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Merged revisions 51434-53004 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r51434 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-21 20:20:10 +0200 (Mon, 21 Aug 2006) | 1 line Fix a couple of ssize-t issues reported by Alexander Belopolsky on python-dev ........ r51439 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-21 21:47:08 +0200 (Mon, 21 Aug 2006) | 6 lines Patch #1542451: disallow continue anywhere under a finally I'm undecided if this should be backported to 2.5 or 2.5.1. Armin suggested to wait (I'm of the same opinion). Thomas W thinks it's fine to go in 2.5. ........ r51443 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-21 22:16:24 +0200 (Mon, 21 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Handle a few more error conditions. Klocwork 301 and 302. Will backport. ........ r51450 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-22 00:21:19 +0200 (Tue, 22 Aug 2006) | 5 lines Patch #1541585: fix buffer overrun when performing repr() on a unicode string in a build with wide unicode (UCS-4) support. This code could be improved, so add an XXX comment. ........ r51456 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-22 01:44:48 +0200 (Tue, 22 Aug 2006) | 1 line Try to get the windows bots working again with the new peephole.c ........ r51461 | anthony.baxter | 2006-08-22 09:36:59 +0200 (Tue, 22 Aug 2006) | 1 line patch for documentation for recent uuid changes (from ping) ........ r51473 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-22 15:56:56 +0200 (Tue, 22 Aug 2006) | 1 line Alexander Belopolsky pointed out that pos is a size_t ........ r51489 | jeremy.hylton | 2006-08-22 22:46:00 +0200 (Tue, 22 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Expose column offset information in parse trees. ........ r51497 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-23 01:13:43 +0200 (Wed, 23 Aug 2006) | 1 line Move functional howto into trunk ........ r51515 | jeremy.hylton | 2006-08-23 20:37:43 +0200 (Wed, 23 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Baby steps towards better tests for tokenize ........ r51525 | alex.martelli | 2006-08-23 22:42:02 +0200 (Wed, 23 Aug 2006) | 6 lines x**2 should about equal x*x (including for a float x such that the result is inf) but didn't; added a test to test_float to verify that, and ignored the ERANGE value for errno in the pow operation to make the new test pass (with help from Marilyn Davis at the Google Python Sprint -- thanks!). ........ r51526 | jeremy.hylton | 2006-08-23 23:14:03 +0200 (Wed, 23 Aug 2006) | 20 lines Bug fixes large and small for tokenize. Small: Always generate a NL or NEWLINE token following a COMMENT token. The old code did not generate an NL token if the comment was on a line by itself. Large: The output of untokenize() will now match the input exactly if it is passed the full token sequence. The old, crufty output is still generated if a limited input sequence is provided, where limited means that it does not include position information for tokens. Remaining bug: There is no CONTINUATION token (\) so there is no way for untokenize() to handle such code. Also, expanded the number of doctests in hopes of eventually removing the old-style tests that compare against a golden file. Bug fix candidate for Python 2.5.1. (Sigh.) ........ r51527 | jeremy.hylton | 2006-08-23 23:26:46 +0200 (Wed, 23 Aug 2006) | 5 lines Replace dead code with an assert. Now that COMMENT tokens are reliably followed by NL or NEWLINE, there is never a need to add extra newlines in untokenize. ........ r51530 | alex.martelli | 2006-08-24 00:17:59 +0200 (Thu, 24 Aug 2006) | 7 lines Reverting the patch that tried to fix the issue whereby x**2 raises OverflowError while x*x succeeds and produces infinity; apparently these inconsistencies cannot be fixed across ``all'' platforms and there's a widespread feeling that therefore ``every'' platform should keep suffering forevermore. Ah well. ........ r51565 | thomas.wouters | 2006-08-24 20:40:20 +0200 (Thu, 24 Aug 2006) | 6 lines Fix SF bug #1545837: array.array borks on deepcopy. array.__deepcopy__() needs to take an argument, even if it doesn't actually use it. Will backport to 2.5 and 2.4 (if applicable.) ........ r51580 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-08-25 02:03:34 +0200 (Fri, 25 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1545507: Exclude ctypes package in Win64 MSI file. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r51589 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-25 03:52:49 +0200 (Fri, 25 Aug 2006) | 1 line importing types is not necessary if we use isinstance ........ r51604 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-25 09:27:33 +0200 (Fri, 25 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Port _ctypes.pyd to win64 on AMD64. ........ r51605 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-25 09:34:51 +0200 (Fri, 25 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Add missing file for _ctypes.pyd port to win64 on AMD64. ........ r51606 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-25 11:26:33 +0200 (Fri, 25 Aug 2006) | 6 lines Build _ctypes.pyd for win AMD64 into the MSVC project file. Since MSVC doesn't know about .asm files, a helper batch file is needed to find ml64.exe in predefined locations. The helper script hardcodes the path to the MS Platform SDK. ........ r51608 | armin.rigo | 2006-08-25 14:44:28 +0200 (Fri, 25 Aug 2006) | 4 lines The regular expression engine in '_sre' can segfault when interpreting bogus bytecode. It is unclear whether this is a real bug or a "won't fix" case like bogus_code_obj.py. ........ r51617 | tim.peters | 2006-08-26 00:05:39 +0200 (Sat, 26 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r51618 | tim.peters | 2006-08-26 00:06:44 +0200 (Sat, 26 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r51619 | tim.peters | 2006-08-26 00:26:21 +0200 (Sat, 26 Aug 2006) | 3 lines A new test here relied on preserving invisible trailing whitespace in expected output. Stop that. ........ r51624 | jack.diederich | 2006-08-26 20:42:06 +0200 (Sat, 26 Aug 2006) | 4 lines - Move functions common to all path modules into genericpath.py and have the OS speicifc path modules import them. - Have os2emxpath import common functions fron ntpath instead of using copies ........ r51642 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-29 07:40:58 +0200 (Tue, 29 Aug 2006) | 1 line Fix a couple of typos. ........ r51647 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2006-08-29 12:34:12 +0200 (Tue, 29 Aug 2006) | 5 lines Fix a buglet in the error reporting (SF bug report #1546372). This should probably go into Python 2.5 or 2.5.1 as well. ........ r51663 | armin.rigo | 2006-08-31 10:51:06 +0200 (Thu, 31 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Doc fix: hashlib objects don't always return a digest of 16 bytes. Backport candidate for 2.5. ........ r51664 | nick.coghlan | 2006-08-31 14:00:43 +0200 (Thu, 31 Aug 2006) | 1 line Fix the wrongheaded implementation of context management in the decimal module and add unit tests. (python-dev discussion is ongoing regarding what we do about Python 2.5) ........ r51665 | nick.coghlan | 2006-08-31 14:51:25 +0200 (Thu, 31 Aug 2006) | 1 line Remove the old decimal context management tests from test_contextlib (guess who didn't run the test suite before committing...) ........ r51669 | brett.cannon | 2006-08-31 20:54:26 +0200 (Thu, 31 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Make sure memory is properly cleaned up in file_init. Backport candidate. ........ r51671 | brett.cannon | 2006-08-31 23:47:52 +0200 (Thu, 31 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Fix comment about indentation level in C files. ........ r51674 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-01 00:42:37 +0200 (Fri, 01 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Have pre-existing C files use 8 spaces indents (to match old PEP 7 style), but have all new files use 4 spaces (to match current PEP 7 style). ........ r51676 | fred.drake | 2006-09-01 05:57:19 +0200 (Fri, 01 Sep 2006) | 3 lines - SF patch #1550263: Enhance and correct unittest docs - various minor cleanups for improved consistency ........ r51677 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-02 00:30:52 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 2 lines evalfile() should be execfile(). ........ r51681 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-02 04:43:17 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 1 line SF #1547931, fix typo (missing and). Will backport to 2.5 ........ r51683 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-02 04:50:35 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 1 line Bug #1548092: fix curses.tparm seg fault on invalid input. Needs backport to 2.5.1 and earlier. ........ r51684 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-02 04:58:13 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1550714: fix SystemError from itertools.tee on negative value for n. Needs backport to 2.5.1 and earlier. ........ r51685 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-02 05:54:17 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 1 line Make decimal.ContextManager a private implementation detail of decimal.localcontext() ........ r51686 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-02 06:04:18 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 1 line Further corrections to the decimal module context management documentation ........ r51688 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-09-02 19:07:23 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix documentation nits for decimal context managers. ........ r51690 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-02 20:51:34 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add missing word in comment ........ r51691 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-02 21:40:19 +0200 (Sat, 02 Sep 2006) | 7 lines Hmm, this test has failed at least twice recently on the OpenBSD and Debian sparc buildbots. Since this goes through a lot of tests and hits the disk a lot it could be slow (especially if NFS is involved). I'm not sure if that's the problem, but printing periodic msgs shouldn't hurt. The code was stolen from test_compiler. ........ r51693 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-03 03:02:00 +0200 (Sun, 03 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix final documentation nits before backporting decimal module fixes to 2.5 ........ r51694 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-03 03:06:07 +0200 (Sun, 03 Sep 2006) | 1 line Typo fix for decimal docs ........ r51697 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-03 03:20:46 +0200 (Sun, 03 Sep 2006) | 1 line NEWS entry on trunk for decimal module changes ........ r51704 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-09-04 17:32:48 +0200 (Mon, 04 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix endcase for str.rpartition() ........ r51716 | tim.peters | 2006-09-05 04:18:09 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 12 lines "Conceptual" merge of rev 51711 from the 2.5 branch. i_divmod(): As discussed on Python-Dev, changed the overflow checking to live happily with recent gcc optimizations that assume signed integer arithmetic never overflows. This differs from the corresponding change on the 2.5 and 2.4 branches, using a less obscure approach, but one that /may/ tickle platform idiocies in their definitions of LONG_MIN. The 2.4 + 2.5 change avoided introducing a dependence on LONG_MIN, at the cost of substantially goofier code. ........ r51717 | tim.peters | 2006-09-05 04:21:19 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r51719 | tim.peters | 2006-09-05 04:22:17 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r51720 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 04:24:03 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix SF bug #1546288, crash in dict_equal. ........ r51721 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 04:25:41 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix SF #1552093, eval docstring typo (3 ps in mapping) ........ r51724 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 04:35:08 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line This was found by Guido AFAIK on p3yk (sic) branch. ........ r51725 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 04:36:20 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add a NEWS entry for str.rpartition() change ........ r51728 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 04:57:01 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line Patch #1540470, for OpenBSD 4.0. Backport candidate for 2.[34]. ........ r51729 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 05:53:08 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 12 lines Bug #1520864 (again): unpacking singleton tuples in list comprehensions and generator expressions (x for x, in ... ) works again. Sigh, I only fixed for loops the first time, not list comps and genexprs too. I couldn't find any more unpacking cases where there is a similar bug lurking. This code should be refactored to eliminate the duplication. I'm sure the listcomp/genexpr code can be refactored. I'm not sure if the for loop can re-use any of the same code though. Will backport to 2.5 (the only place it matters). ........ r51731 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 05:58:26 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add a comment about some refactoring. (There's probably more that should be done.) I will reformat this file in the next checkin due to the inconsistent tabs/spaces. ........ r51732 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-05 06:00:12 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line M-x untabify ........ r51737 | hyeshik.chang | 2006-09-05 14:07:09 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 7 lines Fix a few bugs on cjkcodecs found by Oren Tirosh: - gbk and gb18030 codec now handle U+30FB KATAKANA MIDDLE DOT correctly. - iso2022_jp_2 codec now encodes into G0 for KS X 1001, GB2312 codepoints to conform the standard. - iso2022_jp_3 and iso2022_jp_2004 codec can encode JIS X 2013:2 codepoints now. ........ r51738 | hyeshik.chang | 2006-09-05 14:14:57 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix a typo: 2013 -> 0213 ........ r51740 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-05 14:44:58 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1552618: change docs of dict.has_key() to reflect recommendation to use "in". ........ r51742 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-05 15:02:40 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line Rearrange example a bit, and show rpartition() when separator is not found ........ r51744 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-05 15:15:41 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1525469] SimpleXMLRPCServer still uses the sys.exc_{value,type} module-level globals instead of calling sys.exc_info(). Reported by Russell Warren ........ r51745 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-05 15:19:18 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 3 lines [Bug #1526834] Fix crash in pdb when you do 'b f('; the function name was placed into a regex pattern and the unbalanced paren caused re.compile() to report an error ........ r51751 | kristjan.jonsson | 2006-09-05 19:58:12 +0200 (Tue, 05 Sep 2006) | 6 lines Update the PCBuild8 solution. Facilitate cross-compilation by having binaries in separate Win32 and x64 directories. Rationalized configs by making proper use of platforms/configurations. Remove pythoncore_pgo project. Add new PGIRelease and PGORelease configurations to perform Profile Guided Optimisation. Removed I64 support, but this can be easily added by copying the x64 platform settings. ........ r51758 | gustavo.niemeyer | 2006-09-06 03:58:52 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Fixing #1531862: Do not close standard file descriptors in the subprocess module. ........ r51760 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-06 05:58:34 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 1 line Revert 51758 because it broke all the buildbots ........ r51762 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-06 08:03:59 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1551427: fix a wrong NULL pointer check in the win32 version of os.urandom(). ........ r51765 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-06 08:09:31 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1550983: emit better error messages for erroneous relative imports (if not in package and if beyond toplevel package). ........ r51767 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-06 08:28:06 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 1 line with and as are now keywords. There are some generated files I can't recreate. ........ r51770 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-06 08:50:05 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 5 lines Bug #1542051: Exceptions now correctly call PyObject_GC_UnTrack. Also make sure that every exception class has __module__ set to 'exceptions'. ........ r51785 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-06 22:05:58 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix missing import of the types module in logging.config. ........ r51789 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2006-09-06 22:40:22 +0200 (Wed, 06 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Add news item for bug fix of SF bug report #1546372. ........ r51797 | gustavo.niemeyer | 2006-09-07 02:48:33 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Fixed subprocess bug #1531862 again, after removing tests offending buildbot ........ r51798 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-09-07 04:42:48 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix refcounts and add error checks. ........ r51803 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-07 12:50:34 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix the speed regression in inspect.py by adding another cache to speed up getmodule(). Patch #1553314 ........ r51805 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-09-07 14:03:10 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix a glaring error and update some version numbers. ........ r51814 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-07 15:56:23 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r51815 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-07 15:59:38 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 8 lines [Bug #1552726] Avoid repeatedly polling in interactive mode -- only put a timeout on the select() if an input hook has been defined. Patch by Richard Boulton. This select() code is only executed with readline 2.1, or if READLINE_CALLBACKS is defined. Backport candidate for 2.5, 2.4, probably earlier versions too. ........ r51816 | armin.rigo | 2006-09-07 17:06:00 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Add a warning notice on top of the generated grammar.txt. ........ r51819 | thomas.heller | 2006-09-07 20:56:28 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 5 lines Anonymous structure fields that have a bit-width specified did not work, and they gave a strange error message from PyArg_ParseTuple: function takes exactly 2 arguments (3 given). With tests. ........ r51820 | thomas.heller | 2006-09-07 21:09:54 +0200 (Thu, 07 Sep 2006) | 4 lines The cast function did not accept c_char_p or c_wchar_p instances as first argument, and failed with a 'bad argument to internal function' error message. ........ r51827 | nick.coghlan | 2006-09-08 12:04:38 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add missing NEWS entry for rev 51803 ........ r51828 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-08 15:25:23 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add missing word ........ r51829 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-08 15:35:49 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Explain SQLite a bit more clearly ........ r51830 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-08 15:36:36 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Explain SQLite a bit more clearly ........ r51832 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-08 16:02:45 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Use native SQLite types ........ r51833 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-08 16:03:01 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Use native SQLite types ........ r51835 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-08 16:05:10 +0200 (Fri, 08 Sep 2006) | 1 line Fix typo in example ........ r51837 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-09 09:11:46 +0200 (Sat, 09 Sep 2006) | 6 lines Remove the __unicode__ method from exceptions. Allows unicode() to be called on exception classes. Would require introducing a tp_unicode slot to make it work otherwise. Fixes bug #1551432 and will be backported. ........ r51854 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-11 06:24:09 +0200 (Mon, 11 Sep 2006) | 8 lines Forward port of 51850 from release25-maint branch. As mentioned on python-dev, reverting patch #1504333 because it introduced an infinite loop in rev 47154. This patch also adds a test to prevent the regression. ........ r51855 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-11 06:28:16 +0200 (Mon, 11 Sep 2006) | 5 lines Properly handle a NULL returned from PyArena_New(). (Also fix some whitespace) Klocwork #364. ........ r51856 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-11 06:32:57 +0200 (Mon, 11 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add a "crasher" taken from the sgml bug report referenced in the comment ........ r51858 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-11 11:38:35 +0200 (Mon, 11 Sep 2006) | 12 lines Forward-port of rev. 51857: Building with HP's cc on HP-UX turned up a couple of problems. _PyGILState_NoteThreadState was declared as static inconsistently. Make it static as it's not necessary outside of this module. Some tests failed because errno was reset to 0. (I think the tests that failed were at least: test_fcntl and test_mailbox). Ensure that errno doesn't change after a call to Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS. This only affected debug builds. ........ r51865 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-09-12 21:49:20 +0200 (Tue, 12 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Forward-port 51862: Add sgml_input.html. ........ r51866 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-12 22:50:23 +0200 (Tue, 12 Sep 2006) | 1 line Markup typo fix ........ r51867 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-12 23:09:02 +0200 (Tue, 12 Sep 2006) | 1 line Some editing, markup fixes ........ r51868 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-12 23:21:51 +0200 (Tue, 12 Sep 2006) | 1 line More wordsmithing ........ r51877 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-14 13:22:18 +0200 (Thu, 14 Sep 2006) | 1 line Make --help mention that -v can be supplied multiple times ........ r51878 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-14 13:28:50 +0200 (Thu, 14 Sep 2006) | 1 line Rewrite help message to remove some of the parentheticals. (There were a lot of them.) ........ r51883 | ka-ping.yee | 2006-09-15 02:34:19 +0200 (Fri, 15 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix grammar errors and improve clarity. ........ r51885 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-15 07:22:24 +0200 (Fri, 15 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Correct elementtree module index entry. ........ r51889 | fred.drake | 2006-09-15 17:18:04 +0200 (Fri, 15 Sep 2006) | 4 lines - fix module name in links in formatted documentation - minor markup cleanup (forward-ported from release25-maint revision 51888) ........ r51891 | fred.drake | 2006-09-15 18:11:27 +0200 (Fri, 15 Sep 2006) | 3 lines revise explanation of returns_unicode to reflect bool values and to include the default value (merged from release25-maint revision 51890) ........ r51897 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-09-16 19:36:37 +0200 (Sat, 16 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1557515: Add RLIMIT_SBSIZE. ........ r51903 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-09-17 20:42:53 +0200 (Sun, 17 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Port of revision 51902 in release25-maint to the trunk ........ r51904 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-09-17 21:23:27 +0200 (Sun, 17 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Tweak Mac/Makefile in to ensure that pythonw gets rebuild when the major version of python changes (2.5 -> 2.6). Bug #1552935. ........ r51913 | guido.van.rossum | 2006-09-18 23:36:16 +0200 (Mon, 18 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Make this thing executable. ........ r51920 | gregory.p.smith | 2006-09-19 19:35:04 +0200 (Tue, 19 Sep 2006) | 5 lines Fixes a bug with bsddb.DB.stat where the flags and txn keyword arguments are transposed. (reported by Louis Zechtzer) ..already committed to release24-maint ..needs committing to release25-maint ........ r51926 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-20 20:34:28 +0200 (Wed, 20 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Accidentally didn't commit Misc/NEWS entry on when __unicode__() was removed from exceptions. ........ r51927 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-20 20:43:13 +0200 (Wed, 20 Sep 2006) | 6 lines Allow exceptions to be directly sliced again (e.g., ``BaseException(1,2,3)[0:2]``). Discovered in Python 2.5.0 by Thomas Heller and reported to python-dev. This should be backported to 2.5 . ........ r51928 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-20 21:28:35 +0200 (Wed, 20 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Make python.vim output more deterministic. ........ r51949 | walter.doerwald | 2006-09-21 17:09:55 +0200 (Thu, 21 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix typo. ........ r51950 | jack.diederich | 2006-09-21 19:50:26 +0200 (Thu, 21 Sep 2006) | 5 lines * regression bug, count_next was coercing a Py_ssize_t to an unsigned Py_size_t which breaks negative counts * added test for negative numbers will backport to 2.5.1 ........ r51953 | jack.diederich | 2006-09-21 22:34:49 +0200 (Thu, 21 Sep 2006) | 1 line added itertools.count(-n) fix ........ r51971 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-22 10:16:26 +0200 (Fri, 22 Sep 2006) | 10 lines Fix %zd string formatting on Mac OS X so it prints negative numbers. In addition to testing positive numbers, verify negative numbers work in configure. In order to avoid compiler warnings on OS X 10.4, also change the order of the check for the format character to use (PY_FORMAT_SIZE_T) in the sprintf format for Py_ssize_t. This patch changes PY_FORMAT_SIZE_T from "" to "l" if it wasn't defined at configure time. Need to verify the buildbot results. Backport candidate (if everyone thinks this patch can't be improved). ........ r51972 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-22 10:18:10 +0200 (Fri, 22 Sep 2006) | 7 lines Bug #1557232: fix seg fault with def f((((x)))) and def f(((x),)). These tests should be improved. Hopefully this fixes variations when flipping back and forth between fpdef and fplist. Backport candidate. ........ r51975 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-22 10:47:23 +0200 (Fri, 22 Sep 2006) | 4 lines Mostly revert this file to the same version as before. Only force setting of PY_FORMAT_SIZE_T to "l" for Mac OSX. I don't know a better define to use. This should get rid of the warnings on other platforms and Mac too. ........ r51986 | fred.drake | 2006-09-23 02:26:31 +0200 (Sat, 23 Sep 2006) | 1 line add boilerplate "What's New" document so the docs will build ........ r51987 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-23 06:11:38 +0200 (Sat, 23 Sep 2006) | 1 line Remove extra semi-colons reported by Johnny Lee on python-dev. Backport if anyone cares. ........ r51989 | neal.norwitz | 2006-09-23 20:11:58 +0200 (Sat, 23 Sep 2006) | 1 line SF Bug #1563963, add missing word and cleanup first sentance ........ r51990 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-23 21:53:20 +0200 (Sat, 23 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Make output on test_strptime() be more verbose in face of failure. This is in hopes that more information will help debug the failing test on HPPA Ubuntu. ........ r51991 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-24 12:36:01 +0200 (Sun, 24 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Fix webbrowser.BackgroundBrowser on Windows. ........ r51993 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-24 14:35:36 +0200 (Sun, 24 Sep 2006) | 4 lines Fix a bug in the parser's future statement handling that led to "with" not being recognized as a keyword after, e.g., this statement: from __future__ import division, with_statement ........ r51995 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-24 14:50:24 +0200 (Sun, 24 Sep 2006) | 4 lines Fix a bug in traceback.format_exception_only() that led to an error being raised when print_exc() was called without an exception set. In version 2.4, this printed "None", restored that behavior. ........ r52000 | armin.rigo | 2006-09-25 17:16:26 +0200 (Mon, 25 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Another crasher. ........ r52011 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-27 01:38:24 +0200 (Wed, 27 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Make the error message for when the time data and format do not match clearer. ........ r52014 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-27 18:37:30 +0200 (Wed, 27 Sep 2006) | 1 line Add news item for rev. 51815 ........ r52018 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-09-27 21:23:05 +0200 (Wed, 27 Sep 2006) | 1 line Make examples do error checking on Py_InitModule ........ r52032 | brett.cannon | 2006-09-29 00:10:14 +0200 (Fri, 29 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Very minor grammatical fix in a comment. ........ r52048 | george.yoshida | 2006-09-30 07:14:02 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 4 lines SF bug #1567976 : fix typo Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52051 | gregory.p.smith | 2006-09-30 08:08:20 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 2 lines wording change ........ r52053 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 09:24:48 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1567375: a minor logical glitch in example description. ........ r52056 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 09:31:57 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1565661: in webbrowser, split() the command for the default GNOME browser in case it is a command with args. ........ r52058 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 10:43:30 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1567691: super() and new.instancemethod() now don't accept keyword arguments any more (previously they accepted them, but didn't use them). ........ r52061 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 11:03:42 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1566800: make sure that EnvironmentError can be called with any number of arguments, as was the case in Python 2.4. ........ r52063 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 11:06:45 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1566663: remove obsolete example from datetime docs. ........ r52065 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 11:13:21 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1566602: correct failure of posixpath unittest when $HOME ends with a slash. ........ r52068 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 12:58:01 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1457823: cgi.(Sv)FormContentDict's constructor now takes keep_blank_values and strict_parsing keyword arguments. ........ r52069 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 13:06:47 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1560617: in pyclbr, return full module name not only for classes, but also for functions. ........ r52072 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 13:17:34 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1556784: allow format strings longer than 127 characters in datetime's strftime function. ........ r52075 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 13:22:28 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1446043: correctly raise a LookupError if an encoding name given to encodings.search_function() contains a dot. ........ r52078 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 14:02:57 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1546052: clarify that PyString_FromString(AndSize) copies the string pointed to by its parameter. ........ r52080 | georg.brandl | 2006-09-30 14:16:03 +0200 (Sat, 30 Sep 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_import to unittest. ........ r52083 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-10-01 23:16:45 +0200 (Sun, 01 Oct 2006) | 5 lines Some syntax errors were being caught by tokenize during the tabnanny check, resulting in obscure error messages. Do the syntax check first. Bug 1562716, 1562719 ........ r52084 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-10-01 23:54:37 +0200 (Sun, 01 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Add comment explaining that error msgs may be due to user code when running w/o subprocess. ........ r52086 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-02 16:55:51 +0200 (Mon, 02 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Fix test for uintptr_t. Fixes #1568842. Will backport. ........ r52089 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-02 17:20:37 +0200 (Mon, 02 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Guard uintptr_t test with HAVE_STDINT_H, test for stdint.h. Will backport. ........ r52100 | vinay.sajip | 2006-10-03 20:02:37 +0200 (Tue, 03 Oct 2006) | 1 line Documentation omitted the additional parameter to LogRecord.__init__ which was added in 2.5. (See SF #1569622). ........ r52101 | vinay.sajip | 2006-10-03 20:20:26 +0200 (Tue, 03 Oct 2006) | 1 line Documentation clarified to mention optional parameters. ........ r52102 | vinay.sajip | 2006-10-03 20:21:56 +0200 (Tue, 03 Oct 2006) | 1 line Modified LogRecord.__init__ to make the func parameter optional. (See SF #1569622). ........ r52121 | brett.cannon | 2006-10-03 23:58:55 +0200 (Tue, 03 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Fix minor typo in a comment. ........ r52123 | brett.cannon | 2006-10-04 01:23:14 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Convert test_imp over to unittest. ........ r52128 | barry.warsaw | 2006-10-04 04:06:36 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 3 lines decode_rfc2231(): As Christian Robottom Reis points out, it makes no sense to test for parts > 3 when we use .split(..., 2). ........ r52129 | jeremy.hylton | 2006-10-04 04:24:52 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 9 lines Fix for SF bug 1569998: break permitted inside try. The compiler was checking that there was something on the fblock stack, but not that there was a loop on the stack. Fixed that and added a test for the specific syntax error. Bug fix candidate. ........ r52130 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-04 07:47:34 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Fix integer negation and absolute value to not rely on undefined behaviour of the C compiler anymore. Will backport to 2.5 and 2.4. ........ r52135 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-04 11:21:20 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 1 line Forward port r52134: Add uuids for 2.4.4. ........ r52137 | armin.rigo | 2006-10-04 12:23:57 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Compilation problem caused by conflicting typedefs for uint32_t (unsigned long vs. unsigned int). ........ r52139 | armin.rigo | 2006-10-04 14:17:45 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 23 lines Forward-port of r52136,52138: a review of overflow-detecting code. * unified the way intobject, longobject and mystrtoul handle values around -sys.maxint-1. * in general, trying to entierely avoid overflows in any computation involving signed ints or longs is extremely involved. Fixed a few simple cases where a compiler might be too clever (but that's all guesswork). * more overflow checks against bad data in marshal.c. * 2.5 specific: fixed a number of places that were still confusing int and Py_ssize_t. Some of them could potentially have caused "real-world" breakage. * list.pop(x): fixing overflow issues on x was messy. I just reverted to PyArg_ParseTuple("n"), which does the right thing. (An obscure test was trying to give a Decimal to list.pop()... doesn't make sense any more IMHO) * trying to write a few tests... ........ r52147 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-04 15:42:43 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 6 lines Cause a PyObject_Malloc() failure to trigger a MemoryError, and then add 'if (PyErr_Occurred())' checks to various places so that NULL is returned properly. 2.4 backport candidate. ........ r52148 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-04 17:25:28 +0200 (Wed, 04 Oct 2006) | 1 line Add MSVC8 project files to create wininst-8.exe. ........ r52196 | brett.cannon | 2006-10-06 00:02:31 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 7 lines Clarify what "re-initialization" means for init_builtin() and init_dynamic(). Also remove warning about re-initialization as possibly raising an execption as both call _PyImport_FindExtension() which pulls any module that was already imported from the Python process' extension cache and just copies the __dict__ into the module stored in sys.modules. ........ r52200 | fred.drake | 2006-10-06 02:03:45 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 3 lines - update links - remove Sleepycat name now that they have been bought ........ r52204 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-06 12:41:01 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 1 line Case fix ........ r52208 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-06 14:46:08 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Fix name. ........ r52211 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-06 15:18:26 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1545341] Allow 'classifier' parameter to be a tuple as well as a list. Will backport. ........ r52212 | armin.rigo | 2006-10-06 18:33:22 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 4 lines A very minor bug fix: this code looks like it is designed to accept any hue value and do the modulo itself, except it doesn't quite do it in all cases. At least, the "cannot get here" comment was wrong. ........ r52213 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-06 20:51:55 +0200 (Fri, 06 Oct 2006) | 1 line Comment grammar ........ r52218 | skip.montanaro | 2006-10-07 13:05:02 +0200 (Sat, 07 Oct 2006) | 6 lines Note that the excel_tab class is registered as the "excel-tab" dialect. Fixes 1572471. Make a similar change for the excel class and clean up references to the Dialects and Formatting Parameters section in a few places. ........ r52221 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-08 09:11:54 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Add missing NEWS entry for rev. 52129. ........ r52223 | hyeshik.chang | 2006-10-08 15:48:34 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1572832: fix a bug in ISO-2022 codecs which may cause segfault when encoding non-BMP unicode characters. (Submitted by Ray Chason) ........ r52227 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-08 19:37:58 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Add version number to the link to the python documentation in /Developer/Documentation/Python, better for users that install multiple versions of python. ........ r52229 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-08 19:40:02 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Fix for bug #1570284 ........ r52233 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-08 19:49:52 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 6 lines MacOSX: distutils changes the values of BASECFLAGS and LDFLAGS when using a universal build of python on OSX 10.3 to ensure that those flags can be used to compile code (the universal build uses compiler flags that aren't supported on 10.3). This patches gives the same treatment to CFLAGS, PY_CFLAGS and BLDSHARED. ........ r52236 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-08 19:51:46 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 5 lines MacOSX: The universal build requires that users have the MacOSX10.4u SDK installed to build extensions. This patch makes distutils emit a warning when the compiler should use an SDK but that SDK is not installed, hopefully reducing some confusion. ........ r52238 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-08 20:18:26 +0200 (Sun, 08 Oct 2006) | 3 lines MacOSX: add more logic to recognize the correct startup file to patch to the shell profile patching post-install script. ........ r52242 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-09 19:10:12 +0200 (Mon, 09 Oct 2006) | 1 line Add news item for rev. 52211 change ........ r52245 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-09 20:05:19 +0200 (Mon, 09 Oct 2006) | 1 line Fix wording in comment ........ r52251 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-09 21:03:06 +0200 (Mon, 09 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1572724: fix typo ('=' instead of '==') in _msi.c. ........ r52255 | barry.warsaw | 2006-10-09 21:43:24 +0200 (Mon, 09 Oct 2006) | 2 lines List gc.get_count() in the module docstring. ........ r52257 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-09 22:44:25 +0200 (Mon, 09 Oct 2006) | 1 line Bug #1565150: Fix subsecond processing for os.utime on Windows. ........ r52268 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-10 09:55:06 +0200 (Tue, 10 Oct 2006) | 2 lines MacOSX: fix permission problem in the generated installer ........ r52293 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 09:38:04 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1575746: fix typo in property() docs. ........ r52295 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 09:57:21 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #813342: Start the IDLE subprocess with -Qnew if the parent is started with that option. ........ r52297 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 10:22:53 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1565919: document set types in the Language Reference. ........ r52299 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 11:20:33 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1550524: better heuristics to find correct class definition in inspect.findsource(). ........ r52301 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 11:47:12 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1548891: The cStringIO.StringIO() constructor now encodes unicode arguments with the system default encoding just like the write() method does, instead of converting it to a raw buffer. ........ r52303 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 13:14:40 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1546628: add a note about urlparse.urljoin() and absolute paths. ........ r52305 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 13:27:59 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1545497: when given an explicit base, int() did ignore NULs embedded in the string to convert. ........ r52307 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 13:41:11 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Add a note to fpectl docs that it's not built by default (bug #1556261). ........ r52309 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 13:46:57 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1560114: the Mac filesystem does have accurate information about the case of filenames. ........ r52311 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 13:59:27 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Small grammar fix, thanks Sjoerd. ........ r52313 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 14:03:07 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Fix tarfile depending on buggy int('1\0', base) behavior. ........ r52315 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 14:33:07 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1283491: follow docstring convention wrt. keyword-able args in sum(). ........ r52316 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-12 15:08:16 +0200 (Thu, 12 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1560179: speed up posixpath.(dir|base)name ........ r52327 | brett.cannon | 2006-10-14 08:36:45 +0200 (Sat, 14 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Clean up the language of a sentence relating to the connect() function and user-defined datatypes. ........ r52332 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-14 23:33:38 +0200 (Sat, 14 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Update the peephole optimizer to remove more dead code (jumps after returns) and inline jumps to returns. ........ r52333 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 09:54:40 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1576954: Update VC6 build directory; remove redundant files in VC7. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52335 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 10:43:33 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 1 line Patch #1576166: Support os.utime for directories on Windows NT+. ........ r52336 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 10:51:22 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1577551: Add ctypes and ET build support for VC6. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52338 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 11:35:51 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 1 line Loosen the test for equal time stamps. ........ r52339 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 11:43:39 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1567666: Emulate GetFileAttributesExA for Win95. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52341 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 13:02:07 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Round to int, because some systems support sub-second time stamps in stat, but not in utime. Also be consistent with modifying only mtime, not atime. ........ r52342 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 13:57:40 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Set the eol-style for project files to "CRLF". ........ r52343 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 13:59:56 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Drop binary property on dsp files, set eol-style to CRLF instead. ........ r52344 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 14:01:43 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Remove binary property, set eol-style to CRLF instead. ........ r52346 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-15 16:30:38 +0200 (Sun, 15 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Mention the bdist_msi module. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52354 | brett.cannon | 2006-10-16 05:09:52 +0200 (Mon, 16 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Fix turtle so that you can launch the demo2 function on its own instead of only when the module is launched as a script. ........ r52356 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-17 17:18:06 +0200 (Tue, 17 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1457736: Update VC6 to use current PCbuild settings. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52360 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-17 20:09:55 +0200 (Tue, 17 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Remove obsolete file. Will backport. ........ r52363 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-17 20:59:23 +0200 (Tue, 17 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Forward-port r52358: - Bug #1578513: Cross compilation was broken by a change to configure. Repair so that it's back to how it was in 2.4.3. ........ r52365 | thomas.heller | 2006-10-17 21:30:48 +0200 (Tue, 17 Oct 2006) | 6 lines ctypes callback functions only support 'fundamental' result types. Check this and raise an error when something else is used - before this change ctypes would hang or crash when such a callback was called. This is a partial fix for #1574584. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52377 | tim.peters | 2006-10-18 07:06:06 +0200 (Wed, 18 Oct 2006) | 2 lines newIobject(): repaired incorrect cast to quiet MSVC warning. ........ r52378 | tim.peters | 2006-10-18 07:09:12 +0200 (Wed, 18 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r52379 | tim.peters | 2006-10-18 07:10:28 +0200 (Wed, 18 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style to text files. ........ r52387 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-19 12:58:46 +0200 (Thu, 19 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Add check for the PyArg_ParseTuple format, and declare it if it is supported. ........ r52388 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-19 13:00:37 +0200 (Thu, 19 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Fix various minor errors in passing arguments to PyArg_ParseTuple. ........ r52389 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-19 18:01:37 +0200 (Thu, 19 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Restore CFLAGS after checking for __attribute__ ........ r52390 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-19 23:55:55 +0200 (Thu, 19 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1576348] Fix typo in example ........ r52414 | walter.doerwald | 2006-10-22 10:59:41 +0200 (Sun, 22 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Port test___future__ to unittest. ........ r52415 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-10-22 12:45:18 +0200 (Sun, 22 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1580674: with this patch os.readlink uses the filesystem encoding to decode unicode objects and returns an unicode object when the argument is one. ........ r52416 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-22 12:46:18 +0200 (Sun, 22 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1580872: Remove duplicate declaration of PyCallable_Check. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52418 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-22 12:55:15 +0200 (Sun, 22 Oct 2006) | 4 lines - Patch #1560695: Add .note.GNU-stack to ctypes' sysv.S so that ctypes isn't considered as requiring executable stacks. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52420 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-22 15:45:13 +0200 (Sun, 22 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Remove passwd.adjunct.byname from list of maps for test_nis. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52431 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-24 18:54:16 +0200 (Tue, 24 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Patch [ 1583506 ] tarfile.py: 100-char filenames are truncated ........ r52446 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-26 21:10:46 +0200 (Thu, 26 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1579796] Wrong syntax for PyDateTime_IMPORT in documentation. Reported by David Faure. ........ r52449 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-26 21:16:46 +0200 (Thu, 26 Oct 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r52452 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-27 08:16:31 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1549049: Rewrite type conversion in structmember. Fixes #1545696 and #1566140. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52454 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-27 08:42:27 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Check for values.h. Will backport. ........ r52456 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-27 09:06:52 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Get DBL_MAX from float.h not values.h. Will backport. ........ r52458 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-10-27 09:13:28 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1567274: Support SMTP over TLS. ........ r52459 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 13:33:29 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line Set svn:keywords property ........ r52460 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 13:36:41 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line Add item ........ r52461 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 13:37:01 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line Some wording changes and markup fixes ........ r52462 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 14:18:38 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1585690] Note that line_num was added in Python 2.5 ........ r52464 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 14:50:38 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1583946] Reword description of server and issuer ........ r52466 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 15:06:25 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1562583] Mention the set_reuse_addr() method ........ r52469 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 15:22:46 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 4 lines [Bug #1542016] Report PCALL_POP value. This makes the return value of sys.callstats() match its docstring. Backport candidate. Though it's an API change, this is a pretty obscure portion of the API. ........ r52473 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 16:53:41 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line Point users to the subprocess module in the docs for os.system, os.spawn*, os.popen2, and the popen2 and commands modules ........ r52476 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 18:39:10 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1576241] Let functools.wraps work with built-in functions ........ r52478 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 18:55:34 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1575506] The _singlefileMailbox class was using the wrong file object in its flush() method, causing an error ........ r52480 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 19:06:16 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line Clarify docstring ........ r52481 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 19:11:23 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 5 lines [Patch #1574068 by Scott Dial] urllib and urllib2 were using base64.encodestring() for encoding authentication data. encodestring() can include newlines for very long input, which produced broken HTTP headers. ........ r52483 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 20:13:46 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line Check db_setup_debug for a few print statements; change sqlite_setup_debug to False ........ r52484 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-10-27 20:15:02 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 1 line [Patch #1503717] Tiny patch from Chris AtLee to stop a lengthy line from being printed ........ r52485 | thomas.heller | 2006-10-27 20:31:36 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 5 lines WindowsError.str should display the windows error code, not the posix error code; with test. Fixes #1576174. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52487 | thomas.heller | 2006-10-27 21:05:53 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Modulefinder now handles absolute and relative imports, including tests. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52488 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-27 22:39:43 +0200 (Fri, 27 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1552024: add decorator support to unparse.py demo script. ........ r52492 | walter.doerwald | 2006-10-28 12:47:12 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Port test_bufio to unittest. ........ r52493 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-28 15:10:17 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 6 lines Convert test_global, test_scope and test_grammar to unittest. I tried to enclose all tests which must be run at the toplevel (instead of inside a method) in exec statements. ........ r52494 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-28 15:11:41 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Update outstanding bugs test file. ........ r52495 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-28 15:51:49 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_math to unittest. ........ r52496 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-28 15:56:58 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_opcodes to unittest. ........ r52497 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-28 18:04:04 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Fix nth() itertool recipe. ........ r52500 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-28 22:25:09 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 2 lines make test_grammar pass with python -O ........ r52501 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:15:30 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 6 lines Add some asserts. In sysmodule, I think these were to try to silence some warnings from Klokwork. They verify the assumptions of the format of svn version output. The assert in the thread module helped debug a problem on HP-UX. ........ r52502 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:16:54 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 5 lines Fix warnings with HP's C compiler. It doesn't recognize that infinite loops are, um, infinite. These conditions should not be able to happen. Will backport. ........ r52503 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:17:51 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 5 lines Fix crash in test on HP-UX. Apparently, it's not possible to delete a lock if it's held (even by the current thread). Will backport. ........ r52504 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:19:07 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 6 lines Fix bug #1565514, SystemError not raised on too many nested blocks. It seems like this should be a different error than SystemError, but I don't have any great ideas and SystemError was raised in 2.4 and earlier. Will backport. ........ r52505 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:20:12 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Prevent crash if alloc of garbage fails. Found by Typo.pl. Will backport. ........ r52506 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:21:00 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Don't inline Py_ADDRESS_IN_RANGE with gcc 4+ either. Will backport. ........ r52513 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-28 23:56:49 +0200 (Sat, 28 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Fix test_modulefinder so it doesn't fail when run after test_distutils. ........ r52514 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-29 00:12:26 +0200 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 4 lines From SF 1557890, fix problem of using wrong type in example. Will backport. ........ r52517 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 09:39:22 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Fix codecs.EncodedFile which did not use file_encoding in 2.5.0, and fix all codecs file wrappers to work correctly with the "with" statement (bug #1586513). ........ r52519 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 09:47:08 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Clean up a leftover from old listcomp generation code. ........ r52520 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 09:53:06 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1586448: the compiler module now emits the same bytecode for list comprehensions as the builtin compiler, using the LIST_APPEND opcode. ........ r52521 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 10:01:01 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Remove trailing comma. ........ r52522 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 10:05:04 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1357915: allow all sequence types for shell arguments in subprocess. ........ r52524 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 10:16:12 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1583880: fix tarfile's problems with long names and posix/ GNU modes. ........ r52526 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 10:18:00 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Test assert if __debug__ is true. ........ r52527 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 10:32:16 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Fix the new EncodedFile test to work with big endian platforms. ........ r52529 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 15:39:09 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1586613: fix zlib and bz2 codecs' incremental en/decoders. ........ r52532 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 19:01:08 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1586773: extend hashlib docstring. ........ r52534 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-29 19:30:10 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 4 lines Update comments, remove commented out code. Move assembler structure next to assembler code to make it easier to move it to a separate file. ........ r52535 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 19:31:42 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1576657: when setting a KeyError for a tuple key, make sure that the tuple isn't used as the "exception arguments tuple". ........ r52537 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 20:13:40 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_mmap to unittest. ........ r52538 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 20:20:45 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_poll to unittest. ........ r52539 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 20:24:43 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_nis to unittest. ........ r52540 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 20:35:03 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_types to unittest. ........ r52541 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 20:51:16 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_cookie to unittest. ........ r52542 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 21:09:12 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_cgi to unittest. ........ r52543 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 21:24:01 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Completely convert test_httplib to unittest. ........ r52544 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 21:28:26 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Convert test_MimeWriter to unittest. ........ r52545 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 21:31:17 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Convert test_openpty to unittest. ........ r52546 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 21:35:12 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Remove leftover test output file. ........ r52547 | georg.brandl | 2006-10-29 22:54:18 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Move the check for openpty to the beginning. ........ r52548 | walter.doerwald | 2006-10-29 23:06:28 +0100 (Sun, 29 Oct 2006) | 2 lines Add tests for basic argument errors. ........ r52549 | walter.doerwald | 2006-10-30 00:02:27 +0100 (Mon, 30 Oct 2006) | 3 lines Add tests for incremental codecs with an errors argument. ........ r52550 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-30 00:39:03 +0100 (Mon, 30 Oct 2006) | 1 line Fix refleak ........ r52552 | neal.norwitz | 2006-10-30 00:58:36 +0100 (Mon, 30 Oct 2006) | 1 line I'm assuming this is correct, it fixes the tests so they pass again ........ r52555 | vinay.sajip | 2006-10-31 18:32:37 +0100 (Tue, 31 Oct 2006) | 1 line Change to improve speed of _fixupChildren ........ r52556 | vinay.sajip | 2006-10-31 18:34:31 +0100 (Tue, 31 Oct 2006) | 1 line Added relativeCreated to Formatter doc (has been in the system for a long time - was unaccountably left out of the docs and not noticed until now). ........ r52588 | thomas.heller | 2006-11-02 20:48:24 +0100 (Thu, 02 Nov 2006) | 5 lines Replace the XXX marker in the 'Arrays and pointers' reference manual section with a link to the tutorial sections. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52592 | thomas.heller | 2006-11-02 21:22:29 +0100 (Thu, 02 Nov 2006) | 6 lines Fix a code example by adding a missing import. Fixes #1557890. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52598 | tim.peters | 2006-11-03 03:32:46 +0100 (Fri, 03 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r52619 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-04 19:14:06 +0100 (Sat, 04 Nov 2006) | 4 lines - Patch #1060577: Extract list of RPM files from spec file in bdist_rpm Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52621 | neal.norwitz | 2006-11-04 20:25:22 +0100 (Sat, 04 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1588287: fix invalid assertion for `1,2` in debug builds. Will backport ........ r52630 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-05 22:04:37 +0100 (Sun, 05 Nov 2006) | 1 line Update link ........ r52631 | skip.montanaro | 2006-11-06 15:34:52 +0100 (Mon, 06 Nov 2006) | 1 line note that user can control directory location even if default dir is used ........ r52644 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-11-07 16:53:38 +0100 (Tue, 07 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Fix a number of typos in strings and comments (sf#1589070) ........ r52647 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-11-07 17:00:34 +0100 (Tue, 07 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace changes to make the source more compliant with PEP8 (SF#1589070) ........ r52651 | thomas.heller | 2006-11-07 19:01:18 +0100 (Tue, 07 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Fix markup. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52653 | thomas.heller | 2006-11-07 19:20:47 +0100 (Tue, 07 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Fix grammatical error as well. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r52657 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-07 21:39:16 +0100 (Tue, 07 Nov 2006) | 1 line Add missing word ........ r52662 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-08 07:46:37 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Correctly forward exception in instance_contains(). Fixes #1591996. Patch contributed by Neal Norwitz. Will backport. ........ r52664 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-08 07:48:36 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 2 lines News entry for 52662. ........ r52665 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-08 08:35:55 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1351744: Add askyesnocancel helper for tkMessageBox. ........ r52666 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-08 08:45:59 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1592072: fix docs for return value of PyErr_CheckSignals. ........ r52668 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-08 11:04:29 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1592533: rename variable in heapq doc example, to avoid shadowing "sorted". ........ r52671 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-08 14:35:34 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 1 line Add section on the functional module ........ r52672 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-08 15:14:30 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 1 line Add section on operator module; make a few edits ........ r52673 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-08 15:24:03 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 1 line Add table of contents; this required fixing a few headings. Some more smalle edits. ........ r52674 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-08 15:30:14 +0100 (Wed, 08 Nov 2006) | 1 line More edits ........ r52686 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-09 12:06:03 +0100 (Thu, 09 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Patch #838546: Make terminal become controlling in pty.fork(). Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52688 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-09 12:27:32 +0100 (Thu, 09 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1592250: Add elidge argument to Tkinter.Text.search. ........ r52690 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-09 14:27:07 +0100 (Thu, 09 Nov 2006) | 7 lines [Bug #1569790] mailbox.Maildir.get_folder() loses factory information Both the Maildir and MH classes had this bug; the patch fixes both classes and adds a test. Will backport to 25-maint. ........ r52692 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-09 14:51:14 +0100 (Thu, 09 Nov 2006) | 1 line [Patch #1514544 by David Watson] use fsync() to ensure data is really on disk ........ r52695 | walter.doerwald | 2006-11-09 17:23:26 +0100 (Thu, 09 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Replace C++ comment with C comment (fixes SF bug #1593525). ........ r52712 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-09 22:16:46 +0100 (Thu, 09 Nov 2006) | 11 lines [Patch #1514543] mailbox (Maildir): avoid losing messages on name clash Two changes: Where possible, use link()/remove() to move files into a directory; this makes it easier to avoid overwriting an existing file. Use _create_carefully() to create files in tmp/, which uses O_EXCL. Backport candidate. ........ r52716 | phillip.eby | 2006-11-10 01:33:36 +0100 (Fri, 10 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Fix SF#1566719: not creating site-packages (or other target directory) when installing .egg-info for a project that contains no modules or packages, while using --root (as in bdist_rpm). ........ r52719 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-10 14:14:01 +0100 (Fri, 10 Nov 2006) | 1 line Reword entry ........ r52725 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-10 15:39:01 +0100 (Fri, 10 Nov 2006) | 1 line [Feature request #1542920] Link to wsgi.org ........ r52731 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-11 19:29:11 +0100 (Sat, 11 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1594742: wrong word in stringobject doc. ........ r52733 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-11 19:32:47 +0100 (Sat, 11 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1594758: wording improvement for dict.update() docs. ........ r52736 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-12 11:32:47 +0100 (Sun, 12 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1065257: Support passing open files as body in HTTPConnection.request(). ........ r52737 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-12 11:41:39 +0100 (Sun, 12 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1355023: support whence argument for GzipFile.seek. ........ r52738 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-12 19:24:26 +0100 (Sun, 12 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1067760: Deprecate passing floats to file.seek. ........ r52739 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-12 19:48:13 +0100 (Sun, 12 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1359217: Ignore 2xx response before 150 response. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52741 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-12 19:56:03 +0100 (Sun, 12 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1360200: Use unmangled_version RPM spec field to deal with file name mangling. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52753 | walter.doerwald | 2006-11-15 17:23:46 +0100 (Wed, 15 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Fix typo. ........ r52754 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-15 18:42:03 +0100 (Wed, 15 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1594809: add a note to README regarding PYTHONPATH and make install. ........ r52762 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-16 16:05:14 +0100 (Thu, 16 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1597576: mention that the new base64 api has been introduced in py2.4. ........ r52764 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-16 17:50:59 +0100 (Thu, 16 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1597824: return the registered function from atexit.register() to facilitate usage as a decorator. ........ r52765 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-16 18:08:45 +0100 (Thu, 16 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1588217: don't parse "= " as a soft line break in binascii's a2b_qp() function, instead leave it in the string as quopri.decode() does. ........ r52776 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-17 14:30:25 +0100 (Fri, 17 Nov 2006) | 17 lines Remove file-locking in MH.pack() method. This change looks massive but it's mostly a re-indenting after removing some try...finally blocks. Also adds a test case that does a pack() while the mailbox is locked; this test would have turned up bugs in the original code on some platforms. In both nmh and GNU Mailutils' implementation of MH-format mailboxes, no locking is done of individual message files when renaming them. The original mailbox.py code did do locking, which meant that message files had to be opened. This code was buggy on certain platforms (found through reading the code); there were code paths that closed the file object and then called _unlock_file() on it. Will backport to 25-maint once I see how the buildbots react to this patch. ........ r52780 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-18 19:00:23 +0100 (Sat, 18 Nov 2006) | 5 lines Patch #1538878: Don't make tkSimpleDialog dialogs transient if the parent window is withdrawn. This mirrors what dialog.tcl does. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52782 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-18 19:05:35 +0100 (Sat, 18 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1594554: Always close a tkSimpleDialog on ok(), even if an exception occurs. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52784 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-18 19:42:11 +0100 (Sat, 18 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1472877: Fix Tix subwidget name resolution. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52786 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-18 23:17:33 +0100 (Sat, 18 Nov 2006) | 1 line Expand checking in test_sha ........ r52787 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-19 09:48:30 +0100 (Sun, 19 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Patch [ 1586791 ] better error msgs for some TypeErrors ........ r52788 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-19 11:41:41 +0100 (Sun, 19 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Make cStringIO.truncate raise IOError for negative arguments (even for -1). Fixes the last bit of #1359365. ........ r52789 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-19 19:40:01 +0100 (Sun, 19 Nov 2006) | 1 line Add a test case of data w/ bytes > 127 ........ r52790 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-19 19:51:54 +0100 (Sun, 19 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1070046: Marshal new-style objects like InstanceType in xmlrpclib. ........ r52792 | neal.norwitz | 2006-11-19 22:26:53 +0100 (Sun, 19 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Speed up function calls into the math module by using METH_O. There should be no functional changes. However, the error msgs are slightly different. Also verified that the module dict is not NULL on init. ........ r52794 | george.yoshida | 2006-11-20 03:24:48 +0100 (Mon, 20 Nov 2006) | 2 lines markup fix ........ r52795 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-20 08:12:58 +0100 (Mon, 20 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Further markup fix. ........ r52800 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-11-20 14:39:37 +0100 (Mon, 20 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Jython compatibility fix: if uu.decode() opened its output file, be sure to close it. ........ r52811 | neal.norwitz | 2006-11-21 06:26:22 +0100 (Tue, 21 Nov 2006) | 9 lines Bug #1599782: Fix segfault on bsddb.db.DB().type(). The problem is that _DB_get_type() can't be called without the GIL because it calls a bunch of PyErr_* APIs when an error occurs. There were no other cases in this file that it was called without the GIL. Removing the BEGIN/END THREAD around _DB_get_type() made everything work. Will backport. ........ r52814 | neal.norwitz | 2006-11-21 06:51:51 +0100 (Tue, 21 Nov 2006) | 1 line Oops, convert tabs to spaces ........ r52815 | neal.norwitz | 2006-11-21 07:23:44 +0100 (Tue, 21 Nov 2006) | 1 line Fix SF #1599879, socket.gethostname should ref getfqdn directly. ........ r52817 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-21 19:20:25 +0100 (Tue, 21 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Conditionalize definition of _CRT_SECURE_NO_DEPRECATE and _CRT_NONSTDC_NO_DEPRECATE. Will backport. ........ r52821 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-22 09:50:02 +0100 (Wed, 22 Nov 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1362975: Rework CodeContext indentation algorithm to avoid hard-coding pixel widths. Also make the text's scrollbar a child of the text frame, not the top widget. ........ r52826 | walter.doerwald | 2006-11-23 06:03:56 +0100 (Thu, 23 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Change decode() so that it works with a buffer (i.e. unicode(..., 'utf-8-sig')) SF bug #1601501. ........ r52833 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-23 10:55:07 +0100 (Thu, 23 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1601630: little improvement to getopt docs ........ r52835 | michael.hudson | 2006-11-23 14:54:04 +0100 (Thu, 23 Nov 2006) | 3 lines a test for an error condition not covered by existing tests (noticed this when writing the equivalent code for pypy) ........ r52839 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-11-23 22:06:03 +0100 (Thu, 23 Nov 2006) | 1 line Fix and/add typo ........ r52840 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-11-23 22:35:19 +0100 (Thu, 23 Nov 2006) | 1 line ... and the number of the counting shall be three. ........ r52841 | thomas.heller | 2006-11-24 19:45:39 +0100 (Fri, 24 Nov 2006) | 1 line Fix bug #1598620: A ctypes structure cannot contain itself. ........ r52843 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-11-25 16:39:19 +0100 (Sat, 25 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Disable _XOPEN_SOURCE on NetBSD 1.x. Will backport to 2.5 ........ r52845 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-26 20:27:47 +0100 (Sun, 26 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1603321: make pstats.Stats accept Unicode file paths. ........ r52850 | georg.brandl | 2006-11-27 19:46:21 +0100 (Mon, 27 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1603789: grammatical error in Tkinter docs. ........ r52855 | thomas.heller | 2006-11-28 21:21:54 +0100 (Tue, 28 Nov 2006) | 7 lines Fix #1563807: _ctypes built on AIX fails with ld ffi error. The contents of ffi_darwin.c must be compiled unless __APPLE__ is defined and __ppc__ is not. Will backport. ........ r52862 | armin.rigo | 2006-11-29 22:59:22 +0100 (Wed, 29 Nov 2006) | 3 lines Forgot a case where the locals can now be a general mapping instead of just a dictionary. (backporting...) ........ r52872 | guido.van.rossum | 2006-11-30 20:23:13 +0100 (Thu, 30 Nov 2006) | 2 lines Update version. ........ r52890 | walter.doerwald | 2006-12-01 17:59:47 +0100 (Fri, 01 Dec 2006) | 3 lines Move xdrlib tests from the module into a separate test script, port the tests to unittest and add a few new tests. ........ r52900 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-12-02 03:00:39 +0100 (Sat, 02 Dec 2006) | 1 line Add name to credits (for untokenize). ........ r52905 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-12-03 10:54:46 +0100 (Sun, 03 Dec 2006) | 2 lines Move IDLE news into NEWS.txt. ........ r52906 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-12-03 12:23:45 +0100 (Sun, 03 Dec 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1544279: Improve thread-safety of the socket module by moving the sock_addr_t storage out of the socket object. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r52908 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-12-03 13:01:53 +0100 (Sun, 03 Dec 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1371075: Make ConfigParser accept optional dict type for ordering, sorting, etc. ........ r52910 | matthias.klose | 2006-12-03 18:16:41 +0100 (Sun, 03 Dec 2006) | 2 lines - Fix build failure on kfreebsd and on the hurd. ........ r52915 | george.yoshida | 2006-12-04 12:41:54 +0100 (Mon, 04 Dec 2006) | 2 lines fix a versionchanged tag ........ r52917 | george.yoshida | 2006-12-05 06:39:50 +0100 (Tue, 05 Dec 2006) | 3 lines Fix pickle doc typo Patch #1608758 ........ r52938 | georg.brandl | 2006-12-06 23:21:18 +0100 (Wed, 06 Dec 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1610437: fix a tarfile bug with long filename headers. ........ r52945 | brett.cannon | 2006-12-07 00:38:48 +0100 (Thu, 07 Dec 2006) | 3 lines Fix a bad assumption that all objects assigned to '__loader__' on a module will have a '_files' attribute. ........ r52951 | georg.brandl | 2006-12-07 10:30:06 +0100 (Thu, 07 Dec 2006) | 3 lines RFE #1592899: mention string.maketrans() in docs for str.translate, remove reference to the old regex module in the former's doc. ........ r52962 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-12-08 04:17:18 +0100 (Fri, 08 Dec 2006) | 1 line Eliminate two redundant calls to PyObject_Hash(). ........ r52963 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-12-08 05:24:33 +0100 (Fri, 08 Dec 2006) | 3 lines Port Armin's fix for a dict resize vulnerability (svn revision 46589, sf bug 1456209). ........ r52964 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-12-08 05:57:50 +0100 (Fri, 08 Dec 2006) | 4 lines Port Georg's dictobject.c fix keys that were tuples got unpacked on the way to setting a KeyError (svn revision 52535, sf bug 1576657). ........ r52966 | raymond.hettinger | 2006-12-08 18:35:25 +0100 (Fri, 08 Dec 2006) | 2 lines Add test for SF bug 1576657 ........ r52970 | georg.brandl | 2006-12-08 21:46:11 +0100 (Fri, 08 Dec 2006) | 3 lines #1577756: svnversion doesn't react to LANG=C, use LC_ALL=C to force English output. ........ r52972 | georg.brandl | 2006-12-09 10:08:29 +0100 (Sat, 09 Dec 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1608267: fix a race condition in os.makedirs() is the directory to be created is already there. ........ r52975 | matthias.klose | 2006-12-09 13:15:27 +0100 (Sat, 09 Dec 2006) | 2 lines - Fix the build of the library reference in info format. ........ r52994 | neal.norwitz | 2006-12-11 02:01:06 +0100 (Mon, 11 Dec 2006) | 1 line Fix a typo ........ r52996 | georg.brandl | 2006-12-11 08:56:33 +0100 (Mon, 11 Dec 2006) | 2 lines Move errno imports back to individual functions. ........ r52998 | vinay.sajip | 2006-12-11 15:07:16 +0100 (Mon, 11 Dec 2006) | 1 line Patch by Jeremy Katz (SF #1609407) ........ r53000 | vinay.sajip | 2006-12-11 15:26:23 +0100 (Mon, 11 Dec 2006) | 1 line Patch by "cuppatea" (SF #1503765) ........
2075 lines
86 KiB
TeX
2075 lines
86 KiB
TeX
\chapter{Built-in Types \label{types}}
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The following sections describe the standard types that are built into
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the interpreter.
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\note{Historically (until release 2.2), Python's built-in types have
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differed from user-defined types because it was not possible to use
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the built-in types as the basis for object-oriented inheritance.
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This limitation does not exist any longer.}
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The principal built-in types are numerics, sequences, mappings, files,
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classes, instances and exceptions.
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\indexii{built-in}{types}
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Some operations are supported by several object types; in particular,
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practically all objects can be compared, tested for truth value,
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and converted to a string (with
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the \function{repr()} function or the slightly different
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\function{str()} function). The latter
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function is implicitly used when an object is written by the
|
|
\keyword{print}\stindex{print} statement.
|
|
(Information on the \ulink{\keyword{print} statement}{../ref/print.html}
|
|
and other language statements can be found in the
|
|
\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} and the
|
|
\citetitle[../tut/tut.html]{Python Tutorial}.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Truth Value Testing\label{truth}}
|
|
|
|
Any object can be tested for truth value, for use in an \keyword{if} or
|
|
\keyword{while} condition or as operand of the Boolean operations below.
|
|
The following values are considered false:
|
|
\stindex{if}
|
|
\stindex{while}
|
|
\indexii{truth}{value}
|
|
\indexii{Boolean}{operations}
|
|
\index{false}
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item \code{None}
|
|
\withsubitem{(Built-in object)}{\ttindex{None}}
|
|
|
|
\item \code{False}
|
|
\withsubitem{(Built-in object)}{\ttindex{False}}
|
|
|
|
\item zero of any numeric type, for example, \code{0}, \code{0L},
|
|
\code{0.0}, \code{0j}.
|
|
|
|
\item any empty sequence, for example, \code{''}, \code{()}, \code{[]}.
|
|
|
|
\item any empty mapping, for example, \code{\{\}}.
|
|
|
|
\item instances of user-defined classes, if the class defines a
|
|
\method{__bool__()} or \method{__len__()} method, when that
|
|
method returns the integer zero or \class{bool} value
|
|
\code{False}.\footnote{Additional
|
|
information on these special methods may be found in the
|
|
\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual}.}
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
All other values are considered true --- so objects of many types are
|
|
always true.
|
|
\index{true}
|
|
|
|
Operations and built-in functions that have a Boolean result always
|
|
return \code{0} or \code{False} for false and \code{1} or \code{True}
|
|
for true, unless otherwise stated. (Important exception: the Boolean
|
|
operations \samp{or}\opindex{or} and \samp{and}\opindex{and} always
|
|
return one of their operands.)
|
|
\index{False}
|
|
\index{True}
|
|
|
|
\section{Boolean Operations ---
|
|
\keyword{and}, \keyword{or}, \keyword{not}
|
|
\label{boolean}}
|
|
|
|
These are the Boolean operations, ordered by ascending priority:
|
|
\indexii{Boolean}{operations}
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} or \var{y}}
|
|
{if \var{x} is false, then \var{y}, else \var{x}}{(1)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} and \var{y}}
|
|
{if \var{x} is false, then \var{x}, else \var{y}}{(1)}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{not \var{x}}
|
|
{if \var{x} is false, then \code{True}, else \code{False}}{(2)}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
\opindex{and}
|
|
\opindex{or}
|
|
\opindex{not}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[(1)]
|
|
These only evaluate their second argument if needed for their outcome.
|
|
|
|
\item[(2)]
|
|
\samp{not} has a lower priority than non-Boolean operators, so
|
|
\code{not \var{a} == \var{b}} is interpreted as \code{not (\var{a} ==
|
|
\var{b})}, and \code{\var{a} == not \var{b}} is a syntax error.
|
|
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Comparisons \label{comparisons}}
|
|
|
|
Comparison operations are supported by all objects. They all have the
|
|
same priority (which is higher than that of the Boolean operations).
|
|
Comparisons can be chained arbitrarily; for example, \code{\var{x} <
|
|
\var{y} <= \var{z}} is equivalent to \code{\var{x} < \var{y} and
|
|
\var{y} <= \var{z}}, except that \var{y} is evaluated only once (but
|
|
in both cases \var{z} is not evaluated at all when \code{\var{x} <
|
|
\var{y}} is found to be false).
|
|
\indexii{chaining}{comparisons}
|
|
|
|
This table summarizes the comparison operations:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Meaning}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{<}{strictly less than}{}
|
|
\lineiii{<=}{less than or equal}{}
|
|
\lineiii{>}{strictly greater than}{}
|
|
\lineiii{>=}{greater than or equal}{}
|
|
\lineiii{==}{equal}{}
|
|
\lineiii{!=}{not equal}{}
|
|
\lineiii{is}{object identity}{}
|
|
\lineiii{is not}{negated object identity}{}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
\indexii{operator}{comparison}
|
|
\opindex{==} % XXX *All* others have funny characters < ! >
|
|
\opindex{is}
|
|
\opindex{is not}
|
|
|
|
Objects of different types, except different numeric types and different string types, never
|
|
compare equal; such objects are ordered consistently but arbitrarily
|
|
(so that sorting a heterogeneous array yields a consistent result).
|
|
Furthermore, some types (for example, file objects) support only a
|
|
degenerate notion of comparison where any two objects of that type are
|
|
unequal. Again, such objects are ordered arbitrarily but
|
|
consistently. The \code{<}, \code{<=}, \code{>} and \code{>=}
|
|
operators will raise a \exception{TypeError} exception when any operand
|
|
is a complex number.
|
|
\indexii{object}{numeric}
|
|
\indexii{objects}{comparing}
|
|
|
|
Instances of a class normally compare as non-equal unless the class
|
|
\withsubitem{(instance method)}{\ttindex{__cmp__()}}
|
|
defines the \method{__cmp__()} method. Refer to the
|
|
\citetitle[../ref/customization.html]{Python Reference Manual} for
|
|
information on the use of this method to effect object comparisons.
|
|
|
|
\strong{Implementation note:} Objects of different types except
|
|
numbers are ordered by their type names; objects of the same types
|
|
that don't support proper comparison are ordered by their address.
|
|
|
|
Two more operations with the same syntactic priority,
|
|
\samp{in}\opindex{in} and \samp{not in}\opindex{not in}, are supported
|
|
only by sequence types (below).
