dialling->dialing (from me)

substition->substitution (from Igor Sobrado, PR misc/20744)
This commit is contained in:
perry 2003-03-31 01:09:08 +00:00
parent 893cb2b5a6
commit bbf77a1edf
1 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
.\" $NetBSD: chat.8,v 1.17 2002/10/29 16:13:50 wiz Exp $
.\" $NetBSD: chat.8,v 1.18 2003/03/31 01:09:08 perry Exp $
.\" -*- nroff -*-
.\" manual page [] for chat 1.8
.\" Id: chat.8,v 1.9 1999/09/06 05:10:23 paulus Exp
@ -216,7 +216,7 @@ ABORT BUSY
.br
ECHO OFF
.br
SAY "Dialling your ISP...\\n"
SAY "Dialing your ISP...\\n"
.br
\'' ATDT5551212
.br
@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ This sequence will only present the SAY strings to the user and all
the details of the script will remain hidden. For example, if the
above script works, the user will see:
.IP
Dialling your ISP...
Dialing your ISP...
.br
Waiting up to 2 minutes for connection ... Connected, now logging in ...
.br
@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ but starting with the \fICONNECT\fR (or \fIBUSY\fR) message, everything
will be echoed.
.SH HANGUP
The HANGUP options control whether a modem hangup should be considered
as an error or not. This option is useful in scripts for dialling
as an error or not. This option is useful in scripts for dialing
systems which will hang up and call your system back. The HANGUP
options can be \fBON\fR or \fBOFF\fR.
.br
@ -459,7 +459,7 @@ For example, the character DC1 (17) is shown as \^^Q.
Environment variables are available within chat scripts, if the \fI-E\fR
option was specified in the command line. The metacharacter \fI$\fR is used
to introduce the name of the environment variable to substitute. If the
substition fails, because the requested environment variable is not set,
substitution fails, because the requested environment variable is not set,
\fInothing\fR is replaced for the variable.
.SH TERMINATION CODES
The \fIchat\fR program will terminate with the following completion