Chez Scheme: corrects typos in project documentation

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plan-do-break-fix 2021-04-23 23:48:09 -05:00 committed by Gustavo Massaccesi
parent 6e3a94b6ac
commit 0cdede88c3

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@ -267,7 +267,7 @@ To the degree that the runtime system needs global state, that state
is in the thread context (so, it's thread-local), which we'll
abbreviate as "TC". Some machine register is designated as the `%tc`
register, and it's initialized on entry to Scheme code. For the
defintion of TC, see `(define-primitive-structure-disps tc ...)` in
definition of TC, see `(define-primitive-structure-disps tc ...)` in
"cmacro.ss".
The first several fields of TC are virtual registers that may be
@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ frame is the return address, so a frame looks like this:
On entry to a Scheme function, a check ensures that the difference
between SFP and the end of the current stack segment is big enough to
accomodate the (spilled) variables of the called function, plus enough
accommodate the (spilled) variables of the called function, plus enough
slop to deal with some primitive operations.
A non-tail call moves SFP past all the live variables of the current
@ -437,7 +437,7 @@ implementation.
Finally, some primitives in "prims.ss" are implemented in the kernel
and simply accessed with `foreign-procedure`. Other parts of the
implementation also use `foreign-procedure` instead of having a
defintion in "prims.ss".
definition in "prims.ss".
If you're looking for math primitives, see "mathprims.ss" instead of
"prims.ss".
@ -724,7 +724,7 @@ backend can assume that a `uvar` wil be replaced later by a register.
When reading the compiler's implementation, `make-tmp` in most passes
creates a `uvar` (that may eventually be spilled to a stack-frame
slot). A `make-tmp` in the instruction-selection pass, however, makes
an unspillable. In earlies passes of the compiler, new temporaries
an unspillable. In earliest passes of the compiler, new temporaries
must be bound with a `let` form (i.e., a `let` in the intermediate
repressentation) before they can be used; in later passes, a `set!`
initializes a temporary.
@ -929,7 +929,7 @@ instruction for the register--register and the register--immediate
cases. A more explicit distinction could be made in the output of
instruction selection, but delaying the choice is anologous to how
assembly languages often use the same mnemonic for related
instructions. The `asm-move` and `asm-fpmove` must accomodate
instructions. The `asm-move` and `asm-fpmove` must accommodate
register--memory, memory--register, and register--register cases,
because `set!` forms after instruction selection can have those
variants.
@ -1000,7 +1000,7 @@ handling in "compile.ss", and the update routine in "fasl.c".
# Foreign Function ABI
Support for foreign procedures and callables in Chez Scheme boils down
to foriegn calls and callable stubs for the backend. A backend's
to foreign calls and callable stubs for the backend. A backend's
`asm-foreign-call` and `asm-foreign-callbable` function receives an
`info-foreign` record, which describes the argument and result types
in relatively primitive forms: