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-rw-r--r--help/opie-sh/node3.html2
-rw-r--r--help/opie-sh/node9.html2
2 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/help/opie-sh/node3.html b/help/opie-sh/node3.html
index 8d16696..f3f1e73 100644
--- a/help/opie-sh/node3.html
+++ b/help/opie-sh/node3.html
@@ -61,3 +61,3 @@ What it is for</A>
</H2>
-Opie-sh is designed to be a frontend to Opie that can be used from the console. This is especially usefull for creating interactive shell scripts, as it will use the Opie interface (which is presumably familiar to the user) instead of a text based interface (which can be confusing). It can also be convinient for prototyping an app that you want to write for Opie without actually bothering to break out the cross compiler. Opie-sh does not use an Opie specific libs, so you can just as easily use it with Qtopia.
+Opie-sh is designed to be a frontend to Opie that can be used from the console. This is especially useful for creating interactive shell scripts, as it will use the Opie interface (which is presumably familiar to the user) instead of a text based interface (which can be confusing). It can also be convinient for prototyping an app that you want to write for Opie without actually bothering to break out the cross compiler. Opie-sh does not use an Opie specific libs, so you can just as easily use it with Qtopia.
diff --git a/help/opie-sh/node9.html b/help/opie-sh/node9.html
index b047cf9..e4358ad 100644
--- a/help/opie-sh/node9.html
+++ b/help/opie-sh/node9.html
@@ -71,3 +71,3 @@ opie-sh -m -I
<P>
-A warning icon is specified with the ``-w'' flag, and should be used for problems that the user should know about, but that will not necessarily cause the program to stop working. For example, if the program cannot find a configureation file, you might pop up a warning, notifying the user that the default configuration will be used. This is also usefull for asking the user if they want to continue doing something that might damage the system (editing rc scripts, for instance). Example:
+A warning icon is specified with the ``-w'' flag, and should be used for problems that the user should know about, but that will not necessarily cause the program to stop working. For example, if the program cannot find a configureation file, you might pop up a warning, notifying the user that the default configuration will be used. This is also useful for asking the user if they want to continue doing something that might damage the system (editing rc scripts, for instance). Example: