* doc/contrib.texi, doc/invoke.texi, doc/tm.texi: Fix typos.

From-SVN: r97367
This commit is contained in:
Kazu Hirata 2005-04-01 04:28:33 +00:00
parent 69de3b838f
commit 38b974a6cf
4 changed files with 9 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -1,4 +1,8 @@
2005-03-31 James E Wilson <wilson@specifixinc.com>
2005-04-01 Kazu Hirata <kazu@cs.umass.edu>
* doc/contrib.texi, doc/invoke.texi, doc/tm.texi: Fix typos.
2005-04-01 James E Wilson <wilson@specifixinc.com>
PR c++/20505
* dwarf2out.c (rtl_for_decl_init): New function.

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@ -279,7 +279,7 @@ feeding the gcc.gnu.org box and saving its users tons of spam.
Fred Fish for BeOS support and Ada fixes.
@item
Ivan Fontes Garcia for the Portugese translation of the GCJ FAQ@.
Ivan Fontes Garcia for the Portuguese translation of the GCJ FAQ@.
@item
Peter Gerwinski for various bug fixes and the Pascal front end.

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@ -7344,7 +7344,7 @@ The subtype of the file created (like @samp{ppc7400} or @samp{ppc970} or
that GCC is targetting, like @option{-mcpu} or @option{-march}. The
@option{-force_cpusubtype_ALL} option can be used to override this.
The Darwin tools vary in their behaviour when presented with an ISA
The Darwin tools vary in their behavior when presented with an ISA
mismatch. The assembler, @file{as}, will only permit instructions to
be used that are valid for the subtype of the file it is generating,
so you cannot put 64-bit instructions in an @samp{ppc750} object file.
@ -9779,7 +9779,7 @@ This option is only meaningful in conjunction with @option{-membedded-data}.
@opindex msplit-addresses
@opindex mno-split-addresses
Enable (disable) use of the @code{%hi()} and @code{%lo()} assembler
relocation operators. This option has been superceded by
relocation operators. This option has been superseded by
@option{-mexplicit-relocs} but is retained for backwards compatibility.
@item -mexplicit-relocs

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@ -4866,7 +4866,7 @@ This macro should evaluate to @code{true} if the integer comparison
functions (like @code{__cmpdi2}) return 0 to indicate that the first
operand is smaller than the second, 1 to indicate that they are equal,
and 2 to indicate that the first operand is greater than the second.
If this macro evalutes to @code{false} the comparison functions return
If this macro evaluates to @code{false} the comparison functions return
@minus{}1, 0, and 1 instead of 0, 1, and 2. If the target uses the routines
in @file{libgcc.a}, you do not need to define this macro.
@end defmac