From 7c4d8f3ca9b847f9b581419fe5a9fb615a5a87c9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Fred Drake Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2003 20:47:43 +0000 Subject: - add version annotation for HIGHEST_PROTOCOL - cleaned up some markup --- Doc/lib/libpickle.tex | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/lib/libpickle.tex b/Doc/lib/libpickle.tex index 95ec3ea..ef8cb23 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libpickle.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libpickle.tex @@ -164,6 +164,7 @@ following constant: \begin{datadesc}{HIGHEST_PROTOCOL} The highest protocol version available. This value can be passed as a \var{protocol} value. +\versionadded{2.3} \end{datadesc} The \module{pickle} module provides the @@ -255,12 +256,11 @@ including (but not necessarily limited to) \exception{AttributeError}, The \module{pickle} module also exports two callables\footnote{In the \module{pickle} module these callables are classes, which you could -subclass to customize the behavior. However, in the \module{cPickle} -modules these callables are factory functions and so cannot be -subclassed. One of the common reasons to subclass is to control what +subclass to customize the behavior. However, in the \refmodule{cPickle} +module these callables are factory functions and so cannot be +subclassed. One common reason to subclass is to control what objects can actually be unpickled. See section~\ref{pickle-sub} for -more details.}, \class{Pickler} and -\class{Unpickler}: +more details.}, \class{Pickler} and \class{Unpickler}: \begin{classdesc}{Pickler}{file\optional{, protocol\optional{, bin}}} This takes a file-like object to which it will write a pickle data -- cgit v0.12