Typo in example.

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Guido van Rossum 1997-07-17 16:14:12 +00:00
parent 14a8024b04
commit 246d96555f
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ The module also defines two mathematical constants:
Note that the selection of functions is similar, but not identical, to Note that the selection of functions is similar, but not identical, to
that in module \code{math}. The reason for having two modules is, that in module \code{math}. The reason for having two modules is,
that some users aren't interested in complex numbers, and perhaps that some users aren't interested in complex numbers, and perhaps
don't even know what they are. They would rather have \code{math(-1)} don't even know what they are. They would rather have \code{math.sqrt(-1)}
raise an exception than return a complex number. Also note that the raise an exception than return a complex number. Also note that the
functions defined in \code{cmath} always return a complex number, even functions defined in \code{cmath} always return a complex number, even
if the answer can be expressed as a real number (in which case the if the answer can be expressed as a real number (in which case the

View file

@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ The module also defines two mathematical constants:
Note that the selection of functions is similar, but not identical, to Note that the selection of functions is similar, but not identical, to
that in module \code{math}. The reason for having two modules is, that in module \code{math}. The reason for having two modules is,
that some users aren't interested in complex numbers, and perhaps that some users aren't interested in complex numbers, and perhaps
don't even know what they are. They would rather have \code{math(-1)} don't even know what they are. They would rather have \code{math.sqrt(-1)}
raise an exception than return a complex number. Also note that the raise an exception than return a complex number. Also note that the
functions defined in \code{cmath} always return a complex number, even functions defined in \code{cmath} always return a complex number, even
if the answer can be expressed as a real number (in which case the if the answer can be expressed as a real number (in which case the