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authorBerker Peksag <berker.peksag@gmail.com>2016-06-01 20:55:00 (GMT)
committerBerker Peksag <berker.peksag@gmail.com>2016-06-01 20:55:00 (GMT)
commit32072714fd4796465d76ac25836c08de661cbeef (patch)
treef7a49af5d380c67f2d4bfe41d80c5b03a814fe2c
parentef1179e451b84a2ff1d6ac324ff0441608b4323a (diff)
parent5b6a14d1cbc66b6a60ba695b519c210155a35adc (diff)
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Merge from 3.5
-rw-r--r--Doc/faq/programming.rst2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/faq/programming.rst b/Doc/faq/programming.rst
index a0ddfb4..ac10ea5 100644
--- a/Doc/faq/programming.rst
+++ b/Doc/faq/programming.rst
@@ -1313,7 +1313,7 @@ I want to do a complicated sort: can you do a Schwartzian Transform in Python?
The technique, attributed to Randal Schwartz of the Perl community, sorts the
elements of a list by a metric which maps each element to its "sort value". In
-Python, use the ``key`` argument for the :func:`sort()` function::
+Python, use the ``key`` argument for the :meth:`list.sort` method::
Isorted = L[:]
Isorted.sort(key=lambda s: int(s[10:15]))