From 7a3522d478d456b38ef5e647c21595904bea79df Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Miss Islington (bot)" <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sun, 17 May 2020 14:37:30 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Doc: change 'Posix' for 'POSIX' (GH-20001) (cherry picked from commit 65460565df99fbda6a74b6bb4bf99affaaf8bd95) Co-authored-by: Mathieu Dupuy --- Doc/howto/sockets.rst | 2 +- Doc/library/subprocess.rst | 4 ++-- Doc/library/sysconfig.rst | 6 +++--- 3 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/howto/sockets.rst b/Doc/howto/sockets.rst index bc71d85a83e..b5c2152ec70 100644 --- a/Doc/howto/sockets.rst +++ b/Doc/howto/sockets.rst @@ -319,7 +319,7 @@ inside-out. In Python, you use ``socket.setblocking(0)`` to make it non-blocking. In C, it's more complex, (for one thing, you'll need to choose between the BSD flavor -``O_NONBLOCK`` and the almost indistinguishable Posix flavor ``O_NDELAY``, which +``O_NONBLOCK`` and the almost indistinguishable POSIX flavor ``O_NDELAY``, which is completely different from ``TCP_NODELAY``), but it's the exact same idea. You do this after creating the socket, but before using it. (Actually, if you're nuts, you can switch back and forth.) diff --git a/Doc/library/subprocess.rst b/Doc/library/subprocess.rst index cce7da1c9b1..0b692b4dec6 100644 --- a/Doc/library/subprocess.rst +++ b/Doc/library/subprocess.rst @@ -755,14 +755,14 @@ Instances of the :class:`Popen` class have the following methods: .. method:: Popen.terminate() - Stop the child. On Posix OSs the method sends SIGTERM to the + Stop the child. On POSIX OSs the method sends SIGTERM to the child. On Windows the Win32 API function :c:func:`TerminateProcess` is called to stop the child. .. method:: Popen.kill() - Kills the child. On Posix OSs the function sends SIGKILL to the child. + Kills the child. On POSIX OSs the function sends SIGKILL to the child. On Windows :meth:`kill` is an alias for :meth:`terminate`. diff --git a/Doc/library/sysconfig.rst b/Doc/library/sysconfig.rst index b5a1da80c68..78a1dfce9ae 100644 --- a/Doc/library/sysconfig.rst +++ b/Doc/library/sysconfig.rst @@ -74,12 +74,12 @@ places. Python currently supports seven schemes: -- *posix_prefix*: scheme for Posix platforms like Linux or Mac OS X. This is +- *posix_prefix*: scheme for POSIX platforms like Linux or Mac OS X. This is the default scheme used when Python or a component is installed. -- *posix_home*: scheme for Posix platforms used when a *home* option is used +- *posix_home*: scheme for POSIX platforms used when a *home* option is used upon installation. This scheme is used when a component is installed through Distutils with a specific home prefix. -- *posix_user*: scheme for Posix platforms used when a component is installed +- *posix_user*: scheme for POSIX platforms used when a component is installed through Distutils and the *user* option is used. This scheme defines paths located under the user home directory. - *nt*: scheme for NT platforms like Windows.