Sujet : Re: Python recompile
De : jameskuyper (at) *nospam* alumni.caltech.edu (James Kuyper)
Groupes : comp.lang.c comp.lang.c++ comp.lang.pythonDate : 03. Mar 2025, 16:22:10
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vq4hf2$1brf7$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 03/03/2025 08:13,
Muttley@DastardlyHQ.org wrote:
On Sun, 2 Mar 2025 12:30:53 -0500
James Kuyper <jameskuyper@alumni.caltech.edu> wibbled:
On Sun, 02 Mar 2025 16:58:20 +0000, Muttley wrote:
>
On Sun, 2 Mar 2025 15:54:19 -0000 (UTC)
Lew Pitcher <lew.pitcher@digitalfreehold.ca> gabbled:
First off, this isn't really on-topic for comp.lang.c, as it is a question
regarding a linker, interacting
with the results of various options given to a specific compiler.
>
Is there a comp.lang.c.linker group?
>
comp.lang.c is about using the C programming language. Linkers are
independent of the programming language, and can be used to link
Without compilers and linkers a C program would just be a load of text.
Without computers, keyboards and monitors most C programs wouldn't be
much use, either. That doesn't make a malfunctioning computer monitor a
C problem. And it doesn't make a linkage problems a C problem either.
together programs written in many different languages. The subject line
and the text of the error messages indicate that it's a Python program,
so why would a group devoted to C be in any way appropriate?
If you'd taken 2 seconds to look at it you'd realise the issue was building
the Python source code which is written in C.
The indentations of the first message cross-posted to comp.lang.c and
comp.lang.c++ suggest that it was the latest in a series of earlier
messages posted somewhere else (comp.lang.python?). Those earlier
messages might have contained additional information. If that
information was relevant, it should have been included when the message
was first cross-posted to comp.lang.c or comp.lang.c++. You might be
right about it being "Python source code ... written in C", but nothing
in the messages that were posted here makes that obvious.
That sounds like a C issue to me.
If it were a C problem, then the C source code that produced the problem
should have been shown. It's hard to debug code that you can't see.