Skip to content

Commit 586dd5e

Browse files
committed
fix Markdown in README
1 parent 5e68849 commit 586dd5e

File tree

1 file changed

+14
-14
lines changed

1 file changed

+14
-14
lines changed

README.md

+14-14
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ which is automatically converted to a Julia type, you will have override this
145145
via `@pywith EXPR::PyObject ...`.
146146

147147
If you are already familiar with Python, it perhaps is easier to use
148-
``py`...``` and ````py```...``````` which are equivalent to Python's
148+
` py`...` ` and ` py```...``` ` which are equivalent to Python's
149149
[`eval`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#eval) and
150150
[`exec`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#exec),
151151
respectively:
@@ -162,7 +162,7 @@ py`sinpi`(1)
162162

163163
When creating a Julia module, it is a useful pattern to define Python
164164
functions or classes in Julia's `__init__` and then use it in Julia
165-
function with ``py`...```.
165+
function with ` py`...` `.
166166

167167
````julia
168168
module MyModule
@@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ two(x) = py`one`(x) + py`one`(x)
183183
end
184184
````
185185

186-
Note that Python code in ``py`...``` of above example is evaluated in a
186+
Note that Python code in ` py`...` ` of above example is evaluated in a
187187
Python namespace dedicated to `MyModule`. Thus, Python function `one`
188188
cannot be accessed outside `MyModule`.
189189

@@ -355,38 +355,38 @@ and also by providing more type information to the Julia compiler.
355355
`@pycall function(args...)::returntype` into
356356
`pycall(function,returntype,args...)`.
357357

358-
* ``py`...``` evaluates `"..."` as Python code, equivalent to
358+
* ` py`...` ` evaluates `"..."` as Python code, equivalent to
359359
Python's [`eval`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#eval) function, and returns the result
360-
converted to `PyAny`. Alternatively, ``py`...`o`` returns the raw `PyObject`
360+
converted to `PyAny`. Alternatively, ` py`...`o ` returns the raw `PyObject`
361361
(which can then be manually converted if desired). You can interpolate
362362
Julia variables and other expressions into the Python code with `$`,
363363
which interpolates the *value* (converted to `PyObject`) of the given
364364
expression---data is not passed as a string, so this is different from
365-
ordinary Julia string interpolation. e.g. ``py`sum($([1,2,3]))``` calls the
365+
ordinary Julia string interpolation. e.g. ` py`sum($([1,2,3]))` ` calls the
366366
Python `sum` function on the Julia array `[1,2,3]`, returning `6`.
367367
In contrast, if you use `$$` before the interpolated expression, then
368368
the value of the expression is inserted as a string into the Python code,
369369
allowing you to generate Python code itself via Julia expressions.
370-
For example, if `x="1+1"` in Julia, then ``py`$x``` returns the string `"1+1"`,
371-
but ``py`$$x``` returns `2`.
372-
If you use ````py```...``````` to pass a *multi-line* string, the string can
370+
For example, if `x="1+1"` in Julia, then ` py`$x` ` returns the string `"1+1"`,
371+
but ` py`$$x` ` returns `2`.
372+
If you use ` py```...``` ` to pass a *multi-line* string, the string can
373373
contain arbitrary Python code (not just a single expression) to be evaluated,
374374
but the return value is `nothing`; this is useful e.g. to define pure-Python
375375
functions, and is equivalent to Python's
376376
[`exec`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#exec) function.
377-
(If you define a Python global `g` in a multiline ````py```...```````
378-
string, you can retrieve it in Julia by subsequently evaluating ``py`g```.)
377+
(If you define a Python global `g` in a multiline ` py```...``` `
378+
string, you can retrieve it in Julia by subsequently evaluating ` py`g` `.)
379379

380-
When ``py`...``` is used inside a Julia module, it uses a Python namespace
380+
When ` py`...` ` is used inside a Julia module, it uses a Python namespace
381381
dedicated to this Julia module. Thus, you can define Python function
382-
using ````py```....``````` in your module without worrying about name clash
382+
using ` py```....``` ` in your module without worrying about name clash
383383
with other Python code. Note that Python functions _must_ be defined in
384384
`__init__`. Side-effect in Python occurred at top-level Julia scope
385385
cannot be used at run-time for precompiled modules.
386386

387387
* `pybuiltin(s)`: Look up `s` (a string or symbol) among the global Python
388388
builtins. If `s` is a string it returns a `PyObject`, while if `s` is a
389-
symbol it returns the builtin converted to `PyAny`. (You can also use ``py`s```
389+
symbol it returns the builtin converted to `PyAny`. (You can also use ` py`s` `
390390
to look up builtins or other Python globas.)
391391

392392
Occasionally, you may need to pass a keyword argument to Python that

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)