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authorTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-10-04 06:53:20 (GMT)
committerTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-10-04 06:53:20 (GMT)
commit3899d74c102b9b5925f7b29bd12a96164f3dbaef (patch)
treec207b4149133b9860264a8cd5e88f081b7a2b1f8
parent1c9ca8726ec138af890643100859d3bc65d4e365 (diff)
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Make clear that tuple() accepts the same kind of arguments as list().
-rw-r--r--Doc/lib/libfuncs.tex4
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libfuncs.tex b/Doc/lib/libfuncs.tex
index ec7ce86..acf1b09 100644
--- a/Doc/lib/libfuncs.tex
+++ b/Doc/lib/libfuncs.tex
@@ -722,7 +722,9 @@ its goal is to return a printable string.
\begin{funcdesc}{tuple}{sequence}
Return a tuple whose items are the same and in the same order as
-\var{sequence}'s items. If \var{sequence} is already a tuple, it
+\var{sequence}'s items. \var{sequence} may be a sequence, a
+container that supports iteration, or an iterator object.
+If \var{sequence} is already a tuple, it
is returned unchanged. For instance, \code{tuple('abc')} returns
returns \code{('a', 'b', 'c')} and \code{tuple([1, 2, 3])} returns
\code{(1, 2, 3)}.