docs: fix minor grammar issues in the manual

This commit is contained in:
Benjamin Hipple 2018-11-14 21:40:47 -05:00
parent 61d41d7225
commit 286e7a57c4

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@ -2077,7 +2077,7 @@ someVar=$(stripHash $name)
Nix itself considers a build-time dependency merely something that should
previously be built and accessible at build time—packages themselves are
on their own to perform any additional setup. In most cases, that is fine,
and the downstream derivation can deal with it's own dependencies. But for a
and the downstream derivation can deal with its own dependencies. But for a
few common tasks, that would result in almost every package doing the same
sort of setup work---depending not on the package itself, but entirely on
which dependencies were used.
@ -2131,10 +2131,10 @@ someVar=$(stripHash $name)
<literal>n + 1</literal> dependencies, as only those ones match the
compiler's target platform. The <envar>hostOffset</envar> variable is
defined with the current dependency's host offset
<envar>targetOffset</envar> with its target offset, before it's setup hook
is sourced. Additionally, since most environment hooks don't care about the
target platform, That means the setup hook can append to the right bash
array by doing something like
<envar>targetOffset</envar> with its target offset, before its setup hook is
sourced. Additionally, since most environment hooks don't care about the
target platform, That means the setup hook can append to the right bash array
by doing something like
<programlisting language="bash">
addEnvHooks "$hostOffset" myBashFunction
</programlisting>
@ -2142,7 +2142,7 @@ addEnvHooks "$hostOffset" myBashFunction
<para>
The <emphasis>existence</emphasis> of setups hooks has long been documented
and packages inside Nixpkgs are free to use these mechanism. Other packages,
and packages inside Nixpkgs are free to use this mechanism. Other packages,
however, should not rely on these mechanisms not changing between Nixpkgs
versions. Because of the existing issues with this system, there's little
benefit from mandating it be stable for any period of time.