in response to a OS X compiler problem, mal wrote: > You could try to enable the macro at the top of unicodectype.c: > > #if defined(macintosh) || defined(MS_WIN64) > /*XXX This was required to avoid a compiler error for an early Win64 > * cross-compiler that was used for the port to Win64. When the platform is > * released the MS_WIN64 inclusion here should no longer be necessary. > */ > /* This probably needs to be defined for some other compilers too. It breaks the > ** 5000-label switch statement up into switches with around 1000 cases each. > */ > #define BREAK_SWITCH_UP return 1; } switch (ch) { > #else > #define BREAK_SWITCH_UP /* nothing */ > #endif > > If it does compile with the work-around enabled, please > give us a set of defines which identify the compiler and > platform so we can enable it per default for your setup. I have a 500k "negative patch" sitting on my machine which removes most of unicodectype.c, replacing it with a small data table (based on the same unidb work as yesterdays unicodedatabase patch). out </F> # dump all known unicode data import unicodedata for i in range(65536): char = unichr(i) data = ( # ctype predicates char.isalnum(), char.isalpha(), char.isdecimal(), char.isdigit(), char.islower(), char.isnumeric(), char.isspace(), char.istitle(), char.isupper(), # ctype mappings char.lower(), char.upper(), char.title(), # properties unicodedata.digit(char, None), unicodedata.numeric(char, None), unicodedata.decimal(char, None), unicodedata.category(char), unicodedata.bidirectional(char), unicodedata.decomposition(char), unicodedata.mirrored(char), unicodedata.combining(char) )
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