REAL type is now supported


git-svn-id: https://asn1c.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/asn1c/trunk@330 59561ff5-6e30-0410-9f3c-9617f08c8826
diff --git a/BUGS b/BUGS
index d35cff7..2023fcf 100644
--- a/BUGS
+++ b/BUGS
@@ -5,30 +5,28 @@
 NOTE:	This statement does not apply to the target code _produced_
 	by the compiler.
 
-1. REAL type is not supported yet.
-
-2. For purposes of compilation, INTEGER type is modelled using a large
+1. For purposes of compilation, INTEGER type is modelled using a large
 static type (asn_integer_t), but defined as any positive or negative value
 by ASN.1. Not a problem as most specifications use very small values anyway.
 NOTE:	This statement does not apply to the target code _produced_
 	by the compiler.
 
-3. ASN Macros are prohibited by the current ASN.1 standard,
+2. ASN Macros are prohibited by the current ASN.1 standard,
 and are not supported.
 
-4. Multiple tags applied at the same level are not supported:
+3. Multiple tags applied at the same level are not supported:
 	BadTags ::= [0] EXPLICIT [2] IMPLICIT OtherType
    The same thing could be achieved by using the indirection:
 	GoodTags     ::= [0] EXPLICIT OtherTypePtr
 	OtherTypePtr ::= [2] IMPLICIT OtherType
 
-5. Mixed definite/indefinite length in a _single_ BER tags sequence is not
+4. Mixed definite/indefinite length in a _single_ BER tags sequence is not
 supported. Should not be a problem in the real world. Please note that it
 is still possible, for example, to encode a wrapper structure using definite
 length, and encode its substructure member using indefinite length. The BER
 decoder is perfectly capable of decoding such sequences.
 
-6. Encoding or decoding of structures with combined length greater than 16MB
+5. Encoding or decoding of structures with combined length greater than 16MB
 is not tested. There are some size determination bugs lurking in the produced
 code, which may cause integer overflow in certain edge cases. This restriction
 should not cause a problem in the real world, as higher level protocol typically