#3220: improve bytes docs a bit.
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@ -512,17 +512,21 @@ string literals. In addition to the functionality described here, there are
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also string-specific methods described in the :ref:`string-methods` section.
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Bytes and bytearray objects contain single bytes -- the former is immutable
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while the latter is a mutable sequence. Bytes objects can be constructed from
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literals too; use a ``b`` prefix with normal string syntax: ``b'xyzzy'``. To
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construct byte arrays, use the :func:`bytearray` function.
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while the latter is a mutable sequence. Bytes objects can be constructed the
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constructor, :func:`bytes`, and from literals; use a ``b`` prefix with normal
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string syntax: ``b'xyzzy'``. To construct byte arrays, use the
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:func:`bytearray` function.
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.. warning::
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While string objects are sequences of characters (represented by strings of
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length 1), bytes and bytearray objects are sequences of *integers* (between 0
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and 255), representing the ASCII value of single bytes. That means that for
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a bytes or bytearray object *b*, ``b[0]`` will be an integer, while ``b[0:1]``
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will be a bytes or bytearray object of length 1.
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a bytes or bytearray object *b*, ``b[0]`` will be an integer, while
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``b[0:1]`` will be a bytes or bytearray object of length 1. The
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representation of bytes objects uses the literal format (``b'...'``) since it
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is generally more useful than e.g. ``bytes([50, 19, 100])``. You can always
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convert a bytes object into a list of integers using ``list(b)``.
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Also, while in previous Python versions, byte strings and Unicode strings
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could be exchanged for each other rather freely (barring encoding issues),
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@ -1413,15 +1417,14 @@ Wherever one of these methods needs to interpret the bytes as characters
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The bytes and bytearray types have an additional class method:
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.. method:: bytes.fromhex(string)
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bytearray.fromhex(string)
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This :class:`bytes` class method returns a bytes object, decoding the given
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string object. The string must contain two hexadecimal digits per byte, spaces
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are ignored.
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This :class:`bytes` class method returns a bytes or bytearray object,
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decoding the given string object. The string must contain two hexadecimal
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digits per byte, spaces are ignored.
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Example::
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>>> bytes.fromhex('f0 f1f2 ')
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b'\xf0\xf1\xf2'
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>>> bytes.fromhex('f0 f1f2 ')
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b'\xf0\xf1\xf2'
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.. XXX verify/document translate() semantics!
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