diff options
author | Benjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org> | 2015-07-11 23:32:55 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Benjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org> | 2015-07-11 23:32:55 (GMT) |
commit | acb3a4d88bdee64096ed4f00c9d464b6b4513658 (patch) | |
tree | b9b00721e67f4b88a648a6f090f3b7159e109e00 | |
parent | d44768ff16131c17bb9dc277840a94810a87b6a9 (diff) | |
download | cpython-acb3a4d88bdee64096ed4f00c9d464b6b4513658.zip cpython-acb3a4d88bdee64096ed4f00c9d464b6b4513658.tar.gz cpython-acb3a4d88bdee64096ed4f00c9d464b6b4513658.tar.bz2 |
fix normalization example (closes #24610)
Patch by Chris Angelico
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/reference/expressions.rst | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/reference/expressions.rst b/Doc/reference/expressions.rst index dd3cb9e..71684b7 100644 --- a/Doc/reference/expressions.rst +++ b/Doc/reference/expressions.rst @@ -1381,7 +1381,7 @@ precedence and have a left-to-right chaining feature as described in the .. [#] While comparisons between strings make sense at the byte level, they may be counter-intuitive to users. For example, the strings ``"\u00C7"`` and - ``"\u0327\u0043"`` compare differently, even though they both represent the + ``"\u0043\u0327"`` compare differently, even though they both represent the same unicode character (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA). To compare strings in a human recognizable way, compare using :func:`unicodedata.normalize`. |