diff --git a/website/manual.md b/website/manual.md index 600e4fecca..a3315eeec4 100644 --- a/website/manual.md +++ b/website/manual.md @@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ cargo build -vv #### Prerequisites -To ensure reproducible builds, deno has most of its dependencies in a git +To ensure reproducible builds, Deno has most of its dependencies in a git submodule. However, you need to install separately: 1. [Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/en-US/install.html) >= 1.36.0 @@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ $ deno https://deno.land/std/examples/echo_server.ts ⚠️ Deno requests network access to "listen". Grant? [a/y/n/d (a = allow always, y = allow once, n = deny once, d = deny always)] ``` -For security reasons, deno does not allow programs to access the network without +For security reasons, Deno does not allow programs to access the network without explicit permission. To avoid the console prompt, use a command-line flag: ```shell @@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ $ file_server --reload ### Permissions whitelist -deno also provides permissions whitelist. +Deno also provides permissions whitelist. This is an example to restrict File system access by whitelist. @@ -559,14 +559,14 @@ external libraries in a central `deps.ts` file (which serves the same purpose as Node's `package.json` file). For example, let's say you were using the above testing library across a large project. Rather than importing `"https://deno.land/std/testing/mod.ts"` everywhere, you could create a -`deps.ts` file the exports the third-party code: +`deps.ts` file that exports the third-party code: ```ts export { test, assertEquals } from "https://deno.land/std/testing/mod.ts"; ``` -And throughout project one can import from the `deps.ts` and avoid having many -references to the same URL: +And throughout the same project, you can import from the `deps.ts` and avoid +having many references to the same URL: ```ts import { test, assertEquals } from "./deps.ts"; @@ -947,7 +947,7 @@ close(3); #### Metrics -Metrics is deno's internal counters for various statics. +Metrics is Deno's internal counters for various statics. ```shell > console.table(Deno.metrics()) @@ -1023,7 +1023,7 @@ To learn more about `d8` and profiling, check out the following links: ### Debugging with LLDB -We can use LLDB to debug deno. +We can use LLDB to debug Deno. ```shell $ lldb -- target/debug/deno run tests/worker.js