From 2fdc0f8a86d715fe4408fc5de98da70be480acfa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Georg Brandl Date: Sat, 6 Oct 2012 22:38:20 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Fix markup in Counter note. --- Doc/library/collections.rst | 20 ++++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/library/collections.rst b/Doc/library/collections.rst index 7979f076f4a..45da4e55419 100644 --- a/Doc/library/collections.rst +++ b/Doc/library/collections.rst @@ -347,24 +347,24 @@ or subtracting from an empty counter. this section documents the minimum range and type restrictions. * The :class:`Counter` class itself is a dictionary subclass with no - restrictions on its keys and values. The values are intended to be numbers - representing counts, but you *could* store anything in the value field. + restrictions on its keys and values. The values are intended to be numbers + representing counts, but you *could* store anything in the value field. * The :meth:`most_common` method requires only that the values be orderable. * For in-place operations such as ``c[key] += 1``, the value type need only - support addition and subtraction. So fractions, floats, and decimals would - work and negative values are supported. The same is also true for - :meth:`update` and :meth:`subtract` which allow negative and zero values - for both inputs and outputs. + support addition and subtraction. So fractions, floats, and decimals would + work and negative values are supported. The same is also true for + :meth:`update` and :meth:`subtract` which allow negative and zero values + for both inputs and outputs. * The multiset methods are designed only for use cases with positive values. - The inputs may be negative or zero, but only outputs with positive values - are created. There are no type restrictions, but the value type needs to - support addition, subtraction, and comparison. + The inputs may be negative or zero, but only outputs with positive values + are created. There are no type restrictions, but the value type needs to + support addition, subtraction, and comparison. * The :meth:`elements` method requires integer counts. It ignores zero and - negative counts. + negative counts. .. seealso::