From bf58d8012332b0f835c1d6595b4c47d2c9f6c1ae Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Georg Brandl Date: Thu, 3 Sep 2009 07:27:26 +0000 Subject: #6828: fix wrongly highlighted blocks. --- Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst | 14 +++++++++----- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst b/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst index 23ff522..1d67ed3 100644 --- a/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst +++ b/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst @@ -138,7 +138,6 @@ its magnitude (as a float) or ``z.real`` to get its real part. :: 4.0 >>> abs(a) # sqrt(a.real**2 + a.imag**2) 5.0 - >>> In interactive mode, the last printed expression is assigned to the variable ``_``. This means that when you are using Python as a desk calculator, it is @@ -152,7 +151,6 @@ somewhat easier to continue calculations, for example:: 113.0625 >>> round(_, 2) 113.06 - >>> This variable should be treated as read-only by the user. Don't explicitly assign a value to it --- you would create an independent local variable with the @@ -193,7 +191,9 @@ next line is a logical continuation of the line:: Note that newlines still need to be embedded in the string using ``\n``; the newline following the trailing backslash is discarded. This example would print -the following:: +the following: + +.. code-block:: text This is a rather long string containing several lines of text just as you would do in C. @@ -209,7 +209,9 @@ they will be included in the string. :: -H hostname Hostname to connect to """ -produces the following output:: +produces the following output: + +.. code-block:: text Usage: thingy [OPTIONS] -h Display this usage message @@ -224,7 +226,9 @@ in the source, are both included in the string as data. Thus, the example:: print hello -would print:: +would print: + +.. code-block:: text This is a rather long string containing\n\ several lines of text much as you would do in C. -- cgit v0.12