@@ -99,14 +99,14 @@ For an in-place variant that reuses memory across solves, see [`usymlqr!`](@ref)
9999function  usymlqr end 
100100
101101""" 
102-     workspace = trimr !(workspace::UsymlqrWorkspace, A, b, c; kwargs...) 
103-     workspace = trimr !(workspace::UsymlqrWorkspace, A, b, c, x0, y0; kwargs...) 
102+     workspace = usymlqr !(workspace::UsymlqrWorkspace, A, b, c; kwargs...) 
103+     workspace = usymlqr !(workspace::UsymlqrWorkspace, A, b, c, x0, y0; kwargs...) 
104104
105105In these calls, `kwargs` are keyword arguments of [`usymlqr`](@ref). 
106106
107107See [`UsymlqrWorkspace`](@ref) for instructions on how to create the `workspace`. 
108108
109- For a more generic interface, you can use [`krylov_workspace`](@ref) to allocate the workspace, 
109+ For a more generic interface, you can use [`krylov_workspace`](@ref) `method = :usymlqr`  to allocate the workspace, 
110110and [`krylov_solve!`](@ref) to run the Krylov method in-place. 
111111""" 
112112function  usymlqr! end 
@@ -501,7 +501,7 @@ kwargs_usymlqr = (:transfer_to_usymcg, :M, :N, :ldiv, :atol, :rtol, :itmax, :tim
501501    user_requested_exit &&  (status =  " user-requested exit"  )
502502    overtimed           &&  (status =  " time limit exceeded"  )
503503
504-     #  Compute the solution the saddle point system
504+     #  Compute the solution of  the saddle point system
505505    #  xₖ ← xₖ + zₖ
506506    #  yₖ ← yₖ + rₖ
507507    kaxpy! (n, one (FC), zₖ, xₖ)
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