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author | Larry Hastings <larry@hastings.org> | 2014-01-16 19:32:01 (GMT) |
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committer | Larry Hastings <larry@hastings.org> | 2014-01-16 19:32:01 (GMT) |
commit | 2a727916c598c576507e3a7447fc54cc0e01d4a5 (patch) | |
tree | f9f4ab7d1ff8c08a44659a1c2c6a11563ded215d /Doc/c-api | |
parent | e1f554490de1852faa03b5c06f051756aa168bfe (diff) | |
download | cpython-2a727916c598c576507e3a7447fc54cc0e01d4a5.zip cpython-2a727916c598c576507e3a7447fc54cc0e01d4a5.tar.gz cpython-2a727916c598c576507e3a7447fc54cc0e01d4a5.tar.bz2 |
Issue #20226: Major improvements to Argument Clinic.
* You may now specify an expression as the default value for a
parameter! Example: "sys.maxsize - 1". This support is
intentionally quite limited; you may only use values that
can be represented as static C values.
* Removed "doc_default", simplified support for "c_default"
and "py_default". (I'm not sure we still even need
"py_default", but I'm leaving it in for now in case a
use presents itself.)
* Parameter lines support a trailing '\\' as a line
continuation character, allowing you to break up long lines.
* The argument parsing code generated when supporting optional
groups now uses PyTuple_GET_SIZE instead of PyTuple_GetSize,
leading to a 850% speedup in parsing. (Just kidding, this
is an unmeasurable difference.)
* A bugfix for the recent regression where the generated
prototype from pydoc for builtins would be littered with
unreadable "=<object ...>"" default values for parameters
that had no default value.
* Converted some asserts into proper failure messages.
* Many doc improvements and fixes.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/c-api')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/c-api/arg.rst | 2 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/c-api/arg.rst b/Doc/c-api/arg.rst index b4efbf0..ee38e18 100644 --- a/Doc/c-api/arg.rst +++ b/Doc/c-api/arg.rst @@ -294,6 +294,8 @@ Other objects the object pointer is stored. If the Python object does not have the required type, :exc:`TypeError` is raised. +.. _o_ampersand: + ``O&`` (object) [*converter*, *anything*] Convert a Python object to a C variable through a *converter* function. This takes two arguments: the first is a function, the second is the address of a C |