.SH DATA MEMBERS
.PP
-There are five types of data members. Three of them are normal data numbers,
+There are five types of data members. Three of them are normal data members,
one is class wide (global) in scope and one is a virtual one, usually linked to
a normal data member or a class wide data member. The three normal data
members are public, protected and private. Public and protected are basically
.PP
To get bettery type safety on some of the property types, you can specify
the \'type\' attribute which will add casts where appropriate in code dealing
-with this property. This is especially useful for POINTER types. But
-even for others.
+with this property. This is especially useful for POINTER and OBJECT types.
+But even for others.
.SH METHODS
.PP
to type and easier to change typenames around which can help a lot during
prototyping stage. However you should note that the Self type should not be
used in function prototypes as one of the arguments or as a return value type.
-This is because this is a simple C typedef which is only available inside you
-.c file. You can disable both the self casting macros and the self type
-aliases by passing --no-self-alias to
+This is because this is a simple C typedef which is only available inside your
+\&.c file and not in the header files. You can disable both the self casting
+macros and the self type aliases by passing --no-self-alias to gob.
.SH DEALING WITH DIFFERENT GOB VERSIONS
.PP