From d425a0c9e5ee85ce3f8ba98bdd5fe96c14f976ba Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: hedy Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2024 20:44:39 +0800 Subject: Dark: For content pages using transparent images... ...which are unreadable in dark mode, use `has-dark-mode-background` class. ![](/img.png){: class="has-dark-mode-background" } Like this. And it will be given a nice light gray background and a subtle padding & border. --- .../apps/content/resources/guides/python-guides/mutability.md | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) (limited to 'pydis_site/apps') diff --git a/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/python-guides/mutability.md b/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/python-guides/mutability.md index 185dc87c..e180fd16 100644 --- a/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/python-guides/mutability.md +++ b/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/python-guides/mutability.md @@ -30,11 +30,11 @@ It just returns a new one. Let's examine what's going on here. At first, the variable `s` refers to some object, the string `'hello'`. -![s refers to the string "hello"](/static/images/content/mutability/s_refers_hello.png) +![s refers to the string "hello"](/static/images/content/mutability/s_refers_hello.png){: class="has-dark-mode-background" } When you call `s.upper()`, a new string, which contains the characters `'HELLO'`, gets created. -![s.upper creates "HELLO"](/static/images/content/mutability/s_upper_creates_HELLO.png) +![s.upper creates "HELLO"](/static/images/content/mutability/s_upper_creates_HELLO.png){: class="has-dark-mode-background" } This happens even if you just call `s.upper()` without any assignment, on its own line: ```python @@ -44,12 +44,12 @@ In this case, a new object will be created and discarded right away. Then the assignment part comes in: the name `s` gets disconnected from `'hello'`, and gets connected to `'HELLO'`. -![s gets assigned to "HELLO"](/static/images/content/mutability/s_gets_assigned_to_HELLO.png) +![s gets assigned to "HELLO"](/static/images/content/mutability/s_gets_assigned_to_HELLO.png){: class="has-dark-mode-background" } Now we can say that `'HELLO'` is stored in the `s` variable. Then, because no variables refer to the _object_ `'hello'`, it gets eaten by the garbage collector. -!["hello" Gets Eaten](/static/images/content/mutability/hello_gets_eaten.png) +!["hello" Gets Eaten](/static/images/content/mutability/hello_gets_eaten.png){: class="has-dark-mode-background" } It means that the memory reserved for that object will be freed. If that didn't happen, the 'garbage' would accumulate over time and fill up all the RAM. -- cgit v1.2.3