@@ -512,17 +512,21 @@ string literals. In addition to the functionality described here, there are
512512also string-specific methods described in the :ref: `string-methods ` section.
513513
514514Bytes and bytearray objects contain single bytes -- the former is immutable
515- while the latter is a mutable sequence. Bytes objects can be constructed from
516- literals too; use a ``b `` prefix with normal string syntax: ``b'xyzzy' ``. To
517- construct byte arrays, use the :func: `bytearray ` function.
515+ while the latter is a mutable sequence. Bytes objects can be constructed the
516+ constructor, :func: `bytes `, and from literals; use a ``b `` prefix with normal
517+ string syntax: ``b'xyzzy' ``. To construct byte arrays, use the
518+ :func: `bytearray ` function.
518519
519520.. warning ::
520521
521522 While string objects are sequences of characters (represented by strings of
522523 length 1), bytes and bytearray objects are sequences of *integers * (between 0
523524 and 255), representing the ASCII value of single bytes. That means that for
524- a bytes or bytearray object *b *, ``b[0] `` will be an integer, while ``b[0:1] ``
525- will be a bytes or bytearray object of length 1.
525+ a bytes or bytearray object *b *, ``b[0] `` will be an integer, while
526+ ``b[0:1] `` will be a bytes or bytearray object of length 1. The
527+ representation of bytes objects uses the literal format (``b'...' ``) since it
528+ is generally more useful than e.g. ``bytes([50, 19, 100]) ``. You can always
529+ convert a bytes object into a list of integers using ``list(b) ``.
526530
527531 Also, while in previous Python versions, byte strings and Unicode strings
528532 could be exchanged for each other rather freely (barring encoding issues),
@@ -1413,15 +1417,14 @@ Wherever one of these methods needs to interpret the bytes as characters
14131417The bytes and bytearray types have an additional class method:
14141418
14151419.. method :: bytes.fromhex(string)
1420+ bytearray.fromhex(string)
14161421
1417- This :class: `bytes ` class method returns a bytes object, decoding the given
1418- string object. The string must contain two hexadecimal digits per byte, spaces
1419- are ignored.
1422+ This :class: `bytes ` class method returns a bytes or bytearray object,
1423+ decoding the given string object. The string must contain two hexadecimal
1424+ digits per byte, spaces are ignored.
14201425
1421- Example::
1422-
1423- >>> bytes.fromhex('f0 f1f2 ')
1424- b'\xf0\xf1\xf2'
1426+ >>> bytes .fromhex(' f0 f1f2 ' )
1427+ b'\xf0\xf1\xf2'
14251428
14261429.. XXX verify/document translate() semantics!
14271430
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