[gcc r12-10508] docs: Fix 2 typos
Jakub Jelinek
jakub@gcc.gnu.org
Tue Jun 11 10:36:49 GMT 2024
https://gcc.gnu.org/g:ba385435a9c6f2ae211c2595ffb96ee176aec12c
commit r12-10508-gba385435a9c6f2ae211c2595ffb96ee176aec12c
Author: Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
Date: Thu Jan 25 09:10:08 2024 +0100
docs: Fix 2 typos
When looking into PR113572, I've noticed a typo in VECTOR_CST documentation
and grep found pasto of it elsewhere.
2024-01-25 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* doc/generic.texi (VECTOR_CST): Fix typo - petterns -> patterns.
* doc/rtl.texi (CONST_VECTOR): Likewise.
(cherry picked from commit 36c1384038f3b9f01124f0fc38bb3c930b1cbe8a)
Diff:
---
gcc/doc/generic.texi | 2 +-
gcc/doc/rtl.texi | 2 +-
2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/gcc/doc/generic.texi b/gcc/doc/generic.texi
index e5f9d1be8ea..1f7b00a2403 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/generic.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/generic.texi
@@ -1144,7 +1144,7 @@ vector. For example @{ 0, 1 @} could be seen as two patterns with
one element each or one pattern with two elements (@var{base0} and
@var{base1}). The canonical encoding is always the one with the
fewest patterns or (if both encodings have the same number of
-petterns) the one with the fewest encoded elements.
+patterns) the one with the fewest encoded elements.
@samp{vector_cst_encoding_nelts (@var{v})} gives the total number of
encoded elements in @var{v}, which is 6 in the example above.
diff --git a/gcc/doc/rtl.texi b/gcc/doc/rtl.texi
index 43c9ee8bffe..2aed9a0454e 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/rtl.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/rtl.texi
@@ -1843,7 +1843,7 @@ vector. For example @{ 0, 1 @} could be seen as two patterns with
one element each or one pattern with two elements (@var{base0} and
@var{base1}). The canonical encoding is always the one with the
fewest patterns or (if both encodings have the same number of
-petterns) the one with the fewest encoded elements.
+patterns) the one with the fewest encoded elements.
@samp{const_vector_encoding_nelts (@var{v})} gives the total number of
encoded elements in @var{v}, which is 6 in the example above.
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