ossp-pkg/xds/docs/libxds.tex 1.14 -> 1.15
--- libxds.tex 2001/08/09 15:35:23 1.14
+++ libxds.tex 2001/08/13 14:19:57 1.15
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
% -*- mode: LaTeX; fill-column: 75; -*-
%
-% $Id: libxds.tex,v 1.14 2001/08/09 15:35:23 simons Exp $
+% $Id: libxds.tex,v 1.15 2001/08/13 14:19:57 simons Exp $
%
\documentclass[a4paper,10pt,pointlessnumbers,bibtotoc]{scrartcl}
\usepackage[dvips,xdvi]{graphicx}
@@ -302,7 +302,7 @@
buffer as a ``gift'' (\textsf{XDS\_GIFT}) or as a ``loan'' (\textsf{XDS\_LOAN}).
The buffer being a ``loan'' means that the buffer is still owned by the
-library --- we're only allowed to peak at it. But any call to an XDS
+library --- we're only allowed to peek at it. But any call to an XDS
routine may potentially modify the buffer or even change the buffers
location. Hence the result of a \textsf{xds\_getbuffer()} call with loaning
semantics is only valid until the next XDS routine is called. After
@@ -479,7 +479,7 @@
matter whether loan or gift semantics have been chosen.
\paragraph{Lines 53--54.}
-Here come the actual decoding of the buffer's contents using {\sf
+Here comes the actual decoding of the buffer's contents using {\sf
xds\_decode()}. The syntax is identical to \textsf{xds\_encode()}'s, the only
difference is that the decoding engines do not expect the values --- like
the encoding engines did --- but the location where to store the value.
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