diff options
-rw-r--r-- | docs/conf/httpd-std.conf | 24 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/docs/conf/httpd-std.conf b/docs/conf/httpd-std.conf index 6f45132efd..aaa3d1eb97 100644 --- a/docs/conf/httpd-std.conf +++ b/docs/conf/httpd-std.conf @@ -634,12 +634,12 @@ AddEncoding x-gzip gz tgz # a document. You can then use content negotiation to give a browser a # file in a language the user can understand. # -# Specify a default langyage. This means that all data -# going out without a specific language tag (See below) will -# be marked with this one. You propably do NOT want to set +# Specify a default language. This means that all data +# going out without a specific language tag (see below) will +# be marked with this one. You probably do NOT want to set # this unless you are sure it is correct for all cases. # -# * It is generally better to not mark a pages as in +# * It is generally better to not mark a page as # * being a certain language than marking it with the wrong # * language! # @@ -650,13 +650,13 @@ AddEncoding x-gzip gz tgz # language code is pl) may wish to use "AddLanguage pl .po" to # avoid the ambiguity with the common suffix for perl scripts. # -# Note 2: The example entries below illustrate that in quite -# some cases the two character 'Language' abbriviation is not +# Note 2: The example entries below illustrate that in +# some cases the two character 'Language' abbreviation is not # identical to the two character 'Country' code for its country, # E.g. 'Danmark/dk' versus 'Danish/da'. # # Note 3: In the case of 'ltz' we violate the RFC by using a three char -# specifier. But there is 'work in progress' to fix this and get +# specifier. There is 'work in progress' to fix this and get # the reference data for rfc1766 cleaned up. # # Danish (da) - Dutch (nl) - English (en) - Estonian (et) @@ -698,16 +698,16 @@ LanguagePriority en da nl et fr de el it ja kr no pl pt pt-br ltz ca es sv # Specify a default charset for all pages sent out. This is # always a good idea and opens the door for future internationalisation # of your web site, should you ever want it. Specifying it as -# a default does little harm; as the standart dictates that a page -# is in iso-8859-1 (latin1) unless specified otherwise. I.e. you +# a default does little harm; as the standard dictates that a page +# is in iso-8859-1 (latin1) unless specified otherwise i.e. you # are merely stating the obvious. There are also some security # reasons in browsers, related to javascript and URL parsing -# which encourage to always set a default char set. +# which encourage you to always set a default char set. # AddDefaultCharset ISO-8859-1 # -# Commonly used filename extensions to character sets. You propably +# Commonly used filename extensions to character sets. You probably # want to avoid clashes with the language extensions, unless you # are good at carefully testing your setup after each change. # @@ -725,7 +725,7 @@ AddCharset ISO-2022-KR .iso2022-kr .kis AddCharset ISO-2022-CN .iso2022-cn .cis # The set below does not map to a specific (iso) standard -# but works on a fairly wide range of browser. Note that +# but works on a fairly wide range of browsers. Note that # capitalization actually matters (it should not, but it # does for some browsers). # |