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Numeric Types ---
|
|
\class{int}, \class{float}, \class{long}, \class{complex}
|
|
\label{typesnumeric}}
|
|
|
|
There are four distinct numeric types: \dfn{plain integers},
|
|
\dfn{long integers},
|
|
\dfn{floating point numbers}, and \dfn{complex numbers}.
|
|
In addition, Booleans are a subtype of plain integers.
|
|
Plain integers (also just called \dfn{integers})
|
|
are implemented using \ctype{long} in C, which gives them at least 32
|
|
bits of precision (\code{sys.maxint} is always set to the maximum
|
|
plain integer value for the current platform, the minimum value is
|
|
\code{-sys.maxint - 1}). Long integers have unlimited precision.
|
|
Floating point numbers are implemented using \ctype{double} in C.
|
|
All bets on their precision are off unless you happen to know the
|
|
machine you are working with.
|
|
\obindex{numeric}
|
|
\obindex{Boolean}
|
|
\obindex{integer}
|
|
\obindex{long integer}
|
|
\obindex{floating point}
|
|
\obindex{complex number}
|
|
\indexii{C}{language}
|
|
|
|
Complex numbers have a real and imaginary part, which are each
|
|
implemented using \ctype{double} in C. To extract these parts from
|
|
a complex number \var{z}, use \code{\var{z}.real} and \code{\var{z}.imag}.
|
|
|
|
Numbers are created by numeric literals or as the result of built-in
|
|
functions and operators. Unadorned integer literals (including hex
|
|
and octal numbers) yield plain integers unless the value they denote
|
|
is too large to be represented as a plain integer, in which case
|
|
they yield a long integer. Integer literals with an
|
|
\character{L} or \character{l} suffix yield long integers
|
|
(\character{L} is preferred because \samp{1l} looks too much like
|
|
eleven!). Numeric literals containing a decimal point or an exponent
|
|
sign yield floating point numbers. Appending \character{j} or
|
|
\character{J} to a numeric literal yields a complex number with a
|
|
zero real part. A complex numeric literal is the sum of a real and
|
|
an imaginary part.
|
|
\indexii{numeric}{literals}
|
|
\indexii{integer}{literals}
|
|
\indexiii{long}{integer}{literals}
|
|
\indexii{floating point}{literals}
|
|
\indexii{complex number}{literals}
|
|
\indexii{hexadecimal}{literals}
|
|
\indexii{octal}{literals}
|
|
|
|
Python fully supports mixed arithmetic: when a binary arithmetic
|
|
operator has operands of different numeric types, the operand with the
|
|
``narrower'' type is widened to that of the other, where plain
|
|
integer is narrower than long integer is narrower than floating point is
|
|
narrower than complex.
|
|
Comparisons between numbers of mixed type use the same rule.\footnote{
|
|
As a consequence, the list \code{[1, 2]} is considered equal
|
|
to \code{[1.0, 2.0]}, and similarly for tuples.
|
|
} The constructors \function{int()}, \function{long()}, \function{float()},
|
|
and \function{complex()} can be used
|
|
to produce numbers of a specific type.
|
|
\index{arithmetic}
|
|
\bifuncindex{int}
|
|
\bifuncindex{long}
|
|
\bifuncindex{float}
|
|
\bifuncindex{complex}
|
|
|
|
All numeric types (except complex) support the following operations,
|
|
sorted by ascending priority (operations in the same box have the same
|
|
priority; all numeric operations have a higher priority than
|
|
comparison operations):
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} + \var{y}}{sum of \var{x} and \var{y}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} - \var{y}}{difference of \var{x} and \var{y}}{}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} * \var{y}}{product of \var{x} and \var{y}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} / \var{y}}{quotient of \var{x} and \var{y}}{(1)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} // \var{y}}{(floored) quotient of \var{x} and \var{y}}{(5)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} \%{} \var{y}}{remainder of \code{\var{x} / \var{y}}}{(4)}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{-\var{x}}{\var{x} negated}{}
|
|
\lineiii{+\var{x}}{\var{x} unchanged}{}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{abs(\var{x})}{absolute value or magnitude of \var{x}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{int(\var{x})}{\var{x} converted to integer}{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{long(\var{x})}{\var{x} converted to long integer}{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{float(\var{x})}{\var{x} converted to floating point}{}
|
|
\lineiii{complex(\var{re},\var{im})}{a complex number with real part \var{re}, imaginary part \var{im}. \var{im} defaults to zero.}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{c}.conjugate()}{conjugate of the complex number \var{c}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{divmod(\var{x}, \var{y})}{the pair \code{(\var{x} // \var{y}, \var{x} \%{} \var{y})}}{(3)(4)}
|
|
\lineiii{pow(\var{x}, \var{y})}{\var{x} to the power \var{y}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} ** \var{y}}{\var{x} to the power \var{y}}{}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{numeric}{types}
|
|
\withsubitem{(complex number method)}{\ttindex{conjugate()}}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[(1)]
|
|
For (plain or long) integer division, the result is an integer.
|
|
The result is always rounded towards minus infinity: 1/2 is 0,
|
|
(-1)/2 is -1, 1/(-2) is -1, and (-1)/(-2) is 0. Note that the result
|
|
is a long integer if either operand is a long integer, regardless of
|
|
the numeric value.
|
|
\indexii{integer}{division}
|
|
\indexiii{long}{integer}{division}
|
|
|
|
\item[(2)]
|
|
Conversion from floating point to (long or plain) integer may round or
|
|
truncate as in C; see functions \function{floor()} and
|
|
\function{ceil()} in the \refmodule{math}\refbimodindex{math} module
|
|
for well-defined conversions.
|
|
\withsubitem{(in module math)}{\ttindex{floor()}\ttindex{ceil()}}
|
|
\indexii{numeric}{conversions}
|
|
\indexii{C}{language}
|
|
|
|
\item[(3)]
|
|
See section \ref{built-in-funcs}, ``Built-in Functions,'' for a full
|
|
description.
|
|
|
|
\item[(4)]
|
|
Complex floor division operator, modulo operator, and \function{divmod()}.
|
|
|
|
\deprecated{2.3}{Instead convert to float using \function{abs()}
|
|
if appropriate.}
|
|
|
|
\item[(5)]
|
|
Also referred to as integer division. The resultant value is a whole integer,
|
|
though the result's type is not necessarily int.
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
% XXXJH exceptions: overflow (when? what operations?) zerodivision
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Bit-string Operations on Integer Types \label{bitstring-ops}}
|
|
\nodename{Bit-string Operations}
|
|
|
|
Plain and long integer types support additional operations that make
|
|
sense only for bit-strings. Negative numbers are treated as their 2's
|
|
complement value (for long integers, this assumes a sufficiently large
|
|
number of bits that no overflow occurs during the operation).
|
|
|
|
The priorities of the binary bit-wise operations are all lower than
|
|
the numeric operations and higher than the comparisons; the unary
|
|
operation \samp{\~} has the same priority as the other unary numeric
|
|
operations (\samp{+} and \samp{-}).
|
|
|
|
This table lists the bit-string operations sorted in ascending
|
|
priority (operations in the same box have the same priority):
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} | \var{y}}{bitwise \dfn{or} of \var{x} and \var{y}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} \^{} \var{y}}{bitwise \dfn{exclusive or} of \var{x} and \var{y}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} \&{} \var{y}}{bitwise \dfn{and} of \var{x} and \var{y}}{}
|
|
% The empty groups below prevent conversion to guillemets.
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} <{}< \var{n}}{\var{x} shifted left by \var{n} bits}{(1), (2)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} >{}> \var{n}}{\var{x} shifted right by \var{n} bits}{(1), (3)}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\~\var{x}}{the bits of \var{x} inverted}{}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{integer}{types}
|
|
\indexii{bit-string}{operations}
|
|
\indexii{shifting}{operations}
|
|
\indexii{masking}{operations}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[(1)] Negative shift counts are illegal and cause a
|
|
\exception{ValueError} to be raised.
|
|
\item[(2)] A left shift by \var{n} bits is equivalent to
|
|
multiplication by \code{pow(2, \var{n})} without overflow check.
|
|
\item[(3)] A right shift by \var{n} bits is equivalent to
|
|
division by \code{pow(2, \var{n})} without overflow check.
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Iterator Types \label{typeiter}}
|
|
|
|
\versionadded{2.2}
|
|
\index{iterator protocol}
|
|
\index{protocol!iterator}
|
|
\index{sequence!iteration}
|
|
\index{container!iteration over}
|
|
|
|
Python supports a concept of iteration over containers. This is
|
|
implemented using two distinct methods; these are used to allow
|
|
user-defined classes to support iteration. Sequences, described below
|
|
in more detail, always support the iteration methods.
|
|
|
|
One method needs to be defined for container objects to provide
|
|
iteration support:
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container]{__iter__}{}
|
|
Return an iterator object. The object is required to support the
|
|
iterator protocol described below. If a container supports
|
|
different types of iteration, additional methods can be provided to
|
|
specifically request iterators for those iteration types. (An
|
|
example of an object supporting multiple forms of iteration would be
|
|
a tree structure which supports both breadth-first and depth-first
|
|
traversal.) This method corresponds to the \member{tp_iter} slot of
|
|
the type structure for Python objects in the Python/C API.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
The iterator objects themselves are required to support the following
|
|
two methods, which together form the \dfn{iterator protocol}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[iterator]{__iter__}{}
|
|
Return the iterator object itself. This is required to allow both
|
|
containers and iterators to be used with the \keyword{for} and
|
|
\keyword{in} statements. This method corresponds to the
|
|
\member{tp_iter} slot of the type structure for Python objects in
|
|
the Python/C API.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[iterator]{next}{}
|
|
Return the next item from the container. If there are no further
|
|
items, raise the \exception{StopIteration} exception. This method
|
|
corresponds to the \member{tp_iternext} slot of the type structure
|
|
for Python objects in the Python/C API.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
Python defines several iterator objects to support iteration over
|
|
general and specific sequence types, dictionaries, and other more
|
|
specialized forms. The specific types are not important beyond their
|
|
implementation of the iterator protocol.
|
|
|
|
The intention of the protocol is that once an iterator's
|
|
\method{next()} method raises \exception{StopIteration}, it will
|
|
continue to do so on subsequent calls. Implementations that
|
|
do not obey this property are deemed broken. (This constraint
|
|
was added in Python 2.3; in Python 2.2, various iterators are
|
|
broken according to this rule.)
|
|
|
|
Python's generators provide a convenient way to implement the
|
|
iterator protocol. If a container object's \method{__iter__()}
|
|
method is implemented as a generator, it will automatically
|
|
return an iterator object (technically, a generator object)
|
|
supplying the \method{__iter__()} and \method{next()} methods.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Sequence Types ---
|
|
\class{str}, \class{unicode}, \class{list},
|
|
\class{tuple}, \class{buffer}, \class{xrange}
|
|
\label{typesseq}}
|
|
|
|
There are six sequence types: strings, Unicode strings, lists,
|
|
tuples, buffers, and xrange objects.
|
|
|
|
String literals are written in single or double quotes:
|
|
\code{'xyzzy'}, \code{"frobozz"}. See chapter 2 of the
|
|
\citetitle[../ref/strings.html]{Python Reference Manual} for more about
|
|
string literals. Unicode strings are much like strings, but are
|
|
specified in the syntax using a preceding \character{u} character:
|
|
\code{u'abc'}, \code{u"def"}. Lists are constructed with square brackets,
|
|
separating items with commas: \code{[a, b, c]}. Tuples are
|
|
constructed by the comma operator (not within square brackets), with
|
|
or without enclosing parentheses, but an empty tuple must have the
|
|
enclosing parentheses, such as \code{a, b, c} or \code{()}. A single
|
|
item tuple must have a trailing comma, such as \code{(d,)}.
|
|
\obindex{sequence}
|
|
\obindex{string}
|
|
\obindex{Unicode}
|
|
\obindex{tuple}
|
|
\obindex{list}
|
|
|
|
Buffer objects are not directly supported by Python syntax, but can be
|
|
created by calling the builtin function
|
|
\function{buffer()}.\bifuncindex{buffer} They don't support
|
|
concatenation or repetition.
|
|
\obindex{buffer}
|
|
|
|
Xrange objects are similar to buffers in that there is no specific
|
|
syntax to create them, but they are created using the \function{xrange()}
|
|
function.\bifuncindex{xrange} They don't support slicing,
|
|
concatenation or repetition, and using \code{in}, \code{not in},
|
|
\function{min()} or \function{max()} on them is inefficient.
|
|
\obindex{xrange}
|
|
|
|
Most sequence types support the following operations. The \samp{in} and
|
|
\samp{not in} operations have the same priorities as the comparison
|
|
operations. The \samp{+} and \samp{*} operations have the same
|
|
priority as the corresponding numeric operations.\footnote{They must
|
|
have since the parser can't tell the type of the operands.}
|
|
|
|
This table lists the sequence operations sorted in ascending priority
|
|
(operations in the same box have the same priority). In the table,
|
|
\var{s} and \var{t} are sequences of the same type; \var{n}, \var{i}
|
|
and \var{j} are integers:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} in \var{s}}{\code{True} if an item of \var{s} is equal to \var{x}, else \code{False}}{(1)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} not in \var{s}}{\code{False} if an item of \var{s} is
|
|
equal to \var{x}, else \code{True}}{(1)}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s} + \var{t}}{the concatenation of \var{s} and \var{t}}{(6)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s} * \var{n}\textrm{,} \var{n} * \var{s}}{\var{n} shallow copies of \var{s} concatenated}{(2)}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}]}{\var{i}'th item of \var{s}, origin 0}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}]}{slice of \var{s} from \var{i} to \var{j}}{(3), (4)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]}{slice of \var{s} from \var{i} to \var{j} with step \var{k}}{(3), (5)}
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{len(\var{s})}{length of \var{s}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{min(\var{s})}{smallest item of \var{s}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{max(\var{s})}{largest item of \var{s}}{}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{sequence}{types}
|
|
\bifuncindex{len}
|
|
\bifuncindex{min}
|
|
\bifuncindex{max}
|
|
\indexii{concatenation}{operation}
|
|
\indexii{repetition}{operation}
|
|
\indexii{subscript}{operation}
|
|
\indexii{slice}{operation}
|
|
\indexii{extended slice}{operation}
|
|
\opindex{in}
|
|
\opindex{not in}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[(1)] When \var{s} is a string or Unicode string object the
|
|
\code{in} and \code{not in} operations act like a substring test. In
|
|
Python versions before 2.3, \var{x} had to be a string of length 1.
