751620ce9fae

Fix pluralisation/punctuation of "command(s)"
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author Richard Cheng <rcheng@neuratron.com>
date Mon, 16 Apr 2012 15:23:50 +0100
parents b9e0500a6e02
children cf9864ab3854
branches/tags (none)
files chapters/21.markdown chapters/22.markdown chapters/23.markdown chapters/25.markdown

Changes

--- a/chapters/21.markdown	Mon Apr 16 14:41:50 2012 +0100
+++ b/chapters/21.markdown	Mon Apr 16 15:23:50 2012 +0100
@@ -45,8 +45,8 @@
     :    echom "ONE"
     :endif
 
-Vim will display "ONE", because the integer `1` is "truthy".  Now try this
-command:
+Vim will display "ONE", because the integer `1` is "truthy".  Now try these
+commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if 0
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@
     :endif
 
 Vim will *not* display "ZERO" because the integer `0` is "falsy".  Let's see how
-strings behave.  Run this command:
+strings behave.  Run these commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if "something"
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@
 The results may surprise you.  Vim does *not* necessarily treat a non-empty
 string as "truthy", so it will not display anything!
 
-Let's dive a bit further down the rabbit hole.  Run this command:
+Let's dive a bit further down the rabbit hole.  Run these commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if "9024"
--- a/chapters/22.markdown	Mon Apr 16 14:41:50 2012 +0100
+++ b/chapters/22.markdown	Mon Apr 16 15:23:50 2012 +0100
@@ -5,14 +5,14 @@
 compare things.  Of course Vim lets us compare values, but it's not as
 straightforward as it may seem.
 
-Run the following command:
+Run the following commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if 10 > 1
     :    echom "foo"
     :endif
 
-Vim will, of course, display "foo".  Now run this command:
+Vim will, of course, display "foo".  Now run these commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if 10 > 2001
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
     :endif
 
 Vim displays nothing, because `10` is not greater than `2001`.  So far
-everything works as expected.  Run this command:
+everything works as expected.  Run these commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if 10 == 11
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
     :endif
 
 Vim displays "second".  Nothing surprising here.  Let's try comparing strings.
-Run this command:
+Run these commands:
 
     :::vim
     :if "foo" == "bar"
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@
 So how can you get around this ridiculousness?  It turns out that Vim has *two
 extra sets* of comparison operators to deal with this.
 
-Run the following command:
+Run the following commands:
 
     :::vim
     :set ignorecase
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@
     :endif
 
 Vim displays "first" because `==?` is the "case-insensitive no matter what the
-user has set" comparison operator.  Now run the following command:
+user has set" comparison operator.  Now run the following commands:
 
     :::vim
     :set ignorecase
--- a/chapters/23.markdown	Mon Apr 16 14:41:50 2012 +0100
+++ b/chapters/23.markdown	Mon Apr 16 15:23:50 2012 +0100
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
 Like most programming languages, Vimscript has functions.  Let's take a look at
 how to create them, and then talk about some of their quirks.
 
-Run the following commands:
+Run the following command:
 
     :::vim
     :function meow()
--- a/chapters/25.markdown	Mon Apr 16 14:41:50 2012 +0100
+++ b/chapters/25.markdown	Mon Apr 16 15:23:50 2012 +0100
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
 Number Formats
 --------------
 
-You can specify Numbers in a few different ways.  Run the following command.
+You can specify Numbers in a few different ways.  Run the following command:
 
     :::vim
     :echom 100