"Portability" (was: How to create a Unix Domain Socket?)
Cameron Laird
claird at starbase.neosoft.com
Wed Oct 18 14:07:49 EDT 2000
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Wed Oct 18 14:07:49 EDT 2000
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In article <8skj2r$3i9k$1 at nntp6.u.washington.edu>, Donn Cave <donn at u.washington.edu> wrote: . . . >underlying C API pretty closely. The Python documentation tends >to be mostly concerned with the Python-specific issues. Rather >than look there for every detail of the API, you should refer >to the documentation on the host system, e.g., "man socket", which >will be more complete (and more accurate when there are differences >between one platform and another, as there are with sockets.) > > Donn Cave, donn at u.washington.edu I'm going to grumble briefly--or perhaps ask for help. I'm getting tired of calling Python "wonderfully por- table" or whatever it is I say when I'm acting as an advocate. I know what I mean by it, but for most people, most of the time, Python's not quite up to the portability of C, and almost every other language is equally tender on the point. So: what's a good word to express, "available on lots of platforms, more or less, and, whatever the semantics are on any particular one, there's an entertaining story to explain why it's so"? -- Cameron Laird <claird at NeoSoft.com> Business: http://www.Phaseit.net Personal: http://starbase.neosoft.com/~claird/home.html
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