That's an oversight. I've corrected it now.

Guido van Rossum schrieb:
> Why do have some note numbers a \ and others don't?
> 
> On Jan 6, 2008 9:39 AM, georg.brandl <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Author: georg.brandl
>> Date: Sun Jan  6 18:39:49 2008
>> New Revision: 59789
>>
>> Modified:
>>    python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
>> Log:
>> Use consistent note numbers.
>>
>>
>> Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
>> ==============================================================================
>> --- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst       (original)
>> +++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst       Sun Jan  6 18:39:49 
>> 2008
>> @@ -303,7 +303,7 @@
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>>  | ``int(x)``          | *x* converted to integer        | \(3)  | 
>> :func:`int`        |
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>> -| ``float(x)``        | *x* converted to floating point | \(6)  | 
>> :func:`float`      |
>> +| ``float(x)``        | *x* converted to floating point | \(4)  | 
>> :func:`float`      |
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>>  | ``complex(re, im)`` | a complex number with real part |       | 
>> :func:`complex`    |
>>  |                     | *re*, imaginary part *im*.      |       |           
>>          |
>> @@ -314,9 +314,9 @@
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>>  | ``divmod(x, y)``    | the pair ``(x // y, x % y)``    | \(2)  | 
>> :func:`divmod`     |
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>> -| ``pow(x, y)``       | *x* to the power *y*            | (7)   | 
>> :func:`pow`        |
>> +| ``pow(x, y)``       | *x* to the power *y*            | (5)   | 
>> :func:`pow`        |
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>> -| ``x ** y``          | *x* to the power *y*            | (7)   |           
>>          |
>> +| ``x ** y``          | *x* to the power *y*            | (5)   |           
>>          |
>>  
>> +---------------------+---------------------------------+-------+--------------------+
>>
>>  .. index::
>> @@ -347,11 +347,11 @@
>>     as in C; see functions :func:`floor` and :func:`ceil` in the :mod:`math` 
>> module
>>     for well-defined conversions.
>>
>> -(6)
>> +(4)
>>     float also accepts the strings "nan" and "inf" with an optional prefix 
>> "+"
>>     or "-" for Not a Number (NaN) and positive or negative infinity.
>>
>> -(7)
>> +(5)
>>     Python defines ``pow(0, 0)`` and ``0 ** 0`` to be ``1``, as is common for
>>     programming languages.
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Python-3000-checkins mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-3000-checkins
>>
> 
> 
> 

_______________________________________________
Python-3000-checkins mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-3000-checkins

Reply via email to