From daa13d00339880f4100e6c537229f99ca9225e7a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: paranoimia Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2021 21:46:04 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Fix typos in BUILD_WIN.md --- BUILD_WIN.md | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/BUILD_WIN.md b/BUILD_WIN.md index 55f3a00c8b..1ba841230d 100644 --- a/BUILD_WIN.md +++ b/BUILD_WIN.md @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ To create this variable: In the next step, you will use CMake to build Vircadia. By default, the CMake process builds dependency files in Windows' `%TEMP%` directory, which is periodically cleared by the operating system. To prevent you from having to re-build the dependencies in the event that Windows clears that directory, we recommend that you create a `HIFI_VCPKG_BASE` environment variable linked to a directory somewhere on your machine. That directory will contain all dependency files until you manually remove them. To create this variable: -* Naviagte to 'Edit the System Environment Variables' Through the start menu. +* Navigate to 'Edit the System Environment Variables' Through the start menu. * Click on 'Environment Variables' * Select 'New' * Set "Variable name" to `HIFI_VCPKG_BASE` @@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ To create this variable: Additionally, if you have Visual Studio 2019 installed and _only_ Visual Studio 2019 (i.e. you do not have Visual Studio 2017 installed) you must add an additional environment variable `HIFI_VCPKG_BOOTSTRAP` that will fix a bug in our `vcpkg` pre-build step. To create this variable: -* Naviagte to 'Edit the System Environment Variables' Through the start menu. +* Navigate to 'Edit the System Environment Variables' Through the start menu. * Click on 'Environment Variables' * Select 'New' * Set "Variable name" to `HIFI_VCPKG_BOOTSTRAP` @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ Create another environment variable (see Step #3) Restart Visual Studio again. -In Visual Studio, right+click "interface" under the Apps folder in Solution Explorer and select "Set as Startup Project". Run from the menu bar `Debug > Start Debugging`. +In Visual Studio, right-click "interface" under the Apps folder in Solution Explorer and select "Set as Startup Project". Run from the menu bar `Debug > Start Debugging`. Now, you should have a full build of Vircadia and be able to run the Interface using Visual Studio.