@@ -687,7 +687,7 @@ Writing Documentation:
Do: [-q | --quiet]
Don't: [-q|--quiet]
- Don't use spacing around "|" tokens when they're used to seperate the
+ Don't use spacing around "|" tokens when they're used to separate the
alternate arguments of an option:
Do: --track[=(direct|inherit)]
Don't: --track[=(direct | inherit)]
@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ included, Git breaks the cycle by prohibiting these files from affecting
the resolution of these conditions (thus, prohibiting them from
declaring remote URLs).
+
-As for the naming of this keyword, it is for forwards compatibiliy with
+As for the naming of this keyword, it is for forwards compatibility with
a naming scheme that supports more variable-based include conditions,
but currently Git only supports the exact keyword described above.
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ for example:
myuser:$5$.NqmNH1vwfzGpV8B$znZIcumu1tNLATgV2l6e1/mY8RzhUDHMOaVOeL1cxV3
------
You can use the 'htpasswd' facility that comes with Apache to make these
-files, but only with the -d option (or -B if your system suports it).
+files, but only with the -d option (or -B if your system supports it).
Preferably use the system specific utility that manages password hash
creation in your platform (e.g. mkpasswd in Linux, encrypt in OpenBSD or
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@ at the end.
The number of additional commits is the number
of commits which would be displayed by "git log v1.0.4..parent".
-The hash suffix is "-g" + an unambigous abbreviation for the tip commit
+The hash suffix is "-g" + an unambiguous abbreviation for the tip commit
of parent (which was `2414721b194453f058079d897d13c4e377f92dc6`). The
length of the abbreviation scales as the repository grows, using the
approximate number of objects in the repository and a bit of math
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ BUGS
Tree objects as well as tag objects not pointing at commits, cannot be described.
When describing blobs, the lightweight tags pointing at blobs are ignored,
-but the blob is still described as <committ-ish>:<path> despite the lightweight
+but the blob is still described as <commit-ish>:<path> despite the lightweight
tag being favorable.
GIT
@@ -245,7 +245,7 @@ populated with placeholder text.
or "--reroll-count=4rev2" are allowed), but the downside of
using such a reroll-count is that the range-diff/interdiff
with the previous version does not state exactly which
- version the new interation is compared against.
+ version the new iteration is compared against.
--to=<email>::
Add a `To:` header to the email headers. This is in addition
@@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ FIELD NAMES
-----------
Various values from structured fields can be used to interpolate
-into the resulting output. For each outputing line, the following
+into the resulting output. For each outputting line, the following
names can be used:
objectmode::
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ from warnings to errors (so e.g. a missing "tagger" line is an error).
Extra headers in the object are also an error under mktag, but ignored
by linkgit:git-fsck[1]. This extra check can be turned off by setting
-the appropriate `fsck.<msg-id>` varible:
+the appropriate `fsck.<msg-id>` variable:
git -c fsck.extraHeaderEntry=ignore mktag <my-tag-with-headers
@@ -286,7 +286,7 @@ patterns in non-cone mode has a number of shortcomings:
problem above? Also, if it suggests paths, what if the user has a
file or directory that begins with either a '!' or '#' or has a '*',
'\', '?', '[', or ']' in its name? And if it suggests paths, will
- it complete "/pro" to "/proc" (in the root filesytem) rather than to
+ it complete "/pro" to "/proc" (in the root filesystem) rather than to
"/progress.txt" in the current directory? (Note that users are
likely to want to start paths with a leading '/' in non-cone mode,
for the same reason that .gitignore files often have one.)
@@ -366,7 +366,7 @@ only the commit ends-up being in the stash and not on the current branch.
# ... hack hack hack ...
$ git add --patch foo # add unrelated changes to the index
$ git stash push --staged # save these changes to the stash
-# ... hack hack hack, finish curent changes ...
+# ... hack hack hack, finish current changes ...
$ git commit -m 'Massive' # commit fully tested changes
$ git switch fixup-branch # switch to another branch
$ git stash pop # to finish work on the saved changes
@@ -503,7 +503,7 @@ repositories, you can configure Apache like this:
The above configuration expects your public repositories to live under
`/pub/git` and will serve them as `http://git.domain.org/dir-under-pub-git`,
-both as clonable Git URL and as browseable gitweb interface. If you then
+both as clonable Git URL and as browsable gitweb interface. If you then
start your linkgit:git-daemon[1] with `--base-path=/pub/git --export-all`
then you can even use the `git://` URL with exactly the same path.
@@ -664,7 +664,7 @@ skip-irrelevant-renames optimization means we sometimes don't detect
renames for any files within a directory that was renamed, in which
case we will not have been able to detect any rename for the directory
itself. In such a case, we do not know whether the directory was
-renamed; we want to be careful to avoid cacheing some kind of "this
+renamed; we want to be careful to avoid caching some kind of "this
directory was not renamed" statement. If we did, then a subsequent
commit being rebased could add a file to the old directory, and the
user would expect it to end up in the correct directory -- something
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ config file would appear like this:
The `<pushurl>` is used for pushes only. It is optional and defaults
to `<URL>`. Pushing to a remote affects all defined pushurls or to all
defined urls if no pushurls are defined. Fetch, however, will only
-fetch from the first defined url if muliple urls are defined.
+fetch from the first defined url if multiple urls are defined.
Named file in `$GIT_DIR/remotes`
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~