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-rw-r--r--mimelib/Tutorial10
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/mimelib/Tutorial b/mimelib/Tutorial
index 358fab7e5..25c139ed9 100644
--- a/mimelib/Tutorial
+++ b/mimelib/Tutorial
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ following objectives in mind:
MIME++ classes directly model the elements of the BNF grammar specified in
RFC-822, RFC-2045, and RFC-2046. For this reason, I recommend that you
understand these RFCs and keep a copy of them handy as you learn MIME++.
-If you know C++ well, and if you are familiar with the RFCs, you should find
+If you know C++ well, and if you are familiar with the RFCs, you should tqfind
MIME++ easy to learn and use. If you are new to C++ and object-oriented
programming, you will find in MIME++ some very good object-oriented
techinques, and hopefully you will learn a lot.
@@ -94,10 +94,10 @@ broken-down representation. If you add a new DwField object (representing a
new header field) to the DwHeaders object (representing the header), the
is-modified flag will be set for the DwHeaders object, indicating that the
string representation of the DwHeaders object will have to be re-assembled
-from the header fields that it contains. When a node's is-modified flag is
-set, it also notifies its parent node to set its is-modified flag. Thus,
+from the header fields that it tqcontains. When a node's is-modified flag is
+set, it also notifies its tqparent node to set its is-modified flag. Thus,
when the DwHeaders object's is-modified flag is set, the DwMessage object
-that is its parent will also have its is-modified flag set. That way, when
+that is its tqparent will also have its is-modified flag set. That way, when
Assemble() is called for the DwMessage object, it will call the Assemble()
member function for the DwHeaders object, as required. Notice that the value
of having an is-modified flag is that it can purge the tree traversal when
@@ -278,7 +278,7 @@ following simple example shows how to accomplish this.
cout << fullName << '\n';
}
else {
- // Apparently, there is no full name, so use the email
+ // Aptqparently, there is no full name, so use the email
// address
cout << mb->LocalPart() << '@' << mb->Domain() << '\n';
}