From 5d35d279a5150fd5ea4731c53fc3459cf22f1d16 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Miss Islington (bot)" <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 6 Dec 2024 15:19:08 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] [3.13] gh-101100: amend references starting with `!~` in gh-127054 (GH-127684) (#127692) gh-101100: amend references starting with `!~` in gh-127054 (GH-127684) (cherry picked from commit 77a61c0465c27c1c4ba7cddf4638d9ed75259671) Co-authored-by: Yuki Kobayashi --- Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst b/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst index 263b0c2e2815a1..cbe780e075baf5 100644 --- a/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst +++ b/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst @@ -142,8 +142,8 @@ Using Lists as Stacks The list methods make it very easy to use a list as a stack, where the last element added is the first element retrieved ("last-in, first-out"). To add an -item to the top of the stack, use :meth:`!~list.append`. To retrieve an item from the -top of the stack, use :meth:`!~list.pop` without an explicit index. For example:: +item to the top of the stack, use :meth:`!append`. To retrieve an item from the +top of the stack, use :meth:`!pop` without an explicit index. For example:: >>> stack = [3, 4, 5] >>> stack.append(6) @@ -340,7 +340,7 @@ The :keyword:`!del` statement ============================= There is a way to remove an item from a list given its index instead of its -value: the :keyword:`del` statement. This differs from the :meth:`!~list.pop` method +value: the :keyword:`del` statement. This differs from the :meth:`!pop` method which returns a value. The :keyword:`!del` statement can also be used to remove slices from a list or clear the entire list (which we did earlier by assignment of an empty list to the slice). For example:: @@ -500,8 +500,8 @@ any immutable type; strings and numbers can always be keys. Tuples can be used as keys if they contain only strings, numbers, or tuples; if a tuple contains any mutable object either directly or indirectly, it cannot be used as a key. You can't use lists as keys, since lists can be modified in place using index -assignments, slice assignments, or methods like :meth:`!~list.append` and -:meth:`!~list.extend`. +assignments, slice assignments, or methods like :meth:`!append` and +:meth:`!extend`. It is best to think of a dictionary as a set of *key: value* pairs, with the requirement that the keys are unique (within one dictionary). A pair of