RGBA: Consistently use “” around inline arg names

instead of being inconsistent and not using them later, which leaves a
bunch of single letters floating among real words, not the prettiest.
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Boles 2018-12-17 19:59:28 +00:00
parent 33a966952a
commit be60ddbec9

View File

@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ parse_rgb_value (const gchar *str,
* - A RGBA color in the form rgba(r,g,b,a) * - A RGBA color in the form rgba(r,g,b,a)
* *
* Where r, g, b and a are respectively the red, green, blue and * Where r, g, b and a are respectively the red, green, blue and
* alpha color values. In the last two cases, r g and b are either integers * alpha color values. In the last two cases, r, g, and b are either integers
* in the range 0 to 255 or percentage values in the range 0% to 100%, and * in the range 0 to 255 or percentage values in the range 0% to 100%, and
* a is a floating point value in the range 0 to 1. * a is a floating point value in the range 0 to 1.
* *
@ -336,15 +336,15 @@ gdk_rgba_equal (gconstpointer p1,
* `rgb(r,g,b)` or * `rgb(r,g,b)` or
* `rgba(r g,b,a)`, * `rgba(r g,b,a)`,
* where r, g, b and a represent the red, green, * where r, g, b and a represent the red, green,
* blue and alpha values respectively. r, g, and b are * blue and alpha values respectively. r, g, and b are
* represented as integers in the range 0 to 255, and a * represented as integers in the range 0 to 255, and a
* is represented as floating point value in the range 0 to 1. * is represented as floating point value in the range 0 to 1.
* *
* These string forms are string forms those supported by * These string forms are string forms those supported by
* the CSS3 colors module, and can be parsed by gdk_rgba_parse(). * the CSS3 colors module, and can be parsed by gdk_rgba_parse().
* *
* Note that this string representation may lose some * Note that this string representation may lose some
* precision, since r, g and b are represented as 8-bit * precision, since r, g and b are represented as 8-bit
* integers. If this is a concern, you should use a * integers. If this is a concern, you should use a
* different representation. * different representation.
* *