Use \obindex{...} instead of \indexii{...}{type} in many places; this is

more consistent with other index entries in the documentation.
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 2000-10-04 04:21:19 +00:00
parent d215218178
commit 0b4e25d0c0
1 changed files with 16 additions and 17 deletions

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@ -166,12 +166,11 @@ bits of precision. Long integers have unlimited precision. Floating
point numbers are implemented using \ctype{double} in C. All bets on
their precision are off unless you happen to know the machine you are
working with.
\indexii{numeric}{types}
\indexii{integer}{types}
\indexii{integer}{type}
\indexiii{long}{integer}{type}
\indexii{floating point}{type}
\indexii{complex number}{type}
\obindex{numeric}
\obindex{integer}
\obindex{long integer}
\obindex{floating point}
\obindex{complex number}
\indexii{C}{language}
Complex numbers have a real and imaginary part, which are both
@ -332,13 +331,13 @@ builtin function \function{buffer()}.\bifuncindex{buffer} XRanges
objects are similar to buffers in that there is no specific syntax to
create them, but they are created using the \function{xrange()}
function.\bifuncindex{xrange}
\indexii{sequence}{types}
\indexii{string}{type}
\indexii{Unicode}{type}
\indexii{buffer}{type}
\indexii{tuple}{type}
\indexii{list}{type}
\indexii{xrange}{type}
\obindex{sequence}
\obindex{string}
\obindex{Unicode}
\obindex{buffer}
\obindex{tuple}
\obindex{list}
\obindex{xrange}
Sequence types support the following operations. The \samp{in} and
\samp{not in} operations have the same priorities as the comparison
@ -647,7 +646,7 @@ Additional string operations are defined in standard module
\subsubsection{XRange Type \label{typesseq-xrange}}
The xrange\indexii{xrange}{type} type is an immutable sequence which is
The xrange\obindex{xrange} type is an immutable sequence which is
commonly used for looping. The advantage of the xrange type is that an
xrange object will always take the same amount of memory, no matter the
size of the range it represents. There are no consistent performance
@ -672,7 +671,7 @@ be modified once created.
The following operations are defined on mutable sequence types (where
\var{x} is an arbitrary object):
\indexiii{mutable}{sequence}{types}
\indexii{list}{type}
\obindex{list}
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}] = \var{x}}
@ -749,8 +748,8 @@ Notes:
\subsection{Mapping Types \label{typesmapping}}
\indexii{mapping}{types}
\indexii{dictionary}{type}
\obindex{mapping}
\obindex{dictionary}
A \dfn{mapping} object maps values of one type (the key type) to
arbitrary objects. Mappings are mutable objects. There is currently