Fix most trivially-findable print statements.

There's one major and one minor category still unfixed:
doctests are the major category (and I hope to be able to augment the
refactoring tool to refactor bona fide doctests soon);
other code generating print statements in strings is the minor category.

(Oh, and I don't know if the compiler package works.)
This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 2007-02-09 05:37:30 +00:00
parent 452bf519a7
commit be19ed77dd
331 changed files with 2567 additions and 2648 deletions

View file

@ -80,9 +80,9 @@ attributes by using the .output() function
>>> C = Cookie.SmartCookie()
>>> C["rocky"] = "road"
>>> C["rocky"]["path"] = "/cookie"
>>> print C.output(header="Cookie:")
>>> print(C.output(header="Cookie:"))
Cookie: rocky=road; Path=/cookie
>>> print C.output(attrs=[], header="Cookie:")
>>> print(C.output(attrs=[], header="Cookie:"))
Cookie: rocky=road
The load() method of a Cookie extracts cookies from a string. In a
@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ such trickeries do not confuse it.
>>> C = Cookie.SmartCookie()
>>> C.load('keebler="E=everybody; L=\\"Loves\\"; fudge=\\012;";')
>>> print C
>>> print(C)
Set-Cookie: keebler="E=everybody; L=\"Loves\"; fudge=\012;"
Each element of the Cookie also supports all of the RFC 2109
@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ attribute.
>>> C = Cookie.SmartCookie()
>>> C["oreo"] = "doublestuff"
>>> C["oreo"]["path"] = "/"
>>> print C
>>> print(C)
Set-Cookie: oreo=doublestuff; Path=/
Each dictionary element has a 'value' attribute, which gives you
@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ it is still possible to use Cookie.Cookie() to create a Cookie. In
fact, this simply returns a SmartCookie.
>>> C = Cookie.Cookie()
>>> print C.__class__.__name__
>>> print(C.__class__.__name__)
SmartCookie