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authorThomas Voss <mail@thomasvoss.com> 2024-09-23 06:03:26 +0200
committerThomas Voss <mail@thomasvoss.com> 2024-09-23 06:03:26 +0200
commitefc2bca752a4c76b1ff6a73fa1f889762f170a07 (patch)
treed75237456352879cf071c1ac7c26084570873bdb /src/blog/windowing/index.gsp
parentff5c5117d87fe4c3e2ab9f49f0b83d6c69598ed0 (diff)
Fix typos
Diffstat (limited to 'src/blog/windowing/index.gsp')
-rw-r--r--src/blog/windowing/index.gsp4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/src/blog/windowing/index.gsp b/src/blog/windowing/index.gsp
index 2493d87..4307ecb 100644
--- a/src/blog/windowing/index.gsp
+++ b/src/blog/windowing/index.gsp
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ html lang="en" {
So how do we go from the second image to the third image? The
answer is obvious: we used three windows. Instead of having one
dedicated Emacs window that itself manages two sub-windows, by
- simply breaking it up into two seperate Emacs instances each
+ simply breaking it up into two separate Emacs instances each
displaying only a single file, I allowed my window manager to
make a more informed decision about where to place my web
browser. Intuitively this should make sense; if we have two
@@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ html lang="en" {
p {=
Now we need to keep in mind the usability issues that windowing
in text editors attempt to solve; it is unreasonable to expect
- the user to need to manually and labouriously open a new instance
+ the user to need to manually and laboriously open a new instance
of their text editor, navigate to the project they’re working on,
open a file, etc., all just to view two related files
side-by-side. The reason we all use windowing in our editors is