Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
C
cython
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Boards
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Analytics
Analytics
Repository
Value Stream
Wiki
Wiki
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Create a new issue
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
Gwenaël Samain
cython
Commits
f486ed52
Commit
f486ed52
authored
Aug 02, 2014
by
Stefan Behnel
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
delete outdated comment on differing scope rules in Cython
parent
59da9514
Changes
1
Show whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
1 changed file
with
3 additions
and
20 deletions
+3
-20
docs/src/userguide/language_basics.rst
docs/src/userguide/language_basics.rst
+3
-20
No files found.
docs/src/userguide/language_basics.rst
View file @
f486ed52
...
@@ -394,26 +394,9 @@ Scope rules
...
@@ -394,26 +394,9 @@ Scope rules
Cython determines whether a variable belongs to a local scope, the module
Cython determines whether a variable belongs to a local scope, the module
scope, or the built-in scope completely statically. As with Python, assigning
scope, or the built-in scope completely statically. As with Python, assigning
to a variable which is not otherwise declared implicitly declares it to be a
to a variable which is not otherwise declared implicitly declares it to be a
Python variable residing in the scope where it is assigned.
variable residing in the scope where it is assigned. The type of the variable
depends on type inference, except for the global module scope, where it is
.. note::
always a Python object.
A consequence of these rules is that the module-level scope behaves the
same way as a Python local scope if you refer to a variable before assigning
to it. In particular, tricks such as the following will not work in Cython::
try:
x = True
except NameError:
True = 1
because, due to the assignment, the True will always be looked up in the
module-level scope. You would have to do something like this instead::
import __builtin__
try:
True = __builtin__.True
except AttributeError:
True = 1
Built-in Functions
Built-in Functions
...
...
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment