spellcheck: adapt to backslashed minuses

As the curl.1 has more backslashed minus, the cleanup sed lines xneed to
adapt.

Adjusted some docs slighly.

Follow-up to 439ff2052e

Closes #11663
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Stenberg 2023-08-11 23:51:15 +02:00
parent 439ff2052e
commit 0efe8b215c
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6 changed files with 14 additions and 11 deletions

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@ -853,6 +853,8 @@ Viktor
VM
VMS
VMware
VRF
VRFY
VSE
vsprintf
vt

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@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ jobs:
- name: trim the curl.1 markdown file
run: |
perl -pi -e 's/^ .*//' docs/curl.md
perl -pi -e 's/--[a-z0-9-]*//ig' docs/curl.md
perl -pi -e 's/\-\-[\a-z0-9-]*//ig' docs/curl.md
perl -pi -e 's!https://[a-z0-9%/.-]*!!ig' docs/curl.md
- name: setup the custom wordlist

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@ -13,9 +13,10 @@ Multi: single
Specify the login options to use during server authentication.
You can use login options to specify protocol specific options that may be
used during authentication. At present only IMAP, POP3 and SMTP support
login options. For more information about login options please see RFC
2384, RFC 5092 and the IETF draft **draft-earhart-url-smtp-00.txt**.
used during authentication. At present only IMAP, POP3 and SMTP support login
options. For more information about login options please see RFC 2384,
RFC 5092 and the IETF draft
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-earhart-url-smtp-00.
Since 8.2.0, IMAP supports the login option "AUTH=+LOGIN". With this option,
curl uses the plain (not SASL) LOGIN IMAP command even if the server advertises

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@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Multi: append
Specify a single email address, user name or mailing list name. Repeat this
option several times to send to multiple recipients.
When performing an address verification (*VRFY* command), the recipient should be
When performing an address verification (**VRFY** command), the recipient should be
specified as the user name or user name and domain (as per Section 3.5 of
RFC 5321). (Added in 7.34.0)

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@ -28,13 +28,13 @@ You may use this option as many times as the number of URLs you have. For
example, if you specify two URLs on the same command line, you can use it like
this:
curl -o aa example.com -o bb example.net
curl -o aa example.com -o bb example.net
and the order of the -o options and the URLs does not matter, just that the
first -o is for the first URL and so on, so the above command line can also be
written as
curl example.com example.net -o aa -o bb
curl example.com example.net -o aa -o bb
See also the --create-dirs option to create the local directories
dynamically. Specifying the output as '-' (a single dash) will force the
@ -42,8 +42,8 @@ output to be done to stdout.
To suppress response bodies, you can redirect output to /dev/null:
curl example.com -o /dev/null
curl example.com -o /dev/null
Or for Windows use **nul**:
Or for Windows:
curl example.com -o nul
curl example.com -o nul

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@ -46,6 +46,6 @@ Specifies a custom POP3 command to use instead of *LIST* or *RETR*.
Specifies a custom IMAP command to use instead of *LIST*. (Added in 7.30.0)
.TP
**SMTP**
Specifies a custom SMTP command to use instead of *HELP* or *VRFY*. (Added in 7.34.0)
Specifies a custom SMTP command to use instead of *HELP* or **VRFY**. (Added in 7.34.0)
.RE
.IP