From e06be0820f3304b1ea940cd643214d332ed02ea8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Miss Islington (bot)" <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sun, 29 Dec 2019 14:20:52 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] Fix typos and remove deprecated deprecation warning. (GH-17741) (cherry picked from commit 32a12aed6da41f49a5ca05e6de34f5f93ea1dc33) Co-authored-by: Antoine <43954001+awecx@users.noreply.github.com> --- Doc/library/ctypes.rst | 15 ++++----------- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/library/ctypes.rst b/Doc/library/ctypes.rst index e0bc28f5e50..2d6c6d0a1c3 100644 --- a/Doc/library/ctypes.rst +++ b/Doc/library/ctypes.rst @@ -161,13 +161,6 @@ as the ``NULL`` pointer):: 0x1d000000 >>> -.. note:: - - :mod:`ctypes` may raise a :exc:`ValueError` after calling the function, if - it detects that an invalid number of arguments were passed. This behavior - should not be relied upon. It is deprecated in 3.6.2, and will be removed - in 3.7. - :exc:`ValueError` is raised when you call an ``stdcall`` function with the ``cdecl`` calling convention, or vice versa:: @@ -624,7 +617,7 @@ Structure/union alignment and byte order ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ By default, Structure and Union fields are aligned in the same way the C -compiler does it. It is possible to override this behavior be specifying a +compiler does it. It is possible to override this behavior by specifying a :attr:`_pack_` class attribute in the subclass definition. This must be set to a positive integer and specifies the maximum alignment for the fields. This is what ``#pragma pack(n)`` also does in MSVC. @@ -922,7 +915,7 @@ attribute later, after the class statement:: ... ("next", POINTER(cell))] >>> -Lets try it. We create two instances of ``cell``, and let them point to each +Let's try it. We create two instances of ``cell``, and let them point to each other, and finally follow the pointer chain a few times:: >>> c1 = cell() @@ -1125,8 +1118,8 @@ hit the ``NULL`` entry:: >>> The fact that standard Python has a frozen module and a frozen package -(indicated by the negative size member) is not well known, it is only used for -testing. Try it out with ``import __hello__`` for example. +(indicated by the negative ``size`` member) is not well known, it is only used +for testing. Try it out with ``import __hello__`` for example. .. _ctypes-surprises: