From 0fd331b2f1ce974e8428acbd46ec8384da5879e1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Boris Kolpackov Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2012 13:49:57 +0200 Subject: Proofreading fixes to documentation --- odb/options.cli | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) (limited to 'odb/options.cli') diff --git a/odb/options.cli b/odb/options.cli index 1a0d0c1..aa50a9a 100644 --- a/odb/options.cli +++ b/odb/options.cli @@ -450,14 +450,14 @@ class options version-specific optimizations and workarounds in the generated C++ code. The version must be in the \c{\i{major}\b{.}\i{minor}} form, for example, \cb{9.0} (SQL Server 2005), \cb{10.5} (2008R2), or \cb{11.0} - (2012). If this options is not specified, then \cb{10.0} (SQL Server 2008) + (2012). If this option is not specified, then \cb{10.0} (SQL Server 2008) or later is assumed." }; unsigned int --mssql-short-limit = 1024 { "", - "Specify the short data size limit. If character, national character, or + "Specify the short data size limit. If a character, national character, or binary data type has a maximum length (in bytes) less than or equal to this limit, then it is treated as \i{short data}, otherwise it is \i{long data}. For short data ODB pre-allocates an intermediate buffer of @@ -467,9 +467,9 @@ class options in chunks using the \cb{SQLGetData()}/\cb{SQLPutData()} ODBC functions. While the long data approach reduces the amount of memory used by the application, it may require greater CPU resources. The default short - data limit is 1024 bytes. When setting a custom short data limit make - sure that it is sufficiently large so that no character object id in - the application is treated as long data." + data limit is 1024 bytes. When setting a custom short data limit, make + sure that it is sufficiently large so that no object id in the + application is treated as long data." }; // @@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ class options generated C++ code will be linked. This information is used to enable version-specific optimizations and workarounds in the generated C++ code. The version must be in the \c{\i{major}\b{.}\i{minor}} form, - for example, \cb{11.2}. If this options is not specified, then + for example, \cb{11.2}. If this option is not specified, then \cb{10.1} or later is assumed." }; -- cgit v1.1