Fixed dictionary example to use commas instead of semicolons.

(This was actually a bug in the interpreter!)
This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 1991-11-12 15:45:03 +00:00
parent 92fba0293f
commit 8f96f7734c
2 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -1075,13 +1075,13 @@ Here is a small example using a dictionary:
>>> tel = {'jack': 4098, 'sape': 4139}
>>> tel['guido'] = 4127
>>> tel
{'sape': 4139; 'guido': 4127; 'jack': 4098}
{'sape': 4139, 'guido': 4127, 'jack': 4098}
>>> tel['jack']
4098
>>> del tel['sape']
>>> tel['irv'] = 4127
>>> tel
{'guido': 4127; 'irv': 4127; 'jack': 4098}
{'guido': 4127, 'irv': 4127, 'jack': 4098}
>>> tel.keys()
['guido', 'irv', 'jack']
>>> tel.has_key('guido')

View File

@ -1075,13 +1075,13 @@ Here is a small example using a dictionary:
>>> tel = {'jack': 4098, 'sape': 4139}
>>> tel['guido'] = 4127
>>> tel
{'sape': 4139; 'guido': 4127; 'jack': 4098}
{'sape': 4139, 'guido': 4127, 'jack': 4098}
>>> tel['jack']
4098
>>> del tel['sape']
>>> tel['irv'] = 4127
>>> tel
{'guido': 4127; 'irv': 4127; 'jack': 4098}
{'guido': 4127, 'irv': 4127, 'jack': 4098}
>>> tel.keys()
['guido', 'irv', 'jack']
>>> tel.has_key('guido')