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9ece4a5057
There are plenty of legitimate scripts in the tree that begin with a `#!`, but also a few that seem to be marked executable by mistake. Found them with this command -- it gets executable files known to Git, filters to the ones that don't start with a `#!`, and then unmarks them as executable: $ git ls-files --stage \ | perl -lane 'print $F[3] if (!/^100644/)' \ | while read f; do head -c2 "$f" | grep -qxF '#!' \ || chmod a-x "$f"; \ done Looking at the list by hand confirms that we didn't sweep up any files that should have the executable bit after all. In particular * The `.psd` files are images from Photoshop. * The `.bat` files sure look like things that can be run. But we have lots of other `.bat` files, and they don't have this bit set, so it must not be needed for them. Automerge-Triggered-By: @benjaminp |
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libmpdec | ||
tests | ||
_decimal.c | ||
docstrings.h | ||
README.txt |
About ===== _decimal.c is a wrapper for the libmpdec library. libmpdec is a fast C library for correctly-rounded arbitrary precision decimal floating point arithmetic. It is a complete implementation of Mike Cowlishaw/IBM's General Decimal Arithmetic Specification. Build process for the module ============================ As usual, the build process for _decimal.so is driven by setup.py in the top level directory. setup.py autodetects the following build configurations: 1) x64 - 64-bit Python, x86_64 processor (AMD, Intel) 2) uint128 - 64-bit Python, compiler provides __uint128_t (gcc) 3) ansi64 - 64-bit Python, ANSI C 4) ppro - 32-bit Python, x86 CPU, PentiumPro or later 5) ansi32 - 32-bit Python, ANSI C 6) ansi-legacy - 32-bit Python, compiler without uint64_t 7) universal - Mac OS only (multi-arch) It is possible to override autodetection by exporting: PYTHON_DECIMAL_WITH_MACHINE=value, where value is one of the above options. NOTE ==== decimal.so is not built from a static libmpdec.a since doing so led to failures on AIX (user report) and Windows (mixing static and dynamic CRTs causes locale problems and more).