fix various typos; thanks, George Yoshida!

(closes SF patch #952047)
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 2004-05-12 03:07:27 +00:00
parent f72de0fb8c
commit bb066cf841
6 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ Returns a code object (the same as \code{compile(\var{source},
valid; \code{None} if the command is incomplete; raises
\exception{SyntaxError} if the command is complete and contains a
syntax error, or raises \exception{OverflowError} or
\exception{ValueError} if the command cotains an invalid literal.
\exception{ValueError} if the command contains an invalid literal.
\end{funcdesc}

View File

@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ Note:
\begin{funcdesc}{getmodulename}{path}
Return the name of the module named by the file \var{path}, without
including the names of enclosing packages. This uses the same
algortihm as the interpreter uses when searching for modules. If
algorithm as the interpreter uses when searching for modules. If
the name cannot be matched according to the interpreter's rules,
\code{None} is returned.
\end{funcdesc}

View File

@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ regular expression represented as a string literal, you have to
E.g.\ to extract \LaTeX\ \samp{\e section\{\textrm{\ldots}\}} headers
from a document, you can use this pattern:
\code{'[\e ]section\{\e (.*\e )\}'}. \emph{Another exception:}
the escape sequece \samp{\e b} is significant in string literals
the escape sequence \samp{\e b} is significant in string literals
(where it means the ASCII bell character) as well as in Emacs regular
expressions (where it stands for a word boundary), so in order to
search for a word boundary, you should use the pattern \code{'\e \e b'}.

View File

@ -496,7 +496,7 @@ These methods are available on \class{HTTPPasswordMgr} and
\class{HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm} objects.
\begin{methoddesc}[HTTPPasswordMgr]{add_password}{realm, uri, user, passwd}
\var{uri} can be either a single URI, or a sequene of URIs. \var{realm},
\var{uri} can be either a single URI, or a sequence of URIs. \var{realm},
\var{user} and \var{passwd} must be strings. This causes
\code{(\var{user}, \var{passwd})} to be used as authentication tokens
when authentication for \var{realm} and a super-URI of any of the

View File

@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ It also supports certain of Python's built-in operators through
\subsection{Binary Objects \label{binary-objects}}
This class may initialized from string data (which may include NULs).
The primary acess to the content of a \class{Binary} object is
The primary access to the content of a \class{Binary} object is
provided by an attribute:
\begin{memberdesc}[Binary]{data}

View File

@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ either in direct use, or as base classes.
content of \var{data}, attempting to avoid encoding any quote
characters in the string. If both single- and double-quote
characters are already in \var{data}, the double-quote characters
will be encoded and \var{data} will be wrapped in doule-quotes. The
will be encoded and \var{data} will be wrapped in double-quotes. The
resulting string can be used directly as an attribute value:
\begin{verbatim}