Hi Chris, what I misses: currently I'm using Python 2.7.
On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 02:48:57AM +1100, Chris Angelico wrote: > On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 2:29 AM, Ervin Hegedüs <airw...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > >> Sounds to me like the easiest way would be to inject into the > >> builtins. You should be able to import the builtins module from your C > >> code, and then stuff some extra attributes into it; they'll be > >> automatically available to the script, same as the "normal" built-in > >> names like int, super, and ValueError. > > > > well, sounds good - this solution would be right for me. Could > > you show me a good example and/or documentation about this? I've > > looked up, but "python extend built-in module" is may be too > > simple expression :). > > It'd look broadly like this: > > /* initialize the interpreter, yada yada */ > PyObject *builtins = PyImport_ImportModule("builtins"); > PyModule_AddFunctions(builtins, mymodule_methods); PyModule_AddFunction was introduced in Python 3.5. Most of stable Linux distribution has Python 3.4 > instead of the current module initialization. You import the name > 'builtins', stuff some extra stuff into it, and then go on your merry > way. It should be reasonably easy. Is there any other solution to add functions to builtins? Thanks, a. -- I � UTF-8 -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list