commit:     571fb06ee654d9af7cc53772fb99adb70abac62e
Author:     Ulrich Müller <ulm <AT> gentoo <DOT> org>
AuthorDate: Fri May  6 17:23:31 2016 +0000
Commit:     Ulrich Müller <ulm <AT> gentoo <DOT> org>
CommitDate: Fri May  6 17:23:31 2016 +0000
URL:        https://gitweb.gentoo.org/proj/pms.git/commit/?id=571fb06e

Typographic fix: Use compactitem rather than itemize.

 ebuild-vars.tex      | 4 ++--
 pkg-mgr-commands.tex | 4 ++--
 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

diff --git a/ebuild-vars.tex b/ebuild-vars.tex
index 43ce528..1577e26 100644
--- a/ebuild-vars.tex
+++ b/ebuild-vars.tex
@@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ these values are different.
 
 Keywords are used to indicate levels of stability of a package on a respective 
architecture
 \t{arch}. The following conventions are used:
-\begin{itemize}
+\begin{compactitem}
 \item \t{arch}: Both the package version and the ebuild are widely tested, 
known to work and not
     have any serious issues on the indicated platform. This is referred to as 
a \i{stable keyword}.
 \item \t{\textasciitilde arch}: The package version and the ebuild are 
believed to work and do
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ Keywords are used to indicate levels of stability of a 
package on a respective a
 \item No keyword: It is not known whether the package will work, or 
insufficient testing has
     occurred.
 \item \t{-arch}: The package version will not work on the architecture.
-\end{itemize}
+\end{compactitem}
 The \t{-*} keyword is used to indicate package versions which are not worth 
trying to test on
 unlisted architectures.
 

diff --git a/pkg-mgr-commands.tex b/pkg-mgr-commands.tex
index be157cf..a8aa12b 100644
--- a/pkg-mgr-commands.tex
+++ b/pkg-mgr-commands.tex
@@ -834,14 +834,14 @@ has returned.
     under the current working directory additionally have permissions \t{a+x}.
 
     Arguments to \t{unpack} are interpreted as follows:
-    \begin{itemize}
+    \begin{compactitem}
     \item A filename without path (i.\,e., not containing any slash) is looked 
up in \t{DISTDIR}.
     \item An argument starting with the string \t{./} is a path relative to 
the working directory.
     \item \featurelabel{unpack-absolute} Otherwise, for EAPIs listed in
         table~\ref{tab:unpack-behaviour} as supporting absolute and relative 
paths, the argument is
         interpreted as a literal path (absolute, or relative to the working 
directory); for EAPIs
         listed as \e{not} supporting such paths, \t{unpack} shall abort the 
build process.
-    \end{itemize}
+    \end{compactitem}
 
     Any unrecognised file format shall be skipped silently. If unpacking a 
supported file format
     fails, \t{unpack} shall abort the build process.

Reply via email to