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authorGeorg Brandl <georg@python.org>2012-10-06 20:39:16 (GMT)
committerGeorg Brandl <georg@python.org>2012-10-06 20:39:16 (GMT)
commit2a09b6e84955779dbc878c5a0679c41d84f5d021 (patch)
treef2b3dd04e82c1c6d15763d68178d3a52c98ebcef /Doc
parent3dc23d4bf245406789d87e0c0c33a2624800ae76 (diff)
parent2fdc0f8a86d715fe4408fc5de98da70be480acfa (diff)
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merge with 3.3.
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-rw-r--r--Doc/library/collections.rst20
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/collections.rst b/Doc/library/collections.rst
index 7979f07..45da4e5 100644
--- a/Doc/library/collections.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/collections.rst
@@ -347,24 +347,24 @@ or subtracting from an empty counter.
this section documents the minimum range and type restrictions.
* The :class:`Counter` class itself is a dictionary subclass with no
- restrictions on its keys and values. The values are intended to be numbers
- representing counts, but you *could* store anything in the value field.
+ restrictions on its keys and values. The values are intended to be numbers
+ representing counts, but you *could* store anything in the value field.
* The :meth:`most_common` method requires only that the values be orderable.
* For in-place operations such as ``c[key] += 1``, the value type need only
- support addition and subtraction. So fractions, floats, and decimals would
- work and negative values are supported. The same is also true for
- :meth:`update` and :meth:`subtract` which allow negative and zero values
- for both inputs and outputs.
+ support addition and subtraction. So fractions, floats, and decimals would
+ work and negative values are supported. The same is also true for
+ :meth:`update` and :meth:`subtract` which allow negative and zero values
+ for both inputs and outputs.
* The multiset methods are designed only for use cases with positive values.
- The inputs may be negative or zero, but only outputs with positive values
- are created. There are no type restrictions, but the value type needs to
- support addition, subtraction, and comparison.
+ The inputs may be negative or zero, but only outputs with positive values
+ are created. There are no type restrictions, but the value type needs to
+ support addition, subtraction, and comparison.
* The :meth:`elements` method requires integer counts. It ignores zero and
- negative counts.
+ negative counts.
.. seealso::