In some of the standard pattern names, it is not obvious which mode is being 
used in the pattern
name. Is it operand 0, 1, or 2? Is it the wider mode or the narrower mode?
This fixes that so there is no confusion by adding a sentence to some of them.

Built the documentation to make sure that it builds.

gcc/ChangeLog:

        * doc/md.texi (sdot_prod@var{m}, udot_prod@var{m},
        usdot_prod@var{m}, ssad@var{m}, usad@var{m}, widen_usum@var{m}3,
        smulhs@var{m}3, umulhs@var{m}3, smulhrs@var{m}3, umulhrs@var{m}3):
        Add sentence about what the mode m is.

Signed-off-by: Andrew Pinski <quic_apin...@quicinc.com>
---
 gcc/doc/md.texi | 9 +++++++++
 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+)

diff --git a/gcc/doc/md.texi b/gcc/doc/md.texi
index 274dd03d419..33b37e79cd4 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/md.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/md.texi
@@ -5746,6 +5746,7 @@ Operand 1 and operand 2 are of the same mode. Their
 product, which is of a wider mode, is computed and added to operand 3.
 Operand 3 is of a mode equal or wider than the mode of the product. The
 result is placed in operand 0, which is of the same mode as operand 3.
+@var{m} is the mode of operand 1 and operand 2.
 
 Semantically the expressions perform the multiplication in the following signs
 
@@ -5763,6 +5764,7 @@ Operand 1 and operand 2 are of the same mode. Their
 product, which is of a wider mode, is computed and added to operand 3.
 Operand 3 is of a mode equal or wider than the mode of the product. The
 result is placed in operand 0, which is of the same mode as operand 3.
+@var{m} is the mode of operand 1 and operand 2.
 
 Semantically the expressions perform the multiplication in the following signs
 
@@ -5779,6 +5781,7 @@ Operand 1 must be unsigned and operand 2 signed. Their
 product, which is of a wider mode, is computed and added to operand 3.
 Operand 3 is of a mode equal or wider than the mode of the product. The
 result is placed in operand 0, which is of the same mode as operand 3.
+@var{m} is the mode of operand 1 and operand 2.
 
 Semantically the expressions perform the multiplication in the following signs
 
@@ -5797,6 +5800,7 @@ Operand 1 and operand 2 are of the same mode. Their 
absolute difference, which
 is of a wider mode, is computed and added to operand 3. Operand 3 is of a mode
 equal or wider than the mode of the absolute difference. The result is placed
 in operand 0, which is of the same mode as operand 3.
+@var{m} is the mode of operand 1 and operand 2.
 
 @cindex @code{widen_ssum@var{m}3} instruction pattern
 @cindex @code{widen_usum@var{m}3} instruction pattern
@@ -5806,6 +5810,7 @@ Operands 0 and 2 are of the same mode, which is wider 
than the mode of
 operand 1. Add operand 1 to operand 2 and place the widened result in
 operand 0. (This is used express accumulation of elements into an accumulator
 of a wider mode.)
+@var{m} is the mode of operand 1.
 
 @cindex @code{smulhs@var{m}3} instruction pattern
 @cindex @code{umulhs@var{m}3} instruction pattern
@@ -5819,6 +5824,8 @@ op0 = (narrow) (((wide) op1 * (wide) op2) >> (N / 2 - 1));
 @end smallexample
 where the sign of @samp{narrow} determines whether this is a signed
 or unsigned operation, and @var{N} is the size of @samp{wide} in bits.
+@var{m} is the mode for all 3 operands (narrow). The wide mode is not specified
+and is defined to fit the whole multiply.
 
 @cindex @code{smulhrs@var{m}3} instruction pattern
 @cindex @code{umulhrs@var{m}3} instruction pattern
@@ -5833,6 +5840,8 @@ op0 = (narrow) (((((wide) op1 * (wide) op2) >> (N / 2 - 
2)) + 1) >> 1);
 @end smallexample
 where the sign of @samp{narrow} determines whether this is a signed
 or unsigned operation, and @var{N} is the size of @samp{wide} in bits.
+@var{m} is the mode for all 3 operands (narrow). The wide mode is not specified
+and is defined to fit the whole multiply.
 
 @cindex @code{sdiv_pow2@var{m}3} instruction pattern
 @cindex @code{sdiv_pow2@var{m}3} instruction pattern
-- 
2.43.0

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