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author | Arun Isaac | 2021-07-05 15:47:07 +0530 |
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committer | Arun Isaac | 2021-07-05 15:47:07 +0530 |
commit | 5d2368bad49a2663b9753bf559dc28caedb6aea6 (patch) | |
tree | 88c96637a21af1f441699b3f6c967f371732983a | |
parent | 1880f7a2fed157220dd485f9e8ccd9f546996978 (diff) | |
download | ccwl-5d2368bad49a2663b9753bf559dc28caedb6aea6.tar.gz ccwl-5d2368bad49a2663b9753bf559dc28caedb6aea6.tar.lz ccwl-5d2368bad49a2663b9753bf559dc28caedb6aea6.zip |
doc: Inline code snippets.
* doc/ccwl.skb (Tutorial)[Important concepts]: Inline code snippets.
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ccwl.skb | 5 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ccwl.skb b/doc/ccwl.skb index 80ed7c1..41b1642 100644 --- a/doc/ccwl.skb +++ b/doc/ccwl.skb @@ -54,9 +54,8 @@ has been run. Hence, we say that it is statically typed.])) (p [In many languages, the order of arguments passed to a function is significant. The position of each argument determines which formal argument it gets mapped to. For example, passing -positional arguments in Scheme looks like]) - (prog :line #f [(foo 1 2)]) - (p [However, in a language that supports named arguments (say, +positional arguments in Scheme looks like ,(code "(foo 1 +2)"). However, in a language that supports named arguments (say, Scheme or Python), the order of arguments is not significant. Each argument explicitly names the formal argument it gets mapped to. For example, in Scheme, passing named arguments may look like ,(code "(foo |