From ee89c088b057affb5bdb96195e107a218b64b1c5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alexander Regueiro Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 02:59:49 +0000 Subject: Various minor/cosmetic improvements to code --- src/libstd/thread/local.rs | 2 +- src/libstd/thread/mod.rs | 10 +++++----- 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) (limited to 'src/libstd/thread') diff --git a/src/libstd/thread/local.rs b/src/libstd/thread/local.rs index 4df47511172..8bb99096061 100644 --- a/src/libstd/thread/local.rs +++ b/src/libstd/thread/local.rs @@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ impl LocalKey { // ptr::write(ptr, Some(value)) // // Due to this pattern it's possible for the destructor of the value in - // `ptr` (e.g. if this is being recursively initialized) to re-access + // `ptr` (e.g., if this is being recursively initialized) to re-access // TLS, in which case there will be a `&` and `&mut` pointer to the same // value (an aliasing violation). To avoid setting the "I'm running a // destructor" flag we just use `mem::replace` which should sequence the diff --git a/src/libstd/thread/mod.rs b/src/libstd/thread/mod.rs index d15b4902412..194e2881df3 100644 --- a/src/libstd/thread/mod.rs +++ b/src/libstd/thread/mod.rs @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ //! Threads are represented via the [`Thread`] type, which you can get in one of //! two ways: //! -//! * By spawning a new thread, e.g. using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] +//! * By spawning a new thread, e.g., using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] //! function, and calling [`thread`][`JoinHandle::thread`] on the [`JoinHandle`]. //! * By requesting the current thread, using the [`thread::current`] function. //! @@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ //! thread, use [`Thread::name`]. A couple examples of where the name of a thread gets used: //! //! * If a panic occurs in a named thread, the thread name will be printed in the panic message. -//! * The thread name is provided to the OS where applicable (e.g. `pthread_setname_np` in +//! * The thread name is provided to the OS where applicable (e.g., `pthread_setname_np` in //! unix-like platforms). //! //! ## Stack size @@ -422,7 +422,7 @@ impl Builder { /// /// - ensure that [`join`][`JoinHandle::join`] is called before any referenced /// data is dropped - /// - use only types with `'static` lifetime bounds, i.e. those with no or only + /// - use only types with `'static` lifetime bounds, i.e., those with no or only /// `'static` references (both [`thread::Builder::spawn`][`Builder::spawn`] /// and [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] enforce this property statically) /// @@ -692,7 +692,7 @@ pub fn yield_now() { /// already poison themselves when a thread panics while holding the lock. /// /// This can also be used in multithreaded applications, in order to send a -/// message to other threads warning that a thread has panicked (e.g. for +/// message to other threads warning that a thread has panicked (e.g., for /// monitoring purposes). /// /// # Examples @@ -1078,7 +1078,7 @@ struct Inner { /// Threads are represented via the `Thread` type, which you can get in one of /// two ways: /// -/// * By spawning a new thread, e.g. using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] +/// * By spawning a new thread, e.g., using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] /// function, and calling [`thread`][`JoinHandle::thread`] on the /// [`JoinHandle`]. /// * By requesting the current thread, using the [`thread::current`] function. -- cgit 1.4.1-3-g733a5