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Fix typos

Fixes 3 spelling mistakes.
This commit is contained in:
Satwik Kansal 2017-09-02 11:44:15 -07:00 committed by GitHub
commit fe050b8198

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README.md vendored
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@ -1375,7 +1375,7 @@ The midnight time is not printed.
#### 💡 Explanation: #### 💡 Explanation:
Before Python 3.5, the boolean value fo `datetime.time` object was considered to be `False` if it represented midnight in UTC. It is error-prone when using the `if obj:` syntax to check if the `obj` is null or some equivalent of "empty." Before Python 3.5, the boolean value for `datetime.time` object was considered to be `False` if it represented midnight in UTC. It is error-prone when using the `if obj:` syntax to check if the `obj` is null or some equivalent of "empty."
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@ -1547,7 +1547,7 @@ a, b = a[b] = {}, 5
* Few weird looking but semantically correct statements: * Few weird looking but semantically correct statements:
+ `[] = ()` is a semantically correct statement (unpacking an empty `tuple` into an empty `list`) + `[] = ()` is a semantically correct statement (unpacking an empty `tuple` into an empty `list`)
+ `'a'[0][0][0][0][0]` is also a semantically correct statement as strings are iterable in Python. + `'a'[0][0][0][0][0]` is also a semantically correct statement as strings are iterable in Python.
+ `3 --0-- 5 == 8` and `--5 == 5` are both semantically correct statments and evalute to `True`. + `3 --0-- 5 == 8` and `--5 == 5` are both semantically correct statements and evaluate to `True`.
* 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!): * 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 ```py