From 9f267057b2c01129e7bfcdf54f897200a7553c97 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rob Reynolds Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2025 11:40:00 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] Docs: Fix indentation in `slice` class of `functions.rst` (GH-134393) Paragraph should not be under `slice.step`. It applies to the whole class. --------- (cherry picked from commit 6227662ff3bf838d31e9441eda935d24733d705a) Co-authored-by: Rob Reynolds Co-authored-by: Rob Reynolds <13379223+reynoldsnlp@users.noreply.github.com> --- Doc/library/functions.rst | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/library/functions.rst b/Doc/library/functions.rst index 2ecce3dba5a0b9..80bd1275973f8d 100644 --- a/Doc/library/functions.rst +++ b/Doc/library/functions.rst @@ -1839,15 +1839,15 @@ are always available. They are listed here in alphabetical order. ``range(start, stop, step)``. The *start* and *step* arguments default to ``None``. + Slice objects have read-only data attributes :attr:`!start`, + :attr:`!stop`, and :attr:`!step` which merely return the argument + values (or their default). They have no other explicit functionality; + however, they are used by NumPy and other third-party packages. + .. attribute:: slice.start .. attribute:: slice.stop .. attribute:: slice.step - Slice objects have read-only data attributes :attr:`!start`, - :attr:`!stop`, and :attr:`!step` which merely return the argument - values (or their default). They have no other explicit functionality; - however, they are used by NumPy and other third-party packages. - Slice objects are also generated when extended indexing syntax is used. For example: ``a[start:stop:step]`` or ``a[start:stop, i]``. See :func:`itertools.islice` for an alternate version that returns an