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-rw-r--r--gcc/ChangeLog4
-rw-r--r--gcc/doc/cpp.texi5
2 files changed, 7 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/gcc/ChangeLog b/gcc/ChangeLog
index 6ff7d82..310984e 100644
--- a/gcc/ChangeLog
+++ b/gcc/ChangeLog
@@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
+2003-05-11 Neil Booth <neil@cat.daikokuya.co.uk>
+
+ * doc/cpp.texi: Fix typos.
+
2003-05-11 Ulrich Weigand <uweigand@de.ibm.com>
* config/s390/s390.c (s390_function_arg_float): New function.
diff --git a/gcc/doc/cpp.texi b/gcc/doc/cpp.texi
index 336cc47..62da31f 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/cpp.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/cpp.texi
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ complete support for international character sets in a future release.
Different systems use different conventions to indicate the end of a
line. GCC accepts the ASCII control sequences @kbd{LF}, @kbd{@w{CR
-LF}}, @kbd{CR} as end-of-line markers. These
+LF}} and @kbd{CR} as end-of-line markers. These
are the canonical sequences used by Unix, DOS and VMS, and the
classic Mac OS (before OSX) respectively. You may therefore safely copy
source code written on any of those systems to a different one and use
@@ -1857,7 +1857,8 @@ use. You can use @code{__OBJC__} to test whether a header is compiled
by a C compiler or a Objective-C compiler.
@item __ASSEMBLER__
-This macro is defined with value 1 when preprocessing assembler.
+This macro is defined with value 1 when preprocessing assembly
+language.
@end table