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authorFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>2001-07-14 02:12:27 (GMT)
committerFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>2001-07-14 02:12:27 (GMT)
commit6e5e1d924cb58be4b1922f0087e3528517f161c1 (patch)
tree62146bca93958e5336e873505c0c9710e98a1617
parent8da359bdc08cf97cf4820b0789c8ad8cfec36556 (diff)
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Minor change to match the style guide.
-rw-r--r--Doc/ref/ref3.tex2
-rw-r--r--Doc/texinputs/boilerplate.tex2
2 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/ref/ref3.tex b/Doc/ref/ref3.tex
index 06155c0..9074a0b 100644
--- a/Doc/ref/ref3.tex
+++ b/Doc/ref/ref3.tex
@@ -210,7 +210,7 @@ These represent machine-level double precision floating point numbers.
You are at the mercy of the underlying machine architecture and
\C{} implementation for the accepted range and handling of overflow.
Python does not support single-precision floating point numbers; the
-savings in CPU and memory usage that are usually the reason for using
+savings in processor and memory usage that are usually the reason for using
these is dwarfed by the overhead of using objects in Python, so there
is no reason to complicate the language with two kinds of floating
point numbers.
diff --git a/Doc/texinputs/boilerplate.tex b/Doc/texinputs/boilerplate.tex
index c6dcf6c..b8ffc61 100644
--- a/Doc/texinputs/boilerplate.tex
+++ b/Doc/texinputs/boilerplate.tex
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
Fred L. Drake, Jr., editor}
\authoraddress{
\strong{PythonLabs}\\
- E-mail: \email{python-docs@python.org}
+ Email: \email{python-docs@python.org}
}
\date{\today} % XXX update before release!