5807c415c5
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk When forward porting this, I added _PyUnicode_InsertThousandsGrouping. ........ r63078 | eric.smith | 2008-05-11 15:52:48 -0400 (Sun, 11 May 2008) | 14 lines Addresses issue 2802: 'n' formatting for integers. Adds 'n' as a format specifier for integers, to mirror the same specifier which is already available for floats. 'n' is the same as 'd', but inserts the current locale-specific thousands grouping. I added this as a stringlib function, but it's only used by str type, not unicode. This is because of an implementation detail in unicode.format(), which does its own str->unicode conversion. But the unicode version will be needed in 3.0, and it may be needed by other code eventually in 2.6 (maybe decimal?), so I left it as a stringlib implementation. As long as the unicode version isn't instantiated, there's no overhead for this. ........ |
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README.txt | ||
count.h | ||
ctype.h | ||
eq.h | ||
fastsearch.h | ||
find.h | ||
formatter.h | ||
localeutil.h | ||
partition.h | ||
string_format.h | ||
stringdefs.h | ||
transmogrify.h | ||
unicodedefs.h |
README.txt
bits shared by the stringobject 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 int STRINGLIB_CMP(STRINGLIB_CHAR*, STRINGLIB_CHAR*, Py_ssize_t) compares two strings. returns 0 if they match, and non-zero if not. 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.