From 62fe13bb45e3560e30ec88b55f38a1820d81d42b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrey Orst Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2018 22:39:05 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] fix typos --- CONTRIBUTING.md | 26 +++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md index d10d27c..a4f4698 100644 --- a/CONTRIBUTING.md +++ b/CONTRIBUTING.md @@ -1,29 +1,29 @@ -# Contributoin guidelines +# Contribution guidelines Before writing additional functionality to fzf.kak please refer to [Kakoune's scripting guidelines](https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/blob/master/doc/writing_scripts.asciidoc). ## Adding new command -When adding commands to fzf.kak script please ensure to provide meaningfull names, -and prever full command defenitions. Also ensure that code must be resourcible, so if user +When adding commands to fzf.kak script please ensure to provide meaningful names, +and prefer full command definitions. Also ensure that code must be resourceable, so if user want to resource kakrc plugin would not provide any warnings. Good code: ```kak define-command -override -hidden -docstring \ "This is an example of adding new fzf-mode command. - Note that '-override' is used since script should always be resourcible + Note that '-override' is used since script should always be resourceable If shell scripting is involved please follow POSIX standards, and test your code in POSIX shells, like 'dash', 'ash', and popular POSIX-compatible shells, like 'bash' and 'zsh' You earn bonus points if your script works in 'fish'. - Also notice that '-hidden' is used since all commands of fzf should be accesible from -fzf-mode keybindings. User should not remember all possible commands. + Also notice that '-hidden' is used since all commands of fzf should be accessible from +fzf-mode key bindings. User should not remember all possible commands. " \ fzf-good-example %{ # This script features fzf command that accepts two arguments: - # First argument is the command that should be used by kakoune + # First argument is the command that should be used by Kakoune # after fzf returns its result # Second argument is a command to the fzf itself, which will be used - # to provede list for fzf to show. + # to provide list for fzf to show. fzf "echo $1" "echo 'this␤is␤an␤example'" } @@ -34,15 +34,15 @@ map global fzf -docstring "fzf example command" e ': fzf-good-example' Bad code: ```kak # example -def fzf-good-exmpl %{ fzf "echo $1" "echo 'actually i'm bad example'" } +def fzf-good-exmpl %{ fzf "echo $1" "echo 'actually I'm bad example'" } ``` Although such code is short, it is not *safe*, because reloading kakrc will cause an error here. -Also user doesnt know about all fzf commands, and by not adding command to `fzf-mode` you force -user to search for fzf commands in commandline which isn't the way how plugin should work. And even -if user finds this command in commandline, there's no documentation, and name is short and may be not +Also user doesn't know about all fzf commands, and by not adding command to `fzf-mode` you force +user to search for fzf commands in command-line which isn't the way how plugin should work. And even +if user finds this command in command-line, there's no documentation, and name is short and may be not meaningful enough for user to understand what this command actually does. The name may also be misleading -like in whis example - command says that it is good, but the result will be bad for the user. +like in this example - command says that it is good, but the result will be bad for the user. ## Shell scripting Shell scripting should be POSIX compatible. Please avoid bashisms. You can refer to