Notice -> Note in the docs, and a handful of other typo fixed

This commit is contained in:
Daniele Varrazzo 2011-10-14 23:59:49 +01:00
parent 37a9eb3615
commit 3e39b23835
4 changed files with 9 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -351,7 +351,7 @@ returned, the connection can be safely used:
>>> wait(aconn)
>>> acurs = aconn.cursor()
Notice that there are a few other requirements to be met in order to have a
Note that there are a few other requirements to be met in order to have a
completely non-blocking connection attempt: see the libpq documentation for
|PQconnectStart|_.

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@ -579,7 +579,7 @@ from the database. See :ref:`unicode-handling` for details.
TIME
UNICODE
Typecasters for basic types. Notice that a few other ones (`~psycopg2.BINARY`,
Typecasters for basic types. Note that a few other ones (`~psycopg2.BINARY`,
`~psycopg2.DATETIME`, `~psycopg2.NUMBER`, `~psycopg2.ROWID`,
`~psycopg2.STRING`) are exposed by the `psycopg2` module for |DBAPI|_
compliance.

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@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ directly into the client application.
Close all the connections handled by the pool.
Notice that all the connections are closed, including ones
Note that all the connections are closed, including ones
eventually in use by the application.

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@ -180,9 +180,9 @@ reliable. It is really the case to stress this point:
The correct way to pass variables in a SQL command is using the second
argument of the `~cursor.execute()` method::
>>> SQL = "INSERT INTO authors (name) VALUES (%s);" # Notice: no quotes
>>> SQL = "INSERT INTO authors (name) VALUES (%s);" # Note: no quotes
>>> data = ("O'Reilly", )
>>> cur.execute(SQL, data) # Notice: no % operator
>>> cur.execute(SQL, data) # Note: no % operator
@ -473,7 +473,7 @@ to a `~psycopg2.tz.FixedOffsetTimezone` instance.
>>> cur.fetchone()[0].tzinfo
psycopg2.tz.FixedOffsetTimezone(offset=60, name=None)
Notice that only time zones with an integer number of minutes are supported:
Note that only time zones with an integer number of minutes are supported:
this is a limitation of the Python `datetime` module. A few historical time
zones had seconds in the UTC offset: these time zones will have the offset
rounded to the nearest minute, with an error of up to 30 seconds.
@ -568,9 +568,9 @@ method and to read the data using `~cursor.fetchone()` and
`~cursor.fetchmany()` methods.
Named cursors are also :ref:`iterable <cursor-iterable>` like regular cursors.
Notice however that before Psycopg 2.4 iteration was performed fetching one
Note however that before Psycopg 2.4 iteration was performed fetching one
record at time from the backend, resulting in a large overhead. The attribute
`~cursor.itersize` now controls how many records are now fetched at time
`~cursor.itersize` now controls how many records are fetched at time
during the iteration: the default value of 2000 allows to fetch about 100KB
per roundtrip assuming records of 10-20 columns of mixed number and strings;
you may decrease this value if you are dealing with huge records.
@ -584,7 +584,7 @@ value for the `withhold` parameter to `~connection.cursor()` or by setting the
`~cursor.withhold` attribute to `!True` before calling `~cursor.execute()` on
the cursor. It is extremely important to always `~cursor.close()` such cursors,
otherwise they will continue to hold server-side resources until the connection
will be eventually be closed. Also note that while :sql:`WITH HOLD` cursors
will be eventually closed. Also note that while :sql:`WITH HOLD` cursors
lifetime extends well after `~connection.commit()`, calling
`~connection.rollback()` will automatically close the cursor.