From 76bc73e52ac119d205c4a5fcb5d049b86a3603df Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cjihrig Date: Wed, 7 Nov 2018 12:36:57 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] doc: fix linting errors --- doc/api/errors.md | 8 ++++++-- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/api/errors.md b/doc/api/errors.md index 575f77861fa0f2..82c4e790e6b84b 100644 --- a/doc/api/errors.md +++ b/doc/api/errors.md @@ -260,7 +260,10 @@ not capture any frames. * {string} The `error.code` property is a string label that identifies the kind of error. -`error.code` is the most stable way to identify an error. It will only change between major versions of Node.js. In contrast, `error.message` strings may change between any versions of Node.js. See [Node.js Error Codes][] for details about specific codes. +`error.code` is the most stable way to identify an error. It will only change +between major versions of Node.js. In contrast, `error.message` strings may +change between any versions of Node.js. See [Node.js Error Codes][] for details +about specific codes. ### error.message @@ -489,7 +492,8 @@ system error. * {string|number} -The `error.errno` property is a number or a string. If it is a number, it is a negative value which corresponds to the error code defined in +The `error.errno` property is a number or a string. If it is a number, it is a +negative value which corresponds to the error code defined in [`libuv Error handling`]. See the libuv `errno.h` header file (`deps/uv/include/uv/errno.h` in the Node.js source tree) for details. In case of a string, it is the same as `error.code`.