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authorAlex Beregszaszi <alex@rtfs.hu>2017-03-16 07:41:02 +0800
committerAlex Beregszaszi <alex@rtfs.hu>2017-03-16 07:41:02 +0800
commit2d8b0fdc39eb8ddaa840fb1ecd478ad7869cb769 (patch)
treea273fa4b87956785b70e3f0ecd3c1833b1ca234e
parent0157b86ce655a8dd83f402039a4740a9b7d2eea6 (diff)
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Fix inconsistent use of single backticks
-rw-r--r--docs/style-guide.rst2
-rw-r--r--docs/types.rst4
-rw-r--r--docs/units-and-global-variables.rst2
3 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/docs/style-guide.rst b/docs/style-guide.rst
index 9aae3d7b..0742d2e9 100644
--- a/docs/style-guide.rst
+++ b/docs/style-guide.rst
@@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ Functions should be grouped according to their visibility and ordered:
- internal
- private
-Within a grouping, place the `constant` functions last.
+Within a grouping, place the ``constant`` functions last.
Yes::
diff --git a/docs/types.rst b/docs/types.rst
index 243a9a0c..6379f01c 100644
--- a/docs/types.rst
+++ b/docs/types.rst
@@ -232,7 +232,7 @@ a non-rational number).
Integer literals and rational number literals belong to number literal types.
Moreover, all number literal expressions (i.e. the expressions that
contain only number literals and operators) belong to number literal
- types. So the number literal expressions `1 + 2` and `2 + 1` both
+ types. So the number literal expressions ``1 + 2`` and ``2 + 1`` both
belong to the same number literal type for the rational number three.
.. note::
@@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ a non-rational number).
String Literals
---------------
-String literals are written with either double or single-quotes (``"foo"`` or ``'bar'``). They do not imply trailing zeroes as in C; `"foo"`` represents three bytes not four. As with integer literals, their type can vary, but they are implicitly convertible to ``bytes1``, ..., ``bytes32``, if they fit, to ``bytes`` and to ``string``.
+String literals are written with either double or single-quotes (``"foo"`` or ``'bar'``). They do not imply trailing zeroes as in C; ``"foo"`` represents three bytes not four. As with integer literals, their type can vary, but they are implicitly convertible to ``bytes1``, ..., ``bytes32``, if they fit, to ``bytes`` and to ``string``.
String literals support escape characters, such as ``\n``, ``\xNN`` and ``\uNNNN``. ``\xNN`` takes a hex value and inserts the appropriate byte, while ``\uNNNN`` takes a Unicode codepoint and inserts an UTF-8 sequence.
diff --git a/docs/units-and-global-variables.rst b/docs/units-and-global-variables.rst
index 49fe5d84..e4f0ea43 100644
--- a/docs/units-and-global-variables.rst
+++ b/docs/units-and-global-variables.rst
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ Mathematical and Cryptographic Functions
``keccak256(...) returns (bytes32)``:
compute the Ethereum-SHA-3 (Keccak-256) hash of the (tightly packed) arguments
``sha3(...) returns (bytes32)``:
- alias to `keccak256()`
+ alias to ``keccak256()``
``sha256(...) returns (bytes32)``:
compute the SHA-256 hash of the (tightly packed) arguments
``ripemd160(...) returns (bytes20)``: