port of GCC (same as cygwin in no-cygwin mode).
-:mod:`distutils.emxccompiler` --- OS/2 EMX Compiler
-===================================================
-
-.. module:: distutils.emxccompiler
- :synopsis: OS/2 EMX Compiler support
-
-
-This module provides the EMXCCompiler class, a subclass of
-:class:`UnixCCompiler` that handles the EMX port of the GNU C compiler to OS/2.
-
-
:mod:`distutils.archive_util` --- Archiving utilities
======================================================
de-facto standard for portable advanced terminal handling.
While curses is most widely used in the Unix environment, versions are available
-for DOS, OS/2, and possibly other systems as well. This extension module is
+for Windows, DOS, and possibly other systems as well. This extension module is
designed to match the API of ncurses, an open-source curses library hosted on
Linux and the BSD variants of Unix.
Fork a child process. Return ``0`` in the child and the child's process id in the
parent. If an error occurs :exc:`OSError` is raised.
- Note that some platforms including FreeBSD <= 6.3, Cygwin and OS/2 EMX have
+ Note that some platforms including FreeBSD <= 6.3 and Cygwin have
known issues when using fork() from a thread.
.. warning::
:manpage:`times(2)` or the corresponding Windows Platform API documentation.
On Windows, only :attr:`user` and :attr:`system` are known; the other
attributes are zero.
- On OS/2, only :attr:`elapsed` is known; the other attributes are zero.
Availability: Unix, Windows.
This module provides access to the BSD *socket* interface. It is available on
-all modern Unix systems, Windows, MacOS, OS/2, and probably additional
-platforms.
+all modern Unix systems, Windows, MacOS, and probably additional platforms.
.. note::
documented beyond this mention. There's little need to document these.
:mod:`ntpath`
- --- Implementation of :mod:`os.path` on Win32, Win64, WinCE, and OS/2 platforms.
+ --- Implementation of :mod:`os.path` on Win32, Win64, and WinCE platforms.
:mod:`posixpath`
--- Implementation of :mod:`os.path` on POSIX.