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

gh-132346: Docs: Clarify that reference counts aren't stable between versions #132352

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Open
wants to merge 2 commits into
base: main
Choose a base branch
Loading
from
Open
Changes from 1 commit
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
Prev Previous commit
Reword and reformat a little.
  • Loading branch information
ZeroIntensity committed Apr 11, 2025
commit 3cc01bb4896d23987d97fdf4e4efe49104f9ada9
9 changes: 5 additions & 4 deletions 9 Doc/glossary.rst
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -1202,10 +1202,11 @@ Glossary
:func:`sys.getrefcount` function to return the
reference count for a particular object.

In :term:`CPython`, reference counts are not considered to be stable, well-defined
values for an object; the number of references to a Python object, and how that number
is affected by Python code, may be different between versions. Consequently, don't rely
on an object's reference count to be a value other than 0 or 1.
In :term:`CPython`, reference counts are not considered to be stable
or well-defined values; the number of references to an object, and how
that number is affected by Python code, may be different between
versions. Consequently, don't rely on an object's reference count to be
a value other than 0 or 1.

regular package
A traditional :term:`package`, such as a directory containing an
Expand Down
Loading
Morty Proxy This is a proxified and sanitized view of the page, visit original site.