On 12/01/2014 06:17 AM, C. Michael Pilato wrote:
On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 2:24 AM, Alexey Neyman <sti...@att.net <mailto:sti...@att.net>> wrote:

    Hi all,

    Please review/comment.


Just a quick question, as my bindings knowledge has grown somewhat stale: why do some of the wrapper functions use a format string with the tuple notation (e.g., "(O)") and others not (e.g., "Oss#O&")?

I notice that the basic editor wrapping methods have the same disparity. I'm probably overlooking something obvious, but hey, it's Monday, so be gentle.
It is rather the opposite: the "Oss#O&" implicitly requests a tuple packing by virtue of having more than one value to pack.

PyObject_CallMethod (and other similar functions) defer to the Py_BuildValue for the description of the format string. The latter states that by default, it only builds a tuple if there are two or more arguments to be packed; for one argument, it returns just the object specified by the format string and for zero arguments, it returns None.

I am not sure what it would mean to pass a non-tuple to a callable Python object as an argument though; haven't tried it myself.

Regards,
Alexey.

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