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authorGabor Greif <ggreif@gmail.com>2017-03-14 12:38:50 +0100
committerGabor Greif <ggreif@gmail.com>2017-03-14 12:38:50 +0100
commit50512c6b2bd878f0be5e1c7b85cadf22094aaa5a (patch)
tree42d5a0313cf414f6706ebf699faf601f1c344997 /docs/rts
parent08e73ccf4c75a7d7a8b8167d2ccf8bc505fe1130 (diff)
downloadhaskell-50512c6b2bd878f0be5e1c7b85cadf22094aaa5a.tar.gz
Typos in manual and comments
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/rts')
-rw-r--r--docs/rts/rts.tex2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/docs/rts/rts.tex b/docs/rts/rts.tex
index 191d65da9c..4337bb1f8e 100644
--- a/docs/rts/rts.tex
+++ b/docs/rts/rts.tex
@@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ Functions can take multiple arguments as easily as they can take one
argument: there's no cost for adding another argument. But functions
can only return one result: the cost of adding a second ``result'' is
that the function must construct a tuple of ``results'' on the heap.
-The assymetry is rather galling and can make certain programming
+The asymmetry is rather galling and can make certain programming
styles quite expensive. For example, consider a simple state transformer
monad:
\begin{verbatim}