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Posted to cvs@httpd.apache.org by hu...@apache.org on 2012/04/28 08:54:48 UTC

svn commit: r1331693 - in /httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual: glossary.html.en glossary.xml

Author: humbedooh
Date: Sat Apr 28 06:54:47 2012
New Revision: 1331693

URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?rev=1331693&view=rev
Log:
Another typo fix

Modified:
    httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.html.en
    httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.xml

Modified: httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.html.en
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.html.en?rev=1331693&r1=1331692&r2=1331693&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.html.en (original)
+++ httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.html.en Sat Apr 28 06:54:47 2012
@@ -368,7 +368,7 @@
       be written as "<code>/images/.*(jpg|gif)$</code>".  In places where
       regular expressions are used to replace strings, the special variables
       $1 ... $9 contain backreferences to the grouped parts (in parentheses) of
-      the matched expression. The special variable $0 contains a backerference
+      the matched expression. The special variable $0 contains a backreference
       to the whole matched expression. To write a literal dollar sign in a
       replacement string, it can be escaped with a backslash. Historically, the
       variable &amp; could be used as alias for $0 in some places. This is no

Modified: httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.xml
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.xml?rev=1331693&r1=1331692&r2=1331693&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.xml (original)
+++ httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/glossary.xml Sat Apr 28 06:54:47 2012
@@ -382,7 +382,7 @@
       be written as "<code>/images/.*(jpg|gif)$</code>".  In places where
       regular expressions are used to replace strings, the special variables
       $1 ... $9 contain backreferences to the grouped parts (in parentheses) of
-      the matched expression. The special variable $0 contains a backerference
+      the matched expression. The special variable $0 contains a backreference
       to the whole matched expression. To write a literal dollar sign in a
       replacement string, it can be escaped with a backslash. Historically, the
       variable &amp; could be used as alias for $0 in some places. This is no