On 2021-03-21, MRAB <pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: IMO, the doc is wrong.
>> Hmm, maybe it's different in 3.10, but the docs I'm seeing look fine. >> But maybe there's a better way to word it for both of them. > > Python 3.9.2 (tags/v3.9.2:1a79785, Feb 19 2021, 13:44:55) [MSC v.1928 64 > bit (AMD64)] on win32 > Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>>> help(str.title) > Help on method_descriptor: > > title(self, /) > Return a version of the string where each word is titlecased. > > More specifically, words start with uppercased characters and > all remaining cased characters have lower case. > > '\N{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER DZ}', '\N{LATIN SMALL LETTER DZ}' and '\N{LATIN > CAPITAL LETTER D WITH SMALL LETTER Z}' are all digraphs, so is it > correct to say that .title() uppercases the first character? Kind of. I guess it depends on what you mean by "character". In my mind, the first character of string s is s[1], and I would then expect that s.title()[1] == s[1].upper() -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list