summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/Doc
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorMiss Islington (bot) <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com>2023-02-16 15:22:23 (GMT)
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2023-02-16 15:22:23 (GMT)
commit4d74bb4726697fad7a72430503b5faa6dc4dadf6 (patch)
tree66ae4584e4f7c36800750c5b3428be0a4b788fed /Doc
parentbc3718eb4b6defcdffb23b0c6f5879c5e721609a (diff)
downloadcpython-4d74bb4726697fad7a72430503b5faa6dc4dadf6.zip
cpython-4d74bb4726697fad7a72430503b5faa6dc4dadf6.tar.gz
cpython-4d74bb4726697fad7a72430503b5faa6dc4dadf6.tar.bz2
gh-93573: Replace wrong example domains in configparser doc (GH-93574)
* Replace bitbucket.org domain by forge.example * Update example to python.org * Use explicitly invalid domain topsecret.server.com domain is not controled by PSF. It's replaced by invalid topsecret.server.example domain. It follows RFC 2606, which advise .example as TLD for documentation. (cherry picked from commit 924a3bfa28578802eb9ca77a66fb5d4762a62f14) Co-authored-by: sblondon <stephane.blondon@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/configparser.rst46
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/configparser.rst b/Doc/library/configparser.rst
index 72aa20d..4102c4f 100644
--- a/Doc/library/configparser.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/configparser.rst
@@ -65,10 +65,10 @@ Let's take a very basic configuration file that looks like this:
CompressionLevel = 9
ForwardX11 = yes
- [bitbucket.org]
+ [forge.example]
User = hg
- [topsecret.server.com]
+ [topsecret.server.example]
Port = 50022
ForwardX11 = no
@@ -85,10 +85,10 @@ creating the above configuration file programmatically.
>>> config['DEFAULT'] = {'ServerAliveInterval': '45',
... 'Compression': 'yes',
... 'CompressionLevel': '9'}
- >>> config['bitbucket.org'] = {}
- >>> config['bitbucket.org']['User'] = 'hg'
- >>> config['topsecret.server.com'] = {}
- >>> topsecret = config['topsecret.server.com']
+ >>> config['forge.example'] = {}
+ >>> config['forge.example']['User'] = 'hg'
+ >>> config['topsecret.server.example'] = {}
+ >>> topsecret = config['topsecret.server.example']
>>> topsecret['Port'] = '50022' # mutates the parser
>>> topsecret['ForwardX11'] = 'no' # same here
>>> config['DEFAULT']['ForwardX11'] = 'yes'
@@ -111,28 +111,28 @@ back and explore the data it holds.
>>> config.read('example.ini')
['example.ini']
>>> config.sections()
- ['bitbucket.org', 'topsecret.server.com']
- >>> 'bitbucket.org' in config
+ ['forge.example', 'topsecret.server.example']
+ >>> 'forge.example' in config
True
- >>> 'bytebong.com' in config
+ >>> 'python.org' in config
False
- >>> config['bitbucket.org']['User']
+ >>> config['forge.example']['User']
'hg'
>>> config['DEFAULT']['Compression']
'yes'
- >>> topsecret = config['topsecret.server.com']
+ >>> topsecret = config['topsecret.server.example']
>>> topsecret['ForwardX11']
'no'
>>> topsecret['Port']
'50022'
- >>> for key in config['bitbucket.org']: # doctest: +SKIP
+ >>> for key in config['forge.example']: # doctest: +SKIP
... print(key)
user
compressionlevel
serveraliveinterval
compression
forwardx11
- >>> config['bitbucket.org']['ForwardX11']
+ >>> config['forge.example']['ForwardX11']
'yes'
As we can see above, the API is pretty straightforward. The only bit of magic
@@ -150,15 +150,15 @@ configuration while the previously existing keys are retained.
>>> another_config = configparser.ConfigParser()
>>> another_config.read('example.ini')
['example.ini']
- >>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['Port']
+ >>> another_config['topsecret.server.example']['Port']
'50022'
- >>> another_config.read_string("[topsecret.server.com]\nPort=48484")
- >>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['Port']
+ >>> another_config.read_string("[topsecret.server.example]\nPort=48484")
+ >>> another_config['topsecret.server.example']['Port']
'48484'
- >>> another_config.read_dict({"topsecret.server.com": {"Port": 21212}})
- >>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['Port']
+ >>> another_config.read_dict({"topsecret.server.example": {"Port": 21212}})
+ >>> another_config['topsecret.server.example']['Port']
'21212'
- >>> another_config['topsecret.server.com']['ForwardX11']
+ >>> another_config['topsecret.server.example']['ForwardX11']
'no'
This behaviour is equivalent to a :meth:`ConfigParser.read` call with several
@@ -191,9 +191,9 @@ recognizes Boolean values from ``'yes'``/``'no'``, ``'on'``/``'off'``,
>>> topsecret.getboolean('ForwardX11')
False
- >>> config['bitbucket.org'].getboolean('ForwardX11')
+ >>> config['forge.example'].getboolean('ForwardX11')
True
- >>> config.getboolean('bitbucket.org', 'Compression')
+ >>> config.getboolean('forge.example', 'Compression')
True
Apart from :meth:`~ConfigParser.getboolean`, config parsers also
@@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ provide fallback values:
Please note that default values have precedence over fallback values.
For instance, in our example the ``'CompressionLevel'`` key was
specified only in the ``'DEFAULT'`` section. If we try to get it from
-the section ``'topsecret.server.com'``, we will always get the default,
+the section ``'topsecret.server.example'``, we will always get the default,
even if we specify a fallback:
.. doctest::
@@ -235,7 +235,7 @@ the ``fallback`` keyword-only argument:
.. doctest::
- >>> config.get('bitbucket.org', 'monster',
+ >>> config.get('forge.example', 'monster',
... fallback='No such things as monsters')
'No such things as monsters'