From 0290757ed4ed7d99b5bab5d92933dd6026af9fff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Peter Stephenson
Date: Wed, 3 Oct 2018 13:53:12 +0100
Subject: unposted: minor FAQ typos
---
Etc/FAQ.yo | 4 ++--
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
(limited to 'Etc')
diff --git a/Etc/FAQ.yo b/Etc/FAQ.yo
index da7cbe758..6986a6ba4 100644
--- a/Etc/FAQ.yo
+++ b/Etc/FAQ.yo
@@ -1983,8 +1983,8 @@ sect(Why does `which' output for missing commands go to stdout?)
found in certain distributions. Other shells had equivalent commands,
`tt(whence)' and `tt(type), that zsh has also adopted. So in fact
this has always been a feature of `tt(which)'. (It would be possible
- to change this in emulation modes; however. So far this possibility
- has been seen has more of an additional confusion than a help.)
+ to change this in emulation modes; however, so far this possibility
+ has been seen as more of an additional confusion than a help.)
If you want some further rationalisation, you might note that
`tt(which)' is designed as a way of outputting information about a
--
cgit 1.4.1