Author: masak
Date: 2009-12-06 03:39:02 +0100 (Sun, 06 Dec 2009)
New Revision: 29266

Modified:
   docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod
Log:
[S05] reverted s/actions/action/ correction

Pm-7 asserts that it should be the plural. Which means Rakudo is lagging
behind, not the spec.

Modified: docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod
===================================================================
--- docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod       2009-12-05 21:49:28 UTC (rev 29265)
+++ docs/Perl6/Spec/S05-regex.pod       2009-12-06 02:39:02 UTC (rev 29266)
@@ -16,8 +16,8 @@
 
     Created: 24 Jun 2002
 
-    Last Modified: 5 Dec 2009
-    Version: 111
+    Last Modified: 6 Dec 2009
+    Version: 112
 
 This document summarizes Apocalypse 5, which is about the new regex
 syntax.  We now try to call them I<regex> rather than "regular
@@ -3779,9 +3779,9 @@
 =item *
 
 A string can be matched against a grammar by calling C<.parse> on the grammar,
-and optionally pass an I<action> object to that grammar:
+and optionally pass an I<actions> object to that grammar:
 
-    MyGrammar.parse($str, :action($action-object))
+    MyGrammar.parse($str, :actions($action-object))
 
 Whenever a closure within the grammar returns a C<Whatever> object, the
 grammar engine tries to call a method of the same name as the name of the
@@ -3807,7 +3807,7 @@
            make 2 * $/.ast;
        }
    }
-   Integer.parse('21', :action(Twice.new)).ast      # 42
+   Integer.parse('21', :actions(Twice.new)).ast      # 42
 
 A C<{*}> is assumed at the end of every rule, and the method is
 called with no tag argument.  Note that the implicit C<{*}> is

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