diff --git a/src/libcore/macros.rs b/src/libcore/macros.rs index a0c87f13e5d5a4debd4b5ad1728f3ffb2a320c3e..c008b78e4509292810c8416d293b573bf15773fd 100644 --- a/src/libcore/macros.rs +++ b/src/libcore/macros.rs @@ -350,9 +350,8 @@ /// assert_eq!(v, b"s = \"abc 123\""); /// ``` /// -/// Note: This macro can be used in `no_std` setups as well -/// In a `no_std` setup you are responsible for the -/// implementation details of the components. +/// Note: This macro can be used in `no_std` setups as well. +/// In a `no_std` setup you are responsible for the implementation details of the components. /// /// ```no_run /// # extern crate core; @@ -440,7 +439,7 @@ /// /// If the determination that the code is unreachable proves incorrect, the /// program immediately terminates with a [`panic!`]. The function [`unreachable_unchecked`], -/// which belongs to the [`std::hint`] module, informs the compilier to +/// which belongs to the [`std::hint`] module, informs the compiler to /// optimize the code out of the release version entirely. /// /// [`panic!`]: ../std/macro.panic.html diff --git a/src/libcore/pin.rs b/src/libcore/pin.rs index 68de82d294529e5cefa0d3eae3159a00674849f3..308dd9c79fa374391e1e222d379725c3c968f27d 100644 --- a/src/libcore/pin.rs +++ b/src/libcore/pin.rs @@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ //! It is sometimes useful to have objects that are guaranteed to not move, //! in the sense that their placement in memory does not change, and can thus be relied upon. //! -//! A prime example of such a scenario would be building self-referencial structs, +//! A prime example of such a scenario would be building self-referential structs, //! since moving an object with pointers to itself will invalidate them, //! which could cause undefined behavior. //! @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ //! use std::marker::Pinned; //! use std::ptr::NonNull; //! -//! // This is a self referencial struct since the slice field points to the data field. +//! // This is a self-referential struct since the slice field points to the data field. //! // We cannot inform the compiler about that with a normal reference, //! // since this pattern cannot be described with the usual borrowing rules. //! // Instead we use a raw pointer, though one which is known to not be null,