>>>> ob should be PyObject* >>> >>> No, the declaration looks correct to me. The input is an object. >> I don’t understand. ob isn’t a type, is it? A type is required. > > It's a (dummy) parameter name. Cython defaults to "object" when a > type isn't specified. > > Looking at the other declarations in that file, it was probably > *meant* to say "object ob", but it's not wrong -- it still works > that way.
Ok, but now the syntax is made very context sensitive. To interpret it correctly, you have to know “ob” is not a type. And the Python docs make exactly the same mistake. In C this would not work because there is no default type, so the Python docs are wrong because they’re supposedly documenting C. [The only case it could be correct would be if the symbol were a macro] And my translator script got fooled, because it assumes any single identifier used as a parameter is a type, and if two words are used, the first is a type and the second can be discarded, except in the special case “unsigned int”. Note, I’m just trying to help by bringing up inconsistencies, which are things my simplistic translator script can’t handle. — John Skaller skal...@internode.on.net _______________________________________________ cython-devel mailing list cython-devel@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/cython-devel