docs typo

main
Matthew Butterick 10 years ago
parent 9c373bfd82
commit 046fbc05fa

@ -103,8 +103,7 @@ Like @racket[hyphenate], but only words matching @racket[_pred] are hyphenated.
(hyphenate "Brennan Huff likes fancy sauce" #\-) (hyphenate "Brennan Huff likes fancy sauce" #\-)
(define uncapitalized? (λ(word) (let ([letter (substring word 0 1)]) (define uncapitalized? (λ(word) (let ([letter (substring word 0 1)])
(equal? letter (string-downcase letter))))) (equal? letter (string-downcase letter)))))
(hyphenatef "Brennan Huff likes fancy sauce" uncapitalized? (hyphenatef "Brennan Huff likes fancy sauce" uncapitalized? #\-)
#\-)
] ]
Sometimes you need @racket[hyphenatef] to prevent unintended consequences. For instance, if you're using ligatures in CSS, certain groups of characters (fi, fl, ffi, et al.) will be replaced by a single glyph. That looks snazzy, but adding soft hyphens between any of these pairs will defeat the ligature substitution, creating inconsistent results. With @racket[hyphenatef], you can skip these words: Sometimes you need @racket[hyphenatef] to prevent unintended consequences. For instance, if you're using ligatures in CSS, certain groups of characters (fi, fl, ffi, et al.) will be replaced by a single glyph. That looks snazzy, but adding soft hyphens between any of these pairs will defeat the ligature substitution, creating inconsistent results. With @racket[hyphenatef], you can skip these words:

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