[Python-checkins] gh-101041: Fix a misspelled name of `utctimetuple` in a doc warning (GH-101042)

miss-islington webhook-mailer at python.org
Fri Jan 20 00:06:11 EST 2023


https://github.com/python/cpython/commit/10c61301240374701279aa8f87bf9f1caf1e9c9a
commit: 10c61301240374701279aa8f87bf9f1caf1e9c9a
branch: 3.10
author: Miss Islington (bot) <31488909+miss-islington at users.noreply.github.com>
committer: miss-islington <31488909+miss-islington at users.noreply.github.com>
date: 2023-01-19T21:06:04-08:00
summary:

gh-101041: Fix a misspelled name of `utctimetuple` in a doc warning (GH-101042)

(cherry picked from commit 8e9d08b062bbabfe439bc73f82e3d7bb3800189e)

Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <oleg at arhadthedev.net>

files:
M Doc/library/datetime.rst

diff --git a/Doc/library/datetime.rst b/Doc/library/datetime.rst
index f222ec9bb771..e23d2a96cc26 100644
--- a/Doc/library/datetime.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/datetime.rst
@@ -1342,7 +1342,7 @@ Instance methods:
 
       Because naive ``datetime`` objects are treated by many ``datetime`` methods
       as local times, it is preferred to use aware datetimes to represent times
-      in UTC; as a result, using ``utcfromtimetuple`` may give misleading
+      in UTC; as a result, using :meth:`datetime.utctimetuple` may give misleading
       results. If you have a naive ``datetime`` representing UTC, use
       ``datetime.replace(tzinfo=timezone.utc)`` to make it aware, at which point
       you can use :meth:`.datetime.timetuple`.



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