leszek Sat Oct 27 18:50:15 2001 EDT
Modified files:
/phpdoc/en/language oop.xml
Log:
Typos
Index: phpdoc/en/language/oop.xml
diff -u phpdoc/en/language/oop.xml:1.28 phpdoc/en/language/oop.xml:1.29
--- phpdoc/en/language/oop.xml:1.28 Fri Sep 21 18:47:48 2001
+++ phpdoc/en/language/oop.xml Sat Oct 27 18:50:15 2001
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
<?xml encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
-<!-- $Revision: 1.28 $ -->
+<!-- $Revision: 1.29 $ -->
<chapter id="language.oop">
<title>Classes and Objects</title>
@@ -169,13 +169,13 @@
<para>
Within a class definition, you do not know under which name the object will
- be accessible in your program: At the time the Cart class was
+ be accessible in your program: at the time the Cart class was
written, it was unknown that the object will be named $cart or
$another_cart later. Thus, you cannot write $cart->items within
the Cart class itself. Instead, in order to be able to access it's own
functions and variables from within a class, one can use the
pseudo-variable $this which can be read as 'my own' or
- 'current object'. Thus, '$this->items[$artnr] += $num' can
+ 'current object'. Thus, '$this->items[$artnr] += $num' can
be read as 'add $num to the $artnr counter of my own items
array' or 'add $num to the $artnr counter of the items array
within the current object'.
@@ -675,7 +675,7 @@
Conversely, <function>unserialize</function> checks for the
presence of a function with the magic name
<literal>__wakeup</literal>. If present, this function can
- reconstruct any ressources that object may have.
+ reconstruct any resources that object may have.
</para>
<para>