ci: fix `v check-md doc/docs.md`

master
Delyan Angelov 2022-04-15 20:25:19 +03:00
parent 173e6a943b
commit e18cb9748f
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1 changed files with 8 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -490,7 +490,7 @@ d := b + x // d is of type `f64` - automatic promotion of `x`'s value
```v nofmt
name := 'Bob'
assert name.len == 3 // will print 3
assert name[0] == byte(66) // indexing gives a byte, byte(66) == `B`
assert name[0] == u8(66) // indexing gives a byte, u8(66) == `B`
assert name[1..3] == 'ob' // slicing gives a string 'ob'
// escape codes
@ -499,7 +499,7 @@ assert windows_newline.len == 2
// arbitrary bytes can be directly specified using `\x##` notation where `#` is
// a hex digit aardvark_str := '\x61ardvark' assert aardvark_str == 'aardvark'
assert '\xc0'[0] == byte(0xc0)
assert '\xc0'[0] == u8(0xc0)
// or using octal escape `\###` notation where `#` is an octal digit
aardvark_str2 := '\141ardvark'
@ -692,7 +692,7 @@ A `rune` can be converted to UTF-8 bytes by using the `.bytes()` method.
```v
rocket := `🚀`
assert rocket.bytes() == [byte(0xf0), 0x9f, 0x9a, 0x80]
assert rocket.bytes() == [u8(0xf0), 0x9f, 0x9a, 0x80]
```
Hex, Unicode, and Octal escape sequences also work in a `rune` literal:
@ -704,9 +704,9 @@ assert `\u0061` == `a`
// multibyte literals work too
assert `\u2605` == `★`
assert `\u2605`.bytes() == [byte(0xe2), 0x98, 0x85]
assert `\xe2\x98\x85`.bytes() == [byte(0xe2), 0x98, 0x85]
assert `\342\230\205`.bytes() == [byte(0xe2), 0x98, 0x85]
assert `\u2605`.bytes() == [u8(0xe2), 0x98, 0x85]
assert `\xe2\x98\x85`.bytes() == [u8(0xe2), 0x98, 0x85]
assert `\342\230\205`.bytes() == [u8(0xe2), 0x98, 0x85]
```
Note that `rune` literals use the same escape syntax as strings, but they can only hold one unicode
@ -763,7 +763,7 @@ If you want a different type of integer, you can use casting:
```v
a := i64(123)
b := byte(42)
b := u8(42)
c := i16(12345)
```
@ -854,7 +854,7 @@ The type of an array is determined by the first element:
* `[1, 2, 3]` is an array of ints (`[]int`).
* `['a', 'b']` is an array of strings (`[]string`).
The user can explicitly specify the type for the first element: `[byte(16), 32, 64, 128]`.
The user can explicitly specify the type for the first element: `[u8(16), 32, 64, 128]`.
V arrays are homogeneous (all elements must have the same type).
This means that code like `[1, 'a']` will not compile.