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authorAndrew M. Kuchling <amk@amk.ca>2000-06-25 14:32:48 (GMT)
committerAndrew M. Kuchling <amk@amk.ca>2000-06-25 14:32:48 (GMT)
commit662d76ee7b90e87b75cb4a48eb2d6faf5919e3e3 (patch)
treed8d2ad9e20b04e5e7a100b5c586b2fcfbeed4c92
parentc380466762b7aeb39697211a53ef5a8e3c8527bc (diff)
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Fix typos and errors noticed by Skip Montanaro
-rw-r--r--Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew20.tex33
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew20.tex b/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew20.tex
index 6e098ec..c35ce9e 100644
--- a/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew20.tex
+++ b/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew20.tex
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
\documentclass{howto}
\title{What's New in Python 1.6}
-\release{0.02}
+\release{0.03}
\author{A.M. Kuchling and Moshe Zadka}
\authoraddress{\email{amk1@bigfoot.com}, \email{moshez@math.huji.ac.il} }
\begin{document}
@@ -55,14 +55,15 @@ escapes can be used for characters up to U+01FF, which is represented
by \code{\e 777}.
Unicode strings, just like regular strings, are an immutable sequence
-type, so they can be indexed and sliced. They also have an
-\method{encode( \optional{\var{encoding}} )} method that returns an
-8-bit string in the desired encoding. Encodings are named by strings,
-such as \code{'ascii'}, \code{'utf-8'}, \code{'iso-8859-1'}, or
-whatever. A codec API is defined for implementing and registering new
-encodings that are then available throughout a Python program. If an
-encoding isn't specified, the default encoding is usually 7-bit ASCII,
-though it can be changed for your Python installation by calling the
+type. They can be indexed and sliced, but not modified in place.
+Unicode strings have an \method{encode( \optional{\var{encoding}} )} method
+that returns an 8-bit string in the desired encoding. Encodings are
+named by strings, such as \code{'ascii'}, \code{'utf-8'},
+\code{'iso-8859-1'}, or whatever. A codec API is defined for
+implementing and registering new encodings that are then available
+throughout a Python program. If an encoding isn't specified, the
+default encoding is usually 7-bit ASCII, though it can be changed for
+your Python installation by calling the
\function{sys.setdefaultencoding(\var{encoding})} function in a
customized version of \file{site.py}.
@@ -352,8 +353,8 @@ digit.
Taking the \function{repr()} of a float now uses a different
formatting precision than \function{str()}. \function{repr()} uses
-``%.17g'' format string for C's \function{sprintf()}, while
-\function{str()} uses ``%.12g'' as before. The effect is that
+\code{\%.17g} format string for C's \function{sprintf()}, while
+\function{str()} uses \code{\%.12g} as before. The effect is that
\function{repr()} may occasionally show more decimal places than
\function{str()}, for numbers
For example, the number 8.1 can't be represented exactly in binary, so
@@ -437,14 +438,18 @@ processor, mostly by Trent Mick of ActiveState. (Confusingly, \code{sys.platfor
Win64 because it seems that for ease of porting, MS Visual C++ treats code
as 32 bit.
) PythonWin also supports Windows CE; see the Python CE page at
-\url{http://www.python.net/crew/mhammond/ce/} for more information.
+\url{http://starship.python.net/crew/mhammond/ce/} for more information.
An attempt has been made to alleviate one of Python's warts, the
often-confusing \exception{NameError} exception when code refers to a
local variable before the variable has been assigned a value. For
example, the following code raises an exception on the \keyword{print}
statement in both 1.5.2 and 1.6; in 1.5.2 a \exception{NameError}
-exception is raised, while 1.6 raises \exception{UnboundLocalError}.
+exception is raised, while 1.6 raises a new
+\exception{UnboundLocalError} exception.
+\exception{UnboundLocalError} is a subclass of \exception{NameError},
+so any existing code that expects \exception{NameError} to be raised
+should still work.
\begin{verbatim}
def f():
@@ -483,7 +488,7 @@ This means you no longer have to remember to write code such as
The \file{Python/importdl.c} file, which was a mass of \#ifdefs to
support dynamic loading on many different platforms, was cleaned up
-are reorganized by Greg Stein. \file{importdl.c} is now quite small,
+and reorganized by Greg Stein. \file{importdl.c} is now quite small,
and platform-specific code has been moved into a bunch of
\file{Python/dynload_*.c} files.