|
|
In Python 2.3 and beyond, \var{x} may be a string of any length.
|
|
|
|
\item[(2)] Values of \var{n} less than \code{0} are treated as
|
|
\code{0} (which yields an empty sequence of the same type as
|
|
\var{s}). Note also that the copies are shallow; nested structures
|
|
are not copied. This often haunts new Python programmers; consider:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> lists = [[]] * 3
|
|
>>> lists
|
|
[[], [], []]
|
|
>>> lists[0].append(3)
|
|
>>> lists
|
|
[[3], [3], [3]]
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
What has happened is that \code{[[]]} is a one-element list containing
|
|
an empty list, so all three elements of \code{[[]] * 3} are (pointers to)
|
|
this single empty list. Modifying any of the elements of \code{lists}
|
|
modifies this single list. You can create a list of different lists this
|
|
way:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> lists = [[] for i in range(3)]
|
|
>>> lists[0].append(3)
|
|
>>> lists[1].append(5)
|
|
>>> lists[2].append(7)
|
|
>>> lists
|
|
[[3], [5], [7]]
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
\item[(3)] If \var{i} or \var{j} is negative, the index is relative to
|
|
the end of the string: \code{len(\var{s}) + \var{i}} or
|
|
\code{len(\var{s}) + \var{j}} is substituted. But note that \code{-0} is
|
|
still \code{0}.
|
|
|
|
\item[(4)] The slice of \var{s} from \var{i} to \var{j} is defined as
|
|
the sequence of items with index \var{k} such that \code{\var{i} <=
|
|
\var{k} < \var{j}}. If \var{i} or \var{j} is greater than
|
|
\code{len(\var{s})}, use \code{len(\var{s})}. If \var{i} is omitted
|
|
or \code{None}, use \code{0}. If \var{j} is omitted or \code{None},
|
|
use \code{len(\var{s})}. If \var{i} is greater than or equal to \var{j},
|
|
the slice is empty.
|
|
|
|
\item[(5)] The slice of \var{s} from \var{i} to \var{j} with step
|
|
\var{k} is defined as the sequence of items with index
|
|
\code{\var{x} = \var{i} + \var{n}*\var{k}} such that
|
|
$0 \leq n < \frac{j-i}{k}$. In other words, the indices
|
|
are \code{i}, \code{i+k}, \code{i+2*k}, \code{i+3*k} and so on, stopping when
|
|
\var{j} is reached (but never including \var{j}). If \var{i} or \var{j}
|
|
is greater than \code{len(\var{s})}, use \code{len(\var{s})}. If
|
|
\var{i} or \var{j} are omitted or \code{None}, they become ``end'' values
|
|
(which end depends on the sign of \var{k}). Note, \var{k} cannot
|
|
be zero. If \var{k} is \code{None}, it is treated like \code{1}.
|
|
|
|
\item[(6)] If \var{s} and \var{t} are both strings, some Python
|
|
implementations such as CPython can usually perform an in-place optimization
|
|
for assignments of the form \code{\var{s}=\var{s}+\var{t}} or
|
|
\code{\var{s}+=\var{t}}. When applicable, this optimization makes
|
|
quadratic run-time much less likely. This optimization is both version
|
|
and implementation dependent. For performance sensitive code, it is
|
|
preferable to use the \method{str.join()} method which assures consistent
|
|
linear concatenation performance across versions and implementations.
|
|
\versionchanged[Formerly, string concatenation never occurred in-place]{2.4}
|
|
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{String Methods \label{string-methods}}
|
|
\indexii{string}{methods}
|
|
|
|
These are the string methods which both 8-bit strings and Unicode
|
|
objects support:
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{capitalize}{}
|
|
Return a copy of the string with only its first character capitalized.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{center}{width\optional{, fillchar}}
|
|
Return centered in a string of length \var{width}. Padding is done
|
|
using the specified \var{fillchar} (default is a space).
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for the \var{fillchar} argument]{2.4}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{count}{sub\optional{, start\optional{, end}}}
|
|
Return the number of occurrences of substring \var{sub} in string
|
|
S\code{[\var{start}:\var{end}]}. Optional arguments \var{start} and
|
|
\var{end} are interpreted as in slice notation.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{decode}{\optional{encoding\optional{, errors}}}
|
|
Decodes the string using the codec registered for \var{encoding}.
|
|
\var{encoding} defaults to the default string encoding. \var{errors}
|
|
may be given to set a different error handling scheme. The default is
|
|
\code{'strict'}, meaning that encoding errors raise
|
|
\exception{UnicodeError}. Other possible values are \code{'ignore'},
|
|
\code{'replace'} and any other name registered via
|
|
\function{codecs.register_error}, see section~\ref{codec-base-classes}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.2}
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for other error handling schemes added]{2.3}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{encode}{\optional{encoding\optional{,errors}}}
|
|
Return an encoded version of the string. Default encoding is the current
|
|
default string encoding. \var{errors} may be given to set a different
|
|
error handling scheme. The default for \var{errors} is
|
|
\code{'strict'}, meaning that encoding errors raise a
|
|
\exception{UnicodeError}. Other possible values are \code{'ignore'},
|
|
\code{'replace'}, \code{'xmlcharrefreplace'}, \code{'backslashreplace'}
|
|
and any other name registered via \function{codecs.register_error},
|
|
see section~\ref{codec-base-classes}.
|
|
For a list of possible encodings, see section~\ref{standard-encodings}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.0}
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for \code{'xmlcharrefreplace'} and
|
|
\code{'backslashreplace'} and other error handling schemes added]{2.3}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{endswith}{suffix\optional{, start\optional{, end}}}
|
|
Return \code{True} if the string ends with the specified \var{suffix},
|
|
otherwise return \code{False}. \var{suffix} can also be a tuple of
|
|
suffixes to look for. With optional \var{start}, test beginning at
|
|
that position. With optional \var{end}, stop comparing at that position.
|
|
|
|
\versionchanged[Accept tuples as \var{suffix}]{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{expandtabs}{\optional{tabsize}}
|
|
Return a copy of the string where all tab characters are expanded
|
|
using spaces. If \var{tabsize} is not given, a tab size of \code{8}
|
|
characters is assumed.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{find}{sub\optional{, start\optional{, end}}}
|
|
Return the lowest index in the string where substring \var{sub} is
|
|
found, such that \var{sub} is contained in the range [\var{start},
|
|
\var{end}]. Optional arguments \var{start} and \var{end} are
|
|
interpreted as in slice notation. Return \code{-1} if \var{sub} is
|
|
not found.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{index}{sub\optional{, start\optional{, end}}}
|
|
Like \method{find()}, but raise \exception{ValueError} when the
|
|
substring is not found.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{isalnum}{}
|
|
Return true if all characters in the string are alphanumeric and there
|
|
is at least one character, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{isalpha}{}
|
|
Return true if all characters in the string are alphabetic and there
|
|
is at least one character, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{isdigit}{}
|
|
Return true if all characters in the string are digits and there
|
|
is at least one character, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{islower}{}
|
|
Return true if all cased characters in the string are lowercase and
|
|
there is at least one cased character, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{isspace}{}
|
|
Return true if there are only whitespace characters in the string and
|
|
there is at least one character, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{istitle}{}
|
|
Return true if the string is a titlecased string and there is at least one
|
|
character, for example uppercase characters may only follow uncased
|
|
characters and lowercase characters only cased ones. Return false
|
|
otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{isupper}{}
|
|
Return true if all cased characters in the string are uppercase and
|
|
there is at least one cased character, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{join}{seq}
|
|
Return a string which is the concatenation of the strings in the
|
|
sequence \var{seq}. The separator between elements is the string
|
|
providing this method.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{ljust}{width\optional{, fillchar}}
|
|
Return the string left justified in a string of length \var{width}.
|
|
Padding is done using the specified \var{fillchar} (default is a
|
|
space). The original string is returned if
|
|
\var{width} is less than \code{len(\var{s})}.
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for the \var{fillchar} argument]{2.4}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{lower}{}
|
|
Return a copy of the string converted to lowercase.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{lstrip}{\optional{chars}}
|
|
Return a copy of the string with leading characters removed. The
|
|
\var{chars} argument is a string specifying the set of characters
|
|
to be removed. If omitted or \code{None}, the \var{chars} argument
|
|
defaults to removing whitespace. The \var{chars} argument is not
|
|
a prefix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped:
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> ' spacious '.lstrip()
|
|
'spacious '
|
|
>>> 'www.example.com'.lstrip('cmowz.')
|
|
'example.com'
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for the \var{chars} argument]{2.2.2}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{partition}{sep}
|
|
Split the string at the first occurrence of \var{sep}, and return
|
|
a 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the separator
|
|
itself, and the part after the separator. If the separator is not
|
|
found, return a 3-tuple containing the string itself, followed by
|
|
two empty strings.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{replace}{old, new\optional{, count}}
|
|
Return a copy of the string with all occurrences of substring
|
|
\var{old} replaced by \var{new}. If the optional argument
|
|
\var{count} is given, only the first \var{count} occurrences are
|
|
replaced.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{rfind}{sub \optional{,start \optional{,end}}}
|
|
Return the highest index in the string where substring \var{sub} is
|
|
found, such that \var{sub} is contained within s[start,end]. Optional
|
|
arguments \var{start} and \var{end} are interpreted as in slice
|
|
notation. Return \code{-1} on failure.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{rindex}{sub\optional{, start\optional{, end}}}
|
|
Like \method{rfind()} but raises \exception{ValueError} when the
|
|
substring \var{sub} is not found.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{rjust}{width\optional{, fillchar}}
|
|
Return the string right justified in a string of length \var{width}.
|
|
Padding is done using the specified \var{fillchar} (default is a space).
|
|
The original string is returned if
|
|
\var{width} is less than \code{len(\var{s})}.
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for the \var{fillchar} argument]{2.4}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{rpartition}{sep}
|
|
Split the string at the last occurrence of \var{sep}, and return
|
|
a 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the separator
|
|
itself, and the part after the separator. If the separator is not
|
|
found, return a 3-tuple containing two empty strings, followed by
|
|
the string itself.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{rsplit}{\optional{sep \optional{,maxsplit}}}
|
|
Return a list of the words in the string, using \var{sep} as the
|
|
delimiter string. If \var{maxsplit} is given, at most \var{maxsplit}
|
|
splits are done, the \emph{rightmost} ones. If \var{sep} is not specified
|
|
or \code{None}, any whitespace string is a separator. Except for splitting
|
|
from the right, \method{rsplit()} behaves like \method{split()} which
|
|
is described in detail below.
|
|
\versionadded{2.4}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{rstrip}{\optional{chars}}
|
|
Return a copy of the string with trailing characters removed. The
|
|
\var{chars} argument is a string specifying the set of characters
|
|
to be removed. If omitted or \code{None}, the \var{chars} argument
|
|
defaults to removing whitespace. The \var{chars} argument is not
|
|
a suffix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped:
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> ' spacious '.rstrip()
|
|
' spacious'
|
|
>>> 'mississippi'.rstrip('ipz')
|
|
'mississ'
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for the \var{chars} argument]{2.2.2}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{split}{\optional{sep \optional{,maxsplit}}}
|
|
Return a list of the words in the string, using \var{sep} as the
|
|
delimiter string. If \var{maxsplit} is given, at most \var{maxsplit}
|
|
splits are done. (thus, the list will have at most \code{\var{maxsplit}+1}
|
|
elements). If \var{maxsplit} is not specified, then there
|
|
is no limit on the number of splits (all possible splits are made).
|
|
Consecutive delimiters are not grouped together and are
|
|
deemed to delimit empty strings (for example, \samp{'1,,2'.split(',')}
|
|
returns \samp{['1', '', '2']}). The \var{sep} argument may consist of
|
|
multiple characters (for example, \samp{'1, 2, 3'.split(', ')} returns
|
|
\samp{['1', '2', '3']}). Splitting an empty string with a specified
|
|
separator returns \samp{['']}.
|
|
|
|
If \var{sep} is not specified or is \code{None}, a different splitting
|
|
algorithm is applied. First, whitespace characters (spaces, tabs,
|
|
newlines, returns, and formfeeds) are stripped from both ends. Then,
|
|
words are separated by arbitrary length strings of whitespace
|
|
characters. Consecutive whitespace delimiters are treated as a single
|
|
delimiter (\samp{'1 2 3'.split()} returns \samp{['1', '2', '3']}).
|
|
Splitting an empty string or a string consisting of just whitespace
|
|
returns an empty list.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{splitlines}{\optional{keepends}}
|
|
Return a list of the lines in the string, breaking at line
|
|
boundaries. Line breaks are not included in the resulting list unless
|
|
\var{keepends} is given and true.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{startswith}{prefix\optional{,
|
|
start\optional{, end}}}
|
|
Return \code{True} if string starts with the \var{prefix}, otherwise
|
|
return \code{False}. \var{prefix} can also be a tuple of
|
|
prefixes to look for. With optional \var{start}, test string beginning at
|
|
that position. With optional \var{end}, stop comparing string at that
|
|
position.
|
|
|
|
\versionchanged[Accept tuples as \var{prefix}]{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{strip}{\optional{chars}}
|
|
Return a copy of the string with the leading and trailing characters
|
|
removed. The \var{chars} argument is a string specifying the set of
|
|
characters to be removed. If omitted or \code{None}, the \var{chars}
|
|
argument defaults to removing whitespace. The \var{chars} argument is not
|
|
a prefix or suffix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped:
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> ' spacious '.strip()
|
|
'spacious'
|
|
>>> 'www.example.com'.strip('cmowz.')
|
|
'example'
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for the \var{chars} argument]{2.2.2}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{swapcase}{}
|
|
Return a copy of the string with uppercase characters converted to
|
|
lowercase and vice versa.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{title}{}
|
|
Return a titlecased version of the string: words start with uppercase
|
|
characters, all remaining cased characters are lowercase.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{translate}{table\optional{, deletechars}}
|
|
Return a copy of the string where all characters occurring in the
|
|
optional argument \var{deletechars} are removed, and the remaining
|
|
characters have been mapped through the given translation table, which
|
|
must be a string of length 256.
|
|
|
|
You can use the \function{maketrans()} helper function in the
|
|
\refmodule{string} module to create a translation table.
|
|
|
|
For Unicode objects, the \method{translate()} method does not
|
|
accept the optional \var{deletechars} argument. Instead, it
|
|
returns a copy of the \var{s} where all characters have been mapped
|
|
through the given translation table which must be a mapping of
|
|
Unicode ordinals to Unicode ordinals, Unicode strings or \code{None}.
|
|
Unmapped characters are left untouched. Characters mapped to \code{None}
|
|
are deleted. Note, a more flexible approach is to create a custom
|
|
character mapping codec using the \refmodule{codecs} module (see
|
|
\module{encodings.cp1251} for an example).
