diff --git a/1-ProceduralProgramming/3-Types.ipynb b/1-ProceduralProgramming/3-Types.ipynb
index ea1cea4717af2a302c00a9e057f7e0ee49630fb6..80d576f062f207a45a8c6c8f69b5ea378f939f95 100644
--- a/1-ProceduralProgramming/3-Types.ipynb
+++ b/1-ProceduralProgramming/3-Types.ipynb
@@ -282,7 +282,7 @@
     "\n",
     "The _0 notation column_ is the way to notice explicitly the type in an expression; of course any value might be used instead of 0. A `u` might be used to signal the unsigned status for integer types; for instance `3ul` means 3 as an _unsigned long_. `auto` notation below will illustrate a case in which such a notation is useful.\n",
     "\n",
-    "The STL features rather heavily a type named `std::size_t`, which by design is able to store the maximum size of a theoretically possible object of any type (including array). On most (all?) systems `std::size_t` is an alias to an `unsigned long`. More may be found about this type on [CppReference](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/size_t). The equivalent counter part for signed integers is the [`std::ptrdiff_t`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/ptrdiff_t), which is the signed integer type of the result of subtracting two pointers. \n",
+    "The STL features rather heavily a type named `std::size_t`, which by design is able to store the maximum size of a theoretically possible object of any type (including array). On most (all?) systems `std::size_t` is an alias to an `unsigned long`. More may be found about this type on [CppReference](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/size_t). \n",
     "\n",
     "You might also encounter [`std::ptrdiff_t`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/ptrdiff_t), which is akin to `std::size_t` but for *signed* values. It is typically used in the STL to store the result of subtracting two pointers. \n",
     "\n",
@@ -817,9 +817,7 @@
   {
    "cell_type": "code",
    "execution_count": null,
-   "metadata": {
-    "scrolled": true
-   },
+   "metadata": {},
    "outputs": [],
    "source": [
     "#include <vector>\n",