Fix typo: recored → recorded

Anthony Fok 2021-11-29 03:36:30 -07:00
parent bf3f3acf76
commit b83cb4d2f1

@ -945,7 +945,7 @@ On a related note, Kubernetes has some atypical build approaches (currently incl
Yes.
If a repository has not opted in to modules but has been tagged with valid [semver](https://semver.org) tags (including the required leading `v`), then those semver tags can be used in a `go get`, and a corresponding semver version will be record in the importing module's `go.mod` file. If the repository does not have any valid semver tags, then the repository's version will be recorded with a ["pseudo-version"](https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Pseudo_versions) such as ` v0.0.0-20171006230638-a6e239ea1c69` (which includes a timestamp and a commit hash, and which are designed to allow a total ordering across versions recored in `go.mod` and to make it easier to reason about which recorded versions are "later" than another recorded version).
If a repository has not opted in to modules but has been tagged with valid [semver](https://semver.org) tags (including the required leading `v`), then those semver tags can be used in a `go get`, and a corresponding semver version will be record in the importing module's `go.mod` file. If the repository does not have any valid semver tags, then the repository's version will be recorded with a ["pseudo-version"](https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Pseudo_versions) such as ` v0.0.0-20171006230638-a6e239ea1c69` (which includes a timestamp and a commit hash, and which are designed to allow a total ordering across versions recorded in `go.mod` and to make it easier to reason about which recorded versions are "later" than another recorded version).
For example, if the latest version of package `foo` is tagged `v1.2.3` but `foo` has not itself opted in to modules, then running `go get foo` or `go get foo@v1.2.3` from inside module M will be recorded in module M's `go.mod` file as: