Fixed double-space typo.
diff --git a/user_guide/general/environments.html b/user_guide/general/environments.html
index 175a153..9aed1d6 100644
--- a/user_guide/general/environments.html
+++ b/user_guide/general/environments.html
@@ -58,17 +58,17 @@
 <h1>Handling Multiple Environments</h1>
 
 <p>
-    Developers often desire different system behavior depending on whether
-    an application is running in a development or production
-    environment. For example, verbose error output is something that would
-    be useful while developing an application, but it may also pose a security issue when "live".
+  Developers often desire different system behavior depending on whether
+  an application is running in a development or production
+  environment. For example, verbose error output is something that would
+  be useful while developing an application, but it may also pose a security issue when "live".
 </p>
 
 <h2>The ENVIRONMENT Constant</h2>
 
 <p>
-    By default, CodeIgniter comes with the environment constant set to
-    '<kbd>development</kbd>'. At the top of index.php, you will see:
+  By default, CodeIgniter comes with the environment constant set to
+  '<kbd>development</kbd>'. At the top of index.php, you will see:
 </p>
 
 <code>
@@ -76,35 +76,35 @@
 </code>
 
 <p>
-    In addition to affecting some basic framework behavior (see the next section),
-    you may use this constant in your own development to differentiate
-    between which environment you are running in.
+  In addition to affecting some basic framework behavior (see the next section),
+  you may use this constant in your own development to differentiate
+  between which environment you are running in.
 </p>
 
 <h2>Effects On Default Framework Behavior</h2>
 
 <p>
-    There are some places in the CodeIgniter system where the <kbd>ENVIRONMENT</kbd>
-    constant is used. This section describes how default framework behavior is
-    affected.
+  There are some places in the CodeIgniter system where the <kbd>ENVIRONMENT</kbd>
+  constant is used. This section describes how default framework behavior is
+  affected.
 </p>
 
 <h3>Error Reporting</h3>
 
 <p>
-    Setting the <kbd>ENVIRONMENT</kbd> constant to a value of '<kbd>development</kbd>' will
-    cause all PHP errors to be rendered to the browser when they occur. Conversely,
-    setting the constant to '<kbd>production</kbd>' will disable all error output. Disabling
-    error reporting in production is a <a href="security.html">good security practice</a>.
+  Setting the <kbd>ENVIRONMENT</kbd> constant to a value of '<kbd>development</kbd>' will
+  cause all PHP errors to be rendered to the browser when they occur. Conversely,
+  setting the constant to '<kbd>production</kbd>' will disable all error output. Disabling
+  error reporting in production is a <a href="security.html">good security practice</a>.
 </p>
 
 <h3>Configuration Files</h3>
 
 <p>
-    Optionally, you can have CodeIgniter load environment-specific
-    configuration files. This may be useful for managing things like differing API keys
-    across multiple environments. This is described in more detail in the
-    environment section of the <a href="../libraries/config.html#environments">Config Class</a> documentation.
+  Optionally, you can have CodeIgniter load environment-specific
+  configuration files. This may be useful for managing things like differing API keys
+  across multiple environments. This is described in more detail in the
+  environment section of the <a href="../libraries/config.html#environments">Config Class</a> documentation.
 </p>
 
 </div>