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Bump node-forge and google-p12-pem in /functions #938

Bump node-forge and google-p12-pem in /functions

Bump node-forge and google-p12-pem in /functions #938

GitHub Actions / LanguageTool succeeded Jun 18, 2024 in 0s

reviewdog [LanguageTool] report

reported by reviewdog 🐶

Findings (0)
Filtered Findings (21)

README.md|28 col 130| It appears that a comma is missing here. (IF_WE_CANT_COMMA[1])
Suggestions: , you
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/IF_WE_CANT_COMMA?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: PUNCTUATION
README.md|117 col 3| In American English, ‘afterward’ is the preferred variant. ‘Afterwards’ is more commonly used in British English and other dialects. (AFTERWARDS_US[1])
Suggestions: Afterward
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/AFTERWARDS_US?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: BRITISH_ENGLISH
README.md|128 col 14| Unpaired symbol: ‘"’ seems to be missing (EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES)
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/punctuation-guide/#what-are-parentheses
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES?lang=en-US
Category: PUNCTUATION
README.md|128 col 30| Unpaired symbol: ‘“’ seems to be missing (EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES)
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/punctuation-guide/#what-are-parentheses
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES?lang=en-US
Category: PUNCTUATION
README.md|128 col 101| In American English, ‘afterward’ is the preferred variant. ‘Afterwards’ is more commonly used in British English and other dialects. (AFTERWARDS_US[1])
Suggestions: Afterward
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/AFTERWARDS_US?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: BRITISH_ENGLISH
README.md|139 col 30| It appears that hyphens are missing in the adjective “up-to-date”. (UP_TO_DATE_HYPHEN[1])
Suggestions: up-to-date
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/hyphen/#hyphenated-phrases-with-more-than-one-hyphen
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/UP_TO_DATE_HYPHEN?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: COMPOUNDING
README.md|141 col 42| In American English, abbreviations like “etc.” require a period. (ETC_PERIOD[1])
Suggestions: etc.
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/spelling-etc-or-ect/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/ETC_PERIOD?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: AMERICAN_ENGLISH_STYLE
README.md|144 col 78| The abbreviation “e.g.” (= for example) requires two periods. (E_G[1])
Suggestions: e.g.
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/e-g-versus-i-e/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/E_G?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: PUNCTUATION
README.md|162 col 116| File types are normally capitalized. (FILE_EXTENSIONS_CASE[1])
Suggestions: JS
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/spelling-capital-letters/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/FILE_EXTENSIONS_CASE?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: CASING
README.md|173 col 166| The abbreviation “e.g.” (= for example) requires two periods. (E_G[1])
Suggestions: e.g.
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/e-g-versus-i-e/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/E_G?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: PUNCTUATION
README.md|175 col 27| The word “setup” is a noun. The verb is spelled with a white space. (NOUN_VERB_CONFUSION[6])
Suggestions: set up
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/NOUN_VERB_CONFUSION?lang=en-US&subId=6
Category: GRAMMAR
README.md|183 col 86| Consider using just “Return”. (RETURN_BACK[1])
Suggestions: Return
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/RETURN_BACK?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: REDUNDANCY
docs/USAGE.md|5 col 13| Unpaired symbol: ‘"’ seems to be missing (EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES)
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/punctuation-guide/#what-are-parentheses
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES?lang=en-US
Category: PUNCTUATION
docs/USAGE.md|5 col 205| Unpaired symbol: ‘"’ seems to be missing (EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES)
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/punctuation-guide/#what-are-parentheses
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/EN_UNPAIRED_QUOTES?lang=en-US
Category: PUNCTUATION
docs/USAGE.md|14 col 54| Use a comma before ‘and’ if it connects two independent clauses (unless they are closely connected and short). (COMMA_COMPOUND_SENTENCE[1])
Suggestions: , and
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/types-of-sentences/#compound-sentence
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/COMMA_COMPOUND_SENTENCE?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: PUNCTUATION
docs/USAGE.md|93 col 69| Possible spelling mistake found. (EN_MULTITOKEN_SPELLING_TWO[2])
Suggestions: Google Assistant
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/EN_MULTITOKEN_SPELLING_TWO?lang=en-US&subId=2
Category: MULTITOKEN_SPELLING
docs/USAGE.md|95 col 52| A comma may be missing after the conjunctive/linking adverb ‘Currently’. (SENT_START_CONJUNCTIVE_LINKING_ADVERB_COMMA[1])
Suggestions: Currently,
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/linking-words/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/SENT_START_CONJUNCTIVE_LINKING_ADVERB_COMMA?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: PUNCTUATION
docs/USAGE.md|374 col 65| Use a comma before ‘and’ if it connects two independent clauses (unless they are closely connected and short). (COMMA_COMPOUND_SENTENCE[1])
Suggestions: , and
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/types-of-sentences/#compound-sentence
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/COMMA_COMPOUND_SENTENCE?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: PUNCTUATION
docs/USAGE.md|617 col 35| File types are normally capitalized. (FILE_EXTENSIONS_CASE[1])
Suggestions: JS
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/spelling-capital-letters/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/FILE_EXTENSIONS_CASE?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: CASING
docs/USAGE.md|646 col 30| It appears that hyphens are missing in the adjective “up-to-date”. (UP_TO_DATE_HYPHEN[1])
Suggestions: up-to-date
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/hyphen/#hyphenated-phrases-with-more-than-one-hyphen
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/UP_TO_DATE_HYPHEN?lang=en-US&subId=1
Category: COMPOUNDING
docs/USAGE.md|704 col 60| Use “an” instead of ‘a’ if the following word starts with a vowel sound, e.g. ‘an article’, ‘an hour’. (EN_A_VS_AN)
Suggestions: an
URL: https://languagetool.org/insights/post/indefinite-articles/
Rule: https://community.languagetool.org/rule/show/EN_A_VS_AN?lang=en-US
Category: MISC