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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2002-05-16 13:48:14 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2002-05-16 13:48:14 (GMT) |
commit | 4e7655558c6868584ec2c78dbca7e9dad7507421 (patch) | |
tree | 2a27fca79445808e717a4fb79c61ce0468570e8a /Doc/ext/extending.tex | |
parent | 742dc774af4de1728dac3435af1380d4be512f9e (diff) | |
download | cpython-4e7655558c6868584ec2c78dbca7e9dad7507421.zip cpython-4e7655558c6868584ec2c78dbca7e9dad7507421.tar.gz cpython-4e7655558c6868584ec2c78dbca7e9dad7507421.tar.bz2 |
Fix broken reference, minor clarification.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/ext/extending.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/ext/extending.tex | 18 |
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/ext/extending.tex b/Doc/ext/extending.tex index 41bdab5..9b6517a 100644 --- a/Doc/ext/extending.tex +++ b/Doc/ext/extending.tex @@ -414,18 +414,20 @@ for more information. There are two more things to do before you can use your new extension: compiling and linking it with the Python system. If you use dynamic -loading, the details depend on the style of dynamic loading your -system uses; see the chapters about building extension modules on -\UNIX{} (chapter \ref{building-on-unix}) and Windows (chapter -\ref{building-on-windows}) for more information about this. -% XXX Add information about MacOS +loading, the details may depend on the style of dynamic loading your +system uses; see the chapters about building extension modules +(chapter \ref{building}) and additional information that pertains only +to building on Windows (chapter \ref{building-on-windows}) for more +information about this. +% XXX Add information about Mac OS If you can't use dynamic loading, or if you want to make your module a permanent part of the Python interpreter, you will have to change the configuration setup and rebuild the interpreter. Luckily, this is -very simple: just place your file (\file{spammodule.c} for example) in -the \file{Modules/} directory of an unpacked source distribution, add -a line to the file \file{Modules/Setup.local} describing your file: +very simple on \UNIX: just place your file (\file{spammodule.c} for +example) in the \file{Modules/} directory of an unpacked source +distribution, add a line to the file \file{Modules/Setup.local} +describing your file: \begin{verbatim} spam spammodule.o |