bpo-26701: Tweak the documentation for special methods in int(). (GH-6741)

(cherry picked from commit df00f04825)

Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
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Miss Islington (bot) 2018-05-10 07:38:06 -07:00 committed by GitHub
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1 changed files with 6 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -671,8 +671,8 @@ are always available. They are listed here in alphabetical order.
.. function:: hex(x)
Convert an integer number to a lowercase hexadecimal string prefixed with
"0x". If x is not a Python :class:`int` object, it has to define an
__index__() method that returns an integer. Some examples:
"0x". If *x* is not a Python :class:`int` object, it has to define an
:meth:`__index__` method that returns an integer. Some examples:
>>> hex(255)
'0xff'
@ -730,12 +730,10 @@ are always available. They are listed here in alphabetical order.
int(x, base=10)
Return an integer object constructed from a number or string *x*, or return
``0`` if no arguments are given. If *x* is a number, return
:meth:`x.__int__() <object.__int__>`. If *x* defines
:meth:`x.__trunc__() <object.__trunc__>` but not
:meth:`x.__int__() <object.__int__>`, then return
:meth:`x.__trunc__() <object.__trunc__>`. For floating point numbers,
this truncates towards zero.
``0`` if no arguments are given. If *x* defines :meth:`__int__`,
``int(x)`` returns ``x.__int__()``. If *x* defines :meth:`__trunc__`,
it returns ``x.__trunc__()``.
For floating point numbers, this truncates towards zero.
If *x* is not a number or if *base* is given, then *x* must be a string,
:class:`bytes`, or :class:`bytearray` instance representing an :ref:`integer