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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1997-12-04 04:57:56 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1997-12-04 04:57:56 (GMT) |
commit | 1cf87496a641168969e3a95ba2cf04c922b36e34 (patch) | |
tree | 0ea3126dfe8c57ddc6a9e8008e8433a63dca30d5 /Doc/lib | |
parent | 7381e28399ea31b26dfa1f0e1db1a85bd4bf37c3 (diff) | |
download | cpython-1cf87496a641168969e3a95ba2cf04c922b36e34.zip cpython-1cf87496a641168969e3a95ba2cf04c922b36e34.tar.gz cpython-1cf87496a641168969e3a95ba2cf04c922b36e34.tar.bz2 |
Arg; more nits, but I may as well finish the job.
Removed the large comment remaining from the template documentation
section; the template tells us to remove these once they're not needed.
Remove some trailing whitespace from VM instruction pseudo-code.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/lib')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libdis.tex | 26 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 20 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libdis.tex b/Doc/lib/libdis.tex index 30d966d..018fd1b 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libdis.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libdis.tex @@ -35,20 +35,6 @@ The \code{dis} module defines the following functions: \renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module dis)} -% ---- 3.2. ---- -% For each function, use a ``funcdesc'' block. This has exactly two -% parameters (each parameters is contained in a set of curly braces): -% the first parameter is the function name (this automatically -% generates an index entry); the second parameter is the function's -% argument list. If there are no arguments, use an empty pair of -% curly braces. If there is more than one argument, separate the -% arguments with backslash-comma. Optional parts of the parameter -% list are contained in \optional{...} (this generates a set of square -% brackets around its parameter). Arguments are automatically set in -% italics in the parameter list. Each argument should be mentioned at -% least once in the description; each usage (even inside \code{...}) -% should be enclosed in \var{...}. - \begin{funcdesc}{dis}{\optional{bytesource}} Disassemble the \var{bytesource} object. \var{bytesource} can denote either a class, a method, a function, or a code object. For a class, @@ -196,27 +182,27 @@ Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 - TOS}. \end{opcodedesc} \begin{opcodedesc}{BINARY_SUBSCR}{} -Implements \code{TOS = TOS1[TOS] }. +Implements \code{TOS = TOS1[TOS]}. \end{opcodedesc} \begin{opcodedesc}{BINARY_LSHIFT}{} -Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 << TOS }. +Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 << TOS}. \end{opcodedesc} \begin{opcodedesc}{BINARY_RSHIFT}{} -Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 >> TOS }. +Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 >> TOS}. \end{opcodedesc} \begin{opcodedesc}{BINARY_AND}{} -Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 and TOS }. +Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 and TOS}. \end{opcodedesc} \begin{opcodedesc}{BINARY_XOR}{} -Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 \^{ }TOS }. +Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 \^{ }TOS}. \end{opcodedesc} \begin{opcodedesc}{BINARY_OR}{} -Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 or TOS }. +Implements \code{TOS = TOS1 or TOS}. \end{opcodedesc} The slice opcodes take up to three parameters. |