https://github.com/python/cpython/commit/92e43aea354b4962b65662eb08c57a9d17b20694 commit: 92e43aea354b4962b65662eb08c57a9d17b20694 branch: 3.11 author: Miss Islington (bot) <[email protected]> committer: terryjreedy <[email protected]> date: 2024-02-24T23:30:34-05:00 summary:
[3.11] Erase some unnecessary quotes on data model doc (GH-113521) (#115897) Thanks to Pedro Arthur Duarte (pedroarthur.jedi at gmail.com) for help with this bug. (cherry picked from commit f7455864f22369cc23bf3428624f310305cac999) Co-authored-by: Adorilson Bezerra <[email protected]> files: M Doc/library/array.rst M Doc/reference/datamodel.rst diff --git a/Doc/library/array.rst b/Doc/library/array.rst index 788dd763ffb915..51947a3a1e821f 100644 --- a/Doc/library/array.rst +++ b/Doc/library/array.rst @@ -273,4 +273,3 @@ Examples:: `NumPy <https://numpy.org/>`_ The NumPy package defines another array type. - diff --git a/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst b/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst index 566ae03c410d87..10c72dcae3735b 100644 --- a/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst +++ b/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ represented by objects.) Every object has an identity, a type and a value. An object's *identity* never changes once it has been created; you may think of it as the object's address in -memory. The ':keyword:`is`' operator compares the identity of two objects; the +memory. The :keyword:`is` operator compares the identity of two objects; the :func:`id` function returns an integer representing its identity. .. impl-detail:: @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ are still reachable. Note that the use of the implementation's tracing or debugging facilities may keep objects alive that would normally be collectable. Also note that catching -an exception with a ':keyword:`try`...\ :keyword:`except`' statement may keep +an exception with a :keyword:`try`...\ :keyword:`except` statement may keep objects alive. Some objects contain references to "external" resources such as open files or @@ -89,8 +89,8 @@ windows. It is understood that these resources are freed when the object is garbage-collected, but since garbage collection is not guaranteed to happen, such objects also provide an explicit way to release the external resource, usually a :meth:`!close` method. Programs are strongly recommended to explicitly -close such objects. The ':keyword:`try`...\ :keyword:`finally`' statement -and the ':keyword:`with`' statement provide convenient ways to do this. +close such objects. The :keyword:`try`...\ :keyword:`finally` statement +and the :keyword:`with` statement provide convenient ways to do this. .. index:: single: container _______________________________________________ Python-checkins mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] https://mail.python.org/mailman3/lists/python-checkins.python.org/ Member address: [email protected]
