| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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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.
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names in the source code (they already had those for the linker,
through some smart macros; but the source still had the old, un-Py names).
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Note: waitflag not supported on NT.
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bltinmodule.c: fixed coerce() nightmare in ternary pow().
modsupport.c (initmodule2): pass METH_FREENAME flag to newmethodobject().
pythonrun.c: move flushline() into and around print_error().
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compile.c: lists and dictionary in code objects become tuples
import.c: bump MAGIC
thread*.[ch]: added thread_ident() function
version.c: added '++' to version number and bumped date
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Added Tim Peters' pthread version.
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