diff options
-rw-r--r-- | luatexbase-attr.dtx | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | luatexbase-mcb.dtx | 8 |
2 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/luatexbase-attr.dtx b/luatexbase-attr.dtx index afbb102..be0a91c 100644 --- a/luatexbase-attr.dtx +++ b/luatexbase-attr.dtx @@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ See the aforementioned source file(s) for copyright and licensing information. % number of the attribute associated to |\fooattr| assuming it was defined % using |\newluatexattribute\fooattr|, something that \luatex currently % doesn't support (you can get the current value of the associated attribute -% as |tex.atrribute.fooattr|, but not the attribute number). +% as |tex.attribute.fooattr|, but not the attribute number). % % There are several ways to work around this. For example, it is possible to % extract the number at any time from the |\meaning| of |\fooattr|. @@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ See the aforementioned source file(s) for copyright and licensing information. % % Also, two Lua functions are provided that are analogous to the above \tex % macros (actually, the macros are wrappers around the functions): -% |luatexbase.new_attributes|\parg{name} allocates a new attribute, without +% |luatexbase.new_attribute|\parg{name} allocates a new attribute, without % defining a corresponding \tex control sequence (only an entry in % |luatexbase.attributes| is created. It usually returns the number of the % allocated attribute. If room is missing, it raises an error, unless the diff --git a/luatexbase-mcb.dtx b/luatexbase-mcb.dtx index ee07019..f4d6448 100644 --- a/luatexbase-mcb.dtx +++ b/luatexbase-mcb.dtx @@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ See the aforementioned source file(s) for copyright and licensing information. % % \luatex provides an extremely interesting feature, named callbacks. It % allows to call some Lua functions at some points of the \TeX\ algorithm (a -% \emph{callback}), like when \TeX\ breaks likes, puts vertical spaces, etc. +% \emph{callback}), like when \TeX\ breaks lines, puts vertical spaces, etc. % The \luatex core offers a function called \texttt{callback.register} that % enables to register a function in a callback. % @@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ See the aforementioned source file(s) for copyright and licensing information. % \begin{description} % \item[simple] is for functions that don't return anything: they are called % in order, all with the same argument; -% \item[data] is for functions receiving a piece of data of nay type +% \item[data] is for functions receiving a piece of data of any type % except node list head (and possibly other arguments) and returning it % (possibly modified): the functions are called in order, and each is % passed the return value of the previous (and the other arguments @@ -167,8 +167,8 @@ See the aforementioned source file(s) for copyright and licensing information. % modified node list, or the boolean values |true| or |false|. The % functions are chained the same way as for \emph{data} except that for % the following. If -% one function returns |false|, then |false| is immediately return and the -% following functions are \emph{not} called. If one function returns +% one function returns |false|, then |false| is immediately returned and +% the following functions are \emph{not} called. If one function returns % |true|, then the same head is passed to the next function. If all % functions return |true|, then |true| is returned, otherwise the return % value of the last function not returning |true| is used. |