That's not grammatical; you've just created a run-on sentence.  Why not
leave it as a colon?

On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 4:55 AM, <pugs-comm...@feather.perl6.nl> wrote:

> Author: jimmy
> Date: 2009-10-11 10:55:02 +0200 (Sun, 11 Oct 2009)
> New Revision: 28751
>
> Modified:
>   docs/Perl6/Spec/S02-bits.pod
> Log:
> [Spec/S02-bits.pod] changed colon to comma
>
> Modified: docs/Perl6/Spec/S02-bits.pod
> ===================================================================
> --- docs/Perl6/Spec/S02-bits.pod        2009-10-11 07:21:58 UTC (rev 28750)
> +++ docs/Perl6/Spec/S02-bits.pod        2009-10-11 08:55:02 UTC (rev 28751)
> @@ -247,7 +247,7 @@
>     $object\
>     .say
>
> -But unspace is mainly about language extensibility: it lets you continue
> +But unspace is mainly about language extensibility, it lets you continue
>  the line in any situation where a newline might confuse the parser,
>  regardless of your currently installed parser.  (Unless, of course,
>  you override the unspace rule itself...)
> @@ -593,7 +593,7 @@
>
>     my Int $x = undef;    # works
>
> -Variables with native types do not support undefinedness: it is an error
> +Variables with native types do not support undefinedness, it is an error
>  to assign an undefined value to them:
>
>     my int $y = undef;    # dies
>
>


-- 
Mark J. Reed <markjr...@gmail.com>

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