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authorChristian Clauss <cclauss@me.com>2021-09-16 21:44:29 +0200
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2021-09-16 21:44:29 +0200
commit5b43f14be9d909770ca59825851af4b662bf2280 (patch)
tree39ad0ab80fbeddfe49569f1b0974f88a91d1caf2
parent861a75ed5ddb9a4c5818ad6261d31bc021e3f6d9 (diff)
downloadgoogletest-git-5b43f14be9d909770ca59825851af4b662bf2280.tar.gz
Fix typos discovered by codespell
-rw-r--r--docs/gmock_cook_book.md6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/docs/gmock_cook_book.md b/docs/gmock_cook_book.md
index baeeb59f..f7954a21 100644
--- a/docs/gmock_cook_book.md
+++ b/docs/gmock_cook_book.md
@@ -1452,7 +1452,7 @@ the pointer is copied. When the last matcher that references the implementation
object dies, the implementation object will be deleted.
Therefore, if you have some complex matcher that you want to use again and
-again, there is no need to build it everytime. Just assign it to a matcher
+again, there is no need to build it every time. Just assign it to a matcher
variable and use that variable repeatedly! For example,
```cpp
@@ -2601,7 +2601,7 @@ efficient. When the last action that references the implementation object dies,
the implementation object will be deleted.
If you have some complex action that you want to use again and again, you may
-not have to build it from scratch everytime. If the action doesn't have an
+not have to build it from scratch every time. If the action doesn't have an
internal state (i.e. if it always does the same thing no matter how many times
it has been called), you can assign it to an action variable and use that
variable repeatedly. For example:
@@ -4188,7 +4188,7 @@ This implementation class does *not* need to inherit from any particular class.
What matters is that it must have a `Perform()` method template. This method
template takes the mock function's arguments as a tuple in a **single**
argument, and returns the result of the action. It can be either `const` or not,
-but must be invokable with exactly one template argument, which is the result
+but must be invocable with exactly one template argument, which is the result
type. In other words, you must be able to call `Perform<R>(args)` where `R` is
the mock function's return type and `args` is its arguments in a tuple.