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authorDerek Brown <[email protected]>2014-11-20 13:46:42 -0500
committerDerek Brown <[email protected]>2014-11-20 15:56:42 -0500
commit069fe15452aa33440aff5e770c169bd3612d7646 (patch)
tree38e9dfb373fdf898680f1982ba1728dfb1c43f93 /system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml
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Fix spelling and grammar
Diffstat (limited to 'system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml')
-rw-r--r--system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml30
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml b/system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml
index e392287ff0..15feaa9044 100644
--- a/system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml
+++ b/system/doc/getting_started/conc_prog.xml
@@ -352,8 +352,8 @@ pong ! {ping, self()},</code>
on different computers. Before we do this, there are a few things
we need to set up to get this to work. The distributed Erlang
implementation provides a basic security mechanism to prevent
- unauthorized access to an Erlang system on another computer
- (*manual*). Erlang systems which talk to each other must have
+ unauthorized access to an Erlang system on another computer.
+ Erlang systems which talk to each other must have
the same <em>magic cookie</em>. The easiest way to achieve this
is by having a file called <c>.erlang.cookie</c> in your home
directory on all machines which on which you are going to run
@@ -363,7 +363,7 @@ pong ! {ping, self()},</code>
you can safely ignore this and simply create a file called
<c>.erlang.cookie</c> in the directory you get to after executing
the command <c>cd</c> without any argument).
- The <c>.erlang.cookie</c> file should contain on line with
+ The <c>.erlang.cookie</c> file should contain one line with
the same atom. For example on Linux or Unix in the OS shell:</p>
<pre>
$ <input>cd</input>
@@ -376,7 +376,7 @@ $ <input>chmod 400 .erlang.cookie</input></pre>
Erlang systems, you must give it a name, eg: </p>
<pre>
$ <input>erl -sname my_name</input></pre>
- <p>We will see more details of this later (*manual*). If you want to
+ <p>We will see more details of this later. If you want to
experiment with distributed Erlang, but you only have one
computer to work on, you can start two separate Erlang systems on
the same computer but give them different names. Each Erlang
@@ -385,7 +385,7 @@ $ <input>erl -sname my_name</input></pre>
IP domain and we can use only the first component of the IP
address, if we want to use nodes in different domains we use
<c>-name</c> instead, but then all IP address must be given in
- full (*manual*).</p>
+ full.</p>
<p>Here is the ping pong example modified to run on two separate
nodes:</p>
<code type="none">
@@ -538,9 +538,9 @@ ping finished</pre>
<p>Before we start, let's note the following:</p>
<list type="bulleted">
<item>
- <p>This example will just show the message passing logic no
+ <p>This example will just show the message passing logic- no
attempt at all has been made to provide a nice graphical user
- interface - this can of course also be done in Erlang - but
+ interface. This can, of course, also be done in Erlang - but
that's another tutorial.</p>
</item>
<item>
@@ -550,8 +550,8 @@ ping finished</pre>
tutorial.</p>
</item>
<item>
- <p>The first program we write will contain some inadequacies as
- regards handling of nodes which disappear, we will correct
+ <p>The first program we write will contain some inadequacies
+ regarding the handling of nodes which disappear. We will correct
these in a later version of the program.</p>
</item>
</list>
@@ -734,11 +734,11 @@ await_result() ->
<item>copy the compiled code (<c>messenger.beam</c>) to
the directory on each computer where you start Erlang.</item>
</list>
- <p>In the following example of use of this program, I have started
+ <p>In the following example of use of this program I have started
nodes on four different computers, but if you don't have that
- many machines available on your network, you could start up
+ many machines available on your network you could start up
several nodes on the same machine.</p>
- <p>We start up four Erlang nodes, messenger@super, c1@bilbo,
+ <p>We start up four Erlang nodes: messenger@super, c1@bilbo,
c2@kosken, c3@gollum.</p>
<p>First we start up a the server at messenger@super:</p>
<pre>
@@ -780,19 +780,19 @@ ok
receiver_not_found</pre>
<p>But this fails as Fred has already logged off.</p>
<p>First let's look at some of the new concepts we have introduced.</p>
- <p>There are two versions of the <c>server_transfer</c> function,
+ <p>There are two versions of the <c>server_transfer</c> function:
one with four arguments (<c>server_transfer/4</c>) and one with
five (<c>server_transfer/5</c>). These are regarded by Erlang as
two separate functions.</p>
<p>Note how we write the <c>server</c> function so that it calls
- itself, <c>server(User_List)</c> and thus creates a loop.
+ itself, via <c>server(User_List)</c>, and thus creates a loop.
The Erlang compiler is "clever" and optimizes the code so that
this really is a sort of loop and not a proper function call. But
this only works if there is no code after the call, otherwise
the compiler will expect the call to return and make a proper
function call. This would result in the process getting bigger
and bigger for every loop.</p>
- <p>We use functions in the <c>lists</c> module. This is a very
+ <p>We use functions from the <c>lists</c> module. This is a very
useful module and a study of the manual page is recommended
(<c>erl -man lists</c>).
<c>lists:keymember(Key,Position,Lists)</c> looks through a list