fix some typos in the doc
llvm-svn: 292014
diff --git a/llvm/docs/AMDGPUUsage.rst b/llvm/docs/AMDGPUUsage.rst
index 0824eb8..2c1a227 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/AMDGPUUsage.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/AMDGPUUsage.rst
@@ -204,7 +204,7 @@
For full list of supported instructions, refer to "SOPP Instructions" in ISA Manual.
Unless otherwise mentioned, little verification is performed on the operands
-of SOPP Instrucitons, so it is up to the programmer to be familiar with the
+of SOPP Instructions, so it is up to the programmer to be familiar with the
range or acceptable values.
Vector ALU Instruction Examples
diff --git a/llvm/docs/CoverageMappingFormat.rst b/llvm/docs/CoverageMappingFormat.rst
index f4dcfda..46cc9d1 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/CoverageMappingFormat.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/CoverageMappingFormat.rst
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@
guided optimization works is useful, but not required.
We start by showing how to use LLVM and Clang for code coverage analysis,
-then we briefly desribe LLVM's code coverage mapping format and the
+then we briefly describe LLVM's code coverage mapping format and the
way that Clang and LLVM's code coverage tool work with this format. After
the basics are down, more advanced features of the coverage mapping format
are discussed - such as the data structures, LLVM IR representation and
diff --git a/llvm/docs/GettingStarted.rst b/llvm/docs/GettingStarted.rst
index 66f4b8c..6811c5d 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/GettingStarted.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/GettingStarted.rst
@@ -738,7 +738,7 @@
While this is using SVN under the hood, it does not require any interaction from
you with git-svn.
After a few minutes, `git pull` should get back the changes as they were
-commited. Note that a current limitation is that `git` does not directly record
+committed. Note that a current limitation is that `git` does not directly record
file rename, and thus it is propagated to SVN as a combination of delete-add
instead of a file rename.
diff --git a/llvm/docs/ProgrammersManual.rst b/llvm/docs/ProgrammersManual.rst
index ffc022e..1c96046 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/ProgrammersManual.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/ProgrammersManual.rst
@@ -864,7 +864,7 @@
The ``joinErrors`` routine builds a special error type called ``ErrorList``,
which holds a list of user defined errors. The ``handleErrors`` routine
-recognizes this type and will attempt to handle each of the contained erorrs in
+recognizes this type and will attempt to handle each of the contained errors in
order. If all contained errors can be handled, ``handleErrors`` will return
``Error::success()``, otherwise ``handleErrors`` will concatenate the remaining
errors and return the resulting ``ErrorList``.
diff --git a/llvm/docs/Proposals/GitHubMove.rst b/llvm/docs/Proposals/GitHubMove.rst
index c1bdfb3..f120775 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/Proposals/GitHubMove.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/Proposals/GitHubMove.rst
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
from SVN hosted on our own servers to Git hosted on GitHub. We are not proposing
using GitHub's issue tracker, pull-requests, or code-review.
-Contributers will continue to earn commit access on demand under the Developer
+Contributors will continue to earn commit access on demand under the Developer
Policy, except that that a GitHub account will be required instead of SVN
username/password-hash.
@@ -433,7 +433,7 @@
* Using the monolithic repository may add overhead for those *integrating* a
standalone sub-project, even if they aren't contributing to it, due to the
same disk space concern as the point above. The availability of the
- sub-project Git mirror addesses this, even without SVN access.
+ sub-project Git mirror addresses this, even without SVN access.
* Preservation of the existing read/write SVN-based workflows relies on the
GitHub SVN bridge, which is an extra dependency. Maintaining this locks us
into GitHub and could restrict future workflow changes.
diff --git a/llvm/docs/TestingGuide.rst b/llvm/docs/TestingGuide.rst
index 5dac583..26143fe 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/TestingGuide.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/TestingGuide.rst
@@ -313,7 +313,7 @@
ret i32 0
}
-``ModuleID`` can unexpetedly match against ``CHECK`` lines. For example:
+``ModuleID`` can unexpectedly match against ``CHECK`` lines. For example:
.. code-block:: llvm
diff --git a/llvm/docs/WritingAnLLVMBackend.rst b/llvm/docs/WritingAnLLVMBackend.rst
index f06a95d..0fc7382 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/WritingAnLLVMBackend.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/WritingAnLLVMBackend.rst
@@ -593,12 +593,12 @@
FPRegsClass FPRegsRegClass;
IntRegsClass IntRegsRegClass;
...
- // IntRegs Sub-register Classess...
+ // IntRegs Sub-register Classes...
static const TargetRegisterClass* const IntRegsSubRegClasses [] = {
NULL
};
...
- // IntRegs Super-register Classess...
+ // IntRegs Super-register Classes..
static const TargetRegisterClass* const IntRegsSuperRegClasses [] = {
NULL
};
diff --git a/llvm/docs/YamlIO.rst b/llvm/docs/YamlIO.rst
index 04e63fa..0b728ed 100644
--- a/llvm/docs/YamlIO.rst
+++ b/llvm/docs/YamlIO.rst
@@ -731,7 +731,7 @@
static typing, so there are limits to how you can use tags with the YAML I/O
model. Recently, we added support to YAML I/O for checking/setting the optional
tag on a map. Using this functionality it is even possbile to support different
-mappings, as long as they are convertable.
+mappings, as long as they are convertible.
To check a tag, inside your mapping() method you can use io.mapTag() to specify
what the tag should be. This will also add that tag when writing yaml.