Correct some uses of e.g. and i.e. in message strings and documentation

E.g. means "for example" and i.e. means "that is". Fix a couple uses
that don't match the intended meaning.

Kyotaro Horiguchi

Reviewed by Junwang Zhao and Aleksander Alekseev, with one addition by me
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20220713.180943.589079824955875739.horikyota.ntt%40gmail.com
This commit is contained in:
John Naylor 2022-07-14 09:38:06 +07:00
parent 6203583b72
commit 82785effc0
2 changed files with 3 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -8312,7 +8312,7 @@ EXEC SQL CLOSE DATABASE;
<term><literal>FREE cursor_name</literal></term>
<listitem>
<para>
Due to the differences how ECPG works compared to Informix's ESQL/C (i.e., which steps
Due to differences in how ECPG works compared to Informix's ESQL/C (namely, which steps
are purely grammar transformations and which steps rely on the underlying run-time library)
there is no <literal>FREE cursor_name</literal> statement in ECPG. This is because in ECPG,
<literal>DECLARE CURSOR</literal> doesn't translate to a function call into

View File

@ -540,7 +540,7 @@ create_script_for_old_cluster_deletion(char **deletion_script_file_name)
if (path_is_prefix_of_path(old_cluster_pgdata, new_cluster_pgdata))
{
pg_log(PG_WARNING,
"\nWARNING: new data directory should not be inside the old data directory, e.g. %s", old_cluster_pgdata);
"\nWARNING: new data directory should not be inside the old data directory, i.e. %s", old_cluster_pgdata);
/* Unlink file in case it is left over from a previous run. */
unlink(*deletion_script_file_name);
@ -564,7 +564,7 @@ create_script_for_old_cluster_deletion(char **deletion_script_file_name)
{
/* reproduce warning from CREATE TABLESPACE that is in the log */
pg_log(PG_WARNING,
"\nWARNING: user-defined tablespace locations should not be inside the data directory, e.g. %s", old_tablespace_dir);
"\nWARNING: user-defined tablespace locations should not be inside the data directory, i.e. %s", old_tablespace_dir);
/* Unlink file in case it is left over from a previous run. */
unlink(*deletion_script_file_name);