to generate a .d file using gnu cpp. # For GNU systems the compiler can spit out a .d file while it is compiling, # this is specified with the INLINEDEPFLAG. Other systems might have a -# makedep program that can be called after compiling, that's illistrated +# makedep program that can be called after compiling, that's illustrated # by the DEPFLAG case. # Compile rules are expected to call this macro after calling the compiler ifdef GCC3DEP diff --git a/buildlib/manpage.mak b/buildlib/manpage.mak index 1f2644c01..6cdf73ccf 100644 --- a/buildlib/manpage.mak +++ b/buildlib/manpage.mak @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ # Input # $(SOURCE) - The documents to use -# All output is writtin to files in the build doc directory +# All output is written to files in the build doc directory # See defaults.mak for information about LOCAL -- cgit v1.2.3