-All assignable types compile to a \gls{RWST} that writes one fetch instruction.
-For example, using a \gls{SDS} always results in an expression of the form
-\CI{sds \x=4 In ...}. The actual \CI{x} is the \gls{RWST} that always writes
-one \CI{BCSdsFetch} instruction with the correctly embedded \gls{SDS}.
-Assigning to an analog pin will result in the \gls{RWST} containing the
-\CI{BCAnalogRead} instruction. When the operation on the assignable is not a
-read operation from but an assign operation, the instruction(s) will be
-rewritten accordingly. This results in an \CI{BCSdsStore} or \CI{BCAnalogWrite}
+All assignable types compile to a \gls{RWST} which writes the specific fetch
+instruction(s). For example, using an \gls{SDS} always results in an expression
+of the form \CI{sds \x=4 In ...}. The actual \CI{x} is the \gls{RWST} that
+always writes one \CI{BCSdsFetch} instruction with the correctly embedded
+\gls{SDS}. Assigning to an analog pin will result in the \gls{RWST} containing
+the \CI{BCAnalogRead} instruction. When the operation on the assignable is not
+a read operation from but an assign operation, the instruction(s) will be
+rewritten accordingly. This results in a \CI{BCSdsStore} or \CI{BCAnalogWrite}