Minor grammatical fixes.

This commit is contained in:
Brett Cannon 2004-03-18 01:38:11 +00:00
parent 9b976e6636
commit 65d63424b4

View file

@ -82,7 +82,7 @@
\ttindex{stdout}\ttindex{stderr}\ttindex{stdin}}
The return value points to the first thread state created in the new
sub-interpreter. This thread state is made the current thread
sub-interpreter. This thread state is made in the current thread
state. Note that no actual thread is created; see the discussion of
thread states below. If creation of the new interpreter is
unsuccessful, \NULL{} is returned; no exception is set since the
@ -457,7 +457,7 @@ structure.
When creating a thread data structure, you need to provide an
interpreter state data structure. The interpreter state data
structure hold global data that is shared by all threads in an
structure holds global data that is shared by all threads in an
interpreter, for example the module administration
(\code{sys.modules}). Depending on your needs, you can either create
a new interpreter state data structure, or share the interpreter state
@ -555,7 +555,7 @@ for calling into Python from a C thread is
\end{cfuncdesc}
\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyEval_AcquireThread}{PyThreadState *tstate}
Acquire the global interpreter lock and then set the current thread
Acquire the global interpreter lock and set the current thread
state to \var{tstate}, which should not be \NULL. The lock must
have been created earlier. If this thread already has the lock,
deadlock ensues. This function is not available when thread support