recognized by the code generator and code generation for the test and
the subsequent suite is suppressed.
One must write *exactly* ``if __debug__:'' or ``elif __debug__:'' --
no parentheses or operators must be present, or the optimization is
not carried through. Whitespace doesn't matter. Other uses of
__debug__ will find __debug__ defined as 0 or 1 in the __builtin__
module.
of day, day of week, and season.
Fix the weekday predictions -- these seemed to be all bogus. The new
predictions seem to correspond with strftime() on Solaris and IRIX, so
I believe they are correct.
Get rid of the test for non-standard format %C returning "the same as
date(1)". This is hard to do reliably without opening a pipe to date,
and moreover, on IRIX 6.2, %C yields the Century. So we use that
instead. (We don't complain about this in non-verbose mode anyway.)
- Changed FragLoader.h to CodeFragments.h
- Removed Desk.h
- Regenerated bgen modules from new universal headers
- Changed some of the s# in PyArg_ParseTuple to m# (unfortunately:
this should have been a different commit)
in importdl.c (I had just one crash too many with a static python
importing a dynamic module)
- On powerpc, enable USE_CACHE_ALIGNED with a linesize of 32 bytes.
Also grandly renamed.
Here's the new interface:
When WITH_READLINE is defined, two functions are defined:
- PyOS_GnuReadline (what used to be my_readline() with WITH_READLINE)
- PyOS_ReadlineInit (for Dave Ascher)
Always, these functions are defined:
- PyOS_StdioReadline (what used to be my_readline() without WITH_READLINE)
- PyOS_Readline (the interface used by tokenizer.c and [raw_]input().
There's a global function pointer PyOS_ReadlineFunctionPointer,
initialized to NULL. When PyOS_Readline finds this to be NULL, it
sets it to either PyOS_GnuReadline or PyOS_StdioReadline depending on
which one makes more sense (i.e. it uses GNU only if it is defined
*and* stdin is indeed a tty device).
An embedding program that has its own wishes can set the function
pointer to a function of its own design. It should take a char*
prompt argument (which may be NULL) and return a string *ending in a
\n character* -- or "" for EOF or NULL for a user interrupt.
--Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)