diff --git a/src/ch02-00-guessing-game-tutorial.md b/src/ch02-00-guessing-game-tutorial.md
index f80ad52082..5aebefdd98 100644
--- a/src/ch02-00-guessing-game-tutorial.md
+++ b/src/ch02-00-guessing-game-tutorial.md
@@ -682,13 +682,12 @@ in the expression refers to the original `guess` variable that contained the
input as a string. The `trim` method on a `String` instance will eliminate any
whitespace at the beginning and end, which we must do to be able to compare the
string to the `u32`, which can only contain numerical data. The user must press
-enter to satisfy `read_line` and input their
-guess, which adds a newline character to the string. For example, if the user
-types 5 and presses enter, `guess` looks like this: `5\n`. The `\n`
-represents “newline.” (On Windows, pressing enter results in a carriage return and a newline,
-`\r\n`.) The `trim` method eliminates `\n` or `\r\n`, resulting in just `5`.
+enter to satisfy `read_line` and input their guess, which adds a
+newline character to the string. For example, if the user types 5 and
+presses enter, `guess` looks like this: `5\n`. The `\n` represents
+“newline.” (On Windows, pressing enter results in a carriage return
+and a newline, `\r\n`.) The `trim` method eliminates `\n` or `\r\n`, resulting
+in just `5`.
The [`parse` method on strings][parse] converts a string to
another type. Here, we use it to convert from a string to a number. We need to
@@ -762,11 +761,11 @@ and run the program again. The program will now ask for another guess forever,
which actually introduces a new problem. It doesn’t seem like the user can quit!
The user could always interrupt the program by using the keyboard shortcut
-ctrl-c. But there’s another way to escape this
-insatiable monster, as mentioned in the `parse` discussion in [“Comparing the
-Guess to the Secret Number”](#comparing-the-guess-to-the-secret-number): if the user enters a non-number answer, the program will crash. We
-can take advantage of that to allow the user to quit, as shown here:
+ctrl-c. But there’s another way to escape this insatiable
+monster, as mentioned in the `parse` discussion in [“Comparing the Guess to the
+Secret Number”](#comparing-the-guess-to-the-secret-number): if
+the user enters a non-number answer, the program will crash. We can take
+advantage of that to allow the user to quit, as shown here: