Fixed firstWorkload readme typos (#1376)

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# A First Workload With Bedrock
The best way to start learning about Bedrock is walk through the deployment of a cluster and a first workload on it, enabling you to see how Bedrock makes deploying infrastructure easier and how GitOps works first hand.
The best way to start learning about Bedrock is to walk through the deployment of a cluster and try a first workload on it, enabling you to see how Bedrock makes deploying infrastructure easier and how GitOps works first hand.
In this walkthrough, we will:
1. Create our GitOps resource manifest repo that will act as the source of truth for our in-cluster deployments.
@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ $ cd ~/cluster-deployment
$ spk infra scaffold --name cluster --source https://github.com/microsoft/bedrock --version master --template cluster/environments/azure-simple
```
This fetches the specified deployment template, creates a `cluster` directory, and places a `definition.yaml` file in it. The default output for `definition.yaml` file for `azure-simple`template is shown below. The default values for the variables are not shown in this, which is the expecetd behavior for the `spk infra scaffold` command. This can be overridden by supplying new value as you will see in the next section.
This tool fetches the specified deployment template, creates a `cluster` directory, and places a `definition.yaml` file in it. The default output for `definition.yaml` file for `azure-simple`template is shown below. The default values for the variables are not shown in this, which is the expected behavior for the `spk infra scaffold` command. This behavior can be overridden by supplying new value as you will see in the next section.
```yaml
name: cluster
@ -162,7 +162,7 @@ This template is the base of our deployment. Note: The `spk` tool also extracted
## Completing our Deployment Definition
Next we'll fill all of the empty items in this template with config values.
Next, we'll fill all of the empty items in this template with config values.
### Cluster name, DNS prefix, VNET name, and resource group
@ -494,7 +494,7 @@ Apply complete! Resources: 8 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.
You have successfully have deployed your first cluster with Bedrock!
This might seem like a lot of overhead for creating a single cluster. The real advantage of this comes when you need to manage multiple clusters that are only slightly differentiated by config, or when you want to do upgrades to a new version of the template, and a variety of other “day 2” scenarios. You can read in detail about these scenarios in our infrastructure definitions documentation.
These steps might seem like a lot of overhead for creating a single cluster. The real advantage of this comes when you need to manage multiple clusters that are only slightly differentiated by config, or when you want to do upgrades to a new version of the template, and a variety of other “day 2” scenarios. You can read in detail about these scenarios in our infrastructure definitions documentation.
### Using Terraform State