From b813c727235c48e9142726699dae2e0423fd57d9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Camelid <camelidcamel@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2020 17:11:29 -0800
Subject: [PATCH] Clean up `StructuralEq` docs

---
 library/core/src/marker.rs | 13 ++++++++-----
 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)

diff --git a/library/core/src/marker.rs b/library/core/src/marker.rs
index cdf742057b7b6..29364d0ce9b89 100644
--- a/library/core/src/marker.rs
+++ b/library/core/src/marker.rs
@@ -156,18 +156,18 @@ pub trait StructuralPartialEq {
 /// Required trait for constants used in pattern matches.
 ///
 /// Any type that derives `Eq` automatically implements this trait, *regardless*
-/// of whether its type-parameters implement `Eq`.
+/// of whether its type parameters implement `Eq`.
 ///
-/// This is a hack to workaround a limitation in our type-system.
+/// This is a hack to work around a limitation in our type system.
 ///
-/// Background:
+/// # Background
 ///
 /// We want to require that types of consts used in pattern matches
 /// have the attribute `#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]`.
 ///
 /// In a more ideal world, we could check that requirement by just checking that
-/// the given type implements both (1.) the `StructuralPartialEq` trait *and*
-/// (2.) the `Eq` trait. However, you can have ADTs that *do* `derive(PartialEq, Eq)`,
+/// the given type implements both the `StructuralPartialEq` trait *and*
+/// the `Eq` trait. However, you can have ADTs that *do* `derive(PartialEq, Eq)`,
 /// and be a case that we want the compiler to accept, and yet the constant's
 /// type fails to implement `Eq`.
 ///
@@ -176,8 +176,11 @@ pub trait StructuralPartialEq {
 /// ```rust
 /// #[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
 /// struct Wrap<X>(X);
+///
 /// fn higher_order(_: &()) { }
+///
 /// const CFN: Wrap<fn(&())> = Wrap(higher_order);
+///
 /// fn main() {
 ///     match CFN {
 ///         CFN => {}