From d07d29213b328a04bd46781f3f7e7a6111123385 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Richard Sandiford Date: Fri, 3 May 2013 14:32:27 +0000 Subject: Remove comment that no target supports 128-bit IEEE floats The soon-to-be-committed SystemZ port uses 128-bit IEEE floats. MIPS64 GNU/Linux does too (albeit with unusual NaNs). git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@181016 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8 --- docs/LangRef.rst | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs') diff --git a/docs/LangRef.rst b/docs/LangRef.rst index 382314e..410f640 100644 --- a/docs/LangRef.rst +++ b/docs/LangRef.rst @@ -1854,11 +1854,11 @@ double, and there are three forms of long double. The 80-bit format used by x86 is represented as ``0xK`` followed by 20 hexadecimal digits. The 128-bit format used by PowerPC (two adjacent doubles) is represented by ``0xM`` followed by 32 hexadecimal digits. The IEEE 128-bit format is -represented by ``0xL`` followed by 32 hexadecimal digits; no currently -supported target uses this format. Long doubles will only work if they -match the long double format on your target. The IEEE 16-bit format -(half precision) is represented by ``0xH`` followed by 4 hexadecimal -digits. All hexadecimal formats are big-endian (sign bit at the left). +represented by ``0xL`` followed by 32 hexadecimal digits. Long doubles +will only work if they match the long double format on your target. +The IEEE 16-bit format (half precision) is represented by ``0xH`` +followed by 4 hexadecimal digits. All hexadecimal formats are big-endian +(sign bit at the left). There are no constants of type x86mmx. -- cgit v1.1