From e3912f5e63b0c08a0f592ad425e926a5d61e1b8a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "luz.paz" Date: Sun, 11 Mar 2018 10:01:44 -0400 Subject: MIsc. source and comment typos Found using `codespell` and `grep` from downstream FreeCAD --- doc/QuickStartGuide.dox | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'doc/QuickStartGuide.dox') diff --git a/doc/QuickStartGuide.dox b/doc/QuickStartGuide.dox index ea32c3b3d..23bb2981b 100644 --- a/doc/QuickStartGuide.dox +++ b/doc/QuickStartGuide.dox @@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ The output is as follows: The second example starts by declaring a 3-by-3 matrix \c m which is initialized using the \link DenseBase::Random(Index,Index) Random() \endlink method with random values between -1 and 1. The next line applies a linear mapping such that the values are between 10 and 110. The function call \link DenseBase::Constant(Index,Index,const Scalar&) MatrixXd::Constant\endlink(3,3,1.2) returns a 3-by-3 matrix expression having all coefficients equal to 1.2. The rest is standard arithmetics. -The next line of the \c main function introduces a new type: \c VectorXd. This represents a (column) vector of arbitrary size. Here, the vector \c v is created to contain \c 3 coefficients which are left unitialized. The one but last line uses the so-called comma-initializer, explained in \ref TutorialAdvancedInitialization, to set all coefficients of the vector \c v to be as follows: +The next line of the \c main function introduces a new type: \c VectorXd. This represents a (column) vector of arbitrary size. Here, the vector \c v is created to contain \c 3 coefficients which are left uninitialized. The one but last line uses the so-called comma-initializer, explained in \ref TutorialAdvancedInitialization, to set all coefficients of the vector \c v to be as follows: \f[ v = -- cgit v1.2.3