Removed "This will be discussed later." where it's not. Reported by

Clay Spence <cspence@sarnoff.com>; see entry in ../TODO.
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 1999-02-22 14:55:46 +00:00
parent 7d9b13325d
commit 9226d8e8a8
1 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -143,10 +143,10 @@ passed to the C function. The C function always has two arguments,
conventionally named \var{self} and \var{args}.
The \var{self} argument is only used when the C function implements a
built-in method. This will be discussed later. In the example,
\var{self} will always be a \NULL{} pointer, since we are defining
a function, not a method. (This is done so that the interpreter
doesn't have to understand two different types of C functions.)
built-in method, not a function. In the example, \var{self} will
always be a \NULL{} pointer, since we are defining a function, not a
method. (This is done so that the interpreter doesn't have to
understand two different types of C functions.)
The \var{args} argument will be a pointer to a Python tuple object
containing the arguments. Each item of the tuple corresponds to an