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a tuple (literal, field_name, format_spec, conversion). literal will always be a string, but might be of zero length. field_name will be None if there is no markup text format_spec will be a (possibly zero length) string if field_name is non-None conversion will be a one character string, or None This makes the Formatter class, and especially it's parse() method, easier to understand. Suggestion was by Jim Jewett, inspired by the "tail" of an elementtree node. Also, fixed a reference leak in fieldnameiter_next. |
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| .. | ||
| count.h | ||
| fastsearch.h | ||
| find.h | ||
| formatter.h | ||
| partition.h | ||
| README.txt | ||
| string_format.h | ||
| stringdefs.h | ||
| unicodedefs.h | ||
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.
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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)