diff options
author | h_east <h.east.727@gmail.com> | 2024-01-27 19:22:28 +0900 |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2024-01-27 11:22:28 +0100 |
commit | 4d49643c3c8237db68f7717b3600459fad911291 (patch) | |
tree | 3538624d7d70c6722d873569b013cb822137e808 /runtime/doc | |
parent | 1f47db75fdc8c53c5c778b26ecfa0942ac801f22 (diff) |
runtime(doc): style fixes in vim9.txt (#13918)
Remove backticks and a few other style fixes
Signed-off-by: h-east <h.east.727@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'runtime/doc')
-rw-r--r-- | runtime/doc/vim9.txt | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/vim9.txt b/runtime/doc/vim9.txt index b246fcbcec..0f5884b65c 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/vim9.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/vim9.txt @@ -1265,7 +1265,7 @@ level. They cannot be created in a function, also not in a legacy function. yet. This will report any errors found during compilation. -:defc[ompile] MyClass Compile all methods in a class |class-compile|. +:defc[ompile] MyClass Compile all methods in a class. |class-compile| :defc[ompile] {func} :defc[ompile] debug {func} @@ -1720,8 +1720,8 @@ an example for each category: > Vim does not have a familiar null value; it has various null_<type> predefined values, for example |null_string|, |null_list|, |null_job|. Primitives do not have a null_<type>. The typical use cases for null_<type> are: -- to `clear a variable` and release its resources; -- as a `default for a parameter` in a function definition, see |null-compare|. +- to clear a variable and release its resources; +- as a default for a parameter in a function definition, see |null-compare|. For a specialized variable, like `job`, null_<type> is used to clear the resources. For a container variable, resources can also be cleared by @@ -1773,7 +1773,7 @@ an empty container, do not use null_<type> in a comparison: > F(null_list) # output: "null" F([]) # output: "not null, empty" F(['']) # output: "not null, not empty" -The above function takes a `list of strings` and reports on it. +The above function takes a list of strings and reports on it. Change the above function signature to accept different types of arguments: > def F(arg: list<any> = null_list) # any type of list def F(arg: any = null) # any type @@ -1791,18 +1791,18 @@ with vim9 null semantics, the programmer may chose to use null_<type> in comparisons and/or other situations. Elsewhere in the documentation it says: - Quite often a null value is handled the same as an - empty value, but not always + Quite often a null value is handled the same as an empty value, but + not always Here's an example: > vim9script var s1: list<string> var s2: list<string> = null_list echo s1 # output: "[]" echo s2 # output: "[]" - + echo s1 + ['a'] # output: "['a']" echo s2 + ['a'] # output: "['a']" - + echo s1->add('a') # output: "['a']" echo s2->add('a') # E1130: Can not add to null list < |