Commit e48f67f2 authored by pam@chromium.org's avatar pam@chromium.org

Fix typos in privacy API documentation.

BUG=116518
TEST=none (documentation only)

Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/9582005

git-svn-id: svn://svn.chromium.org/chrome/trunk/src@124950 0039d316-1c4b-4281-b951-d872f2087c98
parent f5ed80cd
......@@ -265,7 +265,7 @@
<p>
Reading the current value of a Chrome setting is straightforward. You'll first
need to find the property you're interested in, then you'll call
<code>get()</code> on that object in order to retrieve it's current value and
<code>get()</code> on that object in order to retrieve its current value and
your extension's level of control. For example, to determine if Chrome's
Autofill feature is enabled, you'd write:
</p>
......@@ -278,7 +278,7 @@
<p>
Changing the value of a setting is a little bit more complex, simply because
you first must verify that your extension can control the setting. The user
won't see any change to her settings if you extension toggles a setting that
won't see any change to her settings if your extension toggles a setting that
is either locked to a specific value by enterprise policies
(<code>levelOfControl</code> will be set to "not_controllable"), or if another
extension is controlling the value (<code>levelOfControl</code> will be set to
......@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@
This means that you ought to use the <code>get()</code> method to determine
your level of access, and then only call <code>set()</code> if your extension
can grab control over the setting (in fact if your extension can't control the
setting it's probably a good idea to visibly disable the functionality to
setting it's probably a good idea to visually disable the functionality to
reduce user confusion):
</p>
<pre>chrome.privacy.services.autofillEnabled.get({}, function(details) {
......
......@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@
<p>
Reading the current value of a Chrome setting is straightforward. You'll first
need to find the property you're interested in, then you'll call
<code>get()</code> on that object in order to retrieve it's current value and
<code>get()</code> on that object in order to retrieve its current value and
your extension's level of control. For example, to determine if Chrome's
Autofill feature is enabled, you'd write:
</p>
......@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@
<p>
Changing the value of a setting is a little bit more complex, simply because
you first must verify that your extension can control the setting. The user
won't see any change to her settings if you extension toggles a setting that
won't see any change to her settings if your extension toggles a setting that
is either locked to a specific value by enterprise policies
(<code>levelOfControl</code> will be set to "not_controllable"), or if another
extension is controlling the value (<code>levelOfControl</code> will be set to
......@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@
This means that you ought to use the <code>get()</code> method to determine
your level of access, and then only call <code>set()</code> if your extension
can grab control over the setting (in fact if your extension can't control the
setting it's probably a good idea to visibly disable the functionality to
setting it's probably a good idea to visually disable the functionality to
reduce user confusion):
</p>
......
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