From 10816266d65ead7645a147ae1fde1b90aeda5d33 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matt Brubeck Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2015 15:11:05 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Document the effect of `#` on array formatting --- src/libcollections/fmt.rs | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libcollections/fmt.rs b/src/libcollections/fmt.rs index b106f4adbc708..46b1ad2138bd8 100644 --- a/src/libcollections/fmt.rs +++ b/src/libcollections/fmt.rs @@ -368,12 +368,12 @@ //! should always be printed. //! * '-' - Currently not used //! * '#' - This flag is indicates that the "alternate" form of printing should -//! be used. By default, this only applies to the integer formatting -//! traits and performs like: -//! * `x` - precedes the argument with a "0x" -//! * `X` - precedes the argument with a "0x" -//! * `t` - precedes the argument with a "0b" -//! * `o` - precedes the argument with a "0o" +//! be used. For array slices, the alternate form omits the brackets. +//! For the integer formatting traits, the alternate forms are: +//! * `#x` - precedes the argument with a "0x" +//! * `#X` - precedes the argument with a "0x" +//! * `#t` - precedes the argument with a "0b" +//! * `#o` - precedes the argument with a "0o" //! * '0' - This is used to indicate for integer formats that the padding should //! both be done with a `0` character as well as be sign-aware. A format //! like `{:08}` would yield `00000001` for the integer `1`, while the