-//===-- llvm/Assembly/Writer.h - Printer for VM assembly files --*- C++ -*-===//
+//===-- llvm/Assembly/Writer.h - Printer for LLVM assembly files --*- C++ -*-=//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
-// This functionality is implemented by the lib/Assembly/Writer library.
-// This library is used to print VM assembly language files to an iostream. It
-// can print VM code at a variety of granularities, ranging from a whole class
-// down to an individual instruction. This makes it useful for debugging.
-//
-// This file also defines functions that allow it to output files that a program
-// called VCG can read.
+// This functionality is implemented by lib/VMCore/AsmWriter.cpp.
+// This library is used to print LLVM assembly language files to an iostream. It
+// can print LLVM code at a variety of granularities, including Modules,
+// BasicBlocks, and Instructions. This makes it useful for debugging.
//
// This library uses the Analysis library to figure out offsets for
-// variables in the method tables...
+// variables in the method tables.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
class Value;
// WriteTypeSymbolic - This attempts to write the specified type as a symbolic
-// type, iff there is an entry in the modules symbol table for the specified
-// type or one of it's component types. This is slower than a simple x << Type;
+// type, iff there is an entry in the Module's symbol table for the specified
+// type or one of its component types. This is slower than a simple x << Type;
//
std::ostream &WriteTypeSymbolic(std::ostream &, const Type *, const Module *M);
// WriteAsOperand - Write the name of the specified value out to the specified
// ostream. This can be useful when you just want to print int %reg126, not the
// whole instruction that generated it. If you specify a Module for context,
-// then even constants get pretty printed (for example the type of a null
-// pointer is printed symbolically).
+// then even constants get pretty-printed; for example, the type of a null
+// pointer is printed symbolically.
//
std::ostream &WriteAsOperand(std::ostream &, const Value *, bool PrintTy = true,
bool PrintName = true, const Module *Context = 0);