@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ for example, and a target for creating a distributable. You can only build a
distributable when you have compiled first, so the distribute target
<i>depends on</i> the compile target. Ant resolves these dependencies.</p>
<p>It should be noted, however, that Ant's <code>depends</code> attribute
only specifies the <i>order</i> in which targets should be executed – it
only specifies the <i>order</i> in which targets should be executed - it
does not affect whether the target that specifies the dependency(s) gets
executed if the dependent target(s) did not (need to) run.
</p>
@@ -265,7 +265,7 @@ programming and scripting languages, as well as with documentation systems.</p>
is found in a file, but no
filter is associated with that token, no changes take place;
therefore, no escaping
method is available – but as long as you choose appropriate names for your
method is available - but as long as you choose appropriate names for your
tokens, this should not cause problems.</p>
<p><b>Warning:</b> If you copy binary files with filtering turned on, you can corrupt the
files. This feature should be used with text files <em>only</em>.</p>
@@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ be used. This takes the general form of:</p>
directory relative to the project's base directory (or an absolute
filename), while the <code>path</code> attribute accepts colon-
or semicolon-separated lists of locations. The <code>path</code>
attribute is intended to be used with predefined paths – in any other
attribute is intended to be used with predefined paths - in any other
case, multiple elements with <code>location</code> attributes should be
preferred.</p>
<p>As a shortcut, the <code><classpath></code> tag
@@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ by the <code>classes</code> directory.</p>
<p>If you want to use the same path-like structure for several tasks,
you can define them with a <code><path></code> element at the
same level as <i>target</i>s, and reference them via their
<i>id</i> attribute – see <a href="#references">References</a> for an
<i>id</i> attribute - see <a href="#references">References</a> for an
example.</p>
<p>A path-like structure can include a reference to another path-like
structure via nested <code><path></code> elements:</p>
@@ -405,7 +405,7 @@ that contain space characters, nested <code>arg</code> elements can be used.</p>
<h3><a name="references">References</a></h3>
<p>The <code>id</code> attribute of the buildfile's elements can be
used to refer to them. This can useful if you are going to replicate
the same snippet of XML over and over again – using a
the same snippet of XML over and over again - using a
<code><classpath></code> structure more than once for
example.</p>
<p>The following example:</p>