diff --git a/docs/framework/quantities.rst b/docs/framework/quantities.rst index 661485ac..32bb228a 100644 --- a/docs/framework/quantities.rst +++ b/docs/framework/quantities.rst @@ -313,7 +313,7 @@ Quantity References vs Unit-specific Aliases - Unit-specific Aliases As aliases are defined in terms of types rather variables no major shadowing issues were found - so far. In case of identifiers abiguity it was always possible to disambiguate with more + so far. In case of identifiers ambiguity it was always possible to disambiguate with more namespaces prefixed in front of the alias. 2. Adjustable verbosity @@ -385,7 +385,7 @@ Quantity References vs Unit-specific Aliases - Quantity References The syntax for references uses ``*`` operator which has some predefined precedence. This operator - always takes a magnitude or a reference as ``lhs`` and a reference as ``rhs``. All other comibnations + always takes a magnitude or a reference as ``lhs`` and a reference as ``rhs``. All other combinations are not allowed. It means that in order to satisfy the operators precedence sometimes quite a lot of parenthesis have to be sprinkled in the code in order for the code to compile:: @@ -399,7 +399,7 @@ Quantity References vs Unit-specific Aliases - Quantity References - References have only to be defined for named units. Also for the user's conveniance references are + References have only to be defined for named units. Also for the user's convenience references are predefined for units raised to a specific power (e.g. ``m2``, ``km3``, etc). All other derived units can be constructed using the provided ones already even if they do not correspond to any predefined dimension::