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author | Nicolas Goaziou <mail@nicolasgoaziou.fr> | 2020-04-24 18:32:56 +0200 |
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committer | Nicolas Goaziou <mail@nicolasgoaziou.fr> | 2020-04-24 18:32:56 +0200 |
commit | cc765e478affbb8085c7768a06dab9e13fe4eb86 (patch) | |
tree | b3477523b018763e213dd19faf0cdac37c63cddf | |
parent | 9b42918edd3f7e9d505c874d3947c0a0815fe551 (diff) | |
download | guix-cc765e478affbb8085c7768a06dab9e13fe4eb86.tar.gz |
doc: cookbook: Fix misuses of double spacing.
* doc/guix-cookbook.texi (Extended example): (StumpWM): (Basic setup with manifests): Prevent Texinfo from ending a sentence where it should not. (Setting up a bind mount): Add two spaces where needed.
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix-cookbook.texi | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi index 5d126acd3d..8e9c82ff15 100644 --- a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi +++ b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi @@ -1080,7 +1080,7 @@ mechanism of passing code around two running processes is called @uref{https://a @subsubsection Utility functions When customizing @code{phases}, we often need to write code that mimics the -equivalent system invocations (@code{make}, @code{mkdir}, @code{cp}, etc.) commonly used during +equivalent system invocations (@code{make}, @code{mkdir}, @code{cp}, etc.)@: commonly used during regular ``Unix-style'' installations. Some like @code{chmod} are native to Guile. @@ -1576,7 +1576,7 @@ available for inclusion into the initrd. You could install StumpWM with a Guix system by adding @code{stumpwm-checkout} and optionally @code{`(,stumpwm-checkout "lib")} -packages to a system configuration file, e.g. @file{/etc/config.scm}. +packages to a system configuration file, e.g.@: @file{/etc/config.scm}. An example configuration can look like this: @@ -1620,7 +1620,7 @@ Then you need to add the following code to a StumpWM configuration file @section Setting up a bind mount To bind mount a file system, one must first set up some definitions -before the @code{operating-system} section of the system definition. In +before the @code{operating-system} section of the system definition. In this example we will bind mount a folder from a spinning disk drive to @code{/tmp}, to save wear and tear on the primary SSD, without dedicating an entire partition to be mounted as @code{/tmp}. @@ -1792,7 +1792,7 @@ where we will store our profiles in the rest of this article. Placing all your profiles in a single directory, with each profile getting its own sub-directory, is somewhat cleaner. This way, each sub-directory will contain all the symlinks for precisely one profile. Besides, "looping over -profiles" becomes obvious from any programming language (e.g. a shell script) by +profiles" becomes obvious from any programming language (e.g.@: a shell script) by simply looping over the sub-directories of @samp{$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES}. Note that it's also possible to loop over the output of @@ -1862,7 +1862,7 @@ guix package -m /path/to/guix-my-project-manifest.scm -p "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/ To upgrade all profiles, it's easy enough to loop over them. For instance, assuming your manifest specifications are stored in @samp{~/.guix-manifests/guix-$profile-manifest.scm}, with @samp{$profile} being the name -of the profile (e.g. "project1"), you could do the following in Bourne shell: +of the profile (e.g.@: "project1"), you could do the following in Bourne shell: @example for profile in "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/*; do |