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| author | Ben McGinnes <[email protected]> | 2018-03-15 03:59:36 +0000 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Ben McGinnes <[email protected]> | 2018-03-15 03:59:36 +0000 | 
| commit | 9e3e4a835c64f5d06de821b1fd648af37827ff26 (patch) | |
| tree | 632f3afe917d3580175823eda80e6db8ed648c71 /lang/python | |
| parent | doc: python bindings howto (diff) | |
| download | gpgme-9e3e4a835c64f5d06de821b1fd648af37827ff26.tar.gz gpgme-9e3e4a835c64f5d06de821b1fd648af37827ff26.zip | |
doc: python bindings howto
* Spell checking and fixing the few errors.
Diffstat (limited to '')
| -rw-r--r-- | lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org | 20 | 
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 10 deletions
| diff --git a/lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org b/lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org index 0e61746d..37318fce 100644 --- a/lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org +++ b/lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org @@ -35,8 +35,8 @@     Much of it will work with Python 2, but much of it also deals with     Python 3 byte literals, particularly when reading and writing data.     Developers concentrating on Python 2.7, and possibly even 2.6, will -   need to make the approprate modifications to support the older -   string and unicode types as opposted to bytes. +   need to make the appropriate modifications to support the older +   string and unicode types as opposed to bytes.     There are multiple reasons for concentrating on Python 3; some of     which relate to the immediate integration of these bindings, some @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@     Unlike many modern APIs with which programmers will be more     familiar with these days, the GPGME API is a C API.  The API is     intended for use by C coders who would be able to access its -   features by including the =gpgme.h= header file eith their own C +   features by including the =gpgme.h= header file with their own C     source code and then access its functions just as they would any     other C headers. @@ -208,7 +208,7 @@     By default GPGME will attempt to install the bindings for the most     recent or highest version number of Python 2 and Python 3 it     detects in =$PATH=.  It specifically checks for the =python= and -   =python3= executabled first and then checks for specific version +   =python3= executables first and then checks for specific version     numbers.     For Python 2 it checks for these executables in this order: @@ -275,7 +275,7 @@     result of one operation has a direct bearing on the outcome of     subsequent operations.  Not merely by generating an error either. -   When dealing with this type of persistant state on the web, full of +   When dealing with this type of persistent state on the web, full of     both the RESTful and REST-like, it's most commonly referred to as a     session.  In GPGME, however, it is called a context and every     operation type has one. @@ -351,7 +351,7 @@      :END:      Counting the number of keys in your public keybox (=pubring.kbx=), -    the format which has superceded the old keyring format +    the format which has superseded the old keyring format      (=pubring.gpg= and =secring.gpg=), or the number of secret keys is      a very simple task. @@ -424,7 +424,7 @@    :END:    The most frequently called features of any cryptographic library -  will be the most fundamental tasks for enxryption software.  In this +  will be the most fundamental tasks for encryption software.  In this    section we will look at how to programmatically encrypt data,    decrypt it, sign it and verify signatures. @@ -461,7 +461,7 @@     the key was not found.     The encryption operation is invoked within the Context with the -   =c.op_encrypt= function, loading the recipien (=r=), the message +   =c.op_encrypt= function, loading the recipients (=r=), the message     (=plain=) and the =cipher=.  The =cipher.seek= uses =os.SEEK_SET=     to set the data to the correct byte format for GPGME to use it. @@ -798,7 +798,7 @@     Though everything in this example is accurate, it is more likely     that reading the input data from another file and writing the -   result to a new file will be perfprmed more like the way it is done +   result to a new file will be performed more like the way it is done     in the next example.  Even if the output format is ASCII armoured.     #+begin_src python @@ -838,7 +838,7 @@        signed = c.sign(text, mode=1)        afile = open("/path/to/statement.txt.asc", "w") -      for line in signed[0].splitlines()L +      for line in signed[0].splitlines():  	  afile.write("{0}\n".format(line.decode("utf-8")))        afile.close()      #+end_src | 
