diff options
| author | Jason Gross | 2014-08-12 11:03:05 -0400 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Pierre Boutillier | 2014-08-25 15:22:40 +0200 |
| commit | 876b1b39a0304c93c2511ca8dd34353413e91c9d (patch) | |
| tree | 348c5630f0b35edf53fe4010587b61e615df03af /plugins | |
| parent | a061b4d11fc681182b5bb946aa84d17d0b812225 (diff) | |
instanciation is French, instantiation is English
Diffstat (limited to 'plugins')
| -rw-r--r-- | plugins/extraction/extraction.ml | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/plugins/extraction/extraction.ml b/plugins/extraction/extraction.ml index 618717cdeb..498b33b632 100644 --- a/plugins/extraction/extraction.ml +++ b/plugins/extraction/extraction.ml @@ -56,8 +56,8 @@ let sort_of env c = More formally, a type scheme has type $(x_1:X_1)\ldots(x_n:X_n)s$ with [s = Set], [Prop] or [Type] \item [Default] denotes the other cases. It may be inexact after - instanciation. For example [(X:Type)X] is [Default] and may give [Set] - after instanciation, which is rather [TypeScheme] + instantiation. For example [(X:Type)X] is [Default] and may give [Set] + after instantiation, which is rather [TypeScheme] \item [Logic] denotes a term of sort [Prop], or a type scheme on sort [Prop] \item [Info] is the opposite. The same example [(X:Type)X] shows that an [Info] term might in fact be [Logic] later on. |
