cpython/Objects/stringlib
Siddhesh Poyarekar 55edd0c185 bpo-33012: Fix invalid function cast warnings with gcc 8 for METH_NOARGS. (GH-6030)
METH_NOARGS functions need only a single argument but they are cast
into a PyCFunction, which takes two arguments.  This triggers an
invalid function cast warning in gcc8 due to the argument mismatch.
Fix this by adding a dummy unused argument.
2018-04-29 21:59:33 +03:00
..
README.txt
asciilib.h
codecs.h bpo-30923: Silence fall-through warnings included in -Wextra since gcc-7.0. (#3157) 2017-08-21 13:09:59 +02:00
count.h
ctype.h bpo-33012: Fix invalid function cast warnings with gcc 8 for METH_NOARGS. (GH-6030) 2018-04-29 21:59:33 +03:00
eq.h bpo-31338 (#3374) 2017-09-14 18:13:16 -07:00
fastsearch.h bpo-24821: Fixed the slowing down to 25 times in the searching of some (#505) 2017-03-30 09:11:10 +03:00
find.h
find_max_char.h
join.h
localeutil.h
partition.h
replace.h
split.h
stringdefs.h
transmogrify.h
ucs1lib.h
ucs2lib.h
ucs4lib.h
undef.h
unicode_format.h bpo-30978: str.format_map() now passes key lookup exceptions through. (#2790) 2017-08-03 11:45:23 +03:00
unicodedefs.h

README.txt

bits shared by the bytesobject and unicodeobject implementations (and
possibly other modules, in a not too distant future).

the stuff in here is included into relevant places; see the individual
source files for details.

--------------------------------------------------------------------
the following defines used by the different modules:

STRINGLIB_CHAR

    the type used to hold a character (char or Py_UNICODE)

STRINGLIB_EMPTY

    a PyObject representing the empty string, only to be used if
    STRINGLIB_MUTABLE is 0

Py_ssize_t STRINGLIB_LEN(PyObject*)

    returns the length of the given string object (which must be of the
    right type)

PyObject* STRINGLIB_NEW(STRINGLIB_CHAR*, Py_ssize_t)

    creates a new string object

STRINGLIB_CHAR* STRINGLIB_STR(PyObject*)

    returns the pointer to the character data for the given string
    object (which must be of the right type)

int STRINGLIB_CHECK_EXACT(PyObject *)

    returns true if the object is an instance of our type, not a subclass

STRINGLIB_MUTABLE

    must be 0 or 1 to tell the cpp macros in stringlib code if the object
    being operated on is mutable or not