From e6f247e69bf0ff67dd77da1eb7fe82d7b37bcced Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yuri Chornoivan Date: Sat, 1 Nov 2008 19:37:07 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] typo svn path=/trunk/kdereview/doc/partitionmanager/; revision=878783 --- doc/glossary.docbook | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/doc/glossary.docbook b/doc/glossary.docbook index 8e85d73..0ae388d 100644 --- a/doc/glossary.docbook +++ b/doc/glossary.docbook @@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ &partman; divides the work it does up in operations, jobs and commands. - Operations are the most visible of the three. If you pick an action in the graphical user interface, this will likely result in a new operation being added to the list of pending operations. The idea behind that is: You will most probably want to set up quite a number of steps to transform the current state of your disk devices to the state you have in mind. Some of these steps may take quite a long time to execute (like copying a large file system of resizing a file system that is nearly full). To save you from having to sit in front of your computer for a long time waiting for one step to finish and then starting the next one, operations allow you to exactly specify how the computer's devices should look like once everything is finished, then let &partman; apply the operations and come back when it has executed all of them. + Operations are the most visible of the three. If you pick an action in the graphical user interface, this will likely result in a new operation being added to the list of pending operations. The idea behind that is: You will most probably want to set up quite a number of steps to transform the current state of your disk devices to the state you have in mind. Some of these steps may take quite a long time to execute (like copying a large file system or resizing a file system that is nearly full). To save you from having to sit in front of your computer for a long time waiting for one step to finish and then starting the next one, operations allow you to exactly specify how the computer's devices should look like once everything is finished, then let &partman; apply the operations and come back when it has executed all of them. Operations are kept in a list of pending operations. As long as an operation has not been applied it can still be taken back easily and nothing will have been modified.