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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-07-06 04:38:37 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-07-06 04:38:37 (GMT) |
commit | d14423abe281667fadf8fb0645f10e50805ac10b (patch) | |
tree | 7031b5d1fe4bd7f80f8ed6df5d8d94cb1d9ea22d | |
parent | 63099f911f5e287d9f0fbf63b49a5802496bacd3 (diff) | |
download | cpython-d14423abe281667fadf8fb0645f10e50805ac10b.zip cpython-d14423abe281667fadf8fb0645f10e50805ac10b.tar.gz cpython-d14423abe281667fadf8fb0645f10e50805ac10b.tar.bz2 |
Correct typo in description of the machine name parameter to the
ConnectRegistry() function; there is no trailing period!
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libwinreg.tex | 33 |
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libwinreg.tex b/Doc/lib/libwinreg.tex index 5c9c0cf..a3884b0 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libwinreg.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libwinreg.tex @@ -8,17 +8,17 @@ \versionadded{2.0} -These functions exposes the Windows registry API to Python. Instead of -using an integer as the registry handle, a handle object is used to ensure -that the handles are closed correctly, even if the programmer +These functions expose the Windows registry API to Python. Instead of +using an integer as the registry handle, a handle object is used to +ensure that the handles are closed correctly, even if the programmer neglects to explicitly close them. This module exposes a very low-level interface to the Windows registry; for a more object-oriented interface, use the \module{winreg} module. +This module offers the following functions: -\subsection{Registry Operations \label{registry-operations}} \begin{funcdesc}{CloseKey}{hkey} Closes a previously opened registry key. @@ -35,8 +35,8 @@ registry; for a more object-oriented interface, use the another computer, and returns a \dfn{handle object} \var{computer_name} is the name of the remote computer, of the - form \code{'\\\\computername.'}. If \code{None}, the local computer is - used. + form \samp{\e\e computername}. If \code{None}, the local computer + is used. \var{key} is the predefined handle to connect to. @@ -66,7 +66,6 @@ registry; for a more object-oriented interface, use the raised. \end{funcdesc} - \begin{funcdesc}{DeleteKey}{key, sub_key} Deletes the specified key. @@ -372,21 +371,21 @@ registry; for a more object-oriented interface, use the the object is destroyed. To guarantee cleanup, you can call either the \method{Close()} method on the object, or the \function{CloseKey()} function. - + All registry functions in this module return one of these objects. All registry functions in this module which accept a handle object also accept an integer, however, use of the handle object is encouraged. - Handle objects provide semantics for __nonzero__ - thus - \begin{verbatim} - if handle: - print "Yes" - \end{verbatim} - will print \code{Yes} if the handle is currently valid (ie, + Handle objects provide semantics for \method{__nonzero__()} - thus +\begin{verbatim} + if handle: + print "Yes" +\end{verbatim} + will print \code{Yes} if the handle is currently valid (i.e., has not been closed or detached). - + The object also support comparison semantics, so handle objects will compare true if they both reference the same underlying Windows handle value. @@ -397,14 +396,14 @@ registry; for a more object-oriented interface, use the \method{Detach()} method to return the integer handle, and also disconnect the Windows handle from the handle object. -\begin{methoddesc}{Close} +\begin{methoddesc}{Close}{} Closes the underlying Windows handle. If the handle is already closed, no error is raised. \end{methoddesc} -\begin{methoddesc}{Detach} +\begin{methoddesc}{Detach}{} Detaches the Windows handle from the handle object. The result is an integer (or long on 64 bit Windows) that holds |