Correction: the parameters of new.instance() are type-checked.

Edited several of the descriptions for English usage and more
consistent style.
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 1999-06-17 18:15:07 +00:00
parent de69ae1753
commit e019789962
1 changed files with 11 additions and 11 deletions

View File

@ -19,39 +19,39 @@ This function creates an instance of \class{class} with dictionary
\var{dict} without calling the \method{__init__()} constructor. Note that
this means that there are no guarantees that the object will be in a
consistent state.
Arguments are \emph{not} type-checked, and an incorrectly typed argument
will result in undefined behaviour.
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{instancemethod}{function, instance, class}
This function will return a method object, bound to \var{instance}, or
unbound if \var{instance} is \code{None}. It is checked that
\var{function} is callable, and that \var{instance} is an instance
object or \code{None}.
unbound if \var{instance} is \code{None}. \var{function} must be
callable, and \var{instance} must be an instance object or
\code{None}.
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{function}{code, globals\optional{, name\optional{argdefs}}}
Returns a (Python) function with the given code and globals. If
\var{name} is given, the function will have the given name. If
\var{argdefs} is given, they will be the function defaults.
\var{name} is given, it must be a string or \code{None}. If it is a
string, the function will have the given name, otherwise the function
name will be taken from \code{\var{code}.co_name}. If
\var{argdefs} is given, it must be a tuple and will be used to the
determine the default values of parameters.
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{code}{argcount, nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, names, varnames, filename, name, firstlineno,
lnotab}
This function is an interface to the \cfunction{PyCode_New()} internal
This function is an interface to the \cfunction{PyCode_New()} C
function.
XXX This is still undocumented!!!!!!!!!!!
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{module}{name}
This function returns a new module object with name \var{name}.
\var{name} should be a string.
\var{name} must be a string.
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{classobj}{name, baseclasses, dict}
This function returns a new class object, with name \var{name}, derived
from \var{baseclasses} (which should be a tuple of classes) and with
namespace \var{dict}. All parameters are type checked.
namespace \var{dict}.
\end{funcdesc}