Commit 8556236b by Brooks Moses Committed by Brooks Moses

invoke.texi, [...]: Corrected erronous dashes.

2006-10-10  Brooks Moses  <bmoses@stanford.edu>

	* invoke.texi, gfortran.texi: Corrected erronous dashes.

From-SVN: r117628
parent 13869d71
2006-10-10 Brooks Moses <bmoses@stanford.edu>
* invoke.texi, gfortran.texi: Corrected erronous dashes.
2006-10-10 Brooks Moses <bmoses@stanford.edu>
* Make-lang.in: Added "fortran.pdf", "gfortran.pdf" target
support.
......
......@@ -415,7 +415,7 @@ The primary work remaining to be done on GNU Fortran falls into three
categories: bug fixing (primarily regarding the treatment of invalid code
and providing useful error messages), improving the compiler optimizations
and the performance of compiled code, and extending the compiler to support
future standards -- in particular, Fortran 2003.
future standards---in particular, Fortran 2003.
@node Proposed Extensions
......@@ -474,7 +474,7 @@ LA should use BLAS calling conventions.
@item
Environment variables controlling actions on arithmetic exceptions like
overflow, underflow, precision loss -- Generate NaN, abort, default.
overflow, underflow, precision loss---Generate NaN, abort, default.
action.
@item
......@@ -1002,8 +1002,8 @@ or,
@end smallexample
The pointer is an integer that is intended to hold a memory address.
The pointee may be an array or scalar. A pointee can be an assumed
size array -- that is, the last dimension may be left unspecified by
using a '*' in place of a value -- but a pointee cannot be an assumed
size array---that is, the last dimension may be left unspecified by
using a '*' in place of a value---but a pointee cannot be an assumed
shape array. No space is allocated for the pointee.
The pointee may have its type declared before or after the pointer
......
......@@ -695,7 +695,7 @@ functions that return type @code{COMPLEX} to return the values via an
extra argument in the calling sequence that points to where to
store the return value. Under the default GNU calling conventions, such
functions simply return their results as they would in GNU
C -- default @code{REAL} functions return the C type @code{float}, and
C---default @code{REAL} functions return the C type @code{float}, and
@code{COMPLEX} functions return the GNU C type @code{complex}.
Additionally, this option implies the @option{-fsecond-underscore}
option, unless @option{-fno-second-underscore} is explicitly requested.
......
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