Commit Graph

114 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters 39dce29365 Fix for http://sourceforge.net/bugs/?func=detailbug&bug_id=111866&group_id=5470.
This was a misleading bug -- the true "bug" was that hash(x) gave an error
return when x is an infinity.  Fixed that.  Added new Py_IS_INFINITY macro to
pyport.h.  Rearranged code to reduce growing duplication in hashing of float and
complex numbers, pushing Trent's earlier stab at that to a logical conclusion.
Fixed exceedingly rare bug where hashing of floats could return -1 even if there
wasn't an error (didn't waste time trying to construct a test case, it was simply
obvious from the code that it *could* happen).  Improved complex hash so that
hash(complex(x, y)) doesn't systematically equal hash(complex(y, x)) anymore.
2000-08-15 03:34:48 +00:00
Vladimir Marangozov 2c57e076fe #include reordering so that extern "C" does not interfere with
standard C++ specific includes.

Closes patch 101061.
2000-08-11 11:48:33 +00:00
Peter Schneider-Kamp 10e1bf2f64 remove all occurence of math.rint() from the sources
(and yes, "Currintly" also counts <0.5 wink>)
2000-08-10 04:23:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 367e46a943 Of course, you meant "#if 0" and not "#ifdef 0". :) 2000-08-01 18:28:44 +00:00
Peter Schneider-Kamp 1c2b178ceb Guido said this is food for the beta-testers<wink> 2000-08-01 16:53:44 +00:00
Peter Schneider-Kamp 25f68944c2 patch from Vladimir (move Py_Mem* interface to Include/pymem.h) 2000-07-31 22:19:30 +00:00
Peter Schneider-Kamp 7e01890986 merge Include/my*.h into Include/pyport.h
marked my*.h as obsolete
2000-07-31 15:28:04 +00:00
Sjoerd Mullender 0765fe3a05 Make mode_t available for the declaration of _getpty(). 2000-07-26 15:46:29 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 1e0c2f4bee Create a new section of pyport.h to hold all external function declarations
for systems that are missing those declarations from system include files.
Start by moving a pointy-haired ones from their previous locations to the
new section.

(The gethostname() one, for instance, breaks on several systems, because
some define it as (char *, size_t) and some as (char *, int).)

I purposely decided not to include the summary of used #defines like Tim did
in the first section of pyport.h. In my opinion, the number of #defines
likedly to be used by this section would make such an overview unwieldy. I
would suggest documenting the non-obvious ones, though.
2000-07-24 16:06:23 +00:00
Tim Peters 4f1b2081e9 Removed all instances of RETSIGTYPE from the source code: signal
handlers "return void", according to ANSI C.
Removed the new Py_RETURN_FROM_SIGNAL_HANDLER macro.
Left RETSIGTYPE in the config stuff, because it's not clear to
me that others aren't relying on it (e.g., extension modules).
2000-07-23 21:18:09 +00:00
Tim Peters 8315ea5790 Included assert.h in Python.h -- it's absurd that this basic tool of
good C practice hasn't been available to everything all along.
Added Py_SAFE_DOWNCAST(VALUE, WIDE, NARROW) macro to pyport.h; this
just casts VALUE from type WIDE to type NARROW, but assert-fails if
Py_DEBUG is defined and info is lost due to casting.
Replaced a line in Fredrik's fix to marshal.c to use the new macro.
2000-07-23 19:28:35 +00:00
Tim Peters 1be46844d9 Recent ANSIfication introduced a couple instances of
#if RETSIGTYPE != void
That isn't C, and MSVC properly refuses to compile it.
Introduced new Py_RETURN_FROM_SIGNAL_HANDLER macro in pyport.h
to expand to the correct thing based on RETSIGTYPE.  However,
only void is ANSI!  Do we still have platforms that return int?
The Unix config mess appears to #define RETSIGTYPE by magic
without being asked to, so I assume it's "a problem" across
Unices still.
2000-07-23 18:10:18 +00:00
Vladimir Marangozov 14a4d88a2e Remove the "1" that Tim sticked to the preprocessor symbol for unknown reasons
(cf. the rest of the headers in the distribution)
2000-07-10 04:59:49 +00:00
Tim Peters 7d3a511a40 Cray J90 fixes for long ints.
This was a convenient excuse to create the pyport.h file recently
discussed!
Please use new Py_ARITHMETIC_RIGHT_SHIFT when right-shifting a
signed int and you *need* sign-extension.  This is #define'd in
pyport.h, keying off new config symbol SIGNED_RIGHT_SHIFT_ZERO_FILLS.
If you're running on a platform that needs that symbol #define'd,
the std tests never would have worked for you (in particular,
at least test_long would have failed).
The autoconfig stuff got added to Python after my Unix days, so
I don't know how that works.  Would someone please look into doing
& testing an auto-config of the SIGNED_RIGHT_SHIFT_ZERO_FILLS
symbol?  It needs to be defined if & only if, e.g., (-1) >> 3 is
not -1.
2000-07-08 04:17:21 +00:00