[latex3-commits] [git/LaTeX3-latex3-latex2e] develop: [ci skip] some typos/grammar changes (b914991b)

David Carlisle d.p.carlisle at gmail.com
Fri Jan 10 14:42:58 CET 2020


Repository : https://github.com/latex3/latex2e
On branch  : develop
Link       : https://github.com/latex3/latex2e/commit/b914991b988b5e004badf3981262b33b70442a8e

>---------------------------------------------------------------

commit b914991b988b5e004badf3981262b33b70442a8e
Author: David Carlisle <d.p.carlisle at gmail.com>
Date:   Fri Jan 10 13:42:58 2020 +0000

    [ci skip] some typos/grammar changes


>---------------------------------------------------------------

b914991b988b5e004badf3981262b33b70442a8e
 base/doc/ltnews31.tex | 12 ++++++------
 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)

diff --git a/base/doc/ltnews31.tex b/base/doc/ltnews31.tex
index f703d552..5545b073 100644
--- a/base/doc/ltnews31.tex
+++ b/base/doc/ltnews31.tex
@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ be explicitly selected and for the swash letter shapes there is also
 \cs{swshape} and \cs{textsw} available.
 
 In the original font selection implementation a request to select a new shape
-always overrode the current current. With the 2020 release of \LaTeX{}
+always overrode the current shape. With the 2020 release of \LaTeX{}
 this has changed and \cs{fontshape} can now be used to combine small
 capitals with italics, slanted or swash letters, either by explicitly
 asking for \texttt{scit}, etc., or by asking for italics when typesetting
@@ -216,7 +216,7 @@ There is one exception: for compatibility reasons \cs{upshape} will
 change small capitals back to upright (\texttt{n} shape), if the
 current shape is \texttt{sc}. This is done so that something like
 \cs{scshape}\allowbreak\texttt{...}\allowbreak\cs{upshape} continues
-to work, but we suggested that you don't use that deprecated method in
+to work, but we suggest that you don't use that deprecated method in
 new documents.
 
 Finally, if you want to
@@ -228,7 +228,7 @@ customizable and extensible if there is ever a need for it. The
 mappings are defined through \cs{DeclareFontShapeChangeRule} and the
 details for developers are documented in \texttt{source2e.pdf}.
 
-The ideas for this interface extension has been pioneered in
+The ideas for this interface extension have been pioneered in
 \pkg{fontspec} by Will Robertson for Unicode engines and in
 \pkg{fontaxes} by Andreas Bühmann and Michael Ummels for \pdfTeX{} and
 used in many font support packages.
@@ -243,12 +243,12 @@ such a condensed or extra-condensed. In some cases the number of
 different series values is really impressive, for example, Noto Sans
 offers 36 fonts from ultra-light extra condensed to ultra-bold medium width.
 
-Already in its original design NFSS supported 9 weight levels from
+Already in its original design, NFSS supported 9 weight levels from
 ultra-light (\texttt{ul}) to ultra-bold (\texttt{ub}) and also 9 width
 levels from ultra-condensed (\texttt{uc}) to ultra-expanded
 (\texttt{ux}) so more than enough even for a font family like Noto
 Sans. Unfortunately, some font support packages nevertheless invented
-their own names so in the last years you could find all kind of
+their own names so in recent years you could find all kinds of
 non-standard series names like \texttt{k}, \texttt{i}, \texttt{j} and
 others making it impossible to combine different fonts successfully
 using the standard NFSS mechanisms.
@@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ probably also a number of users who will enjoy using the new
 possibilities that bring \LaTeX{} back into the front league when it
 comes to font usage.
 
-The way how different series values combine with each other is not
+The way different series values combine with each other is not
 hardwired but is again customizable and extensible. The mappings are
 defined through \cs{DeclareFontSeriesChangeRule} and the details for
 developers are documented in \texttt{source2e.pdf}.





More information about the latex3-commits mailing list