diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'absl/strings/string_view.h')
-rw-r--r-- | absl/strings/string_view.h | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/absl/strings/string_view.h b/absl/strings/string_view.h index 96101463125b..9c03108b4439 100644 --- a/absl/strings/string_view.h +++ b/absl/strings/string_view.h @@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ // // This file contains the definition of the `absl::string_view` class. A // `string_view` points to a contiguous span of characters, often part or all of -// another `std::string`, double-quoted std::string literal, character array, or even +// another `std::string`, double-quoted string literal, character array, or even // another `string_view`. // // This `absl::string_view` abstraction is designed to be a drop-in @@ -56,15 +56,15 @@ namespace absl { // absl::string_view // -// A `string_view` provides a lightweight view into the std::string data provided by -// a `std::string`, double-quoted std::string literal, character array, or even -// another `string_view`. A `string_view` does *not* own the std::string to which it +// A `string_view` provides a lightweight view into the string data provided by +// a `std::string`, double-quoted string literal, character array, or even +// another `string_view`. A `string_view` does *not* own the string to which it // points, and that data cannot be modified through the view. // // You can use `string_view` as a function or method parameter anywhere a -// parameter can receive a double-quoted std::string literal, `const char*`, +// parameter can receive a double-quoted string literal, `const char*`, // `std::string`, or another `absl::string_view` argument with no need to copy -// the std::string data. Systematic use of `string_view` within function arguments +// the string data. Systematic use of `string_view` within function arguments // reduces data copies and `strlen()` calls. // // Because of its small size, prefer passing `string_view` by value: @@ -97,8 +97,8 @@ namespace absl { // `string_view` this way, it is your responsibility to ensure that the object // pointed to by the `string_view` outlives the `string_view`. // -// A `string_view` may represent a whole std::string or just part of a std::string. For -// example, when splitting a std::string, `std::vector<absl::string_view>` is a +// A `string_view` may represent a whole string or just part of a string. For +// example, when splitting a string, `std::vector<absl::string_view>` is a // natural data type for the output. // // |