ASN1_STRING_print() is a legacy function which should be avoided in new applications.
-Although there are a large number of options frequently B<ASN1_STRFLAGS_RFC2253> is
-suitable, or on UTF8 terminals B<ASN1_STRFLAGS_RFC2253 & ~ASN1_STRFLAGS_ESC_MSB>.
+Although there are a large number of options frequently B<ASN1_STRFLGS_RFC2253> is
+suitable, or on UTF8 terminals B<ASN1_STRFLGS_RFC2253 & ~ASN1_STRFLGS_ESC_MSB>.
The complete set of supported options for B<flags> is listed below.
If B<ASN1_STRFLGS_DUMP_ALL> is set then any type is dumped.
Normally non character string types (such as OCTET STRING) are assumed to be
-one byte per character, if B<ASN1_STRFLAGS_DUMP_UNKNOWN> is set then they will
+one byte per character, if B<ASN1_STRFLGS_DUMP_UNKNOWN> is set then they will
be dumped instead.
When a type is dumped normally just the content octets are printed, if
Although there are a large number of possible flags for most purposes
B<XN_FLAG_ONELINE>, B<XN_FLAG_MULTILINE> or B<XN_FLAG_RFC2253> will suffice.
As noted on the L<ASN1_STRING_print_ex(3)|ASN1_STRING_print_ex(3)> manual page
-for UTF8 terminals the B<ASN1_STRFLAGS_ESC_MSB> should be unset: so for example
-B<XN_FLAG_ONELINE & ~ASN1_STRFLAGS_ESC_MSB> would be used.
+for UTF8 terminals the B<ASN1_STRFLGS_ESC_MSB> should be unset: so for example
+B<XN_FLAG_ONELINE & ~ASN1_STRFLGS_ESC_MSB> would be used.
The complete set of the flags supported by X509_NAME_print_ex() is listed below.