diff options
-rw-r--r-- | contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_gin.c | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_op.c | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/backend/utils/adt/timestamp.c | 20 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/backend/utils/misc/guc.c | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/backend/utils/sort/tuplesort.c | 2 |
5 files changed, 21 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_gin.c b/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_gin.c index 6805e3e9b20..8c190415910 100644 --- a/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_gin.c +++ b/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_gin.c @@ -210,7 +210,7 @@ gin_trgm_consistent(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) * And again, c (ntrue) is a lower bound of len2, but c <= len1 * just by definition and, consequently, upper bound of * similarity is just c / len1. - * So, independly on DIVUNION the upper bound formula is the same. + * So, independently on DIVUNION the upper bound formula is the same. */ res = (nkeys == 0) ? false : (((((float4) ntrue) / ((float4) nkeys))) >= nlimit); @@ -330,7 +330,7 @@ gin_trgm_triconsistent(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) else { /* - * As trigramsMatchGraph implements a montonic boolean function, + * As trigramsMatchGraph implements a monotonic boolean function, * promoting all GIN_MAYBE keys to GIN_TRUE will give a * conservative result. */ diff --git a/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_op.c b/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_op.c index 3ca6e5e951e..b728cc1abd3 100644 --- a/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_op.c +++ b/contrib/pg_trgm/trgm_op.c @@ -628,7 +628,7 @@ calc_word_similarity(char *str1, int slen1, char *str2, int slen2, /* - * Extract the next non-wildcard part of a search string, ie, a word bounded + * Extract the next non-wildcard part of a search string, i.e. a word bounded * by '_' or '%' meta-characters, non-word characters or string end. * * str: source string, of length lenstr bytes (need not be null-terminated) diff --git a/src/backend/utils/adt/timestamp.c b/src/backend/utils/adt/timestamp.c index 3f013e3f5bb..c9e5270a9eb 100644 --- a/src/backend/utils/adt/timestamp.c +++ b/src/backend/utils/adt/timestamp.c @@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ timestamp_recv(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) errmsg("timestamp cannot be NaN"))); #endif - /* rangecheck: see if timestamp_out would like it */ + /* range check: see if timestamp_out would like it */ if (TIMESTAMP_NOT_FINITE(timestamp)) /* ok */ ; else if (timestamp2tm(timestamp, NULL, tm, &fsec, NULL, NULL) != 0 || @@ -792,7 +792,7 @@ timestamptz_recv(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) timestamp = (TimestampTz) pq_getmsgfloat8(buf); #endif - /* rangecheck: see if timestamptz_out would like it */ + /* range check: see if timestamptz_out would like it */ if (TIMESTAMP_NOT_FINITE(timestamp)) /* ok */ ; else if (timestamp2tm(timestamp, &tz, tm, &fsec, NULL, NULL) != 0 || @@ -1435,7 +1435,7 @@ AdjustIntervalForTypmod(Interval *interval, int32 typmod) else elog(ERROR, "unrecognized interval typmod: %d", typmod); - /* Need to adjust subsecond precision? */ + /* Need to adjust sub-second precision? */ if (precision != INTERVAL_FULL_PRECISION) { if (precision < 0 || precision > MAX_INTERVAL_PRECISION) @@ -1635,7 +1635,7 @@ IntegerTimestampToTimestampTz(int64 timestamp) * Both inputs must be ordinary finite timestamps (in current usage, * they'll be results from GetCurrentTimestamp()). * - * We expect start_time <= stop_time. If not, we return zeroes; for current + * We expect start_time <= stop_time. If not, we return zeros; for current * callers there is no need to be tense about which way division rounds on * negative inputs. */ @@ -2276,7 +2276,7 @@ timestamp_hash(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) /* - * Crosstype comparison functions for timestamp vs timestamptz + * Cross-type comparison functions for timestamp vs timestamptz */ Datum @@ -2678,7 +2678,7 @@ overlaps_timestamp(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) { /* * For ts1 = ts2 the spec says te1 <> te2 OR te1 = te2, which is a - * rather silly way of saying "true if both are nonnull, else null". + * rather silly way of saying "true if both are non-null, else null". */ if (te1IsNull || te2IsNull) PG_RETURN_NULL(); @@ -2996,7 +2996,7 @@ timestamp_pl_interval(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) (errcode(ERRCODE_DATETIME_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE), errmsg("timestamp out of range"))); - /* Add days by converting to and from julian */ + /* Add days by converting to and from Julian */ julian = date2j(tm->tm_year, tm->tm_mon, tm->tm_mday) + span->day; j2date(julian, &tm->tm_year, &tm->tm_mon, &tm->tm_mday); @@ -3104,7 +3104,7 @@ timestamptz_pl_interval(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) (errcode(ERRCODE_DATETIME_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE), errmsg("timestamp out of range"))); - /* Add days by converting to and from julian */ + /* Add days by converting to and from Julian */ julian = date2j(tm->tm_year, tm->tm_mon, tm->tm_mday) + span->day; j2date(julian, &tm->tm_year, &tm->tm_mon, &tm->tm_mday); @@ -3309,7 +3309,7 @@ interval_mul(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) /* * The above correctly handles the whole-number part of the month and day * products, but we have to do something with any fractional part - * resulting when the factor is nonintegral. We cascade the fractions + * resulting when the factor is non-integral. We cascade the fractions * down to lower units using the conversion factors DAYS_PER_MONTH and * SECS_PER_DAY. Note we do NOT cascade up, since we are not forced to do * so by the representation. The user can choose to cascade up later, @@ -3319,7 +3319,7 @@ interval_mul(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) /* * Fractional months full days into days. * - * Floating point calculation are inherently inprecise, so these + * Floating point calculation are inherently imprecise, so these * calculations are crafted to produce the most reliable result possible. * TSROUND() is needed to more accurately produce whole numbers where * appropriate. diff --git a/src/backend/utils/misc/guc.c b/src/backend/utils/misc/guc.c index a325943321b..5a3a40e21d4 100644 --- a/src/backend/utils/misc/guc.c +++ b/src/backend/utils/misc/guc.c @@ -1634,7 +1634,7 @@ static struct config_bool ConfigureNamesBool[] = { {"syslog_sequence_numbers", PGC_SIGHUP, LOGGING_WHERE, - gettext_noop("Add sequence number to syslog messags to avoid duplicate suppression."), + gettext_noop("Add sequence number to syslog messages to avoid duplicate suppression."), NULL }, &syslog_sequence_numbers, @@ -2681,7 +2681,7 @@ static struct config_int ConfigureNamesInt[] = { {"ssl_renegotiation_limit", PGC_USERSET, CONN_AUTH_SECURITY, - gettext_noop("SSL regenotiation is no longer supported; this can only be 0."), + gettext_noop("SSL renegotiation is no longer supported; this can only be 0."), NULL, GUC_NO_SHOW_ALL | GUC_NOT_IN_SAMPLE | GUC_DISALLOW_IN_FILE, }, @@ -4059,7 +4059,7 @@ get_guc_variables(void) /* * Build the sorted array. This is split out so that it could be - * re-executed after startup (eg, we could allow loadable modules to + * re-executed after startup (e.g., we could allow loadable modules to * add vars, and then we'd need to re-sort). */ void @@ -5904,7 +5904,7 @@ set_config_option(const char *name, const char *value, * don't re-read the config file during backend start. * * In EXEC_BACKEND builds, this works differently: we load all - * nondefault settings from the CONFIG_EXEC_PARAMS file during + * non-default settings from the CONFIG_EXEC_PARAMS file during * backend start. In that case we must accept PGC_SIGHUP * settings, so as to have the same value as if we'd forked * from the postmaster. This can also happen when using @@ -6663,7 +6663,7 @@ GetConfigOptionResetString(const char *name) * We need to be told the name of the variable the args are for, because * the flattening rules vary (ugh). * - * The result is NULL if args is NIL (ie, SET ... TO DEFAULT), otherwise + * The result is NULL if args is NIL (i.e., SET ... TO DEFAULT), otherwise * a palloc'd string. */ static char * @@ -7994,7 +7994,7 @@ GetConfigOptionByNum(int varnum, const char **values, bool *noshow) /* source */ values[8] = GucSource_Names[conf->source]; - /* now get the type specifc attributes */ + /* now get the type specific attributes */ switch (conf->vartype) { case PGC_BOOL: @@ -9531,7 +9531,7 @@ validate_option_array_item(const char *name, const char *value, * There are three cases to consider: * * name is a known GUC variable. Check the value normally, check - * permissions normally (ie, allow if variable is USERSET, or if it's + * permissions normally (i.e., allow if variable is USERSET, or if it's * SUSET and user is superuser). * * name is not known, but exists or can be created as a placeholder (i.e., diff --git a/src/backend/utils/sort/tuplesort.c b/src/backend/utils/sort/tuplesort.c index d3070f807b2..dbedc270537 100644 --- a/src/backend/utils/sort/tuplesort.c +++ b/src/backend/utils/sort/tuplesort.c @@ -2742,7 +2742,7 @@ batchmemtuples(Tuplesortstate *state) /* * Refund STANDARDCHUNKHEADERSIZE per tuple. * - * This sometimes fails to make memory use prefectly balanced, but it + * This sometimes fails to make memory use perfectly balanced, but it * should never make the situation worse. Note that Assert-enabled builds * get a larger refund, due to a varying STANDARDCHUNKHEADERSIZE. */ |