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author | Adri-May | 2019-09-18 21:57:24 -0400 |
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committer | Adri-May | 2019-09-18 21:57:24 -0400 |
commit | 02a42d1c9e7cea692d0f80e343820c94f162a9bd (patch) | |
tree | f6a03533ddd3e8d95e5617804d82fc7cdaff361a | |
parent | 474731d829821dbd63cedd45b2bb71349fded741 (diff) |
Bug fix: spelling errors
-rw-r--r-- | README.md | 8 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
@@ -544,7 +544,7 @@ Slides can be nested within other slides to create vertical stacks (see [Markup] <img src="https://static.slid.es/support/reveal.js-vertical-slides.gif" width="450"> #### Navigation Mode -You can finetune the reveal.js navigation behavior by using the `navigationMode` config option. Note that these options are only useful for presnetations that use a mix of horizontal and vertical slides. The following navigation modes are available: +You can fine tune the reveal.js navigation behavior by using the `navigationMode` config option. Note that these options are only useful for presentations that use a mix of horizontal and vertical slides. The following navigation modes are available: | Value | Description | | :--------------------------- | :---------- | @@ -800,7 +800,7 @@ Embeds a web page as a slide background that covers 100% of the reveal.js width </section> ``` -Iframes are lazy-loaded when they become visible. If you'd like to preload iframes aehad of time, you can append a `data-preload` attribute to the slide `<section>`. You can also enable preloading globally for all iframes using the `preloadIframes` configuration option. +Iframes are lazy-loaded when they become visible. If you'd like to preload iframes ahead of time, you can append a `data-preload` attribute to the slide `<section>`. You can also enable preloading globally for all iframes using the `preloadIframes` configuration option. #### Background Transitions @@ -1281,7 +1281,7 @@ Then: Plugins should register themselves with reveal.js by calling `Reveal.registerPlugin( 'myPluginID', MyPlugin )`. Registered plugin instances can optionally expose an "init" function that reveal.js will call to initialize them. -When reveal.js is booted up via `Reveal.initialize()`, it will go through all registered plugins and invoke their "init" methods. If the "init" method returns a Promise, reveal.js will wait for that promise to be fulfilled before finshing the startup sequence and firing the [ready](#ready-event) event. Here's an example of a plugin that does some asynchronous work before reveal.js can proceed: +When reveal.js is booted up via `Reveal.initialize()`, it will go through all registered plugins and invoke their "init" methods. If the "init" method returns a Promise, reveal.js will wait for that promise to be fulfilled before finishing the startup sequence and firing the [ready](#ready-event) event. Here's an example of a plugin that does some asynchronous work before reveal.js can proceed: ```javascript let MyPlugin = { @@ -1292,7 +1292,7 @@ Reveal.addEventListener( 'ready', () => console.log( 'Three seconds later...' ) Reveal.initialize(); ``` -Note that reveal.js will *not* wait for init Promise fullfillment if the plugin is loaded as an [async dependency](#dependencies). If the plugin's init method does _not_ return a Promise, the plugin is considered ready right away and will not hold up the reveal.js startup sequence. +Note that reveal.js will *not* wait for init Promise fulfillment if the plugin is loaded as an [async dependency](#dependencies). If the plugin's init method does _not_ return a Promise, the plugin is considered ready right away and will not hold up the reveal.js startup sequence. ### Retrieving Plugins |