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Kirill Smelkov
cython
Commits
9286f3d4
Commit
9286f3d4
authored
Dec 23, 2017
by
scoder
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GitHub
Dec 23, 2017
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Merge pull request #2034 from jdemeyer/undeprecate_richcmp
Undeprecate __richcmp__
parents
9c14c267
b6648eb1
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47 additions
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-35
docs/src/reference/extension_types.rst
docs/src/reference/extension_types.rst
+13
-8
docs/src/userguide/special_methods.rst
docs/src/userguide/special_methods.rst
+34
-27
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docs/src/reference/extension_types.rst
View file @
9286f3d4
...
...
@@ -276,15 +276,20 @@ Arithmetic Methods
Rich Comparisons
================
* Starting with Cython 0.27, the Python
There are two ways to implement comparison methods.
Depending on the application, one way or the other may be better:
* The first way uses the 6 Python
`special methods <https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#basic-customization>`_
``__eq__``, ``__lt__``, etc. can be implemented. In previous versions, ``__richcmp__`` was
the only way to implement rich comparisons, but is now deprecated.
* A single special method called ``__richcmp__()`` can be used to implement all the individual
rich compare, special method types. Note, however, that it is often easier to correctly
implement the separate Python special methods than to get the ``__richcmp__()`` method right.
* ``__richcmp__()`` takes an integer argument, indicating which operation is to be performed
as shown in the table below.
``__eq__``, ``__lt__``, etc.
This is new since Cython 0.27 and works exactly as in plain Python classes.
* The second way uses a single special method ``__richcmp__``.
This implements all rich comparison operations in one method.
The signature is ``def __richcmp__(self, other, int op)`` matching the
`PyObject_RichCompare() <https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/object.html#c.PyObject_RichCompare>`_
Python/C API function.
The integer argument ``op`` indicates which operation is to be performed
as shown in the table below:
+-----+-----+-------+
| < | 0 | Py_LT |
...
...
docs/src/userguide/special_methods.rst
View file @
9286f3d4
...
...
@@ -127,28 +127,34 @@ take `self` as the first argument.
Rich comparisons
-----------------
Starting with Cython 0.27, the Python
`special methods <https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#basic-customization>`_
:meth:``__eq__``, :meth:``__lt__``, etc. can be implemented. In previous versions,
:meth:``__richcmp__`` was the only way to implement rich comparisons. It takes an integer
indicating which operation is to be performed, as follows:
+-----+-----+-------+
| < | 0 | Py_LT |
+-----+-----+-------+
| == | 2 | Py_EQ |
+-----+-----+-------+
| > | 4 | Py_GT |
+-----+-----+-------+
| <= | 1 | Py_LE |
+-----+-----+-------+
| != | 3 | Py_NE |
+-----+-----+-------+
| >= | 5 | Py_GE |
+-----+-----+-------+
The named constants can be cimported from the ``cpython.object`` module.
They should generally be preferred over plain integers to improve readabilty.
There are two ways to implement comparison methods.
Depending on the application, one way or the other may be better:
* The first way uses the 6 Python
`special methods <https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#basic-customization>`_
:meth:`__eq__`, :meth:`__lt__`, etc.
This is new since Cython 0.27 and works exactly as in plain Python classes.
* The second way uses a single special method :meth:`__richcmp__`.
This implements all rich comparison operations in one method.
The signature is ``def __richcmp__(self, other, int op)``.
The integer argument ``op`` indicates which operation is to be performed
as shown in the table below:
+-----+-------+
| < | Py_LT |
+-----+-------+
| == | Py_EQ |
+-----+-------+
| > | Py_GT |
+-----+-------+
| <= | Py_LE |
+-----+-------+
| != | Py_NE |
+-----+-------+
| >= | Py_GE |
+-----+-------+
These constants can be cimported from the ``cpython.object`` module.
The :meth:`__next__` method
----------------------------
...
...
@@ -209,6 +215,10 @@ Rich comparison operators
https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#basic-customization
You can choose to either implement the standard Python special methods
like :meth:`__eq__` or the single special method :meth:`__richcmp__`.
Depending on the application, one way or the other may be better.
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| __eq__ |self, y | object | self == y |
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
...
...
@@ -222,13 +232,10 @@ https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#basic-customization
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| __ge__ |self, y | object | self >= y |
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| __richcmp__ |
x, y, int op
| object | Joined rich comparison method for all of the above |
| | | | (
deprecated, no direct Python equivalent)
|
| __richcmp__ |
self, y, int op
| object | Joined rich comparison method for all of the above |
| | | | (
no direct Python equivalent)
|
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+--------------------------------------------------------+
New code should better implement the separate Python special methods instead of trying to
correctly implement the joined ``__richcmp__()`` method.
Arithmetic operators
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
...
...
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