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nexedi
cython
Commits
ad38cd41
Commit
ad38cd41
authored
Jun 21, 2016
by
Jeroen Demeyer
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Use automatic PEP links in doc
parent
2c3c04b2
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-20
docs/src/reference/special_methods_table.rst
docs/src/reference/special_methods_table.rst
+1
-1
docs/src/tutorial/strings.rst
docs/src/tutorial/strings.rst
+5
-8
docs/src/userguide/buffer.rst
docs/src/userguide/buffer.rst
+2
-3
docs/src/userguide/pyrex_differences.rst
docs/src/userguide/pyrex_differences.rst
+1
-3
docs/src/userguide/special_methods.rst
docs/src/userguide/special_methods.rst
+4
-5
No files found.
docs/src/reference/special_methods_table.rst
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ad38cd41
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@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ Descriptor objects
.. note::
Descriptor objects are part of the support mechanism for new-style
Python classes. See the discussion of descriptors in the Python documentation.
See also
PEP 252, "Making Types Look More Like Classes", and PEP 253
,
See also
:PEP:`252`, "Making Types Look More Like Classes", and :PEP:`253`
,
"Subtyping Built-In Types".
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+-----------------------------------------------------+
...
...
docs/src/tutorial/strings.rst
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ad38cd41
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@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ Cython understands all Python string type prefixes:
* ``b'bytes'`` for byte strings
* ``u'text'`` for Unicode strings
* ``f'formatted {value}'`` for formatted Unicode string literals as defined by
`PEP 498 <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0498/>`_
(added in Cython 0.24)
:PEP:`498`
(added in Cython 0.24)
Unprefixed string literals become :obj:`str` objects when compiling
with language level 2 and :obj:`unicode` objects (i.e. Python 3
...
...
@@ -558,7 +558,7 @@ When string literals appear in the code, the source code encoding is
important. It determines the byte sequence that Cython will store in
the C code for bytes literals, and the Unicode code points that Cython
builds for unicode literals when parsing the byte encoded source file.
Following
`PEP 263`_
, Cython supports the explicit declaration of
Following
:PEP:`263`
, Cython supports the explicit declaration of
source file encodings. For example, putting the following comment at
the top of an ``ISO-8859-15`` (Latin-9) encoded source file (into the
first or second line) is required to enable ``ISO-8859-15`` decoding
...
...
@@ -567,14 +567,12 @@ in the parser::
# -*- coding: ISO-8859-15 -*-
When no explicit encoding declaration is provided, the source code is
parsed as UTF-8 encoded text, as specified by
`PEP 3120`_
. `UTF-8`_
parsed as UTF-8 encoded text, as specified by
:PEP:`3120`
. `UTF-8`_
is a very common encoding that can represent the entire Unicode set of
characters and is compatible with plain ASCII encoded text that it
encodes efficiently. This makes it a very good choice for source code
files which usually consist mostly of ASCII characters.
.. _`PEP 263`: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0263/
.. _`PEP 3120`: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3120/
.. _`UTF-8`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8
As an example, putting the following line into a UTF-8 encoded source
...
...
@@ -731,15 +729,14 @@ to the internal representation of the Unicode string. Instead, any
Unicode character can be represented on all platforms without
resorting to surrogate pairs. This implies that narrow builds no
longer exist from that version on, regardless of the size of
:c:type:`Py_UNICODE`. See
`PEP 393 <http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0393/>`_ for details.
:c:type:`Py_UNICODE`. See :PEP:`393` for details.
Cython 0.16 and later handles this change internally and does the right
thing also for single character values as long as either type inference
is applied to untyped variables or the portable :c:type:`Py_UCS4` type
is explicitly used in the source code instead of the platform specific
:c:type:`Py_UNICODE` type. Optimisations that Cython applies to the
Python unicode type will automatically adapt to
PEP 393
at C compile
Python unicode type will automatically adapt to
:PEP:`393`
at C compile
time, as usual.
Iteration
...
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docs/src/userguide/buffer.rst
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ad38cd41
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@@ -176,8 +176,7 @@ References
----------
The buffer interface used here is set out in
`PEP 3118, Revising the buffer protocol
<http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3118/>`_
:PEP:`3118`, Revising the buffer protocol.
A tutorial for using this API from C is on Jake Vanderplas's blog,
`An Introduction to the Python Buffer Protocol
...
...
@@ -188,5 +187,5 @@ Reference documentation is available for
and `Python 2 <https://docs.python.org/2.7/c-api/buffer.html>`_.
The Py2 documentation also describes an older buffer protocol
that is no longer in use;
since Python 2.6, the
PEP 3118
protocol has been implemented,
since Python 2.6, the
:PEP:`3118`
protocol has been implemented,
and the older protocol is only relevant for legacy code.
docs/src/userguide/pyrex_differences.rst
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ad38cd41
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@@ -310,9 +310,7 @@ Synonyms
Source code encoding
======================
.. TODO: add the links to the relevant PEPs
Cython supports PEP 3120 and PEP 263, i.e. you can start your Cython source
Cython supports :PEP:`3120` and :PEP:`263`, i.e. you can start your Cython source
file with an encoding comment and generally write your source code in UTF-8.
This impacts the encoding of byte strings and the conversion of unicode string
literals like ``u'abcd'`` to unicode objects.
...
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docs/src/userguide/special_methods.rst
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ad38cd41
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@@ -329,8 +329,8 @@ Iterators
| __next__ | self | object | Get next item (called next in Python) |
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+-----------------------------------------------------+
Buffer interface [
PEP 3118
] (no Python equivalents - see note 1)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Buffer interface [
:PEP:`3118`
] (no Python equivalents - see note 1)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^
+-----------------------+---------------------------------------+-------------+-----------------------------------------------------+
| Name | Parameters | Return type | Description |
...
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@@ -371,11 +371,10 @@ Descriptor objects (see note 2)
.. note:: (1) The buffer interface was intended for use by C code and is not directly
accessible from Python. It is described in the Python/C API Reference Manual
of Python 2.x under sections 6.6 and 10.6. It was superseded by the new
PEP 3118
buffer protocol in Python 2.6 and is no longer available in Python 3.
:PEP:`3118`
buffer protocol in Python 2.6 and is no longer available in Python 3.
For a how-to guide to the new API, see :ref:`buffer`.
.. note:: (2) Descriptor objects are part of the support mechanism for new-style
Python classes. See the discussion of descriptors in the Python documentation.
See also
PEP 252, "Making Types Look More Like Classes", and PEP 253
,
See also
:PEP:`252`, "Making Types Look More Like Classes", and :PEP:`253`
,
"Subtyping Built-In Types".
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