From 93f44683c51d32eaa60dfe302043d064bdeb0570 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rob Speer Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2015 17:49:07 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] fix list formatting --- README.md | 24 ++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 6bd4087..fed31f6 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -53,21 +53,21 @@ frequencies by a million (1e6) to get more readable numbers: The parameters are: - - `word`: a Unicode string containing the word to look up. Ideally the word - is a single token according to our tokenizer, but if not, there is still - hope -- see *Tokenization* below. +- `word`: a Unicode string containing the word to look up. Ideally the word + is a single token according to our tokenizer, but if not, there is still + hope -- see *Tokenization* below. - - `lang`: the BCP 47 or ISO 639 code of the language to use, such as 'en'. +- `lang`: the BCP 47 or ISO 639 code of the language to use, such as 'en'. - - `wordlist`: which set of word frequencies to use. Current options are - 'combined', which combines up to five different sources, and - 'twitter', which returns frequencies observed on Twitter alone. +- `wordlist`: which set of word frequencies to use. Current options are + 'combined', which combines up to five different sources, and + 'twitter', which returns frequencies observed on Twitter alone. - - `minimum`: If the word is not in the list or has a frequency lower than - `minimum`, return `minimum` instead. In some applications, you'll want - to set `minimum=1e-6` to avoid a discontinuity where the list ends, because - a frequency of 1e-6 (1 per million) is the threshold for being included in - the list at all. +- `minimum`: If the word is not in the list or has a frequency lower than + `minimum`, return `minimum` instead. In some applications, you'll want + to set `minimum=1e-6` to avoid a discontinuity where the list ends, because + a frequency of 1e-6 (1 per million) is the threshold for being included in + the list at all. Other functions: