Remove the module index; there aren't enough modules documented yet
for this to make sense.
Add a couple more index entries, fixed a few typos, and adjusted a few
more things for consistency.
Cater to that.
+ Major speed boost via not reading more of files than necessary. This
was no slouch before; now it screams.
+ Improve msg when giving up on a goofy future statement.
If multiple header files are processed simultaneously which include each
other, the corresponding modules mport each other. Specifically, if h2py
is invoked with sys/types.h first, later header files won't contain the
complete contents of TYPES.py.
list of files to not extract docstrings from when the -D option is
given. This isn't optimal, but I didn't want to change the semantics
of -D, and it's bad form to allow optional switch arguments.
Bumping __version__ to 1.4.
TokenEater.__init__(): Initialize __curfile to None.
__waiting(): In order to extract docstrings from the module, both the
-D flag should be set, and the __curfile should not be named in
the -X filename (i.e. it isn't in opts.nodocstrings).
set_filename(): Fixed a bug where once the first module docstring is
extracted, no subsequent module docstrings will be extracted. The
bug was that the first extraction set __freshmodule to 0, but that
flag was never reset back to 1. set_filename() is always called
when the next file is being processed, so use it to reset the
__freshmodule flag.
main(): Add support for -X/--no-docstring.
fragile. Now the leading "0x" on hex numbers are displayed as labels
and the type-in entry fields just accept the hex digits. Be sure to
strip off the "0x" string when displaying hex values too.
Also, de-string-module-ification, and other Python 2.x improvements.
found a bug here. Here's the deal:
Class PyShell derives from class OutputWindow. Method PyShell.close()
wants to invoke its parent method, but because PyShell long ago was
inherited from class PyShellEditorWindow, it invokes
PyShelEditorWindow.close(self). Now, class PyShellEditorWindow itself
derives from class OutputWindow, and inherits the close() method from
there without overriding it. Under the old rules,
PyShellEditorWindow.close would return an unbound method restricted to
the class that defined the implementation of close(), which was
OutputWindow.close. Under the new rules, the unbound method is
restricted to the class whose method was requested, that is
PyShellEditorWindow, and this was correctly trapped as an error.
This allows system libs to be weak-linked, thereby allowing us to generate functions that are only available on some OS versions without getting a NULL dereference if the function isn't available.
I published it on the web as http://www.python.org/2.1/md5sum.py
so I thought I might as well check it in.
Works with Python 1.5.2 and later.
Works like the Linux tool ``mdfsum file ...'' except it doesn't take
any options or read stdin.