diff --git a/1-js/02-first-steps/14-function-basics/1-if-else-required/task.md b/1-js/02-first-steps/14-function-basics/1-if-else-required/task.md index 743ba78a..4f69a5c8 100644 --- a/1-js/02-first-steps/14-function-basics/1-if-else-required/task.md +++ b/1-js/02-first-steps/14-function-basics/1-if-else-required/task.md @@ -35,4 +35,4 @@ function checkAge(age) { } ``` -Is there any difference in the bahavior of these two variants? +Is there any difference in the behavior of these two variants? diff --git a/1-js/07-object-oriented-programming/09-class/article.md b/1-js/07-object-oriented-programming/09-class/article.md index 717376e8..549a40e1 100644 --- a/1-js/07-object-oriented-programming/09-class/article.md +++ b/1-js/07-object-oriented-programming/09-class/article.md @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ let user = new User("John"); user.sayHi(); ``` -It's easy to see that the two examples are alike. Just please note that methods in a class do not have a comma between them. Notice developers sometimes forget it and put a comma between class methods, and things don't work. That's not a literal object, but a class syntax. +It's easy to see that the two examples are alike. Just please note that methods in a class do not have a comma between them. Novice developers sometimes forget it and put a comma between class methods, and things don't work. That's not a literal object, but a class syntax. So, what exactly does `class` do? We may think that it defines a new language-level entity, but that would be wrong.