This gets rid of the mildly confusing `>>>>>>>' underlines which look vaguely like `diff` punctuation.
(cherry picked from commit 00d7109075)
Co-authored-by: Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com>
*creationflags* is a separate topic from *startupinfo*.
Start sentence with 'If given', like previous sentence.
(cherry picked from commit 1183f1e6bf)
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
It only represents the difference between two datetime or
date objects, not between two time objects.
(cherry picked from commit 73d20cafb5)
Co-authored-by: John Belmonte <john@neggie.net>
Also fix test_mousewheel: do not skip a check which was broken due to incorrect
delta on Aqua and XQuartz, and probably not because of `.update_idletasks()`.
(cherry picked from commit d25d4ee60c)
Co-authored-by: Christopher Chavez <chrischavez@gmx.us>
"inherits <someclass>" grates to this reader. I think it should be "inherits from <someclass>".
(cherry picked from commit c9c6e04380)
Co-authored-by: Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com>
PI objects instead of comment objects.
(cherry picked from commit de6f97cd35)
Co-authored-by: Christophe Nanteuil <35002064+christopheNan@users.noreply.github.com>
As @GPHemsley pointed out, GH-29469 omitted `versionadded` notes for the 2 new items.
(cherry picked from commit 586057e9f8)
Co-authored-by: Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com>
gh-111112: Avoid potential confusion in TCP server example. (GH-111113)
Improve misleading TCP server docs and example.
socket.recv(), as documented by the Python reference documentation,
returns at most `bufsize` bytes, and the underlying TCP protocol means
there is no guaranteed correspondence between what is sent by the client
and what is received by the server.
This conflation could mislead readers into thinking that TCP is
datagram-based or has similar semantics, which will likely appear to
work for simple cases, but introduce difficult to reproduce bugs.
(cherry picked from commit a79a27242f)
Co-authored-by: Aidan Holm <alfh@google.com>
Add note to `sys.orig_argv` clarifying the difference from `sys.argv` (GH-114630)
(cherry picked from commit 1836f674c0)
Co-authored-by: Bradley Reynolds <bradley.reynolds@darbia.dev>
Co-authored-by: Ned Batchelder <ned@nedbatchelder.com>
Prior to gh-114269, the iterator returned by ElementTree.iterparse was
initialized with the root attribute as None. This restores the previous
behavior.
(cherry picked from commit 66f95ea6a6)
Co-authored-by: Sam Gross <colesbury@gmail.com>
The text clearly seems to be referencing `TestFuncAcceptsSequencesMixin`,
for which no target is available. Name the class properly and suppress
the dangling reference.
(cherry picked from commit 7a93db4425)
Co-authored-by: Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com>
A 'single tuple' means 'one tuple, of whatever length.
Remove the unneeded and slightly distracting parenthetical 'singleton' comment.
(cherry picked from commit a1332a99cf)
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
They could be confused with references to datetime and time modules.
(cherry picked from commit 39c766b579)
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
gh-110893: Improve the documentation for __future__ module (GH-114642)
nedbat took issue with the phrasing "real module". I'm actually fine
with that phrasing, but I do think the `__future__` page should be clear
about the way in which the `__future__` module is special. (Yes, there
was a footnote linking to the future statements part of the reference,
but there should be upfront discussion).
I'm sympathetic to nedbat's claim that no one really cares about
`__future__._Feature`, so I've moved the interesting table up to the
top.
(cherry picked from commit 3b86891fd6)
Co-authored-by: Shantanu <12621235+hauntsaninja@users.noreply.github.com>