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authorJakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>2007-07-12 18:26:36 +0000
committerJakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>2007-07-12 18:26:36 +0000
commit0ecb606cb6cf65de1d9fc8a919bceb4be476c602 (patch)
tree2ea1f8305970753e4a657acb2ccc15ca3eec8e2c /manual/signal.texi
parent7d58530341304d403a6626d7f7a1913165fe2f32 (diff)
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2.5-18.1
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/signal.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/signal.texi4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/manual/signal.texi b/manual/signal.texi
index 1d28f74..cbf7466 100644
--- a/manual/signal.texi
+++ b/manual/signal.texi
@@ -2029,8 +2029,8 @@ This is an integer data type. Objects of this type are always accessed
atomically.
@end deftp
-In practice, you can assume that @code{int} and other integer types no
-longer than @code{int} are atomic. You can also assume that pointer
+In practice, you can assume that @code{int} is atomic.
+You can also assume that pointer
types are atomic; that is very convenient. Both of these assumptions
are true on all of the machines that the GNU C library supports and on
all POSIX systems we know of.