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Fix documentation typo s/looke/look/ (#11553)
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pixelastic authored Jun 15, 2021
1 parent 91b94c8 commit 6df4ad4
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion docs/Configuration.md
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Expand Up @@ -1059,7 +1059,7 @@ The class may optionally expose an asynchronous `handleTestEvent` method to bind

Any docblock pragmas in test files will be passed to the environment constructor and can be used for per-test configuration. If the pragma does not have a value, it will be present in the object with its value set to an empty string. If the pragma is not present, it will not be present in the object.

To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might looke like this:
To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might look like this:

```js
/**
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion website/versioned_docs/version-25.x/Configuration.md
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Expand Up @@ -942,7 +942,7 @@ The class may optionally expose an asynchronous `handleTestEvent` method to bind

Any docblock pragmas in test files will be passed to the environment constructor and can be used for per-test configuration. If the pragma does not have a value, it will be present in the object with its value set to an empty string. If the pragma is not present, it will not be present in the object.

To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might looke like this:
To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might look like this:

```js
/**
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion website/versioned_docs/version-26.x/Configuration.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -1032,7 +1032,7 @@ The class may optionally expose an asynchronous `handleTestEvent` method to bind

Any docblock pragmas in test files will be passed to the environment constructor and can be used for per-test configuration. If the pragma does not have a value, it will be present in the object with its value set to an empty string. If the pragma is not present, it will not be present in the object.

To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might looke like this:
To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might look like this:

```js
/**
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion website/versioned_docs/version-27.0/Configuration.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -1059,7 +1059,7 @@ The class may optionally expose an asynchronous `handleTestEvent` method to bind

Any docblock pragmas in test files will be passed to the environment constructor and can be used for per-test configuration. If the pragma does not have a value, it will be present in the object with its value set to an empty string. If the pragma is not present, it will not be present in the object.

To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might looke like this:
To use this class as your custom environment, refer to it by its full path within the project. For example, if your class is stored in `my-custom-environment.js` in some subfolder of your project, then the annotation might look like this:

```js
/**
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