diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'include/ruby/internal/encoding/string.h')
| -rw-r--r-- | include/ruby/internal/encoding/string.h | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/include/ruby/internal/encoding/string.h b/include/ruby/internal/encoding/string.h index f8ce809199..2cfa91c01e 100644 --- a/include/ruby/internal/encoding/string.h +++ b/include/ruby/internal/encoding/string.h @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN() /** - * Identical to rb_enc_str_new(), except it additionally takes an encoding. + * Identical to rb_str_new(), except it additionally takes an encoding. * * @param[in] ptr A memory region of `len` bytes length. * @param[in] len Length of `ptr`, in bytes, not including the @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ VALUE rb_enc_str_buf_cat(VALUE str, const char *ptr, long len, rb_encoding *enc) * In other languages, APIs like this one could be seen as the primitive * routines where encodings' "encode" feature are implemented. However in case * of Ruby this is not the primitive one. We directly manipulate encoded - * strings. Encoding conversion routines transocde an encoded string directly + * strings. Encoding conversion routines transcode an encoded string directly * to another one; not via a code point array. */ VALUE rb_enc_uint_chr(unsigned int code, rb_encoding *enc); @@ -307,13 +307,13 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NONNULL(()) /** * Looks for the passed string in the passed buffer. * - * @param[in] x Buffer that potentially includes `y`. + * @param[in] x Query string. * @param[in] m Number of bytes of `x`. - * @param[in] y Query string. + * @param[in] y Buffer that potentially includes `x`. * @param[in] n Number of bytes of `y`. * @param[in] enc Encoding of both `x` and `y`. * @retval -1 Not found. - * @retval otherwise Found index in `x`. + * @retval otherwise Found index in `y`. * @note This API can match at a non-character-boundary. */ long rb_memsearch(const void *x, long m, const void *y, long n, rb_encoding *enc); |
