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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-06-30 16:20:13 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-06-30 16:20:13 (GMT) |
commit | 615ae55eca17c1632e23f52c5842bb338d633ddf (patch) | |
tree | 168f5f6c5b44b133b0d49dbca244776a47db2f9d /Python/compile.c | |
parent | 4c82b2366ff2eb38f062fc5da1b15ddd1c01fa4b (diff) | |
download | cpython-615ae55eca17c1632e23f52c5842bb338d633ddf.zip cpython-615ae55eca17c1632e23f52c5842bb338d633ddf.tar.gz cpython-615ae55eca17c1632e23f52c5842bb338d633ddf.tar.bz2 |
Trent Mick <trentm@activestate.com>:
The common technique for printing out a pointer has been to cast to a long
and use the "%lx" printf modifier. This is incorrect on Win64 where casting
to a long truncates the pointer. The "%p" formatter should be used instead.
The problem as stated by Tim:
> Unfortunately, the C committee refused to define what %p conversion "looks
> like" -- they explicitly allowed it to be implementation-defined. Older
> versions of Microsoft C even stuck a colon in the middle of the address (in
> the days of segment+offset addressing)!
The result is that the hex value of a pointer will maybe/maybe not have a 0x
prepended to it.
Notes on the patch:
There are two main classes of changes:
- in the various repr() functions that print out pointers
- debugging printf's in the various thread_*.h files (these are why the
patch is large)
Closes SourceForge patch #100505.
Diffstat (limited to 'Python/compile.c')
-rw-r--r-- | Python/compile.c | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Python/compile.c b/Python/compile.c index 4373422..c69a95f 100644 --- a/Python/compile.c +++ b/Python/compile.c @@ -130,8 +130,8 @@ code_repr(co) filename = PyString_AsString(co->co_filename); if (co->co_name && PyString_Check(co->co_name)) name = PyString_AsString(co->co_name); - sprintf(buf, "<code object %.100s at %lx, file \"%.300s\", line %d>", - name, (long)co, filename, lineno); + sprintf(buf, "<code object %.100s at %p, file \"%.300s\", line %d>", + name, co, filename, lineno); return PyString_FromString(buf); } |