mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
gh-101386: fix typos found by codespell (#101387)
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@ -839,7 +839,7 @@ PyConfig
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will produce an error.
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Configured by the :option:`-X int_max_str_digits <-X>` command line
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flag or the :envvar:`PYTHONINTMAXSTRDIGITS` environment varable.
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flag or the :envvar:`PYTHONINTMAXSTRDIGITS` environment variable.
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Default: ``-1`` in Python mode. 4300
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(:data:`sys.int_info.default_max_str_digits`) in isolated mode.
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@ -1582,7 +1582,7 @@ applied during the "Main" phase. It may allow to customize Python in Python to
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override or tune the :ref:`Path Configuration <init-path-config>`, maybe
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install a custom :data:`sys.meta_path` importer or an import hook, etc.
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It may become possible to calculatin the :ref:`Path Configuration
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It may become possible to calculate the :ref:`Path Configuration
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<init-path-config>` in Python, after the Core phase and before the Main phase,
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which is one of the :pep:`432` motivation.
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@ -3628,7 +3628,7 @@ refer to the comments in the code snippet for more detailed information.
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Logging to syslog with RFC5424 support
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--------------------------------------
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Although :rfc:`5424` dates from 2009, most syslog servers are configured by detault to
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Although :rfc:`5424` dates from 2009, most syslog servers are configured by default to
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use the older :rfc:`3164`, which hails from 2001. When ``logging`` was added to Python
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in 2003, it supported the earlier (and only existing) protocol at the time. Since
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RFC5424 came out, as there has not been widespread deployment of it in syslog
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@ -3819,7 +3819,7 @@ then running the script results in
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WARNING:demo:division by zero
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As you can see, this output isn't ideal. That's because the underlying code
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which writes to ``sys.stderr`` makes mutiple writes, each of which results in a
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which writes to ``sys.stderr`` makes multiple writes, each of which results in a
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separate logged line (for example, the last three lines above). To get around
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this problem, you need to buffer things and only output log lines when newlines
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are seen. Let's use a slghtly better implementation of ``LoggerWriter``:
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@ -2207,7 +2207,7 @@ This section shows recipes for common adapters and converters.
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assert convert_datetime(b"2019-05-18T15:17:08.123456") == dt
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# Using current time as fromtimestamp() returns local date/time.
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# Droping microseconds as adapt_datetime_epoch truncates fractional second part.
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# Dropping microseconds as adapt_datetime_epoch truncates fractional second part.
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now = datetime.datetime.now().replace(microsecond=0)
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current_timestamp = int(now.timestamp())
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@ -462,7 +462,7 @@ In such cases, the ``@`` format character should be used to specify
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native byte ordering and data sizes. Internal pad bytes are normally inserted
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automatically. It is possible that a zero-repeat format code will be
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needed at the end of a format string to round up to the correct
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byte boundary for proper alignment of consective chunks of data.
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byte boundary for proper alignment of consecutive chunks of data.
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Consider these two simple examples (on a 64-bit, little-endian
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machine)::
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