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-rw-r--r--exercises/106_tokenization.zig2
-rw-r--r--exercises/112_vectors.zig2
-rw-r--r--exercises/114_packed.zig4
3 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/exercises/106_tokenization.zig b/exercises/106_tokenization.zig
index d0abb5c..10962f5 100644
--- a/exercises/106_tokenization.zig
+++ b/exercises/106_tokenization.zig
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
// exercises.
//
// A nice example of this has been published on the Zig homepage,
-// replacing the somewhat dusty 'Hello world!
+// replacing the somewhat dusty 'Hello world!'
//
// Nothing against 'Hello world!', but it just doesn't do justice
// to the elegance of Zig and that's a pity, if someone takes a short,
diff --git a/exercises/112_vectors.zig b/exercises/112_vectors.zig
index 96892ca..748c086 100644
--- a/exercises/112_vectors.zig
+++ b/exercises/112_vectors.zig
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@
// Operations performed on vectors in Zig will be done in parallel using
// SIMD instructions, whenever possible.
//
-// Defining vectors in Zig is straightforwards. No library import is needed.
+// Defining vectors in Zig is straightforward. No library import is needed.
const v1 = @Vector(3, i32){ 1, 10, 100 };
const v2 = @Vector(3, f32){ 2.0, 3.0, 5.0 };
diff --git a/exercises/114_packed.zig b/exercises/114_packed.zig
index 1058f76..933ae0a 100644
--- a/exercises/114_packed.zig
+++ b/exercises/114_packed.zig
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
//
// We've already learned plenty about bit manipulation using bitwise operations
-// in exercices 097 and 098 and in quiz 110. The techniques we already know work
+// in exercises 097 and 098 and in quiz 110. The techniques we already know work
// just fine, but creating masks and shifting individual bits around can become
// quite tedious and unwieldy pretty quickly.
-// What if there was a better, a more convenient way to control invidivual bits?
+// What if there was a better, a more convenient way to control individual bits?
//
// Luckily, Zig has a keyword for exactly this purpose:
//