gh-87864: Use correct function definition syntax in the docs (GH-103312)

(cherry picked from commit 50b4b15984)

Co-authored-by: Nikita Sobolev <mail@sobolevn.me>
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Miss Islington (bot) 2023-04-11 07:19:33 -07:00 committed by GitHub
parent 07a2851edb
commit e715da6db1
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4 changed files with 7 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ Glossary
A callable is an object that can be called, possibly with a set
of arguments (see :term:`argument`), with the following syntax::
callable(argument1, argument2, ...)
callable(argument1, argument2, argumentN)
A :term:`function`, and by extension a :term:`method`, is a callable.
An instance of a class that implements the :meth:`~object.__call__`

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@ -1677,7 +1677,7 @@ are always available. They are listed here in alphabetical order.
class C:
@staticmethod
def f(arg1, arg2, ...): ...
def f(arg1, arg2, argN): ...
The ``@staticmethod`` form is a function :term:`decorator` -- see
:ref:`function` for details.

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@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ def abstractmethod(funcobj):
class C(metaclass=ABCMeta):
@abstractmethod
def my_abstract_method(self, ...):
def my_abstract_method(self, arg1, arg2, argN):
...
"""
funcobj.__isabstractmethod__ = True

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@ -845,7 +845,7 @@ functools_wraps(PyObject *wrapper, PyObject *wrapped)
class C:
@classmethod
def f(cls, arg1, arg2, ...):
def f(cls, arg1, arg2, argN):
...
It can be called either on the class (e.g. C.f()) or on an instance
@ -970,7 +970,7 @@ To declare a class method, use this idiom:\n\
\n\
class C:\n\
@classmethod\n\
def f(cls, arg1, arg2, ...):\n\
def f(cls, arg1, arg2, argN):\n\
...\n\
\n\
It can be called either on the class (e.g. C.f()) or on an instance\n\
@ -1043,7 +1043,7 @@ PyClassMethod_New(PyObject *callable)
class C:
@staticmethod
def f(arg1, arg2, ...):
def f(arg1, arg2, argN):
...
It can be called either on the class (e.g. C.f()) or on an instance
@ -1167,7 +1167,7 @@ To declare a static method, use this idiom:\n\
\n\
class C:\n\
@staticmethod\n\
def f(arg1, arg2, ...):\n\
def f(arg1, arg2, argN):\n\
...\n\
\n\
It can be called either on the class (e.g. C.f()) or on an instance\n\