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Fix spelling in README
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robinschneider committed Oct 28, 2023
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22 changes: 11 additions & 11 deletions README.md
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Expand Up @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ If you are looking for a command line tool for version comparisons please see

## Package Versions

Note, import `github.com/github.com/Masterminds/semver/v3` to use the latest version.
Note, import `github.com/Masterminds/semver/v3` to use the latest version.

There are three major versions fo the `semver` package.

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -80,12 +80,12 @@ There are two methods for comparing versions. One uses comparison methods on
differences to notes between these two methods of comparison.

1. When two versions are compared using functions such as `Compare`, `LessThan`,
and others it will follow the specification and always include prereleases
and others it will follow the specification and always include pre-releases
within the comparison. It will provide an answer that is valid with the
comparison section of the spec at https://semver.org/#spec-item-11
2. When constraint checking is used for checks or validation it will follow a
different set of rules that are common for ranges with tools like npm/js
and Rust/Cargo. This includes considering prereleases to be invalid if the
and Rust/Cargo. This includes considering pre-releases to be invalid if the
ranges does not include one. If you want to have it include pre-releases a
simple solution is to include `-0` in your range.
3. Constraint ranges can have some complex rules including the shorthand use of
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ v, err := semver.NewVersion("1.3")
if err != nil {
// Handle version not being parsable.
}
// Check if the version meets the constraints. The a variable will be true.
// Check if the version meets the constraints. The variable a will be true.
a := c.Check(v)
```

Expand All @@ -137,20 +137,20 @@ The basic comparisons are:
### Working With Prerelease Versions

Pre-releases, for those not familiar with them, are used for software releases
prior to stable or generally available releases. Examples of prereleases include
development, alpha, beta, and release candidate releases. A prerelease may be
prior to stable or generally available releases. Examples of pre-releases include
development, alpha, beta, and release candidate releases. A pre-release may be
a version such as `1.2.3-beta.1` while the stable release would be `1.2.3`. In the
order of precedence, prereleases come before their associated releases. In this
order of precedence, pre-releases come before their associated releases. In this
example `1.2.3-beta.1 < 1.2.3`.

According to the Semantic Version specification prereleases may not be
According to the Semantic Version specification, pre-releases may not be
API compliant with their release counterpart. It says,

> A pre-release version indicates that the version is unstable and might not satisfy the intended compatibility requirements as denoted by its associated normal version.
SemVer comparisons using constraints without a prerelease comparator will skip
prerelease versions. For example, `>=1.2.3` will skip prereleases when looking
at a list of releases while `>=1.2.3-0` will evaluate and find prereleases.
SemVer's comparisons using constraints without a pre-release comparator will skip
pre-release versions. For example, `>=1.2.3` will skip pre-releases when looking
at a list of releases while `>=1.2.3-0` will evaluate and find pre-releases.

The reason for the `0` as a pre-release version in the example comparison is
because pre-releases can only contain ASCII alphanumerics and hyphens (along with
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