[asterisk-commits] pabelanger: branch 1.6.2 r270802 - in /branches/1.6.2: ./ doc/tex/

SVN commits to the Asterisk project asterisk-commits at lists.digium.com
Wed Jun 16 10:07:19 CDT 2010


Author: pabelanger
Date: Wed Jun 16 10:07:15 2010
New Revision: 270802

URL: http://svnview.digium.com/svn/asterisk?view=rev&rev=270802
Log:
Merged revisions 270801 via svnmerge from 
https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk

........
  r270801 | pabelanger | 2010-06-16 11:05:11 -0400 (Wed, 16 Jun 2010) | 9 lines
  
  Update formatting for channelvariables.tex
  
  (closes issue #17511)
  Reported by: klaus3000
  Patches:
        channelvariables.tex-patch.txt uploaded by klaus3000 (license 65)
  Tested by: pabelanger
........

Modified:
    branches/1.6.2/   (props changed)
    branches/1.6.2/doc/tex/channelvariables.tex

Propchange: branches/1.6.2/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Binary property 'trunk-merged' - no diff available.

Modified: branches/1.6.2/doc/tex/channelvariables.tex
URL: http://svnview.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/1.6.2/doc/tex/channelvariables.tex?view=diff&rev=270802&r1=270801&r2=270802
==============================================================================
--- branches/1.6.2/doc/tex/channelvariables.tex (original)
+++ branches/1.6.2/doc/tex/channelvariables.tex Wed Jun 16 10:07:15 2010
@@ -288,7 +288,7 @@
        Exactly the same as the ':' operator, except that the match is
        not anchored to the beginning of the string. Pardon any similarity
        to seemingly similar operators in other programming languages!
-       The ":" and "=\~" operators share the same precedence.
+       The ":" and "=\verb!~!" operators share the same precedence.
 
    \item \verb!expr1 ? expr2 :: expr3!
 
@@ -649,11 +649,11 @@
     Basically, if the string or number is null, empty, or '0',
     a '1' is returned. Otherwise a '0' is returned.
 
-\item  Added the '=~' operator, just in case someone is just looking for
+\item  Added the '=\verb!~!' operator, just in case someone is just looking for
     match anywhere in the string. The only diff with the ':' is that
     match doesn't have to be anchored to the beginning of the string.
 
-\item  Added the conditional operator  'expr1 ? true\_expr : false\_expr'
+\item  Added the conditional operator  'expr1 ? true\_expr :: false\_expr'
     First, all 3 exprs are evaluated, and if expr1 is false, the 'false\_expr'
     is returned as the result. See above for details.
 




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