From 5f3230f7aa6b638825bd43c6a84302a694240ddf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alexandre Antonio Juca Date: Tue, 13 Apr 2021 23:17:20 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Add spelling corrections to welcome livebook (#169) --- lib/livebook/notebook/welcome.ex | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/lib/livebook/notebook/welcome.ex b/lib/livebook/notebook/welcome.ex index 8a967623d..5e2b89e2f 100644 --- a/lib/livebook/notebook/welcome.ex +++ b/lib/livebook/notebook/welcome.ex @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ defmodule Livebook.Notebook.Welcome do you to build great stuff! 🚀 Livebook is a tool for crafting **interactive** and **collaborative** code notebooks. - It is primarily meant as a tool rapid prototyping - think of it as an IEx session + It is primarily meant as a tool for rapid prototyping - think of it as an IEx session combined with your editor. You can also use it for authoring shareable articles that people can easily run and play around with. @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ defmodule Livebook.Notebook.Welcome do message = "hey, grab yourself a cup of 🍵" ``` - Subsequent cells have access to the bindings you defined: + Subsequent cells have access to the bindings you've defined: ```elixir String.replace(message, "🍵", "☕") @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ defmodule Livebook.Notebook.Welcome do ## Notebook files By default notebooks are kept in memory, which is fine for interactive hacking, - but oftentimes you will want to save your work for later. Fortunately notebooks + but oftentimes you will want to save your work for later. Fortunately, notebooks can be persisted by clicking on the "Settings" icon in the sidebar and selecting the file location. @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ defmodule Livebook.Notebook.Welcome do ## Modules - As we already saw, Elixir cells can be used for working on tiny snippets, + As we have seen, Elixir cells can be used for working on tiny snippets, but you may as well define a module! ```elixir @@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ defmodule Livebook.Notebook.Welcome do Livebook has a concept of **runtime**, which in practice is an Elixir node responsible for evaluating your code. - By default a new Elixir node is started (similarly to starting `iex`), + By default, a new Elixir node is started (similarly to starting `iex`), but you can also choose to run inside a Mix project (as you would with `iex -S mix`) or even manually attach to an existing distributed node! You can configure the runtime by clicking the "Settings" icon on the sidebar.