diff options
author | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2012-09-06 11:39:27 +0200 |
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committer | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2012-09-06 11:39:27 +0200 |
commit | 8f8d7f5382b6c8c70b83194f29364f502cfcb9d6 (patch) | |
tree | 41093575da62f2e438e5b088205d989d5cd768f7 /doc/manual.xhtml | |
parent | a2b661bae4df0e4fcc3b82181f71494b5b385a13 (diff) |
Proofreading changes
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/manual.xhtml')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/manual.xhtml | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.xhtml b/doc/manual.xhtml index ea2b797..e5632ce 100644 --- a/doc/manual.xhtml +++ b/doc/manual.xhtml @@ -9875,7 +9875,7 @@ class employer <h3><a name="12.1.12">12.1.12 <code>transient</code></a></h3> <p>The <code>transient</code> specifier instructs the ODB compiler to - treat all non-virtual data member in the persistent class as transient + treat all non-virtual data members in the persistent class as transient (<a href="#12.4.1">Section 12.4.1, "<code>transient</code>"</a>). This specifier is primarily useful when declaring virtual data members, as discussed in <a href="#12.4.13">Section 12.4.13, @@ -10006,7 +10006,7 @@ class employer <h3><a name="12.2.7">12.2.7 <code>transient</code></a></h3> <p>The <code>transient</code> specifier instructs the ODB compiler - to treat all non-virtual data member in the view class as transient + to treat all non-virtual data members in the view class as transient (<a href="#12.4.1">Section 12.4.1, "<code>transient</code>"</a>). This specifier is primarily useful when declaring virtual data members, as discussed in <a href="#12.4.13">Section 12.4.13, @@ -10462,7 +10462,7 @@ class object <h3><a name="12.3.8">12.3.8 <code>transient</code></a></h3> <p>The <code>transient</code> specifier instructs the ODB compiler - to treat all non-virtual data member in the composite value type + to treat all non-virtual data members in the composite value type as transient (<a href="#12.4.1">Section 12.4.1, "<code>transient</code>"</a>). This specifier is primarily useful when declaring virtual data members, as discussed in @@ -11196,9 +11196,9 @@ class person <p>Accessor and modifier expressions can be used with data members of simple value, composite value, container, and object pointer types. They can be used for data members in persistent classes, - composite value types, and views. There is also a related to - accessors and modifiers mechanism called virtual data members - which is discussed in <a href="#12.4.13">Section 12.4.13, + composite value types, and views. There is also a mechanism + related to accessors and modifiers called virtual data members + and which is discussed in <a href="#12.4.13">Section 12.4.13, "<code>virtual</code>"</a>.</p> <p>There are, however, certain limitations when it comes to using @@ -11623,12 +11623,12 @@ class person no virtual function call overhead is incurred when using virtual data members.</p> - <p>To declare a virtual data members we must specify the data + <p>To declare a virtual data member we must specify the data member name using the <code>member</code> specifier. We must also specify the data member type with the <code>virtual</code> specifier. Finally, the virtual data member declaration must also specify the accessor and modifier expressions, unless - suitable accessor and modifier functions can be automatically + suitable accessor and modifier functions can automatically be found by the ODB compiler (<a href="#12.4.5">Section 12.4.5, "<code>get</code>/<code>set</code>/<code>access</code>"</a>). For example:</p> @@ -17272,7 +17272,7 @@ class person to Multi-Index terms <em>ordered index</em> and <em>hashed index</em>.</p> - <p>The <code>emails</code> container form the above example is stored + <p>The <code>emails</code> container from the above example is stored as an ordered container. In contrast, the following <code>aliases</code> container is stored as a set.</p> |