diff --git a/src/atomics.md b/src/atomics.md index f750f09..4f55392 100644 --- a/src/atomics.md +++ b/src/atomics.md @@ -96,8 +96,8 @@ However there's a third potential state that the hardware enables: * `y = 2`: (thread 2 saw `x = 1`, but not `y = 3`, and then overwrote `y = 3`) It's worth noting that different kinds of CPU provide different guarantees. It -is common to separate hardware into two categories: strongly-ordered and weakly- -ordered. Most notably x86/64 provides strong ordering guarantees, while ARM +is common to separate hardware into two categories: strongly-ordered and weakly-ordered. +Most notably x86/64 provides strong ordering guarantees, while ARM provides weak ordering guarantees. This has two consequences for concurrent programming: