Viewing file: tupleobject.h (1.58 KB) -rw-r--r-- Select action/file-type: (+) | (+) | (+) | Code (+) | Session (+) | (+) | SDB (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) |
/* Tuple object interface */
#ifndef Py_TUPLEOBJECT_H #define Py_TUPLEOBJECT_H #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif
/* Another generally useful object type is a tuple of object pointers. For Python, this is an immutable type. C code can change the tuple items (but not their number), and even use tuples as general-purpose arrays of object references, but in general only brand new tuples should be mutated, not ones that might already have been exposed to Python code.
*** WARNING *** PyTuple_SetItem does not increment the new item's reference count, but does decrement the reference count of the item it replaces, if not nil. It does *decrement* the reference count if it is *not* inserted in the tuple. Similarly, PyTuple_GetItem does not increment the returned item's reference count. */
PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyTuple_Type; PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyTupleIter_Type;
#define PyTuple_Check(op) \ PyType_FastSubclass(Py_TYPE(op), Py_TPFLAGS_TUPLE_SUBCLASS) #define PyTuple_CheckExact(op) Py_IS_TYPE(op, &PyTuple_Type)
PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyTuple_New(Py_ssize_t size); PyAPI_FUNC(Py_ssize_t) PyTuple_Size(PyObject *); PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyTuple_GetItem(PyObject *, Py_ssize_t); PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyTuple_SetItem(PyObject *, Py_ssize_t, PyObject *); PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyTuple_GetSlice(PyObject *, Py_ssize_t, Py_ssize_t); PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyTuple_Pack(Py_ssize_t, ...);
#ifndef Py_LIMITED_API # define Py_CPYTHON_TUPLEOBJECT_H # include "cpython/tupleobject.h" # undef Py_CPYTHON_TUPLEOBJECT_H #endif
#ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif /* !Py_TUPLEOBJECT_H */
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