diff DEPENDENCIES/mingw32/Python27/include/dictobject.h @ 87:2a2c65a20a8b

Add Python libs and headers
author Chris Cannam
date Wed, 25 Feb 2015 14:05:22 +0000
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--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/DEPENDENCIES/mingw32/Python27/include/dictobject.h	Wed Feb 25 14:05:22 2015 +0000
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+#ifndef Py_DICTOBJECT_H
+#define Py_DICTOBJECT_H
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+extern "C" {
+#endif
+
+
+/* Dictionary object type -- mapping from hashable object to object */
+
+/* The distribution includes a separate file, Objects/dictnotes.txt,
+   describing explorations into dictionary design and optimization.
+   It covers typical dictionary use patterns, the parameters for
+   tuning dictionaries, and several ideas for possible optimizations.
+*/
+
+/*
+There are three kinds of slots in the table:
+
+1. Unused.  me_key == me_value == NULL
+   Does not hold an active (key, value) pair now and never did.  Unused can
+   transition to Active upon key insertion.  This is the only case in which
+   me_key is NULL, and is each slot's initial state.
+
+2. Active.  me_key != NULL and me_key != dummy and me_value != NULL
+   Holds an active (key, value) pair.  Active can transition to Dummy upon
+   key deletion.  This is the only case in which me_value != NULL.
+
+3. Dummy.  me_key == dummy and me_value == NULL
+   Previously held an active (key, value) pair, but that was deleted and an
+   active pair has not yet overwritten the slot.  Dummy can transition to
+   Active upon key insertion.  Dummy slots cannot be made Unused again
+   (cannot have me_key set to NULL), else the probe sequence in case of
+   collision would have no way to know they were once active.
+
+Note: .popitem() abuses the me_hash field of an Unused or Dummy slot to
+hold a search finger.  The me_hash field of Unused or Dummy slots has no
+meaning otherwise.
+*/
+
+/* PyDict_MINSIZE is the minimum size of a dictionary.  This many slots are
+ * allocated directly in the dict object (in the ma_smalltable member).
+ * It must be a power of 2, and at least 4.  8 allows dicts with no more
+ * than 5 active entries to live in ma_smalltable (and so avoid an
+ * additional malloc); instrumentation suggested this suffices for the
+ * majority of dicts (consisting mostly of usually-small instance dicts and
+ * usually-small dicts created to pass keyword arguments).
+ */
+#define PyDict_MINSIZE 8
+
+typedef struct {
+    /* Cached hash code of me_key.  Note that hash codes are C longs.
+     * We have to use Py_ssize_t instead because dict_popitem() abuses
+     * me_hash to hold a search finger.
+     */
+    Py_ssize_t me_hash;
+    PyObject *me_key;
+    PyObject *me_value;
+} PyDictEntry;
+
+/*
+To ensure the lookup algorithm terminates, there must be at least one Unused
+slot (NULL key) in the table.
+The value ma_fill is the number of non-NULL keys (sum of Active and Dummy);
+ma_used is the number of non-NULL, non-dummy keys (== the number of non-NULL
+values == the number of Active items).
+To avoid slowing down lookups on a near-full table, we resize the table when
+it's two-thirds full.
+*/
+typedef struct _dictobject PyDictObject;
+struct _dictobject {
+    PyObject_HEAD
+    Py_ssize_t ma_fill;  /* # Active + # Dummy */
+    Py_ssize_t ma_used;  /* # Active */
+
+    /* The table contains ma_mask + 1 slots, and that's a power of 2.
+     * We store the mask instead of the size because the mask is more
+     * frequently needed.
+     */
+    Py_ssize_t ma_mask;
+
+    /* ma_table points to ma_smalltable for small tables, else to
+     * additional malloc'ed memory.  ma_table is never NULL!  This rule
+     * saves repeated runtime null-tests in the workhorse getitem and
+     * setitem calls.
+     */
+    PyDictEntry *ma_table;
+    PyDictEntry *(*ma_lookup)(PyDictObject *mp, PyObject *key, long hash);
+    PyDictEntry ma_smalltable[PyDict_MINSIZE];
+};
+
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDict_Type;
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDictIterKey_Type;
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDictIterValue_Type;
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDictIterItem_Type;
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDictKeys_Type;
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDictItems_Type;
+PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyDictValues_Type;
+
+#define PyDict_Check(op) \
+                 PyType_FastSubclass(Py_TYPE(op), Py_TPFLAGS_DICT_SUBCLASS)
+#define PyDict_CheckExact(op) (Py_TYPE(op) == &PyDict_Type)
+#define PyDictKeys_Check(op) (Py_TYPE(op) == &PyDictKeys_Type)
+#define PyDictItems_Check(op) (Py_TYPE(op) == &PyDictItems_Type)
+#define PyDictValues_Check(op) (Py_TYPE(op) == &PyDictValues_Type)
+/* This excludes Values, since they are not sets. */
+# define PyDictViewSet_Check(op) \
+    (PyDictKeys_Check(op) || PyDictItems_Check(op))
+
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_New(void);
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_GetItem(PyObject *mp, PyObject *key);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_SetItem(PyObject *mp, PyObject *key, PyObject *item);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_DelItem(PyObject *mp, PyObject *key);
+PyAPI_FUNC(void) PyDict_Clear(PyObject *mp);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_Next(
+    PyObject *mp, Py_ssize_t *pos, PyObject **key, PyObject **value);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyDict_Next(
+    PyObject *mp, Py_ssize_t *pos, PyObject **key, PyObject **value, long *hash);
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_Keys(PyObject *mp);
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_Values(PyObject *mp);
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_Items(PyObject *mp);
+PyAPI_FUNC(Py_ssize_t) PyDict_Size(PyObject *mp);
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_Copy(PyObject *mp);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_Contains(PyObject *mp, PyObject *key);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyDict_Contains(PyObject *mp, PyObject *key, long hash);
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) _PyDict_NewPresized(Py_ssize_t minused);
+PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyDict_MaybeUntrack(PyObject *mp);
+
+/* PyDict_Update(mp, other) is equivalent to PyDict_Merge(mp, other, 1). */
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_Update(PyObject *mp, PyObject *other);
+
+/* PyDict_Merge updates/merges from a mapping object (an object that
+   supports PyMapping_Keys() and PyObject_GetItem()).  If override is true,
+   the last occurrence of a key wins, else the first.  The Python
+   dict.update(other) is equivalent to PyDict_Merge(dict, other, 1).
+*/
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_Merge(PyObject *mp,
+                                   PyObject *other,
+                                   int override);
+
+/* PyDict_MergeFromSeq2 updates/merges from an iterable object producing
+   iterable objects of length 2.  If override is true, the last occurrence
+   of a key wins, else the first.  The Python dict constructor dict(seq2)
+   is equivalent to dict={}; PyDict_MergeFromSeq(dict, seq2, 1).
+*/
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_MergeFromSeq2(PyObject *d,
+                                           PyObject *seq2,
+                                           int override);
+
+PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyDict_GetItemString(PyObject *dp, const char *key);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_SetItemString(PyObject *dp, const char *key, PyObject *item);
+PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyDict_DelItemString(PyObject *dp, const char *key);
+
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+}
+#endif
+#endif /* !Py_DICTOBJECT_H */