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authorDuncan Sands <baldrick@free.fr>2007-04-16 13:02:27 +0000
committerDuncan Sands <baldrick@free.fr>2007-04-16 13:02:27 +0000
commitfb0a64a172fa405f7d0bcdd11226b99b433b8522 (patch)
tree599940679dc78514b48eda8e6ae35a756c8056f9
parent085659f040f8b943c931db8a695dec4bf22578a5 (diff)
Fix typos.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@36124 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
-rw-r--r--docs/ExceptionHandling.html6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ExceptionHandling.html b/docs/ExceptionHandling.html
index 8303a49fab..57b0c4d848 100644
--- a/docs/ExceptionHandling.html
+++ b/docs/ExceptionHandling.html
@@ -121,8 +121,8 @@ exceptions, the exception handling ABI provides a mechanism for supplying
<i>personalities.</i> An exception handling personality is defined by way of a
<i>personality function</i> (ex. for C++ <tt>__gxx_personality_v0</tt>) which
receives the context of the exception, an <i>exception structure</i> containing
-the exception object type and value, and a reference the exception table for the
-current function. The personality function for the current compile unit is
+the exception object type and value, and a reference to the exception table for
+the current function. The personality function for the current compile unit is
specified in a <i>common exception frame</i>.</p>
<p>The organization of an exception table is language dependent. For C++, an
@@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ unwinding of a throw.</p>
<p>The term used to define a the place where an invoke continues after an
exception is called a <i>landing pad</i>. LLVM landing pads are conceptually
-alternative entry points into where a exception structure reference and a type
+alternative function entry points where a exception structure reference and a type
info index are passed in as arguments. The landing pad saves the exception
structure reference and then proceeds to select the catch block that corresponds
to the type info of the exception object.</p>