Bug #1394868: doc typos

This commit is contained in:
Georg Brandl 2006-01-01 21:35:20 +00:00
parent 60b29961dc
commit 0f194234dc
3 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ generated. This is the basic mechanism controlling the verbosity of
logging output.
Logging messages are encoded as instances of the \class{LogRecord} class.
When a logger decides to actually log an event, an \class{LogRecord}
When a logger decides to actually log an event, a \class{LogRecord}
instance is created from the logging message.
Logging messages are subjected to a dispatch mechanism through the

View File

@ -952,8 +952,8 @@ The conversion flag characters are:
precede the conversion (overrides a "space" flag).}
\end{tableii}
The length modifier may be \code{h}, \code{l}, and \code{L} may be
present, but are ignored as they are not necessary for Python.
A length modifier (\code{h}, \code{l}, or \code{L}) may be
present, but is ignored as it is not necessary for Python.
The conversion types are:
@ -1606,7 +1606,7 @@ flush the read-ahead buffer.
defaults to the current position. The current file position is
not changed. Note that if a specified size exceeds the file's
current size, the result is platform-dependent: possibilities
include that file may remain unchanged, increase to the specified
include that the file may remain unchanged, increase to the specified
size as if zero-filled, or increase to the specified size with
undefined new content.
Availability: Windows, many \UNIX{} variants.

View File

@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ If \var{env} is not \code{None}, it defines the environment variables
for the new process.
If \var{universal_newlines} is \constant{True}, the file objects stdout
and stderr are opened as a text files, but lines may be terminated by
and stderr are opened as text files, but lines may be terminated by
any of \code{'\e n'}, the Unix end-of-line convention, \code{'\e r'},
the Macintosh convention or \code{'\e r\e n'}, the Windows convention.
All of these external representations are seen as \code{'\e n'} by the