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author | Sebastian Engel <sighunter@gmx.de> | 2024-08-12 23:29:44 +0200 |
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committer | Ulrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org> | 2024-08-23 17:16:31 +0200 |
commit | 0edced44cbbbb3bac79448fbf8b1620ecc2b39df (patch) | |
tree | a19d699c46ab1d5b6bc618d131fb547a6bb2aac5 | |
parent | tools-reference/grep: Remove the phonetic spelling of the -l parameter (diff) | |
download | devmanual-0edced44cbbbb3bac79448fbf8b1620ecc2b39df.tar.gz devmanual-0edced44cbbbb3bac79448fbf8b1620ecc2b39df.tar.bz2 devmanual-0edced44cbbbb3bac79448fbf8b1620ecc2b39df.zip |
tools-reference/echo: Format the word variable as inline code
The devmanual commonly uses <c> to format variables in text passages as code
to make them more distinguishable from the rest of the text and that's why
it should be done here too.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Engel <sighunter@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Ulrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org>
-rw-r--r-- | tools-reference/echo/text.xml | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/tools-reference/echo/text.xml b/tools-reference/echo/text.xml index 9bce77c..dba3452 100644 --- a/tools-reference/echo/text.xml +++ b/tools-reference/echo/text.xml @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ As of >=bash-2.05b, the so-called "here strings" have been introduced. Using "here strings", you can pass contents of an environment variable to the standard input of an application, using <c><<<word</c> redirection: what actually happens is -that <c>bash</c> expands word and passes the result to the standard +that <c>bash</c> expands <c>word</c> and passes the result to the standard input. </p> |