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\caption{Summary of related work}\label{fig:related_euler}
\end{figure}
-A summary of the related works can be found in Figure~\ref{fig:related_euler}, which is represented as an Euler diagram. The categories chosen for the Euler diagram are: whether the tool is usable \JWcouldcut{and available}, whether it takes a high-level software language as input, whether it has a correctness proof, and finally whether that proof is mechanised. The goal of \vericert{} is to cover all of these categories.
+A summary of the related works can be found in Figure~\ref{fig:related_euler}, which is represented as an Euler diagram. The categories chosen for the Euler diagram are: whether the tool is usable, whether it takes a high-level software language as input, whether it has a correctness proof, and finally whether that proof is mechanised. The goal of \vericert{} is to cover all of these categories.
Most practical HLS tools~\citep{canis11_legup,xilinx20_vivad_high_synth,intel20_sdk_openc_applic,nigam20_predic_accel_desig_time_sensit_affin_types} fit into the category of usable tools that take high-level inputs. On the other end of the spectrum, there are tools such as BEDROC~\citep{chapman92_verif_bedroc} for which there is no practical tool, and even though it is described as high-level synthesis, it more closely resembles today's logic synthesis tools.