diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index c31017e..b1354cc 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -2336,7 +2336,7 @@ nan #### 💡 Explanation: -`'inf'` and `'nan'` are special strings (case-insensitive), which when explicitly typecasted to `float` type, are used to represent mathematical "infinity" and "not a number" respectively. +`'inf'` and `'nan'` are special strings (case-insensitive), which when explicitly typecast-ed to `float` type, are used to represent mathematical "infinity" and "not a number" respectively. --- @@ -2382,7 +2382,7 @@ nan >>> 44 ``` **💡 Explanation:** - This prank comes from [Raymond Hettinger's tweet](https://twitter.com/raymondh/status/1131103570856632321?lang=en). The space invader operator is actually just a malformatted `a -= (-1)`. Which is eqivalent to `a = a - (- 1)`. Similar for the `a += (+ 1)` case. + This prank comes from [Raymond Hettinger's tweet](https://twitter.com/raymondh/status/1131103570856632321?lang=en). The space invader operator is actually just a malformatted `a -= (-1)`. Which is equivalent to `a = a - (- 1)`. Similar for the `a += (+ 1)` case. * Python uses 2 bytes for local variable storage in functions. In theory, this means that only 65536 variables can be defined in a function. However, python has a handy solution built in that can be used to store more than 2^16 variable names. The following code demonstrates what happens in the stack when more than 65536 local variables are defined (Warning: This code prints around 2^18 lines of text, so be prepared!): ```py @@ -2390,7 +2390,7 @@ nan exec(""" def f(): """ + """ - """.join(["X"+str(x)+"=" + str(x) for x in range(65539)])) + """.join(["X" + str(x) + "=" + str(x) for x in range(65539)])) f()