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| author | Walter Dörwald <walter@livinglogic.de> | 2003-10-20 14:01:56 +0000 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Walter Dörwald <walter@livinglogic.de> | 2003-10-20 14:01:56 +0000 |
| commit | f0dfc7ac5c2f76baaae0c3b45bc339281cfa2adc (patch) | |
| tree | 9a4b5d8c9ea1dbbd4ead4b2990c77a997fb3905b /Lib/asyncore.py | |
| parent | 4b17e3993b7d4ada586e66ad40a73e12e086645e (diff) | |
| download | cpython-git-f0dfc7ac5c2f76baaae0c3b45bc339281cfa2adc.tar.gz | |
Fix a bunch of typos in documentation, docstrings and comments.
(From SF patch #810751)
Diffstat (limited to 'Lib/asyncore.py')
| -rw-r--r-- | Lib/asyncore.py | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Lib/asyncore.py b/Lib/asyncore.py index a38c9113f7..7fb84b47fa 100644 --- a/Lib/asyncore.py +++ b/Lib/asyncore.py @@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ def close_all(map=None): # # After a little research (reading man pages on various unixen, and # digging through the linux kernel), I've determined that select() -# isn't meant for doing doing asynchronous file i/o. +# isn't meant for doing asynchronous file i/o. # Heartening, though - reading linux/mm/filemap.c shows that linux # supports asynchronous read-ahead. So _MOST_ of the time, the data # will be sitting in memory for us already when we go to read it. |
