From e98ea55d98180f41a18324c74c276bc4a7398c23 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dimitri Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2021 07:14:38 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] fix #2549 -- no reuse BIF names - fixed docs to not demonstrate reuse of built-in function names "str" and "int", even when within a one-off script - note: did *not* change the "str" and "int" shown in Howto/Starting/Part1/Learning-Typeclasses.md file, as those are class variables (i.e., Character.str and Character.int), which does not replace the BIFs of str() and int(). Therefore, methods inside the class can still use the python BIFs. While this is possibly confusing to new python programmers, it is also not within the scope of #2549. misc edits: - add .vscode/ to gitignore --- .gitignore | 3 +++ docs/source/Howto/Starting/Part1/Python-basic-introduction.md | 4 ++-- 2 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 2b4e17a807..68662b37b9 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -53,3 +53,6 @@ docs/build # For users of Atom .remote-sync.json + +# Visual Studio Code (VS-Code) +.vscode/ diff --git a/docs/source/Howto/Starting/Part1/Python-basic-introduction.md b/docs/source/Howto/Starting/Part1/Python-basic-introduction.md index c72c357d57..aa0be7d184 100644 --- a/docs/source/Howto/Starting/Part1/Python-basic-introduction.md +++ b/docs/source/Howto/Starting/Part1/Python-basic-introduction.md @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ instead. Here's the stat-example again, moving the stats to variables (here we just set them, but in a real game they may be changed over time, or modified by circumstance): - > py str, dex, int = 13, 14, 8 ; print("STR: {}, DEX: {}, INT: {}".format(stren, dex, int)) + > py stren, dex, intel = 13, 14, 8 ; print("STR: {}, DEX: {dex}, INT: {}".format(stren, dex, intel)) STR: 13, DEX: 14, INT: 8 The point is that even if the values of the stats change, the print() statement would not change - it just keeps @@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ An f-string on its own is just like any other string. But let's redo the example We could just insert that `a` variable directly into the f-string using `{a}`. Fewer parentheses to remember and arguable easier to read as well. - > py str, dex, int = 13, 14, 8 ; print(f"STR: {str}, DEX: {dex}, INT: {int}") + > py stren, dex, intel = 13, 14, 8 ; print(f"STR: {stren}, DEX: {dex}, INT: {intel}") STR: 13, DEX: 14, INT: 8 We will be exploring more complex string concepts when we get to creating Commands and need to