Guido van Rossum wrote: ... >>From Christian's post I can't tell if he wants his types to be dynamic > or static (i.e. if he's creating an arbitrary number of them at > run-time or only a fixed number that's known at compile-time). I'm not absolutely sure what I meant. Actually, I wanted to cache existing methods, which are known at compile-time. At run-time, they would be replaced for derived types. But a run-time solution might make sense, to generate very fast class variables, maybe. > Here's a hack. > > For static extensions, you could extend one of the extension structs, > e.g. PyMappingMethods (which is the smallest and also least likely to > grow new methods), with additional fields. Then you'd have to know > whether you can access those extra fields; I suggest checking for the > metatype. A few casts and you're done. > > For dynamic extensions, you might be able to do the same: after > type_new() has given you an object, allocate memory for an extended > PyMappingMethods struct, copy the existing PyMappingMethods struct > into it (if it exists), and replace the pointer. Then in your > deallocation function, make sure to free the pointer. > > Hope this helps in the short run. Thanks a lot. Yes, it helps in the short run, but stays a hack. I'm trying to find a way that allows meta-types to support slots for its type instances without introducing too much special-casing. What I do not understand yet is who uses the variable type part and in which way. I'd like to collaborate with it. ciao - chris -- Christian Tismer :^) <mailto:tismer@tismer.com> Mission Impossible 5oftware : Have a break! Take a ride on Python's Johannes-Niemeyer-Weg 9a : *Starship* http://starship.python.net/ 14109 Berlin : PGP key -> http://wwwkeys.pgp.net/ work +49 30 89 09 53 34 home +49 30 802 86 56 pager +49 173 24 18 776 PGP 0x57F3BF04 9064 F4E1 D754 C2FF 1619 305B C09C 5A3B 57F3 BF04 whom do you want to sponsor today? http://www.stackless.com/
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4