Update references specifying "Macintosh" to mean OS X semantics and not Mac OS

9.

Applies patch #1095802.  Thanks Jack Jansen.
This commit is contained in:
Brett Cannon 2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00:00
parent 22c0706a58
commit 7706c2da14
17 changed files with 191 additions and 622 deletions

View file

@ -239,9 +239,8 @@
program name (set by \cfunction{Py_SetProgramName()} above) and some
environment variables. The returned string consists of a series of
directory names separated by a platform dependent delimiter
character. The delimiter character is \character{:} on \UNIX,
\character{;} on Windows, and \character{\e n} (the \ASCII{}
newline character) on Macintosh. The returned string points into
character. The delimiter character is \character{:} on \UNIX and Mac OS X,
\character{;} on Windows. The returned string points into
static storage; the caller should not modify its value. The value
is available to Python code as the list
\code{sys.path}\withsubitem{(in module sys)}{\ttindex{path}}, which
@ -272,7 +271,7 @@
this is formed from the ``official'' name of the operating system,
converted to lower case, followed by the major revision number;
e.g., for Solaris 2.x, which is also known as SunOS 5.x, the value
is \code{'sunos5'}. On Macintosh, it is \code{'mac'}. On Windows,
is \code{'sunos5'}. On Mac OS X, it is \code{'darwin'}. On Windows,
it is \code{'win'}. The returned string points into static storage;
the caller should not modify its value. The value is available to
Python code as \code{sys.platform}.