#6421: The self argument of module-level PyCFunctions is now a reference to the module object.
diff --git a/Doc/extending/extending.rst b/Doc/extending/extending.rst
index 7e680db..497180a 100644
--- a/Doc/extending/extending.rst
+++ b/Doc/extending/extending.rst
@@ -82,10 +82,8 @@
function. The C function always has two arguments, conventionally named *self*
and *args*.
-The *self* argument is only used when the C function implements a built-in
-method, not a function. In the example, *self* will always be a *NULL* pointer,
-since we are defining a function, not a method. (This is done so that the
-interpreter doesn't have to understand two different types of C functions.)
+The *self* argument points to the module object for module-level functions;
+for a method it would point to the object instance.
The *args* argument will be a pointer to a Python tuple object containing the
arguments. Each item of the tuple corresponds to an argument in the call's