diff options
author | Eric V. Smith <eric@trueblade.com> | 2014-04-14 11:41:52 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Eric V. Smith <eric@trueblade.com> | 2014-04-14 11:41:52 (GMT) |
commit | fc9a4d828ebdbd2a5e62c93943e9948320323c72 (patch) | |
tree | 8b641c47f81bf8404a6741b287d50b361ef92a29 | |
parent | f6e50b4a811477206d1c252a531c31029ea93866 (diff) | |
download | cpython-fc9a4d828ebdbd2a5e62c93943e9948320323c72.zip cpython-fc9a4d828ebdbd2a5e62c93943e9948320323c72.tar.gz cpython-fc9a4d828ebdbd2a5e62c93943e9948320323c72.tar.bz2 |
Fix text about int() with octal numbers. Closes #21212.
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/faq/programming.rst | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/faq/programming.rst b/Doc/faq/programming.rst index d514a80..9f49ba8 100644 --- a/Doc/faq/programming.rst +++ b/Doc/faq/programming.rst @@ -711,7 +711,7 @@ By default, these interpret the number as decimal, so that ``int('0144') == 144`` and ``int('0x144')`` raises :exc:`ValueError`. ``int(string, base)`` takes the base to convert from as a second optional argument, so ``int('0x144', 16) == 324``. If the base is specified as 0, the number is interpreted using Python's -rules: a leading '0' indicates octal, and '0x' indicates a hex number. +rules: a leading '0o' indicates octal, and '0x' indicates a hex number. Do not use the built-in function :func:`eval` if all you need is to convert strings to numbers. :func:`eval` will be significantly slower and it presents a |