Typo corrections from @radix (thanks!)
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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ examples of using the package.
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## Example
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Since we're about to jump into a few section of descriptive text, let's kick
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this off with a concrete example of whet your appetite. We're going to count
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this off with a concrete example to whet your appetite. We're going to count
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the frequency of different bytes that appear on standard output, and then
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display this content.
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@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ normal concerns of shared mutable state. And perhaps most importantly for
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usage: mutable vectors can be *much* more efficient for certain use cases.
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However, that's not the only dimension of choice you get in the vector package.
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vector itself defines three flavors: unboxed
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vector itself defines three flavors: boxed
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(`Data.Vector`/`Data.Vector.Mutable`), storable (`Data.Vector.Storable` and
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`Data.Vector.Storable.Mutable`), and unboxed (`Data.Vector.Unboxed` and
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`Data.Vector.Unboxed.Mutable`). (There's also technically primitive vectors,
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