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-rw-r--r--doc/guix-cookbook.texi9
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
index a783c0ae4c..affb68ca12 100644
--- a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
+++ b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
@@ -128,8 +128,9 @@ REPL.
@item
Scheme syntax boils down to a tree of expressions (or @emph{s-expression} in
Lisp lingo). An expression can be a literal such as numbers and strings, or a
-compound which is a parenthesized list of compounds and literals. @code{#t}
-and @code{#f} stand for the Booleans ``true'' and ``false'', respectively.
+compound which is a parenthesized list of compounds and literals. @code{#true}
+and @code{#false} (abbreviated @code{#t} and @code{#f}) stand for the
+Booleans ``true'' and ``false'', respectively.
Examples of valid expressions:
@@ -1090,9 +1091,9 @@ this:
#t)
@end lisp
-The procedure must return @code{#t} on success. It's brittle to rely on the return
+The procedure must return @code{#true} on success. It's brittle to rely on the return
value of the last expression used to tweak the phase because there is no
-guarantee it would be a @code{#t}. Hence the trailing @code{#t} to ensure the right value
+guarantee it would be a @code{#true}. Hence the trailing @code{#true} to ensure the right value
is returned on success.
@subsubsection Code staging