Normalize the chapter spelling

This commit is contained in:
Igor Irianto 2021-01-25 14:53:55 -06:00
parent e29ac9bb15
commit 917e8e700e
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View file

@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Ch23. Vim Runtime # Ch23. Vim Runtime
In the previous chapters, I mentioned that Vim automatically looks for special paths like `pack/` (Ch 22) and `compiler/` (Ch 19) inside the `~/.vim/` directory. These are examples of Vim runtime paths. In the previous chapters, I mentioned that Vim automatically looks for special paths like `pack/` (Ch. 22) and `compiler/` (Ch. 19) inside the `~/.vim/` directory. These are examples of Vim runtime paths.
Vim has more runtime paths than these two. In this chapter, you will learn a high-level overview of these runtime paths. The goal of this chapter is to show you when they are called. Knowing this will allow you to understand and customize Vim further. Vim has more runtime paths than these two. In this chapter, you will learn a high-level overview of these runtime paths. The goal of this chapter is to show you when they are called. Knowing this will allow you to understand and customize Vim further.

View file

@ -730,7 +730,7 @@ Vim has special primitives:
- `v:none` - `v:none`
- `v:null` - `v:null`
By the way, `v:` is Vim's built-in variable. They will be covered more in Ch 26. By the way, `v:` is Vim's built-in variable. They will be covered more in a later chapter.
In my experience, you won't use these special primitives often. If you need a truthy / falsy value, you can just use 0 (falsy) and non-0 (truthy). If you need an empty string, just use `""`. But it is still good to know, so let's quickly go over them. In my experience, you won't use these special primitives often. If you need a truthy / falsy value, you can just use 0 (falsy) and non-0 (truthy). If you need an empty string, just use `""`. But it is still good to know, so let's quickly go over them.