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introduce omitted index default before using it (GH-27775) (GH-27803)
(cherry picked from commit 599f5c8481
)
Co-authored-by: Jefferson Oliveira <jefferson.dev.insights@gmail.com>
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1 changed files with 8 additions and 8 deletions
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@ -269,14 +269,6 @@ to obtain individual characters, *slicing* allows you to obtain substring::
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>>> word[2:5] # characters from position 2 (included) to 5 (excluded)
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'tho'
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Note how the start is always included, and the end always excluded. This
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makes sure that ``s[:i] + s[i:]`` is always equal to ``s``::
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>>> word[:2] + word[2:]
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'Python'
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>>> word[:4] + word[4:]
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'Python'
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Slice indices have useful defaults; an omitted first index defaults to zero, an
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omitted second index defaults to the size of the string being sliced. ::
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@ -287,6 +279,14 @@ omitted second index defaults to the size of the string being sliced. ::
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>>> word[-2:] # characters from the second-last (included) to the end
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'on'
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Note how the start is always included, and the end always excluded. This
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makes sure that ``s[:i] + s[i:]`` is always equal to ``s``::
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>>> word[:2] + word[2:]
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'Python'
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>>> word[:4] + word[4:]
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'Python'
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One way to remember how slices work is to think of the indices as pointing
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*between* characters, with the left edge of the first character numbered 0.
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Then the right edge of the last character of a string of *n* characters has
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