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authorAndrés Delfino <34587441+andresdelfino@users.noreply.github.com>2018-04-21 09:17:26 -0300
committerSerhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>2018-04-21 15:17:26 +0300
commitb81ca28b378c8b29204a37f8bd433a3379f53f7d (patch)
tree1139c5fc0e468a45ed7583ad8b8b2e9104183690
parent441d945eb33f8dc130b268ebfa11315b98a2433c (diff)
downloadcpython-git-b81ca28b378c8b29204a37f8bd433a3379f53f7d.tar.gz
bpo-33297: Mention Pillow to work with more image formats. (#6505)
Also update PIL doc references to Pillow.
-rw-r--r--Doc/distutils/introduction.rst4
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/tkinter.rst4
-rw-r--r--Doc/tutorial/modules.rst2
3 files changed, 7 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/distutils/introduction.rst b/Doc/distutils/introduction.rst
index 8f46bd74c5..a385559103 100644
--- a/Doc/distutils/introduction.rst
+++ b/Doc/distutils/introduction.rst
@@ -193,8 +193,8 @@ modules using the Distutils:
module distribution
a collection of Python modules distributed together as a single downloadable
resource and meant to be installed *en masse*. Examples of some well-known
- module distributions are NumPy, SciPy, PIL (the Python Imaging
- Library), or mxBase. (This would be called a *package*, except that term is
+ module distributions are NumPy, SciPy, Pillow,
+ or mxBase. (This would be called a *package*, except that term is
already taken in the Python context: a single module distribution may contain
zero, one, or many Python packages.)
diff --git a/Doc/library/tkinter.rst b/Doc/library/tkinter.rst
index b99dc8ec27..a6a2e473d3 100644
--- a/Doc/library/tkinter.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/tkinter.rst
@@ -800,6 +800,10 @@ reference to the image. When the last Python reference to the image object is
deleted, the image data is deleted as well, and Tk will display an empty box
wherever the image was used.
+.. seealso::
+
+ The `Pillow <http://python-pillow.org/>`_ package adds support for
+ formats such as BMP, JPEG, TIFF, and WebP, among others.
.. _tkinter-file-handlers:
diff --git a/Doc/tutorial/modules.rst b/Doc/tutorial/modules.rst
index 584d4fd72e..3f689327a0 100644
--- a/Doc/tutorial/modules.rst
+++ b/Doc/tutorial/modules.rst
@@ -382,7 +382,7 @@ module names". For example, the module name :mod:`A.B` designates a submodule
named ``B`` in a package named ``A``. Just like the use of modules saves the
authors of different modules from having to worry about each other's global
variable names, the use of dotted module names saves the authors of multi-module
-packages like NumPy or the Python Imaging Library from having to worry about
+packages like NumPy or Pillow from having to worry about
each other's module names.
Suppose you want to design a collection of modules (a "package") for the uniform