This is an automated email from the ASF dual-hosted git repository.

harbs pushed a commit to branch master
in repository https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/royale-docs.git


The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/master by this push:
     new 30572fc  small edit
30572fc is described below

commit 30572fc15eea3a96070ede6ec964ef0b735b8ccc
Author: Harbs <[email protected]>
AuthorDate: Wed Dec 29 23:13:28 2021 +0200

    small edit
---
 features/as3/actionscript-vs-typescript.md | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/features/as3/actionscript-vs-typescript.md 
b/features/as3/actionscript-vs-typescript.md
index e0c5571..46d3822 100644
--- a/features/as3/actionscript-vs-typescript.md
+++ b/features/as3/actionscript-vs-typescript.md
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ Typed arrays is an important piece in declaring types. 
ActionScript does not cur
 
 
 ## XML
-Dealing with XML in Javascript is difficult at best. Many people try to bash 
XML in defence of Javascript's XML support. That's not very helpful if you have 
a legitimate use for XML.
+Dealing with XML in Javascript is difficult at best. Many people try to bash 
XML in defence of Javascript's poor XML support. That's not very helpful if you 
have a legitimate use for XML.
 
 In 2004 and 2005, [Ecma published 
ECMA-357](https://www.ecma-international.org/publications-and-standards/standards/ecma-357/)
 which was a spec for handling XML in Javascript. The spec was called E4X 
(Ecmascript for XML). This was adopted by Firefox and ActionScript. 
Unfortunately it was not adopted by Chrome, so it never became a Javascript 
standard. Royale supports the full E4X spec and XML is treated as a first class 
citizen in Royale. This makes dealing with XML **much** easier. Read [...]
 

Reply via email to