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authorFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>2001-10-26 18:57:14 (GMT)
committerFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>2001-10-26 18:57:14 (GMT)
commitef428a292ad7fcbb27d7877fe14bd1838390fde6 (patch)
treee2ccc125c74ae815d3d9e769246bae2e7002477c /Doc
parentd5be3b75dd7e73ab7bd01f4d0c0c54a189b3c12c (diff)
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Explain what [].insert() does when the target index is negative.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r--Doc/lib/libstdtypes.tex18
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libstdtypes.tex b/Doc/lib/libstdtypes.tex
index ef1cf8c..765ba94 100644
--- a/Doc/lib/libstdtypes.tex
+++ b/Doc/lib/libstdtypes.tex
@@ -839,15 +839,15 @@ The following operations are defined on mutable sequence types (where
{return smallest \var{i} such that \code{\var{s}[\var{i}] == \var{x}}}{(3)}
\lineiii{\var{s}.insert(\var{i}, \var{x})}
{same as \code{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{i}] = [\var{x}]}
- if \code{\var{i} >= 0}}{}
+ if \code{\var{i} >= 0}}{(4)}
\lineiii{\var{s}.pop(\optional{\var{i}})}
- {same as \code{\var{x} = \var{s}[\var{i}]; del \var{s}[\var{i}]; return \var{x}}}{(4)}
+ {same as \code{\var{x} = \var{s}[\var{i}]; del \var{s}[\var{i}]; return \var{x}}}{(5)}
\lineiii{\var{s}.remove(\var{x})}
{same as \code{del \var{s}[\var{s}.index(\var{x})]}}{(3)}
\lineiii{\var{s}.reverse()}
- {reverses the items of \var{s} in place}{(5)}
+ {reverses the items of \var{s} in place}{(6)}
\lineiii{\var{s}.sort(\optional{\var{cmpfunc}})}
- {sort the items of \var{s} in place}{(5), (6)}
+ {sort the items of \var{s} in place}{(6), (7)}
\end{tableiii}
\indexiv{operations on}{mutable}{sequence}{types}
\indexiii{operations on}{sequence}{types}
@@ -874,16 +874,20 @@ Notes:
\item[(3)] Raises \exception{ValueError} when \var{x} is not found in
\var{s}.
-\item[(4)] The \method{pop()} method is only supported by the list and
+\item[(4)] When a negative index is passed as the first parameter to
+ the \method{insert()} method, the new element is prepended to the
+ sequence.
+
+\item[(5)] The \method{pop()} method is only supported by the list and
array types. The optional argument \var{i} defaults to \code{-1},
so that by default the last item is removed and returned.
-\item[(5)] The \method{sort()} and \method{reverse()} methods modify the
+\item[(6)] The \method{sort()} and \method{reverse()} methods modify the
list in place for economy of space when sorting or reversing a large
list. To remind you that they operate by side effect, they don't return
the sorted or reversed list.
-\item[(6)] The \method{sort()} method takes an optional argument
+\item[(7)] The \method{sort()} method takes an optional argument
specifying a comparison function of two arguments (list items) which
should return a negative, zero or positive number depending on whether
the first argument is considered smaller than, equal to, or larger