bpo-40340: Separate examples more clearly in the programming FAQ (GH-19688)

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Cajetan Rodrigues 2020-04-25 01:39:04 +02:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -851,10 +851,11 @@ For integers, use the built-in :func:`int` type constructor, e.g. ``int('144')
e.g. ``float('144') == 144.0``.
By default, these interpret the number as decimal, so that ``int('0144') ==
144`` and ``int('0x144')`` raises :exc:`ValueError`. ``int(string, base)`` takes
the base to convert from as a second optional argument, so ``int('0x144', 16) ==
324``. If the base is specified as 0, the number is interpreted using Python's
rules: a leading '0o' indicates octal, and '0x' indicates a hex number.
144`` holds true, and ``int('0x144')`` raises :exc:`ValueError`. ``int(string,
base)`` takes the base to convert from as a second optional argument, so ``int(
'0x144', 16) == 324``. If the base is specified as 0, the number is interpreted
using Python's rules: a leading '0o' indicates octal, and '0x' indicates a hex
number.
Do not use the built-in function :func:`eval` if all you need is to convert
strings to numbers. :func:`eval` will be significantly slower and it presents a