On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 7:28 AM, Ervin Hegedüs <airw...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Chris, > > what I misses: currently I'm using Python 2.7.
Oh, sorry. In that case, you'll be importing "__builtin__" rather than "builtins", but the same technique works. > On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 02:48:57AM +1100, Chris Angelico wrote: >> 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 It's been years since I actually did this, so I cheated and just flipped through the docs :) But there'll be a way to create a Python function from a C function, and then you can simply stuff that into the module's dictionary. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list