Add words from new features such as NFTs to the spell checker (#1615)

* Add words from new features such as NFTs to the spell checker

* Add more proper nouns and general purpose words

* Add more proper nouns and general purpose words

* Update to use backticks

* Update proper nouns and generic words

* Fix style for words based on style checker report

* Style/spelling fixes

* Fix links broken by style/spelling updates

* More edits for style

* Finish updates to get style checker to pass

Co-authored-by: mDuo13 <mduo13@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Amarantha Kulkarni
2022-12-15 14:29:32 -08:00
committed by GitHub
parent 4c9ca0f219
commit 845422da7f
132 changed files with 618 additions and 981 deletions

View File

@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ The commandline always uses the latest [API version](#api-versioning).
The `rippled` server uses a single integer to identify the API version to use. The first API version is `1`; currently, this is the only version of the `rippled` API. (There is no API version 0.) [New in: rippled 1.5.0][]
Future versions of `rippled` that introduce breaking changes will introduce a new API version number, such as `2`. The server will support a range of API versions, which it reports in the `version` API method. <!-- TODO: add a link when `version` method is documented. --> <!-- Uncomment when multiple API versions exist: Separate API requests can use different API versions even on the same persistent connection. For example, if you connect WebSocket to a server that supports API versions 1 and 2, you can make a server_info request using API version 2 and then make another server_info request using API version 1 from the same connection. -->
Future versions of `rippled` that introduce breaking changes will introduce a new API version number, such as `2`. The server will support a range of API versions, which it reports in the `version` API method. <!-- STYLE_OVERRIDE: will --> <!-- TODO: add a link when `version` method is documented. --> <!-- Uncomment when multiple API versions exist: Separate API requests can use different API versions even on the same persistent connection. For example, if you connect WebSocket to a server that supports API versions 1 and 2, you can make a server_info request using API version 2 and then make another server_info request using API version 1 from the same connection. -->
### Breaking Changes