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Rollup merge of rust-lang#54522 - gardrek:patch-1, r=TimNN
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Fixed three small typos.
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pietroalbini authored Sep 25, 2018
2 parents cf3c385 + 1b9da67 commit 9ea345d
Showing 1 changed file with 3 additions and 3 deletions.
6 changes: 3 additions & 3 deletions src/libstd/primitive_docs.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -208,7 +208,7 @@ mod prim_bool { }
/// # `!` and traits
///
/// When writing your own traits, `!` should have an `impl` whenever there is an obvious `impl`
/// which doesn't `panic!`. As is turns out, most traits can have an `impl` for `!`. Take [`Debug`]
/// which doesn't `panic!`. As it turns out, most traits can have an `impl` for `!`. Take [`Debug`]
/// for example:
///
/// ```
Expand All @@ -228,9 +228,9 @@ mod prim_bool { }
/// [`fmt::Result`]. Since this method takes a `&!` as an argument we know that it can never be
/// called (because there is no value of type `!` for it to be called with). Writing `*self`
/// essentially tells the compiler "We know that this code can never be run, so just treat the
/// entire function body has having type [`fmt::Result`]". This pattern can be used a lot when
/// entire function body as having type [`fmt::Result`]". This pattern can be used a lot when
/// implementing traits for `!`. Generally, any trait which only has methods which take a `self`
/// parameter should have such as impl.
/// parameter should have such an impl.
///
/// On the other hand, one trait which would not be appropriate to implement is [`Default`]:
///
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