Stop claiming that Visual Studio 2005 is a viable basis for building
Clang. It isn't any more, and we're not going to twist the code around
to make it work.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@144815 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
diff --git a/www/get_started.html b/www/get_started.html
index be74f1f..e325e4e 100644
--- a/www/get_started.html
+++ b/www/get_started.html
@@ -125,7 +125,7 @@
         project files.  Get it from:
         <a href="http://www.cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html">
         http://www.cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html</a></li>
-    <li><b>Visual Studio 2005, 2008, or 2010</b></li>
+    <li><b>Visual Studio 2008 or 2010</b></li>
     <li><b>Python</b>.  This is needed only if you will be running the tests
         (which is essential, if you will be developing for clang).
         Get it from:
@@ -154,8 +154,7 @@
     <li><tt>cd ..\..</tt>  (back to where you started)</li>
     <li><tt>mkdir build</tt> (for building without polluting the source dir)</li>
     <li><tt>cd build</tt></li>
-    <li>If you are using Visual Studio 2005:  <tt>cmake -G "Visual Studio 8 2005" ..\llvm</tt></li>
-    <li>Or if you are using Visual Studio 2008:  <tt>cmake -G "Visual Studio 9 2008" ..\llvm</tt></li>
+    <li>If you are using Visual Studio 2008:  <tt>cmake -G "Visual Studio 9 2008" ..\llvm</tt></li>
     <li>Or if you are using Visual Studio 2010:  <tt>cmake -G "Visual Studio 10" ..\llvm</tt></li>
     <li>By default, cmake will target LLVM to X86.  If you want all targets
         (needed if you want to run the LLVM tests), add the <tt>-DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=all</tt> option to the