diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/classes/Vector3i.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/classes/Vector3i.xml | 14 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/doc/classes/Vector3i.xml b/doc/classes/Vector3i.xml index e486d7cfec..ebb518792f 100644 --- a/doc/classes/Vector3i.xml +++ b/doc/classes/Vector3i.xml @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Vector used for 3D math using integer coordinates. </brief_description> <description> - 3-element structure that can be used to represent positions in 3D space or any other pair of numeric values. + 3-element structure that can be used to represent positions in 3D space or any other triplet of numeric values. It uses integer coordinates and is therefore preferable to [Vector3] when exact precision is required. [b]Note:[/b] In a boolean context, a Vector3i will evaluate to [code]false[/code] if it's equal to [code]Vector3i(0, 0, 0)[/code]. Otherwise, a Vector3i will always evaluate to [code]true[/code]. </description> @@ -140,11 +140,6 @@ <operators> <operator name="operator !="> <return type="bool" /> - <description> - </description> - </operator> - <operator name="operator !="> - <return type="bool" /> <argument index="0" name="right" type="Vector3i" /> <description> Returns [code]true[/code] if the vectors are not equal. @@ -166,7 +161,7 @@ <description> Gets the remainder of each component of the [Vector3i] with the the given [int]. This operation uses truncated division, which is often not desired as it does not work well with negative numbers. Consider using [method @GlobalScope.posmod] instead if you want to handle negative numbers. [codeblock] - print(Vector2i(10, -20, 30) % 7) # Prints "(3, -6, 2)" + print(Vector3i(10, -20, 30) % 7) # Prints "(3, -6, 2)" [/codeblock] </description> </operator> @@ -260,11 +255,6 @@ </operator> <operator name="operator =="> <return type="bool" /> - <description> - </description> - </operator> - <operator name="operator =="> - <return type="bool" /> <argument index="0" name="right" type="Vector3i" /> <description> Returns [code]true[/code] if the vectors are equal. |