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authorFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>2001-02-12 17:38:18 (GMT)
committerFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>2001-02-12 17:38:18 (GMT)
commita05460c148ef88e3a9430427adb660d8c253140d (patch)
treee8afb621827b122ecfc95405bd52aba12b8208d2
parent95b96d3941b739017f69b8ac695ca1ac25073a55 (diff)
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PyTuple_*() functions take PyObject* parameters, not PyTupleObject* values.
This closes SF bug #131304.
-rw-r--r--Doc/api/api.tex13
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/api/api.tex b/Doc/api/api.tex
index efb5357..7cda0d5 100644
--- a/Doc/api/api.tex
+++ b/Doc/api/api.tex
@@ -3088,24 +3088,23 @@ Return true if the argument is a tuple object.
Return a new tuple object of size \var{len}, or \NULL{} on failure.
\end{cfuncdesc}
-\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_Size}{PyTupleObject *p}
+\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_Size}{PyObject *p}
Takes a pointer to a tuple object, and returns the size
of that tuple.
\end{cfuncdesc}
-\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GetItem}{PyTupleObject *p, int pos}
+\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GetItem}{PyObject *p, int pos}
Returns the object at position \var{pos} in the tuple pointed
to by \var{p}. If \var{pos} is out of bounds, returns \NULL{} and
sets an \exception{IndexError} exception.
\end{cfuncdesc}
-\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GET_ITEM}{PyTupleObject *p, int pos}
+\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GET_ITEM}{PyObject *p, int pos}
Does the same, but does no checking of its arguments.
\end{cfuncdesc}
-\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GetSlice}{PyTupleObject *p,
- int low,
- int high}
+\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GetSlice}{PyObject *p,
+ int low, int high}
Takes a slice of the tuple pointed to by \var{p} from
\var{low} to \var{high} and returns it as a new tuple.
\end{cfuncdesc}
@@ -3124,7 +3123,7 @@ should \emph{only} be used to fill in brand new tuples.
\strong{Note:} This function ``steals'' a reference to \var{o}.
\end{cfuncdesc}
-\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{_PyTuple_Resize}{PyTupleObject *p,
+\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{_PyTuple_Resize}{PyObject **p,
int newsize, int last_is_sticky}
Can be used to resize a tuple. \var{newsize} will be the new length
of the tuple. Because tuples are \emph{supposed} to be immutable,