[1.6.x] Fixed some intersphinx references.
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@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ Glossary
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version 2.2. This is a neat way to implement attributes whose usage
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resembles attribute access, but whose implementation uses method calls.
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See :func:`property`.
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See :class:`property`.
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queryset
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An object representing some set of rows to be fetched from the database.
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@ -285,7 +285,7 @@ You can edit it multiple times.
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- ``modification``: last modification of the session, as a
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:class:`~datetime.datetime` object. Defaults to the current time.
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- ``expiry``: expiry information for the session, as a
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:class:`~datetime.datetime` object, an :func:`int` (in seconds), or
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:class:`~datetime.datetime` object, an :class:`int` (in seconds), or
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``None``. Defaults to the value stored in the session by
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:meth:`set_expiry`, if there is one, or ``None``.
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@ -78,8 +78,8 @@ wherever possible and avoid the ``b`` prefixes.
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String handling
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---------------
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Python 2's :func:`unicode` type was renamed :func:`str` in Python 3,
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:func:`str` was renamed ``bytes()``, and :func:`basestring` disappeared.
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Python 2's :func:`unicode` type was renamed ``str()`` in Python 3,
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``str()`` was renamed ``bytes()``, and :func:`basestring` disappeared.
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six_ provides :ref:`tools <string-handling-with-six>` to deal with these
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changes.
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@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ In Python 2, the object model specifies :meth:`~object.__str__` and
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:meth:`~object.__unicode__` methods. If these methods exist, they must return
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``str`` (bytes) and ``unicode`` (text) respectively.
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The ``print`` statement and the :func:`str` built-in call
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The ``print`` statement and the :class:`str` built-in call
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:meth:`~object.__str__` to determine the human-readable representation of an
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object. The :func:`unicode` built-in calls :meth:`~object.__unicode__` if it
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exists, and otherwise falls back to :meth:`~object.__str__` and decodes the
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@ -233,7 +233,7 @@ In order to enable the same behavior in Python 2, every module must import
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my_bytestring = b"This is a bytestring"
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If you need a byte string literal under Python 2 and a unicode string literal
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under Python 3, use the :func:`str` builtin::
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under Python 3, use the :class:`str` builtin::
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str('my string')
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