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Results 1 - 3 of 3 for no_scope (0.06 sec)
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src/cmd/cgo/doc.go
then this is unnecessary. The #cgo noescape directive may be used to tell the compiler that no Go pointers escape via the named C function. If the noescape directive is used and the C function does not handle the pointer safely, the program may crash or see memory corruption. For example: // #cgo noescape cFunctionName
Registered: Tue Nov 05 11:13:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Oct 01 22:52:54 UTC 2024 - 44K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/cmd/cgo/gcc.go
} return s } // ProcessCgoDirectives processes the import C preamble: // 1. discards all #cgo CFLAGS, LDFLAGS, nocallback and noescape directives, // so they don't make their way into _cgo_export.h. // 2. parse the nocallback and noescape directives. func (f *File) ProcessCgoDirectives() { linesIn := strings.Split(f.Preamble, "\n") linesOut := make([]string, 0, len(linesIn))
Registered: Tue Nov 05 11:13:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Wed Sep 18 15:07:34 UTC 2024 - 97.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
RELEASE.md
addition we have preliminary (non-broadcasting) support for sliced assignment to variables. In particular one can write `var[1:3].assign([1,11,111])`. * Deprecated `tf.op_scope` and `tf.variable_op_scope` in favor of a unified `tf.name_scope` and `tf.variable_scope`. The new argument order of `tf.variable_scope` is incompatible with previous versions.
Registered: Tue Nov 05 12:39:12 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Oct 22 14:33:53 UTC 2024 - 735.3K bytes - Viewed (0)