Commit 0930228a authored by Georg Brandl's avatar Georg Brandl

Merged revisions 84945 via svnmerge from

svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/py3k

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  r84945 | georg.brandl | 2010-09-21 16:48:28 +0200 (Di, 21 Sep 2010) | 1 line

  #9911: doc copyedits.
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parent 21946afe
......@@ -358,7 +358,7 @@ would create a 64bit installation executable on your 32bit version of Windows.
To cross-compile, you must download the Python source code and cross-compile
Python itself for the platform you are targetting - it is not possible from a
binary installtion of Python (as the .lib etc file for other platforms are
binary installation of Python (as the .lib etc file for other platforms are
not included.) In practice, this means the user of a 32 bit operating
system will need to use Visual Studio 2008 to open the
:file:`PCBuild/PCbuild.sln` solution in the Python source tree and build the
......
......@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ coding-style conflicts. In C there are many different ways to place the braces.
If you're used to reading and writing code that uses one style, you will feel at
least slightly uneasy when reading (or being required to write) another style.
Many coding styles place begin/end brackets on a line by themself. This makes
Many coding styles place begin/end brackets on a line by themselves. This makes
programs considerably longer and wastes valuable screen space, making it harder
to get a good overview of a program. Ideally, a function should fit on one
screen (say, 20-30 lines). 20 lines of Python can do a lot more work than 20
......
......@@ -944,7 +944,7 @@ Is there an equivalent to Perl's chomp() for removing trailing newlines from str
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Starting with Python 2.2, you can use ``S.rstrip("\r\n")`` to remove all
occurences of any line terminator from the end of the string ``S`` without
occurrences of any line terminator from the end of the string ``S`` without
removing other trailing whitespace. If the string ``S`` represents more than
one line, with several empty lines at the end, the line terminators for all the
blank lines will be removed::
......
......@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ Glossary
2to3
A tool that tries to convert Python 2.x code to Python 3.x code by
handling most of the incompatibilites which can be detected by parsing the
handling most of the incompatibilities which can be detected by parsing the
source and traversing the parse tree.
2to3 is available in the standard library as :mod:`lib2to3`; a standalone
......
......@@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ Running the interpreter shows how the function descriptor works in practice::
<bound method D.f of <__main__.D object at 0x00B18C90>>
The output suggests that bound and unbound methods are two different types.
While they could have been implemented that way, the actual C implemention of
While they could have been implemented that way, the actual C implementation of
:ctype:`PyMethod_Type` in
`Objects/classobject.c <http://svn.python.org/view/python/trunk/Objects/classobject.c?view=markup>`_
is a single object with two different representations depending on whether the
......
......@@ -314,7 +314,7 @@ process is likely to be screwed up.
Non-blocking Sockets
====================
If you've understood the preceeding, you already know most of what you need to
If you've understood the preceding, you already know most of what you need to
know about the mechanics of using sockets. You'll still use the same calls, in
much the same ways. It's just that, if you do it right, your app will be almost
inside-out.
......
......@@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ process.
Since some print statements can be parsed as function calls or statements, 2to3
cannot always read files containing the print function. When 2to3 detects the
presence of the ``from __future__ import print_function`` compiler directive, it
modifies its internal grammar to interpert :func:`print` as a function. This
modifies its internal grammar to interpret :func:`print` as a function. This
change can also be enabled manually with the :option:`-p` flag. Use
:option:`-p` to run fixers on code that already has had its print statements
converted.
......
......@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ a 'B', and so on::
Unlike the :func:`sorted` function, it does not make sense for the :func:`bisect`
functions to have *key* or *reversed* arguments because that would lead to an
inefficent design (successive calls to bisect functions would not "remember"
inefficient design (successive calls to bisect functions would not "remember"
all of the previous key lookups).
Instead, it is better to search a list of precomputed keys to find the index
......
......@@ -23,5 +23,5 @@ help ease in transitioning from 2.7 to 3.1.
specified in relative terms, then the *package* argument must be
specified to the package which is to act as the anchor for resolving the
package name (e.g. ``import_module('..mod', 'pkg.subpkg')`` will import
``pkg.mod``). The specified module will be inserted into
``pkg.mod``). The specified module will be inserted into
:data:`sys.modules` and returned.
......@@ -2744,7 +2744,7 @@ wire).
.. attribute:: exc_info
Exception tuple (à la `sys.exc_info`) or `None` if no exception
information is availble.
information is available.
.. attribute:: func
......
......@@ -376,7 +376,7 @@ The :mod:`multiprocessing` package mostly replicates the API of the
Otherwise a daemonic process would leave its children orphaned if it gets
terminated when its parent process exits. Additionally, these are **not**
Unix daemons or services, they are normal processes that will be
terminated (and not joined) if non-dameonic processes have exited.
terminated (and not joined) if non-daemonic processes have exited.
In addition to the :class:`Threading.Thread` API, :class:`Process` objects
also support the following attributes and methods:
......
......@@ -337,7 +337,7 @@ process and user.
Set the current process's real, effective, and saved user ids.
Availibility: Unix.
Availability: Unix.
.. versionadded:: 2.7
......
......@@ -620,7 +620,7 @@ The resulting profiler will then call :func:`your_time_func`.
integers, you can also invoke the class constructor with a second argument
specifying the real duration of one unit of time. For example, if
:func:`your_integer_time_func` returns times measured in thousands of seconds,
you would constuct the :class:`Profile` instance as follows::
you would construct the :class:`Profile` instance as follows::
pr = profile.Profile(your_integer_time_func, 0.001)
......
......@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ interactive prompt and the prompts offered by the :func:`raw_input` and
the ``libedit`` library instead of GNU readline.
The configuration file for ``libedit`` is different from that
of GNU readline. If you programmaticly load configuration strings
of GNU readline. If you programmatically load configuration strings
you can check for the text "libedit" in :const:`readline.__doc__`
to differentiate between GNU readline and libedit.
......
......@@ -198,8 +198,8 @@ Telnet Objects
received so far (may be the empty string if a timeout happened).
If a regular expression ends with a greedy match (such as ``.*``) or if more
than one expression can match the same input, the results are indeterministic,
and may depend on the I/O timing.
than one expression can match the same input, the results are
non-deterministic, and may depend on the I/O timing.
.. method:: Telnet.set_option_negotiation_callback(callback)
......
......@@ -1835,7 +1835,7 @@ Methods specific to Screen, not inherited from TurtleScreen
.. function:: setup(width=_CFG["width"], height=_CFG["height"], startx=_CFG["leftright"], starty=_CFG["topbottom"])
Set the size and position of the main window. Default values of arguments
are stored in the configuration dicionary and can be changed via a
are stored in the configuration dictionary and can be changed via a
:file:`turtle.cfg` file.
:param width: if an integer, a size in pixels, if a float, a fraction of the
......
......@@ -634,7 +634,7 @@ The following decorators implement test skipping and expected failures:
.. function:: skipUnless(condition, reason)
Skip the decoratored test unless *condition* is true.
Skip the decorated test unless *condition* is true.
.. function:: expectedFailure
......@@ -1523,8 +1523,8 @@ Loading and running tests
.. attribute:: expectedFailures
A list contaning 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a expected failures
A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents an expected failure
of the test case.
.. attribute:: unexpectedSuccesses
......
......@@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ All of this makes generator functions quite similar to coroutines; they yield
multiple times, they have more than one entry point and their execution can be
suspended. The only difference is that a generator function cannot control
where should the execution continue after it yields; the control is always
transfered to the generator's caller.
transferred to the generator's caller.
.. index:: object: generator
......
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