This patch doesn't remove the wrappers for OSADebug* API's but only defines
them when configure detects that the API's are present in the system's
header files.
without causing problems for anyone that is on a case-insensitive filesystem).
Setup.py tries to compile the MacOS extension from MacOSmodule.c, while the
actual file is named macosmodule.c. This is no problem on the (default)
case-insensitive filesystem, but doesn't work on case-sensitive filesystems.
This patches a file that is generated by bgen, however the code is now the
same as a current copy of bgen would generate. Without this patch most types
in the Carbon.CF module are unusable.
I haven't managed to coax bgen into generating a complete copy of _CFmodule.c
yet :-(, hence the manual patching.
this file (the source) must be fixed.
Why isn't there a comment at the top saying the file is generated and
why are both the source and generated file checked in? Bootstrap problem?
Will backport.
Turns out patch #1035255 was incomplete, it only patched _Filemodule.c
and not filesupport.py. So regenerating caused as_pathname() to go into
an infinite loop.
(Contributed by Bob Ippolito.)
This patch trims down the Python core on Darwin by making it
independent of CoreFoundation and CoreServices. It does this by:
Changed linker flags in configure/configure.in
Removed the unused PyMac_GetAppletScriptFile
Moved the implementation of PyMac_StrError to the MacOS module
Moved the implementation of PyMac_GetFullPathname to the
Carbon.File module
factory functions, so you can call quicktime functions that are implemented
as methods on NULL too.
Still don't allow quicktime functions to return NULL pointers, though: I
think this always signals an error condition.
a real subtype of Cm.ComponentInstance right now, it turns out that is
too difficult.
- OSA.OSAComponentInstance initializer does accept a Cm.ComponentInstance
instance, though, so at least things are becoming useable.
by request of Donovan Preston. In return, he promised to use this
to create a Python OSA component, which would turn Python
into a first-class OSA scripting language (like AppleScript itself).