Skip to content

Navigation Menu

Sign in
Appearance settings

Search code, repositories, users, issues, pull requests...

Provide feedback

We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously.

Saved searches

Use saved searches to filter your results more quickly

Appearance settings

Commit 692c4af

Browse filesBrowse files
committed
Update README.md
1 parent 5bc9f12 commit 692c4af
Copy full SHA for 692c4af

File tree

1 file changed

+0
-8
lines changed
Filter options

1 file changed

+0
-8
lines changed

‎README.md

Copy file name to clipboardExpand all lines: README.md
-8Lines changed: 0 additions & 8 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -255,14 +255,6 @@ If the module hasn't been imported yet (i.e. it is not yet present in sys.module
255255
<b><a href="#">↥ back to top</a></b>
256256
</div>
257257

258-
## Q. How do I interface to C++ objects from Python?
259-
260-
Depending on your requirements, there are many approaches. To do this manually, begin by reading the "Extending and Embedding" document. Realize that for the Python run-time system, there isn't a whole lot of difference between C and C++ -- so the strategy of building a new Python type around a C structure (pointer) type will also work for C++ objects.
261-
262-
<div align="right">
263-
<b><a href="#">↥ back to top</a></b>
264-
</div>
265-
266258
## Q. How do I convert a number to a string?
267259

268260
To convert, e.g., the number 144 to the string '144', use the built-in function str(). If you want a hexadecimal or octal representation, use the built-in functions hex() or oct(). For fancy formatting, use the % operator on strings, e.g. "%04d" % 144 yields '0144' and "%.3f" % (1/3.0) yields '0.333'. See the library reference manual for details.

0 commit comments

Comments
0 (0)
Morty Proxy This is a proxified and sanitized view of the page, visit original site.