On 11/28/23 06:12, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 11:41:31AM -0800, Randy Dunlap wrote: >> Hi, >> >> On 11/27/23 07:57, attreyee-muk wrote: >>> Respected Maintainers, >>> >>> I have made some grammatical changes in the livepatch.rst file where I >>> felt that the sentence would have sounded more correct and would have become easy for >>> beginners to understand by reading. >>> Requesting review of my proposed changes from the mainatiners. >>> >>> Thank You >>> Attreyee Mukherjee >>> >>> Signed-off-by: attreyee-muk <tintinm2017@xxxxxxxxx> >>> --- >>> Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst | 8 ++++---- >>> 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst b/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst >>> index 68e3651e8af9..a2d2317b7d6b 100644 >>> --- a/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst >>> +++ b/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst >>> @@ -35,11 +35,11 @@ and livepatching: >>> >>> All three approaches need to modify the existing code at runtime. Therefore >>> -they need to be aware of each other and not step over each other's toes. >>> +they need to be aware of each other and not step over each others' toes. >> >> I've never seen that written like that, so I disagree here. FWIW. > > "Step over" is new to me too. I see "step on" much more often. Agreed. > As far as placement of the apostrophe, > https://ludwig.guru/s/step+on+each+others+toes > suggests either omitting the apostrophe or placing it after the s, > as attreyee-muk has done is most common. Apparently you can find anything on the internet. :) Here's the other side: https://jakubmarian.com/each-others-vs-each-others-in-english/ -- ~Randy