# New Ticket Created by  Bob Wilkinson 
# Please include the string:  [perl #43657]
# in the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue. 
# <URL: http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Ticket/Display.html?id=43657 >


Hello

     I do not think that "type-inference" is a verb. "Infer" is,
     however. I have re-worded a sentence.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/src/parrot/docs$ svn diff vtables.pod
Index: vtables.pod
===================================================================
--- vtables.pod (revision 19698)
+++ vtables.pod (working copy)
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@

 To be perfectly honest, this is a slightly flawed example, since it's unlikely
 that there will be a distinct "Python scalar" PMC class.  The Python compiler
-could well type-inference variables such that C<a> would be a C<PythonString>
+could well infer variables by their type such that C<a> would be a 
C<PythonString>
 and C<b> would be a C<PythonNumber>.  But the point remains - incrementing a
 C<PythonString> is very different from incrementing a C<PerlScalar>.

Bob

P.S. Patch enclosed, too
Index: vtables.pod
===================================================================
--- vtables.pod (revision 19698)
+++ vtables.pod (working copy)
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
 
 To be perfectly honest, this is a slightly flawed example, since it's unlikely
 that there will be a distinct "Python scalar" PMC class.  The Python compiler
-could well type-inference variables such that C<a> would be a C<PythonString>
+could well infer variables by their type such that C<a> would be a 
C<PythonString>
 and C<b> would be a C<PythonNumber>.  But the point remains - incrementing a
 C<PythonString> is very different from incrementing a C<PerlScalar>.
 

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