Author: autrijus
Date: Thu Apr  6 01:12:52 2006
New Revision: 8593

Modified:
   doc/trunk/design/syn/S02.pod
   doc/trunk/design/syn/S13.pod

Log:
* S02/S13: s/casted/cast/, as suggested by Uri.

Modified: doc/trunk/design/syn/S02.pod
==============================================================================
--- doc/trunk/design/syn/S02.pod        (original)
+++ doc/trunk/design/syn/S02.pod        Thu Apr  6 01:12:52 2006
@@ -500,11 +500,11 @@
 
 =item *
 
-In numeric context (i.e. when casted into C<Int> or C<Num>), a Hash object
+In numeric context (i.e. when cast into C<Int> or C<Num>), a Hash object
 becomes the number of pairs contained in the hash.  In a boolean context, a
 Hash object is true if there are any pairs in the hash.  In either case,
 any intrinsic iterator would be reset.  (If hashes do carry an intrinsic
-iterator (as they do in Perl 5), there will be a C<.reset> method on the h
+iterator (as they do in Perl 5), there will be a C<.reset> method on the
 hash object to reset the iterator explicitly.)
 
 =item *

Modified: doc/trunk/design/syn/S13.pod
==============================================================================
--- doc/trunk/design/syn/S13.pod        (original)
+++ doc/trunk/design/syn/S13.pod        Thu Apr  6 01:12:52 2006
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@
 =head1 Type Casting
 
 A class can use the C<< *infix:<as> >> submethod to declare that its objects
-can be casted to some other class:
+can be cast to some other class:
 
     multi submethod *infix:<as> (IO)  { $*OUT }
     multi submethod *infix:<as> (Int) { 1 }

Reply via email to