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authormatthiasc <matthiasc>2002-09-07 18:02:32 +0000
committermatthiasc <matthiasc>2002-09-07 18:02:32 +0000
commit1626b82163c6ad6b567af6f5e6028ea0491ff105 (patch)
tree2e0aa8eb6c288d3749bb68f255b24c7ba0bc5a0e /wm-spec
parentbc84ce20c028d238da65f42fecb8494c4d8b5585 (diff)
downloadxdg-specs-1626b82163c6ad6b567af6f5e6028ea0491ff105.tar.xz
Fix a few typos.
Diffstat (limited to 'wm-spec')
-rw-r--r--wm-spec/wm-spec.sgml6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/wm-spec/wm-spec.sgml b/wm-spec/wm-spec.sgml
index 0961ce4..7836064 100644
--- a/wm-spec/wm-spec.sgml
+++ b/wm-spec/wm-spec.sgml
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ to Pagers and Applications ie. all X clients, except for the Window Manager.
<sect2>
<title>Prerequisites for adoption of this specification</title>
<para>
-Window Managers and Clients which aim to fulfil this specification MUST adhere
+Window Managers and Clients which aim to fulfill this specification MUST adhere
to the ICCCM on which this specification builds. If this specification
explicitly modifies the ICCCM Window Managers and Clients MUST fulfil these
modifications.
@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ sometimes be useful.</para>
<sect3>
<title>Shading</title>
<para>Some Desktop Environments offer shading (also known as rollup) as an alternative to
-iconfication. A shaded window typically shows only the titlebar, the client
+iconification. A shaded window typically shows only the titlebar, the client
window is hidden, thus shading is not useful for windows which are not
decorated with a titlebar.</para>
</sect3>
@@ -223,7 +223,7 @@ Some Window Managers keep the toplevel windows not in a single linear stack,
but subdivide the stack into several layers. There is a lot of variation
among the features of layered stacking order implementations. The number of
layers may or may not be fixed. The layer of a toplevel window may be explicit
-and directly modifyable or derived from other properties of the window, e.g.
+and directly modifiable or derived from other properties of the window, e.g.
the <emphasis>type</emphasis> of the window. The stacking order may or may not
be strict, i.e. not allow the user to raise or lower windows beyond their
layer.