At Thu, 14 Jul 2022 15:38:37 +0900 (JST), Kyotaro Horiguchi 
<horikyota....@gmail.com> wrote in 
> At Thu, 14 Jul 2022 09:40:25 +0700, John Naylor 
> <john.nay...@enterprisedb.com> wrote in 
> > On Wed, Jul 13, 2022 at 4:13 PM Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota....@gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > At Wed, 13 Jul 2022 18:09:43 +0900 (JST), Kyotaro Horiguchi <
> > horikyota....@gmail.com> wrote in
> > > > So, "e.g." (for example) in the message sounds like "that is", which I
> > > > think is "i.e.".  It should be fixed if this is correct.  I'm not sure
> > > > whether to keep using Latin-origin acronyms like this, but in the
> > > > attached I used "i.e.".
> > 
> > I did my own quick scan and found one use of i.e. that doesn't really fit,
> > in a sentence that has other grammatical issues:
> > 
> > -        Due to the differences how ECPG works compared to Informix's
> > ESQL/C (i.e., which steps
> > +        Due to differences in how ECPG works compared to Informix's ESQL/C
> > (namely, which steps
> >          are purely grammar transformations and which steps rely on the
> 
> Oh!
> 
> > I've pushed that in addition to your changes, thanks!
> 
> Thanks!

By the way, I forgot about back-branches. Don't we need to fix the
same in back-branches?

regards.

-- 
Kyotaro Horiguchi
NTT Open Source Software Center


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