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-rw-r--r--chapter02/aboutlfs.xml2
-rw-r--r--chapter02/aboutsbus.xml2
-rw-r--r--chapter02/install.xml4
3 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/chapter02/aboutlfs.xml b/chapter02/aboutlfs.xml
index f53f858f8..5dea03e3a 100644
--- a/chapter02/aboutlfs.xml
+++ b/chapter02/aboutlfs.xml
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
the variable $LFS will be used frequently. $LFS must at all times be
replaced with the directory where the partition that contains the LFS system
is mounted. How to create and where to mount the partition will be
-explained in full detail in chapter 4. For example, let's assume that
+explained in full detail in Chapter 4. For example, let's assume that
the LFS partition is mounted on /mnt/lfs.</para>
<para>For example when you are told to run a command like
diff --git a/chapter02/aboutsbus.xml b/chapter02/aboutsbus.xml
index 9e4ef28bc..f43859584 100644
--- a/chapter02/aboutsbus.xml
+++ b/chapter02/aboutsbus.xml
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ times it takes to compile something varies too much. One package may take
<emphasis>Static Bash Unit</emphasis> or <emphasis>SBU</emphasis>.</para>
<para>It works like this: the very first package you compile in this book
-is Bash in chapter 5 and it'll be statically linked. The time it takes to
+is Bash in Chapter 5 and it'll be statically linked. The time it takes to
compile this package will be the basis and called the SBU. All other
compile times are relative to the time it takes to install Bash. For
example, GCC-3.2 takes about 9.5 SBUs and it's proven that this number is
diff --git a/chapter02/install.xml b/chapter02/install.xml
index b9344d008..70f85bbba 100644
--- a/chapter02/install.xml
+++ b/chapter02/install.xml
@@ -63,8 +63,8 @@ can be used they need to be uncompressed first.</para>
it: either the directory that contains the sources can be deleted, or it
can be kept. We highly recommend deleting it. If you don't do this and
try to re-use the same source later on in the book (for example re-using
-the source trees from chapter 5 for use in chapter 6), it may not work
-as you expect it to. Source trees from chapter 5 will have your host
+the source trees from Chapter 5 for use in Chapter 6), it may not work
+as you expect it to. Source trees from Chapter 5 will have your host
distribution's settings, which don't always apply to the LFS system
after you enter the chroot'ed environment. Even running something like
<emphasis>make clean</emphasis> doesn't always guarantee a clean source