Fix a few small typos in the docstrings.

get_close_matches():  Do not use %-interpolation for strings when
    concatenation is more efficient.
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 2001-02-19 19:30:05 +00:00
parent f6a9617ba0
commit f1da6287fc
1 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ __init__(isjunk=None, a='', b='')
Optional arg isjunk is None (the default), or a one-argument function
that takes a sequence element and returns true iff the element is junk.
None is equivalent to passing "lambda x: 0", i.e. no elements are
considered to be junk. For examples, pass
considered to be junk. For example, pass
lambda x: x in " \\t"
if you're comparing lines as sequences of characters, and don't want to
synch up on blanks or hard tabs.
@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ class SequenceMatcher:
Optional arg isjunk is None (the default), or a one-argument
function that takes a sequence element and returns true iff the
element is junk. None is equivalent to passing "lambda x: 0", i.e.
no elements are considered to be junk. For examples, pass
no elements are considered to be junk. For example, pass
lambda x: x in " \\t"
if you're comparing lines as sequences of characters, and don't
want to synch up on blanks or hard tabs.
@ -299,7 +299,7 @@ class SequenceMatcher:
also .set_seqs() and .set_seq1().
Optional arg b is the second of two sequences to be compared. By
default, an empty string. The elements of a must be hashable. See
default, an empty string. The elements of b must be hashable. See
also .set_seqs() and .set_seq2().
"""
@ -752,9 +752,9 @@ def get_close_matches(word, possibilities, n=3, cutoff=0.6):
"""
if not n > 0:
raise ValueError("n must be > 0: %s" % `n`)
raise ValueError("n must be > 0: " + `n`)
if not 0.0 <= cutoff <= 1.0:
raise ValueError("cutoff must be in [0.0, 1.0]: %s" % `cutoff`)
raise ValueError("cutoff must be in [0.0, 1.0]: " + `cutoff`)
result = []
s = SequenceMatcher()
s.set_seq2(word)