--------------
This module defines an object type which can compactly represent an array of
-basic values: characters, integers, floating-point numbers. Arrays are sequence
+basic values: characters, integers, floating-point numbers. Arrays are mutable :term:`sequence`
types and behave very much like lists, except that the type of objects stored in
them is constrained. The type is specified at object creation time by using a
:dfn:`type code`, which is a single character. The following type codes are
otherwise, the initializer's iterator is passed to the :meth:`extend` method
to add initial items to the array.
- Array objects support the ordinary sequence operations of indexing, slicing,
+ Array objects support the ordinary :ref:`mutable <typesseq-mutable>` :term:`sequence` operations of indexing, slicing,
concatenation, and multiplication. When using slice assignment, the assigned
value must be an array object with the same type code; in all other cases,
:exc:`TypeError` is raised. Array objects also implement the buffer interface,
still ``0``.
(4)
- The slice of *s* from *i* to *j* is defined as the sequence of items with index
- *k* such that ``i <= k < j``. If *i* or *j* is greater than ``len(s)``, use
- ``len(s)``. If *i* is omitted or ``None``, use ``0``. If *j* is omitted or
- ``None``, use ``len(s)``. If *i* is greater than or equal to *j*, the slice is
- empty.
+ The slice of *s* from *i* to *j* is defined as the sequence of items with
+ index *k* such that ``i <= k < j``.
+
+ * If *i* is omitted or ``None``, use ``0``.
+ * If *j* is omitted or ``None``, use ``len(s)``.
+ * If *i* or *j* is less than ``-len(s)``, use ``0``.
+ * If *i* or *j* is greater than ``len(s)``, use ``len(s)``.
+ * If *i* is greater than or equal to *j*, the slice is empty.
(5)
The slice of *s* from *i* to *j* with step *k* is defined as the sequence of