-Some example \glspl{mTask} using almost all of their functionality are shown in
-Listing~\ref{lst:exmtask}. The \glspl{mTask} shown in the example do not belong
-to a particular view and therefore are of the type \CI{View t r}. The
-\CI{blink} \gls{mTask} show the classic \gls{Arduino} blinking led application
-that blinks a certain \gls{LED} every second. The \CI{thermostat} expression
-will enable a digital pin powering a cooling fan when the analog pin
-representing a temperature sensor is too high. \CI{thermostat`} shows the same
-expression but now using the assignment style \gls{GPIO} technique. The
-\CI{thermostat} example also shows that it is not necessary to run everything
-as a \CI{task}. The main program code can also just consist of the contents of
-the root \CI{main} itself.
+Some example \gls{mTask}-\glspl{Task} using almost all of their functionality
+are shown in Listing~\ref{lst:exmtask}. The \gls{mTask}-\glspl{Task} shown in
+the example do not belong to a particular view and therefore are of the type
+\CI{View t r}. The \CI{blink} \gls{mTask} show the classic \gls{Arduino}
+blinking led application that blinks a certain \gls{LED} every second. The
+\CI{thermostat} expression will enable a digital pin powering a cooling fan
+when the analog pin representing a temperature sensor is too high.
+\CI{thermostat`} shows the same expression but now using the assignment style
+\gls{GPIO} technique. The \CI{thermostat} example also shows that it is not
+necessary to run everything as a \CI{task}. The main program code can also just
+consist of the contents of the root \CI{main} itself.