I think that "C" encoding is what I need, however I run into an odd problem. If I use the following C code
static PyObject* foo(PyObject *self, PyObject *args, PyObject *kwrds) { char a, b; char *kwlist[] = {"a", "b", NULL}; if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwrds, "|CC", kwlist, &a, &b)) return NULL; ... then the following works: >>> foo('a') >>> foo('a','b') >>> foo(a='a',b='b') but the following fails: >>> foo(b='b') RuntimeError: impossible<bad format char>: 'CC' Is this error-message expected? On Nov 30, 10:19 pm, casevh <cas...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Nov 30, 1:04 pm, Joachim Dahl <dahl.joac...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > Obviously the name of the C function and the char variable cannot both > > be foo, > > so the C code should be: > > > static PyObject* foo(PyObject *self, PyObject *args, PyObject *kwrds) > > { > > char foochar; > > char *kwlist[] = {"foochar", NULL}; > > if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwrds, "c", kwlist, > > &foochar)) > > return NULL; > > ... > > > The question remains the same: why can't I pass a single character > > argument to this function under Python3.1? > > > Thanks. > > Joachim > > > On Nov 30, 9:52 pm, Joachim Dahl <dahl.joac...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > I am updating an extension module from Python2.6 to Python3. > > > > I used to pass character codes to the extension module, for example, I > > > would write: > > > > >>> foo('X') > > > > with the corresponding C extension routine defined as follows: > > > static PyObject* foo(PyObject *self, PyObject *args, PyObject *kwrds) > > > { > > > char foo; > > > char *kwlist[] = {"foo", NULL}; > > > if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, kwrds, "c", kwlist, &foo)) > > > return NULL; > > > ... > > > > In Python3.0 this also works, but in Python3.1 I get the following > > > error: > > > TypeError: argument 1 must be a byte string of length 1, not str > > > > and I seem to be supposed to write>>> foo(b'X') > > > > instead. From the Python C API, I have not been able to explain this > > > new behavior. > > > What is the correct way to pass a single character argument to > > > Python3.1 > > > extension modules?- Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text - > > Python 3.1 uses "c" (lowercase c) to parse a single character from a > byte-string and uses "C" (uppercase c) to parse a single character > from a Unicode string. I don't think there is an easy way to accept a > character from both. > > HTH, > > casevh -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list