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Docs wordsmithing about Range order
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@ -437,14 +437,17 @@ user-defined |range| types can be adapted using `register_range()`.
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`!Range` objects are immutable, hashable, and support the ``in`` operator
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(checking if an element is within the range). They can be tested for
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equivalence. Empty ranges evaluate to `!False` in
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boolean context, nonempty evaluate to `!True`.
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`!Range` objects can be sorted although, as on the server-side,
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this ordering is not particularly meangingful.
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equivalence. Empty ranges evaluate to `!False` in boolean context,
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nonempty evaluate to `!True`.
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.. versionchanged:: 2.5.3
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`!Range` objects can be sorted although, as on the server-side, this
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ordering is not particularly meangingful. It is only meant to be used
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by programs assuming objects using `!Range` as primary key can be
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sorted on them. In previous versions comparing `!Range`\s raises
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`!TypeError`.
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Although it is possible to instantiate `!Range` objects, the class doesn't
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have an adapter registered, so you cannot normally pass these instances as
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query arguments. To use range objects as query arguments you can either
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