docs/src/getting-started.md

changeset 282
3070d72f54af
parent 273
c743721d566f
child 283
0e36bb75a732
--- a/docs/src/getting-started.md	Sat Aug 05 11:33:17 2017 +0200
+++ b/docs/src/getting-started.md	Sat Aug 05 13:35:27 2017 +0200
@@ -7,11 +7,11 @@
 
 	dav list http://example.com/webdav/
 
-This lists all child resources of the specified collection. If you are unfamiliar to WebDAV terminology this means basically listing all files in a directory, similar to the ls unix tool. Infact you can also write dav ls instead of dav list and there is also a -l option like ls has one. 
+This lists all child resources of the specified collection. If you are unfamiliar to WebDAV terminology this means basically listing all files in a directory, similar to the ls unix tool. Actually you can also write `dav ls` instead of `dav list` and there is also an `-l` option similarly to the unix tool `ls`.
 
 ### Create a repository
 
-All dav commands are expecting a url argument, but it may be a bit cumbersome to type a full url every time. But you can configure a repository in the dav configuration file ($HOME/.dav/config.xml) with the servers url, optional authentication information and other options. After that you can access a webdav server just with the repository name and an optional path.
+All dav commands are expecting an url argument, but it may be a bit cumbersome to type a full url every time. But you can configure a repository in the dav configuration file ($HOME/.dav/config.xml) with the servers url, optional authentication information and other options. Afterwards you can access a webdav server just with the repository name and an optional path.
 
 So when you have created a repository with the name myserv and the url http://example.com/webdav/, you can just type
 

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