From 9cfb72b5006d82391a54f5dfc819a49f4f44427e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: VanshAgarwal24036 <148854295+VanshAgarwal24036@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 8 Jan 2026 09:02:44 +0530 Subject: [PATCH] gh-143089: Fix ParamSpec default examples to use list instead of tuple (GH-143179) (cherry picked from commit 67d3d0344f129d486540ab0a41c8c820ca835d18) Co-authored-by: VanshAgarwal24036 <148854295+VanshAgarwal24036@users.noreply.github.com> --- Objects/typevarobject.c | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/Objects/typevarobject.c b/Objects/typevarobject.c index fa6c8d7367d84e..1398f911e54ef5 100644 --- a/Objects/typevarobject.c +++ b/Objects/typevarobject.c @@ -1175,13 +1175,13 @@ The following syntax creates a parameter specification that defaults\n\ to a callable accepting two positional-only arguments of types int\n\ and str:\n\ \n\ - type IntFuncDefault[**P = (int, str)] = Callable[P, int]\n\ + type IntFuncDefault[**P = [int, str]] = Callable[P, int]\n\ \n\ For compatibility with Python 3.11 and earlier, ParamSpec objects\n\ can also be created as follows::\n\ \n\ P = ParamSpec('P')\n\ - DefaultP = ParamSpec('DefaultP', default=(int, str))\n\ + DefaultP = ParamSpec('DefaultP', default=[int, str])\n\ \n\ Parameter specification variables exist primarily for the benefit of\n\ static type checkers. They are used to forward the parameter types of\n\