diff --git a/documentation/18.11/eiffel/Tutorials/Mini-HowTo/Iterating-on-a-LIST.wiki b/documentation/18.11/eiffel/Tutorials/Mini-HowTo/Iterating-on-a-LIST.wiki index d4306b77..fd0f6819 100644 --- a/documentation/18.11/eiffel/Tutorials/Mini-HowTo/Iterating-on-a-LIST.wiki +++ b/documentation/18.11/eiffel/Tutorials/Mini-HowTo/Iterating-on-a-LIST.wiki @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -[[Property:modification_date|Thu, 06 Sep 2018 15:21:39 GMT]] +[[Property:modification_date|Wed, 17 Apr 2019 14:09:18 GMT]] [[Property:publication_date|Thu, 06 Sep 2018 15:17:57 GMT]] [[Property:uuid|96077603-DD2D-4D8C-A486-AF4BD066613A]] [[Property:weight|2000]] @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ The `across` can be used on every `ITERABLE` object (including `LIST` objects). end -Note that the temporary variable (`ic` in the example) represent an iterator of the `ITERABLE` object, and not directly an element like in many other languages (like the `for` structure in Python for example). +Note that the temporary variable (`ic` in the example) represents an iterator of the `ITERABLE` object, and not directly an element like in many other languages (like the `for` structure in Python for example). === the `from until` loop syntax=== This syntax offer more possibilities than the `across` loop, but is riskier.