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cmd/go: remove references to 1.13 in 'go help modules'

In "Module support" section, there were two mentions of "Go 1.13",
assuming that's the latest version. Rather than update these to 1.14,
this CL changes those to "The go command".

Also, a minor change in wording for finding go.mod files.

Change-Id: Id194be9405b540f221464814e71c361a22cc0f55
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/214140
Run-TryBot: Jay Conrod <jayconrod@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
This commit is contained in:
Jay Conrod 2020-01-09 16:22:01 -05:00
parent 199bc0003d
commit 65219650ff
2 changed files with 8 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -2351,14 +2351,15 @@
//
// Module support
//
// Go 1.13 includes support for Go modules. Module-aware mode is active by default
// whenever a go.mod file is found in, or in a parent of, the current directory.
// The go command includes support for Go modules. Module-aware mode is active
// by default whenever a go.mod file is found in the current directory or in
// any parent directory.
//
// The quickest way to take advantage of module support is to check out your
// repository, create a go.mod file (described in the next section) there, and run
// go commands from within that file tree.
//
// For more fine-grained control, Go 1.13 continues to respect
// For more fine-grained control, the go command continues to respect
// a temporary environment variable, GO111MODULE, which can be set to one
// of three string values: off, on, or auto (the default).
// If GO111MODULE=on, then the go command requires the use of modules,

View File

@ -21,14 +21,15 @@ which source files are used in a given build.
Module support
Go 1.13 includes support for Go modules. Module-aware mode is active by default
whenever a go.mod file is found in, or in a parent of, the current directory.
The go command includes support for Go modules. Module-aware mode is active
by default whenever a go.mod file is found in the current directory or in
any parent directory.
The quickest way to take advantage of module support is to check out your
repository, create a go.mod file (described in the next section) there, and run
go commands from within that file tree.
For more fine-grained control, Go 1.13 continues to respect
For more fine-grained control, the go command continues to respect
a temporary environment variable, GO111MODULE, which can be set to one
of three string values: off, on, or auto (the default).
If GO111MODULE=on, then the go command requires the use of modules,