From 0c14961872998022b33f56daf2a6dd77c19aca3c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Fred Drake Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2001 04:26:24 +0000 Subject: Update to reflect the new string repr -- \n instead of \012. This is the only documentation file that appears to be affected by the change! --- Doc/tut/tut.tex | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/tut/tut.tex b/Doc/tut/tut.tex index d1637bb..69ff7ed 100644 --- a/Doc/tut/tut.tex +++ b/Doc/tut/tut.tex @@ -2622,7 +2622,7 @@ The value of x is 31.4, and y is 40000... ... hello = 'hello, world\n' >>> hellos = `hello` >>> print hellos -'hello, world\012' +'hello, world\n' >>> # The argument of reverse quotes may be a tuple: ... `x, y, ('spam', 'eggs')` "(31.400000000000002, 40000, ('spam', 'eggs'))" @@ -2783,7 +2783,7 @@ of the file has been reached, \code{f.read()} will return an empty string (\code {""}). \begin{verbatim} >>> f.read() -'This is the entire file.\012' +'This is the entire file.\n' >>> f.read() '' \end{verbatim} @@ -2798,9 +2798,9 @@ string containing only a single newline. \begin{verbatim} >>> f.readline() -'This is the first line of the file.\012' +'This is the first line of the file.\n' >>> f.readline() -'Second line of the file\012' +'Second line of the file\n' >>> f.readline() '' \end{verbatim} @@ -2814,7 +2814,7 @@ entire file in memory. Only complete lines will be returned. \begin{verbatim} >>> f.readlines() -['This is the first line of the file.\012', 'Second line of the file\012'] +['This is the first line of the file.\n', 'Second line of the file\n'] \end{verbatim} \code{f.write(\var{string})} writes the contents of \var{string} to -- cgit v0.12