diff options
author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1998-04-02 16:19:15 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1998-04-02 16:19:15 (GMT) |
commit | b789c70d056eb40abfd24f114a5402440d18ac05 (patch) | |
tree | 64991c10e47b3b811053b3c1f22b909c84f265cd /Doc/ext | |
parent | f14e2f8a0420f2eff5bd74a3fef3aa67c0e84359 (diff) | |
download | cpython-b789c70d056eb40abfd24f114a5402440d18ac05.zip cpython-b789c70d056eb40abfd24f114a5402440d18ac05.tar.gz cpython-b789c70d056eb40abfd24f114a5402440d18ac05.tar.bz2 |
Minor markup nits.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/ext')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/ext/ext.tex | 22 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/ext/ext.tex b/Doc/ext/ext.tex index 454e767..d8a3d59 100644 --- a/Doc/ext/ext.tex +++ b/Doc/ext/ext.tex @@ -1309,9 +1309,11 @@ otherwise you have to select it as a build option (see below). Once configured, dynamic loading is trivial to use: when a Python program executes \code{import spam}, the search for modules tries to find a file \file{spammodule.o} (\file{spammodule.so} when using shared -libraries) in the module search path, and if one is found, it is -loaded into the executing binary and executed. Once loaded, the -module acts just like a built-in extension module. +libraries) in the module search path,% +\indexiii{module}{search}{path} +and if one is found, it is loaded into the executing binary and +executed. Once loaded, the module acts just like a built-in extension +module. The advantages of dynamic loading are twofold: the ``core'' Python binary gets smaller, and users can extend Python with their own @@ -1411,10 +1413,10 @@ described earlier). Note that in all cases you will have to create your own Makefile that compiles your module file(s). This Makefile will have to pass two \samp{-I} arguments to the \C{} compiler which will make it find the -Python header files. If the Make variable \var{PYTHONTOP} points to -the toplevel Python directory, your \var{CFLAGS} Make variable should +Python header files. If the Make variable \makevar{PYTHONTOP} points to +the toplevel Python directory, your \makevar{CFLAGS} Make variable should contain the options \samp{-I\$(PYTHONTOP) -I\$(PYTHONTOP)/Include}. -(Most header files are in the \file{Include} subdirectory, but the +(Most header files are in the \file{Include/} subdirectory, but the \file{config.h} header lives in the toplevel directory.) @@ -1461,7 +1463,8 @@ additional \C{} flag \samp{-G0} (or \samp{-G 0}). This instructs the assembler to generate position-independent code. You don't need to link the resulting \file{spammodule.o} file; just -copy it into a directory along the Python module search path. +copy it into a directory along the Python module search path.% +\indexiii{module}{search}{path} The first time your extension is loaded, it takes some extra time and a few messages may be printed. This creates a file @@ -1486,7 +1489,8 @@ normally only \samp{-l} options or absolute pathnames of libraries \label{gnuLinking} Just copy \file{spammodule.o} into a directory along the Python module -search path. +search path.% +\indexiii{module}{search}{path} If your extension modules uses additional system libraries, you must create a file \file{spammodule.libs} in the same directory as the @@ -1495,6 +1499,4 @@ whitespace-separated absolute pathnames of libraries (\samp{.a} files). No \samp{-l} options can be used. -\input{ext.ind} - \end{document} |