From: Miss Islington (bot) <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2022 16:07:49 +0000 (-0700) Subject: tutorial: remove "with single quotes" (GH-98204) X-Git-Tag: v3.10.9~159 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=2ed28a69b5a1976ceca6cd84c3c6053eb2738238;p=thirdparty%2FPython%2Fcpython.git tutorial: remove "with single quotes" (GH-98204) Closes GH-91856. On Windows double quotes are sometimes better, on Unix usually single quotes. It's not our place to explain that, so just don't. (cherry picked from commit 5f8ca1b7969f34ee09adb7b28337ebd920e6215a) Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra --- diff --git a/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst b/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst index d2733a9968fb..e804a9d056bc 100644 --- a/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst +++ b/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ A second way of starting the interpreter is ``python -c command [arg] ...``, which executes the statement(s) in *command*, analogous to the shell's :option:`-c` option. Since Python statements often contain spaces or other characters that are special to the shell, it is usually advised to quote -*command* in its entirety with single quotes. +*command* in its entirety. Some Python modules are also useful as scripts. These can be invoked using ``python -m module [arg] ...``, which executes the source file for *module* as