Recently, "M.-A. Lemburg" <mal@lemburg.com> said: > How about this: we add a wchar_t codec to Python and the "eu#" parser > marker. Then you could write: > > wchar_t value = NULL; > int len = 0; > if (PyArg_ParseTuple(tuple, "eu#", "wchar_t", &value, &len) < 0) > return NULL; I like it! Even though I have to do the memory management myself (and have to think of the error case) it at least looks reasonable. I'm assuming here that if I pass a StringObject it will be unicode-encoded using the default encoding, and that unicode value will then be converted to wchar_t and put in value, right? Or, in other words, passing "a.out" will do the same as passing u"a.out"... One minor misgiving is that this call will *always* copy the string, even if the internal coding of unicode objects is wchar_t. That's a bit of a nuisance, but we can try to fix that later. -- - Jack Jansen <Jack.Jansen@oratrix.com> http://www.cwi.nl/~jack - - If I can't dance I don't want to be part of your revolution -- Emma Goldman -
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