diff options
| author | Norwid Behrnd <nbehrnd@yahoo.com> | 2022-11-08 12:50:57 +0100 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Norwid Behrnd <nbehrnd@yahoo.com> | 2022-11-08 12:50:57 +0100 | 
| commit | 0dcfdfb4b4fe27dce599b10f915a55d162e6496c (patch) | |
| tree | 4e1f770ee6e11ee559803884fef15de0518c19c0 | |
| parent | 82462e776a5128812cc115d4e3dc9851c86dd11c (diff) | |
remove overly long lines by additional line breaks
The threshold of a line considered as too long is 80 characters
per line.  Changes introduced only alter the use of line breaks.
| -rw-r--r-- | python.html.markdown | 29 | 
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 13 deletions
| diff --git a/python.html.markdown b/python.html.markdown index 687529b5..72dd45a6 100644 --- a/python.html.markdown +++ b/python.html.markdown @@ -13,11 +13,13 @@ contributors:  filename: learnpython.py  --- -Python was created by Guido van Rossum in the early 90s. It is now one of the most popular -languages in existence. I fell in love with Python for its syntactic clarity. It's basically -executable pseudocode. +Python was created by Guido van Rossum in the early 90s. It is now one of the +most popular languages in existence. I fell in love with Python for its +syntactic clarity. It's basically executable pseudocode. -Note: This article applies to Python 3 specifically. Check out [here](http://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/pythonlegacy/) if you want to learn the old Python 2.7 +Note: This article applies to Python 3 specifically. Check out +[here](http://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/pythonlegacy/) if you want to learn the +old Python 2.7  ```python @@ -97,8 +99,9 @@ bool(set()) # => False  bool(4)     # => True  bool(-6)    # => True -# Using boolean logical operators on ints casts them to booleans for evaluation, but their non-cast value is returned -# Don't mix up with bool(ints) and bitwise and/or (&,|) +# Using boolean logical operators on ints casts them to booleans for evaluation, +# but their non-cast value is returned. Don't mix up with bool(ints) and bitwise +# and/or (&,|)  bool(0)     # => False  bool(2)     # => True  0 and 2     # => 0 @@ -348,7 +351,7 @@ del filled_dict["one"]  # Removes the key "one" from filled dict  # Sets store ... well sets  empty_set = set() -# Initialize a set with a bunch of values. Yeah, it looks a bit like a dict. Sorry. +# Initialize a set with a bunch of values.  some_set = {1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4}  # some_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4}  # Similar to keys of a dictionary, elements of a set have to be immutable. @@ -533,8 +536,8 @@ our_iterable[1]  # Raises a TypeError  # An iterable is an object that knows how to create an iterator.  our_iterator = iter(our_iterable) -# Our iterator is an object that can remember the state as we traverse through it. -# We get the next object with "next()". +# Our iterator is an object that can remember the state as we traverse through +# it. We get the next object with "next()".  next(our_iterator)  # => "one"  # It maintains state as we iterate. @@ -719,8 +722,8 @@ class Human:      # Note that the double leading and trailing underscores denote objects      # or attributes that are used by Python but that live in user-controlled      # namespaces. Methods(or objects or attributes) like: __init__, __str__, -    # __repr__ etc. are called special methods (or sometimes called dunder methods) -    # You should not invent such names on your own. +    # __repr__ etc. are called special methods (or sometimes called dunder +    # methods). You should not invent such names on your own.      def __init__(self, name):          # Assign the argument to the instance's name attribute          self.name = name @@ -811,8 +814,8 @@ if __name__ == '__main__':  # "species", "name", and "age", as well as methods, like "sing" and "grunt"  # from the Human class, but can also have its own unique properties. -# To take advantage of modularization by file you could place the classes above in their own files, -# say, human.py +# To take advantage of modularization by file you could place the classes above +# in their own files, say, human.py  # To import functions from other files use the following format  # from "filename-without-extension" import "function-or-class" | 
