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authorMark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com>2010-02-22 15:42:18 (GMT)
committerMark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com>2010-02-22 15:42:18 (GMT)
commitf9793a36a490a2702da5b3055b757dc9882bbaa8 (patch)
tree88b38b1bc59d9a636fab25eaae497fb86b094bf4 /Doc/library
parent19219b41e84f636b4d5c3f19eac19db9302e7956 (diff)
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Merged revisions 78314 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/py3k ................ r78314 | mark.dickinson | 2010-02-22 15:41:48 +0000 (Mon, 22 Feb 2010) | 9 lines Merged revisions 78312 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r78312 | mark.dickinson | 2010-02-22 15:40:28 +0000 (Mon, 22 Feb 2010) | 1 line Clarify description of three-argument pow for Decimal types: the exponent of the result is always 0. ........ ................
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/library')
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/decimal.rst9
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/decimal.rst b/Doc/library/decimal.rst
index 77769cd..a482417 100644
--- a/Doc/library/decimal.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/decimal.rst
@@ -1215,9 +1215,12 @@ In addition to the three supplied contexts, new contexts can be created with the
- at least one of ``x`` or ``y`` must be nonzero
- ``modulo`` must be nonzero and have at most 'precision' digits
- The result of ``Context.power(x, y, modulo)`` is identical to the result
- that would be obtained by computing ``(x**y) % modulo`` with unbounded
- precision, but is computed more efficiently. It is always exact.
+ The value resulting from ``Context.power(x, y, modulo)`` is
+ equal to the value that would be obtained by computing ``(x**y)
+ % modulo`` with unbounded precision, but is computed more
+ efficiently. The exponent of the result is zero, regardless of
+ the exponents of ``x``, ``y`` and ``modulo``. The result is
+ always exact.
.. method:: quantize(x, y)