In the description of enumerate(), the indexing operators should not

be included in the \var.  This produced weird results in general, but
broke the GNU info conversion.
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 2003-07-16 03:26:31 +00:00
parent 7769bb9224
commit 3605ae5966

View file

@ -383,8 +383,8 @@ and implemented by Jack Jansen.}
A new built-in function, \function{enumerate()}, will make
certain loops a bit clearer. \code{enumerate(thing)}, where
\var{thing} is either an iterator or a sequence, returns a iterator
that will return \code{(0, \var{thing[0]})}, \code{(1,
\var{thing[1]})}, \code{(2, \var{thing[2]})}, and so forth.
that will return \code{(0, \var{thing}[0])}, \code{(1,
\var{thing}[1])}, \code{(2, \var{thing}[2])}, and so forth.
Fairly often you'll see code to change every element of a list that
looks like this: