correct a few spelling mistakes in the tutorial

This commit is contained in:
Nathan Froyd 2014-07-02 16:27:08 -04:00 committed by Alex Crichton
parent 5d36005066
commit 704f11d3d8

View File

@ -469,7 +469,7 @@ fn signum(x: int) -> int {
Rust's `match` construct is a generalized, cleaned-up version of C's
`switch` construct. You provide it with a value and a number of
*arms*, each labelled with a pattern, and the code compares the value
*arms*, each labeled with a pattern, and the code compares the value
against each pattern in order until one matches. The matching pattern
executes its corresponding arm.
@ -2524,7 +2524,7 @@ of the components of types. By design, trait objects don't know the exact type
of their contents and so the compiler cannot reason about those properties.
You can instruct the compiler, however, that the contents of a trait object must
acribe to a particular bound with a trailing colon (`:`). These are examples of
ascribe to a particular bound with a trailing colon (`:`). These are examples of
valid types:
~~~rust
@ -2579,7 +2579,7 @@ This is a silly way to compute the radius of a circle
In type-parameterized functions,
methods of the supertrait may be called on values of subtrait-bound type parameters.
Refering to the previous example of `trait Circle : Shape`:
Referring to the previous example of `trait Circle : Shape`:
~~~
# trait Shape { fn area(&self) -> f64; }