Fixed some more spelling

This commit is contained in:
Vincent Esche 2020-07-14 16:01:14 +02:00
parent 3b48447934
commit e9fa71c065
3 changed files with 4 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
# Summary
[Preface](./preface.md)
- [RTIC by example](./by-example.md)
- [The `app` attribute](./by-example/app.md)
- [Resources](./by-example/resources.md)

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@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ $ cargo run --example idle
To declare interrupt handlers the framework provides a `#[task]` attribute that
can be attached to functions. This attribute takes a `binds` argument whose
value is the name of the interrupt to which the handler will be bound to; the
function adornated with this attribute becomes the interrupt handler. Within the
function adorned with this attribute becomes the interrupt handler. Within the
framework these type of tasks are referred to as *hardware* tasks, because they
start executing in reaction to a hardware event.

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@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ const APP: () = {
};
```
Or, you can use the [`cargo-expand`] subcommand. This subcommand will expand
Or, you can use the [`cargo-expand`] sub-command. This sub-command will expand
*all* the macros, including the `#[rtic::app]` attribute, and modules in your
crate and print the output to the console.
@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ $ cargo expand --example smallest | tail
## Resource de-structure-ing
When having a task taking multiple resources it can help in readability to split
up the resource struct. Here're two examples on how this can be done:
up the resource struct. Here are two examples on how this can be done:
``` rust
{{#include ../../../../examples/destructure.rs}}