--- a/acknowledgements.markdown Fri Apr 12 18:15:45 2013 -0600
+++ b/acknowledgements.markdown Wed Nov 16 11:45:12 2016 +0000
@@ -16,15 +16,16 @@
* [chiphogg](https://github.com/chiphogg)
* [ciwchris](https://github.com/ciwchris)
* [cwarden](https://github.com/cwarden)
+* [danderss](https://bitbucket.org/danderss/)
* [dmedvinsky](https://github.com/dmedvinsky)
* [flatcap](https://github.com/flatcap)
* [helixbass](https://bitbucket.org/helixbass)
* [hoelzro](https://github.com/hoelzro)
+* [jlmuir](https://bitbucket.org/jlmuir/)
* [jrib](https://github.com/jrib)
* [lheiskan](https://github.com/lheiskan)
* [lightningdb](https://github.com/lightningdb)
* [manojkumarm](https://github.com/manojkumarm)
-* [manojkumarm](https://github.com/manojkumarm)
* [markscholtz](https://github.com/markscholtz)
* [marlun](https://github.com/marlun)
* [mattsacks](https://github.com/mattsacks)
--- a/chapters/11.markdown Fri Apr 12 18:15:45 2013 -0600
+++ b/chapters/11.markdown Wed Nov 16 11:45:12 2016 +0000
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@
When you typed `<leader>x` in file `bar` Vim couldn't find a mapping that
matched it, so it treated it as two commands: `<leader>` (which does nothing on
-its own) and `x` (the normal command to delete a single character.)
+its own) and `x` (the normal command to delete a single character).
Local Leader
------------
--- a/chapters/15.markdown Fri Apr 12 18:15:45 2013 -0600
+++ b/chapters/15.markdown Wed Nov 16 11:45:12 2016 +0000
@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@
-------------
A good way to keep the multiple ways of creating operator-pending mappings
-straight is the remember the following two rules:
+straight is to remember the following two rules:
* If your operator-pending mapping ends with some text visually selected, Vim
will operate on that text.
--- a/chapters/20.markdown Fri Apr 12 18:15:45 2013 -0600
+++ b/chapters/20.markdown Wed Nov 16 11:45:12 2016 +0000
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
Vim has many different scopes for variables, but we need to learn a little more
about Vimscript before we can take advantage of the rest. For now, just
-remember that when you see a variable that start with a character and a colon
+remember that when you see a variable that starts with a character and a colon
that it's describing a scoped variable.
Exercises
--- a/chapters/23.markdown Fri Apr 12 18:15:45 2013 -0600
+++ b/chapters/23.markdown Wed Nov 16 11:45:12 2016 +0000
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@
What did we do here?
* First we set the `textwidth` globally to `80`.
-* The we ran an if statement that checked if `TextwidthIsTooWide()` was truthy.
+* Then we ran an if statement that checked if `TextwidthIsTooWide()` was truthy.
* This wound up not being the case, so the `if`'s body wasn't executed.
Because we never explicitly returned a value, Vim returned `0` from the
--- a/introduction.markdown Fri Apr 12 18:15:45 2013 -0600
+++ b/introduction.markdown Wed Nov 16 11:45:12 2016 +0000
@@ -29,12 +29,6 @@
[leanpub]: http://leanpub.org/learnvimscriptthehardway
[paper]: http://bit.ly/lvsthw-paperback
[hard]: http://bit.ly/lvsthw-hardcover
-
-The source code to the book is available [on BitBucket][hg] and [on
-GitHub][git]. If you find any mistakes or feel you could improve it feel free
-to send a pull request, but I'm retaining the copyright on the book, so if
-you're not comfortable with that I understand.
-
[book]: http://learnvimscriptthehardway.stevelosh.com/
[Vim]: http://www.vim.org/
[hg]: http://bitbucket.org/sjl/learnvimscriptthehardway/