Pushed.

On the way I also streamlined the language a bit.

Gerald

gcc:
        * doc/standards.texi (Standards): Update "Object-Oriented
        Programming and the Objective-C Language" reference.
---
 gcc/doc/standards.texi | 5 ++---
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/gcc/doc/standards.texi b/gcc/doc/standards.texi
index 0d765b17aa2..c7c6f28ee21 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/standards.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/standards.texi
@@ -314,9 +314,8 @@ works with the Apple/NeXT Objective-C runtime library.
 
 There is no formal written standard for Objective-C or Objective-C++@.
 The authoritative manual on traditional Objective-C (1.0) is
-``Object-Oriented Programming and the Objective-C Language'':
-@uref{https://gnustep.github.io/@/resources/@/documentation/@/ObjectivCBook.pdf}
-is the original NeXTstep document.
+``Object-Oriented Programming and the Objective-C Language''
+(@uref{https://www.gnustep.org/@/resources/@/documentation/@/ObjectivCBook.pdf}).
 
 The Objective-C exception and synchronization syntax (that is, the
 keywords @code{@@try}, @code{@@throw}, @code{@@catch},
-- 
2.50.1

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