staticforward bites the dust.

The staticforward define was needed to support certain broken C
compilers (notably SCO ODT 3.0, perhaps early AIX as well) botched the
static keyword when it was used with a forward declaration of a static
initialized structure.  Standard C allows the forward declaration with
static, and we've decided to stop catering to broken C compilers.  (In
fact, we expect that the compilers are all fixed eight years later.)

I'm leaving staticforward and statichere defined in object.h as
static.  This is only for backwards compatibility with C extensions
that might still use it.

XXX I haven't updated the documentation.
This commit is contained in:
Jeremy Hylton 2002-07-17 16:30:39 +00:00
parent 9cb64b954a
commit 938ace69a0
61 changed files with 126 additions and 222 deletions

View file

@ -61,9 +61,9 @@ typedef struct {
} PySSLObject;
staticforward PyTypeObject PySSL_Type;
staticforward PyObject *PySSL_SSLwrite(PySSLObject *self, PyObject *args);
staticforward PyObject *PySSL_SSLread(PySSLObject *self, PyObject *args);
static PyTypeObject PySSL_Type;
static PyObject *PySSL_SSLwrite(PySSLObject *self, PyObject *args);
static PyObject *PySSL_SSLread(PySSLObject *self, PyObject *args);
#define PySSLObject_Check(v) ((v)->ob_type == &PySSL_Type)
@ -354,7 +354,7 @@ static PyObject *PySSL_getattr(PySSLObject *self, char *name)
return Py_FindMethod(PySSLMethods, (PyObject *)self, name);
}
staticforward PyTypeObject PySSL_Type = {
static PyTypeObject PySSL_Type = {
PyObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL)
0, /*ob_size*/
"socket.SSL", /*tp_name*/