return -1;
}
-.. XXX tp_compare is dead; need to rewrite for tp_richcompare!
-
- Object Comparison
- -----------------
-
- ::
-
- cmpfunc tp_compare;
-
- The :attr:`tp_compare` handler is called when comparisons are needed and the
- object does not implement the specific rich comparison method which matches the
- requested comparison. (It is always used if defined and the
- :cfunc:`PyObject_Compare` or :cfunc:`PyObject_Cmp` functions are used, or if
- :func:`cmp` is used from Python.) It is analogous to the :meth:`__cmp__` method.
- This function should return ``-1`` if *obj1* is less than *obj2*, ``0`` if they
- are equal, and ``1`` if *obj1* is greater than *obj2*. (It was previously
- allowed to return arbitrary negative or positive integers for less than and
- greater than, respectively; as of Python 2.2, this is no longer allowed. In the
- future, other return values may be assigned a different meaning.)
-
- A :attr:`tp_compare` handler may raise an exception. In this case it should
- return a negative value. The caller has to test for the exception using
- :cfunc:`PyErr_Occurred`.
-
- Here is a sample implementation::
-
- static int
- newdatatype_compare(newdatatypeobject * obj1, newdatatypeobject * obj2)
- {
- long result;
-
- if (obj1->obj_UnderlyingDatatypePtr->size <
- obj2->obj_UnderlyingDatatypePtr->size) {
- result = -1;
- }
- else if (obj1->obj_UnderlyingDatatypePtr->size >
- obj2->obj_UnderlyingDatatypePtr->size) {
- result = 1;
- }
- else {
- result = 0;
- }
- return result;
- }
+Object Comparison
+-----------------
+
+::
+
+ richcmpfunc tp_richcompare;
+
+The :attr:`tp_richcompare` handler is called when comparisons are needed. It is
+analogous to the :ref:`rich comparison methods <richcmpfuncs>`, like
+:meth:`__lt__`, and also called by :cfunc:`PyObject_RichCompare` and
+:cfunc:`PyObject_RichCompareBool`.
+
+This function is called with two Python objects and the operator as arguments,
+where the operator is one of ``Py_EQ``, ``Py_NE``, ``Py_LE``, ``Py_GT``,
+``Py_LT`` or ``Py_GT``. It should compare the two objects with respect to the
+specified operator and return ``Py_True`` or ``Py_False`` if the comparison is
+successfull, ``Py_NotImplemented`` to indicate that comparison is not
+implemented and the other object's comparison method should be tried, or *NULL*
+if an exception was set.
+
+Here is a sample implementation, for a datatype that is considered equal if the
+size of an internal pointer is equal::
+
+ static int
+ newdatatype_richcmp(PyObject *obj1, PyObject *obj2, int op)
+ {
+ PyObject *result;
+ int c, size1, size2;
+
+ /* code to make sure that both arguments are of type
+ newdatatype omitted */
+
+ size1 = obj1->obj_UnderlyingDatatypePtr->size;
+ size2 = obj2->obj_UnderlyingDatatypePtr->size;
+
+ switch (op) {
+ case Py_LT: c = size1 < size2; break;
+ case Py_LE: c = size1 <= size2; break;
+ case Py_EQ: c = size1 == size2; break;
+ case Py_NE: c = size1 != size2; break;
+ case Py_GT: c = size1 > size2; break;
+ case Py_GE: c = size1 >= size2; break;
+ }
+ result = c ? Py_True : Py_False;
+ Py_INCREF(result);
+ return result;
+ }
Abstract Protocol Support