From b7ce245e859b946deee740bc617f2b997a52e9dd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Ryder Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2018 00:01:15 +1300 Subject: Two-space sentences in shell comments --- zsh/profile.d/zsh.sh | 4 ++-- zsh/zshrc | 2 +- zsh/zshrc.d/keep.zsh | 2 +- 3 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) (limited to 'zsh') diff --git a/zsh/profile.d/zsh.sh b/zsh/profile.d/zsh.sh index 37ec8014..530c5d5b 100644 --- a/zsh/profile.d/zsh.sh +++ b/zsh/profile.d/zsh.sh @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ # Zsh before version 5.3.0 emulating POSIX sh(1) or Korn shell only sources the # interactive shell startup file described in ENV if it's set after -# /etc/profile is sourced, but before ~/.profile is. The other shells I have +# /etc/profile is sourced, but before ~/.profile is. The other shells I have # tried (including modern shells emulating POSIX sh(1)) wait until after -# ~/.profile is read. This seems to have been fixed in Zsh commit ID fde365e, +# ~/.profile is read. This seems to have been fixed in Zsh commit ID fde365e, # which was followed by release 5.3.0. # This hack is only applicable to interactive zsh invoked as sh/ksh, when ENV diff --git a/zsh/zshrc b/zsh/zshrc index 0e111364..25d90ead 100644 --- a/zsh/zshrc +++ b/zsh/zshrc @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ # Clear away all aliases; we do this here rather than in $ENV because the ksh # family of shells relies on aliases to implement certain POSIX utilities like -# `fc` and `type`. Ignore output, as older Zsh seems not to implement this +# `fc` and `type`. Ignore output, as older Zsh seems not to implement this # (quelle surprise). unalias -a >/dev/null 2>&1 diff --git a/zsh/zshrc.d/keep.zsh b/zsh/zshrc.d/keep.zsh index 7d460272..869d2039 100644 --- a/zsh/zshrc.d/keep.zsh +++ b/zsh/zshrc.d/keep.zsh @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ # keep -- Main function for zshkeep; provided with a list of NAMEs, whether # shell functions or variables, writes the current definition of each NAME to a # directory $ZSHKEEP (defaults to ~/.zshkeep.d) with a .zsh suffix, each of -# which is reloaded each time this file is called. This allows you to quickly +# which is reloaded each time this file is called. This allows you to quickly # arrange to keep that useful shell function or variable you made inline on # subsequent logins. # -- cgit v1.2.3