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-rw-r--r--src/win32/win32_memory.cpp2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/src/win32/win32_memory.cpp b/src/win32/win32_memory.cpp
index db7a46eb8..2e25e8681 100644
--- a/src/win32/win32_memory.cpp
+++ b/src/win32/win32_memory.cpp
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
* whereas on POSIX systems, shared objects loaded into an executable share
* the executable's heap. This means that if we pass an arbitrary pointer to
* a windows DLL which is not allocated in that dll, without some form of
- * marshalling, we get a page fault. To fix this, these overrided operators
+ * marshalling, we get a page fault. To fix this, these overridden operators
* new and delete use the windows HeapAlloc and HeapFree functions to claim
* memory from the windows global heap. This makes windows 'act like' POSIX
* when it comes to memory usage between dlls and exes.