diff options
author | Francois Kritzinger <francois@codesynthesis.com> | 2021-10-12 10:30:06 +0200 |
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committer | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2021-10-12 11:46:06 +0200 |
commit | 2f93c5c9b87344b4172be9d4acac4851d3972590 (patch) | |
tree | bf7b518fd8a51714ee143f376980636c065d37ef /doc/manual.cli | |
parent | 062c2ecb80226e57e631c9fd7007646658375376 (diff) |
Documentation fixes
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/manual.cli')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/manual.cli | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.cli b/doc/manual.cli index e5f1f10..bc7a68e 100644 --- a/doc/manual.cli +++ b/doc/manual.cli @@ -6167,7 +6167,7 @@ A project that uses standard versioning can rely on the \c{build2} \c{version} module to simplify and automate version managements. The \c{version} module has two primary functions: eliminate the need to change the version anywhere except in the project's manifest file and automatically extract and propagate -the snapshot information (serial number and id). +the snapshot information (sequence number and id). The \c{version} module must be loaded in the project's \c{bootstrap.build}. While being loaded, it reads the project's manifest and extracts its version @@ -6204,7 +6204,7 @@ as the following build system variables (which can be used in the buildfiles): [uint64] version.revision # 3 \ -As a convenience, the \c{version} module also extract the \c{summary} and +As a convenience, the \c{version} module also extracts the \c{summary} and \c{url} manifest values and sets them as the following build system variables (this additional information is used, for example, when generating the \c{pkg-config} files): @@ -6262,7 +6262,7 @@ actual snapshot number and id, just like during the preparation of distributions. The version header rule is based on the \l{#module-in \c{in}} module rule and -can be used to preprocesses a template file with version information. While it +can be used to preprocess a template file with version information. While it is usually used to generate C/C++ version headers (thus the name), it can really generate any kind of files. @@ -6722,7 +6722,7 @@ config.c.internal.scope \h#c-internal-scope|C Compilation Internal Scope| The \c{c} module has a notion of a project's internal scope. During -compilation of project's C translation units a header search path (\c{-I}) +compilation of a project's C translation units a header search path (\c{-I}) exported by a library that is outside of the internal scope is considered external and, if supported by the compiler, the corresponding \c{-I} option is translated to an appropriate \"external header search path\" option. See @@ -6799,7 +6799,7 @@ config.cxx.translate_include \h#cxx-internal-scope|C++ Compilation Internal Scope| The \c{cxx} module has a notion of a project's internal scope. During -compilation of project's C++ translation units a header search path (\c{-I}) +compilation of a project's C++ translation units a header search path (\c{-I}) exported by a library that is outside of the internal scope is considered external and, if supported by the compiler, the corresponding \c{-I} option is translated to an appropriate \"external header search path\" option @@ -6917,7 +6917,7 @@ using cxx \ Note that this variable should also be set before loading the \c{cxx} module -and there is the \c{common cc.internal.libs} equivalent. However, there are +and there is the common \c{cc.internal.libs} equivalent. However, there are no \c{config.*} versions nor the override by the bundle amalgamation semantics. |