Here are typos I have found so far in site articles:
In Home page
- redundant space after period
SuttaCentral brings these together and makes them freely available.
-
- redundant āsā in seems
While the method might seem
sa little arcane at first, once you have remembered a few abbreviations it is really quite simple.
- missing āareā?
In almost all cases, it is clear that a particular rule is a full parallel of the other rules, in the sense that they different versions of the same āthingā.
- Khuddaka NikÄya isnāt bold, whereas other NikÄyas are in bold in the list
Sutta Piį¹aka (Basket of Discourses)
- DÄ«gha NikÄya (Long Discourses)
- Majjhima NikÄya (Middle Discourses)
- Saį¹yutta NikÄya (Linked Discourses)
- Aį¹ guttara NikÄya (Numbered Discourses)
- Khuddaka NikÄya (Minor Discourses)
- collected ā connected
Curiously enough, however, it is not found among the
collectedconnected discourses on the path found in the last book of the Saį¹yutta.
- excess sutta in
The Great Discourse on the Harvest of Deeds (MahÄpadÄnasutta
sutta)
In Middle length discourses guide
- redundant whitespace before period
with the lessening of greed and hate they reach the state of a once-returner
.
- long Ä in MahÄ-
The traditional account says that this was on the instigation of the Buddhaās step-mother, Mah
a
pajÄpatÄ« GotamÄ«
- redundant ātheā
Venerables SÄriputta and MoggallÄna speak of
the
those who have āblemishesā
- unclosed parentheses
The Shorter Discourse at Gosiį¹ ga
(CÅ«įø·agosiį¹ gasutta
depicts an idyllic fellowship
- whitespace after opening parenthesis
and the Pali texts as āI am thatā (
SN 22.8: eso hamasmi)
- missing āmā in dhammÄnupassanÄ
The quality of wisdom, for example, is called āobservation of principlesā (
dhamÄnupassanÄ
)
- sutta number SN 46.56 ā SN 46.55.
SN 46.56 Is Abhayasutta, whereas the text mentions Saį¹ gÄravasutta (SN 46.55)
In SN 46.56, a brahmin asks the Buddha why he can sometimes remember his chanting and sometimes cannot.
- sutta number SN 45.6 ā SN 46.6
The set as a whole emerges from the practice of the four kinds of mindfulness meditation and the series of practices that underlie them (SN 45.6)
- Link to MN 107 is broken because of redundant ā.ā in the hyperlink