-Sometimes a container exited successfully but produced bad output, and re-running the workflow will cause it to re-use the bad container instead of running a new container. One way to deal with this is to re-run the entire workflow with reuse disable. Another way is for the workflow author to tweak the input data or workflow so that on re-run it produces a distinct container request. However, for large or complex workflows both these options may be impractical.
+Sometimes a container exited successfully but produced bad output, and re-running the workflow will cause it to re-use the bad container instead of running a new container. One way to deal with this is to re-run the entire workflow with reuse disabled. Another way is for the workflow author to tweak the input data or workflow so that on re-run it produces a distinct container request. However, for large or complex workflows both these options may be impractical.