have no merge then they are said to be \emph{inconsistent}.
\item The class precedence list of a class $C$ is a merge of the local
precedence list of $C$ together with the class precedence lists of each of
- $C$'s direct superclasses.
-\item If there are no such merges, then the definition of $C$ is invalid.
+ $C$'s direct superclasses. If these lists are inconsistent, then the
+ definition of $C$ is invalid.
\item Suppose that there are multiple candidate merges. Consider the
earliest position in these candidate merges at which they disagree. The
\emph{candidate classes} at this position are the classes appearing at this
There are two kinds of initarg definitions. \emph{User initargs} are defined
by an explicit @|initarg| item appearing in a class definition: the item
-defines a name, type, and (optionally) a default value for the initarg.
+defines a name, a type, and (optionally) a default value for the initarg.
\emph{Slot initargs} are defined by attaching an @|initarg| property to a
slot or slot initializer item: the property's value determines the initarg's
name, while the type is taken from the underlying slot type; slot initargs do