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{upper}{}
|
|
Return a copy of the string converted to uppercase.
|
|
|
|
For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[string]{zfill}{width}
|
|
Return the numeric string left filled with zeros in a string
|
|
of length \var{width}. The original string is returned if
|
|
\var{width} is less than \code{len(\var{s})}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.2.2}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{String Formatting Operations \label{typesseq-strings}}
|
|
|
|
\index{formatting, string (\%{})}
|
|
\index{interpolation, string (\%{})}
|
|
\index{string!formatting}
|
|
\index{string!interpolation}
|
|
\index{printf-style formatting}
|
|
\index{sprintf-style formatting}
|
|
\index{\protect\%{} formatting}
|
|
\index{\protect\%{} interpolation}
|
|
|
|
String and Unicode objects have one unique built-in operation: the
|
|
\code{\%} operator (modulo). This is also known as the string
|
|
\emph{formatting} or \emph{interpolation} operator. Given
|
|
\code{\var{format} \% \var{values}} (where \var{format} is a string or
|
|
Unicode object), \code{\%} conversion specifications in \var{format}
|
|
are replaced with zero or more elements of \var{values}. The effect
|
|
is similar to the using \cfunction{sprintf()} in the C language. If
|
|
\var{format} is a Unicode object, or if any of the objects being
|
|
converted using the \code{\%s} conversion are Unicode objects, the
|
|
result will also be a Unicode object.
|
|
|
|
If \var{format} requires a single argument, \var{values} may be a
|
|
single non-tuple object.\footnote{To format only a tuple you
|
|
should therefore provide a singleton tuple whose only element
|
|
is the tuple to be formatted.} Otherwise, \var{values} must be a tuple with
|
|
exactly the number of items specified by the format string, or a
|
|
single mapping object (for example, a dictionary).
|
|
|
|
A conversion specifier contains two or more characters and has the
|
|
following components, which must occur in this order:
|
|
|
|
\begin{enumerate}
|
|
\item The \character{\%} character, which marks the start of the
|
|
specifier.
|
|
\item Mapping key (optional), consisting of a parenthesised sequence
|
|
of characters (for example, \code{(somename)}).
|
|
\item Conversion flags (optional), which affect the result of some
|
|
conversion types.
|
|
\item Minimum field width (optional). If specified as an
|
|
\character{*} (asterisk), the actual width is read from the
|
|
next element of the tuple in \var{values}, and the object to
|
|
convert comes after the minimum field width and optional
|
|
precision.
|
|
\item Precision (optional), given as a \character{.} (dot) followed
|
|
by the precision. If specified as \character{*} (an
|
|
asterisk), the actual width is read from the next element of
|
|
the tuple in \var{values}, and the value to convert comes after
|
|
the precision.
|
|
\item Length modifier (optional).
|
|
\item Conversion type.
|
|
\end{enumerate}
|
|
|
|
When the right argument is a dictionary (or other mapping type), then
|
|
the formats in the string \emph{must} include a parenthesised mapping key into
|
|
that dictionary inserted immediately after the \character{\%}
|
|
character. The mapping key selects the value to be formatted from the
|
|
mapping. For example:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> print '%(language)s has %(#)03d quote types.' % \
|
|
{'language': "Python", "#": 2}
|
|
Python has 002 quote types.
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
In this case no \code{*} specifiers may occur in a format (since they
|
|
require a sequential parameter list).
|
|
|
|
The conversion flag characters are:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableii}{c|l}{character}{Flag}{Meaning}
|
|
\lineii{\#}{The value conversion will use the ``alternate form''
|
|
(where defined below).}
|
|
\lineii{0}{The conversion will be zero padded for numeric values.}
|
|
\lineii{-}{The converted value is left adjusted (overrides
|
|
the \character{0} conversion if both are given).}
|
|
\lineii{{~}}{(a space) A blank should be left before a positive number
|
|
(or empty string) produced by a signed conversion.}
|
|
\lineii{+}{A sign character (\character{+} or \character{-}) will
|
|
precede the conversion (overrides a "space" flag).}
|
|
\end{tableii}
|
|
|
|
A length modifier (\code{h}, \code{l}, or \code{L}) may be
|
|
present, but is ignored as it is not necessary for Python.
|
|
|
|
The conversion types are:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{character}{Conversion}{Meaning}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{d}{Signed integer decimal.}{}
|
|
\lineiii{i}{Signed integer decimal.}{}
|
|
\lineiii{o}{Unsigned octal.}{(1)}
|
|
\lineiii{u}{Unsigned decimal.}{}
|
|
\lineiii{x}{Unsigned hexadecimal (lowercase).}{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{X}{Unsigned hexadecimal (uppercase).}{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{e}{Floating point exponential format (lowercase).}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{E}{Floating point exponential format (uppercase).}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{f}{Floating point decimal format.}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{F}{Floating point decimal format.}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{g}{Floating point format. Uses exponential format
|
|
if exponent is greater than -4 or less than precision,
|
|
decimal format otherwise.}{(4)}
|
|
\lineiii{G}{Floating point format. Uses exponential format
|
|
if exponent is greater than -4 or less than precision,
|
|
decimal format otherwise.}{(4)}
|
|
\lineiii{c}{Single character (accepts integer or single character
|
|
string).}{}
|
|
\lineiii{r}{String (converts any python object using
|
|
\function{repr()}).}{(5)}
|
|
\lineiii{s}{String (converts any python object using
|
|
\function{str()}).}{(6)}
|
|
\lineiii{\%}{No argument is converted, results in a \character{\%}
|
|
character in the result.}{}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[(1)]
|
|
The alternate form causes a leading zero (\character{0}) to be
|
|
inserted between left-hand padding and the formatting of the
|
|
number if the leading character of the result is not already a
|
|
zero.
|
|
\item[(2)]
|
|
The alternate form causes a leading \code{'0x'} or \code{'0X'}
|
|
(depending on whether the \character{x} or \character{X} format
|
|
was used) to be inserted between left-hand padding and the
|
|
formatting of the number if the leading character of the result is
|
|
not already a zero.
|
|
\item[(3)]
|
|
The alternate form causes the result to always contain a decimal
|
|
point, even if no digits follow it.
|
|
|
|
The precision determines the number of digits after the decimal
|
|
point and defaults to 6.
|
|
\item[(4)]
|
|
The alternate form causes the result to always contain a decimal
|
|
point, and trailing zeroes are not removed as they would
|
|
otherwise be.
|
|
|
|
The precision determines the number of significant digits before
|
|
and after the decimal point and defaults to 6.
|
|
\item[(5)]
|
|
The \code{\%r} conversion was added in Python 2.0.
|
|
|
|
The precision determines the maximal number of characters used.
|
|
\item[(6)]
|
|
If the object or format provided is a \class{unicode} string,
|
|
the resulting string will also be \class{unicode}.
|
|
|
|
The precision determines the maximal number of characters used.
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
% XXX Examples?
|
|
|
|
Since Python strings have an explicit length, \code{\%s} conversions
|
|
do not assume that \code{'\e0'} is the end of the string.
|
|
|
|
For safety reasons, floating point precisions are clipped to 50;
|
|
\code{\%f} conversions for numbers whose absolute value is over 1e25
|
|
are replaced by \code{\%g} conversions.\footnote{
|
|
These numbers are fairly arbitrary. They are intended to
|
|
avoid printing endless strings of meaningless digits without hampering
|
|
correct use and without having to know the exact precision of floating
|
|
point values on a particular machine.
|
|
} All other errors raise exceptions.
|
|
|
|
Additional string operations are defined in standard modules
|
|
\refmodule{string}\refstmodindex{string}\ and
|
|
\refmodule{re}.\refstmodindex{re}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{XRange Type \label{typesseq-xrange}}
|
|
|
|
The \class{xrange}\obindex{xrange} type is an immutable sequence which
|
|
is commonly used for looping. The advantage of the \class{xrange}
|
|
type is that an \class{xrange} object will always take the same amount
|
|
of memory, no matter the size of the range it represents. There are
|
|
no consistent performance advantages.
|
|
|
|
XRange objects have very little behavior: they only support indexing,
|
|
iteration, and the \function{len()} function.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Mutable Sequence Types \label{typesseq-mutable}}
|
|
|
|
List objects support additional operations that allow in-place
|
|
modification of the object.
|
|
Other mutable sequence types (when added to the language) should
|
|
also support these operations.
|
|
Strings and tuples are immutable sequence types: such objects cannot
|
|
be modified once created.
|
|
The following operations are defined on mutable sequence types (where
|
|
\var{x} is an arbitrary object):
|
|
\indexiii{mutable}{sequence}{types}
|
|
\obindex{list}
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}] = \var{x}}
|
|
{item \var{i} of \var{s} is replaced by \var{x}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}] = \var{t}}
|
|
{slice of \var{s} from \var{i} to \var{j}
|
|
is replaced by the contents of the iterable \var{t}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{del \var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}]}
|
|
{same as \code{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}] = []}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}] = \var{t}}
|
|
{the elements of \code{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]} are replaced by those of \var{t}}{(1)}
|
|
\lineiii{del \var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]}
|
|
{removes the elements of \code{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]} from the list}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.append(\var{x})}
|
|
{same as \code{\var{s}[len(\var{s}):len(\var{s})] = [\var{x}]}}{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.extend(\var{x})}
|
|
{same as \code{\var{s}[len(\var{s}):len(\var{s})] = \var{x}}}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.count(\var{x})}
|
|
{return number of \var{i}'s for which \code{\var{s}[\var{i}] == \var{x}}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.index(\var{x}\optional{, \var{i}\optional{, \var{j}}})}
|
|
{return smallest \var{k} such that \code{\var{s}[\var{k}] == \var{x}} and
|
|
\code{\var{i} <= \var{k} < \var{j}}}{(4)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.insert(\var{i}, \var{x})}
|
|
{same as \code{\var{s}[\var{i}:\var{i}] = [\var{x}]}}{(5)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.pop(\optional{\var{i}})}
|
|
{same as \code{\var{x} = \var{s}[\var{i}]; del \var{s}[\var{i}]; return \var{x}}}{(6)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.remove(\var{x})}
|
|
{same as \code{del \var{s}[\var{s}.index(\var{x})]}}{(4)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.reverse()}
|
|
{reverses the items of \var{s} in place}{(7)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.sort(\optional{\var{cmp}\optional{,
|
|
\var{key}\optional{, \var{reverse}}}})}
|
|
{sort the items of \var{s} in place}{(7), (8), (9), (10)}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
\indexiv{operations on}{mutable}{sequence}{types}
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{sequence}{types}
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{list}{type}
|
|
\indexii{subscript}{assignment}
|
|
\indexii{slice}{assignment}
|
|
\indexii{extended slice}{assignment}
|
|
\stindex{del}
|
|
\withsubitem{(list method)}{
|
|
\ttindex{append()}\ttindex{extend()}\ttindex{count()}\ttindex{index()}
|
|
\ttindex{insert()}\ttindex{pop()}\ttindex{remove()}\ttindex{reverse()}
|
|
\ttindex{sort()}}
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[(1)] \var{t} must have the same length as the slice it is
|
|
replacing.
|
|
|
|
\item[(2)] The C implementation of Python has historically accepted
|
|
multiple parameters and implicitly joined them into a tuple; this
|
|
no longer works in Python 2.0. Use of this misfeature has been
|
|
deprecated since Python 1.4.
|
|
|
|
\item[(3)] \var{x} can be any iterable object.
|
|
|
|
\item[(4)] Raises \exception{ValueError} when \var{x} is not found in
|
|
\var{s}. When a negative index is passed as the second or third parameter
|
|
to the \method{index()} method, the list length is added, as for slice
|
|
indices. If it is still negative, it is truncated to zero, as for
|
|
slice indices. \versionchanged[Previously, \method{index()} didn't
|
|
have arguments for specifying start and stop positions]{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\item[(5)] When a negative index is passed as the first parameter to
|
|
the \method{insert()} method, the list length is added, as for slice
|
|
indices. If it is still negative, it is truncated to zero, as for
|
|
slice indices. \versionchanged[Previously, all negative indices
|
|
were truncated to zero]{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\item[(6)] The \method{pop()} method is only supported by the list and
|
|
array types. The optional argument \var{i} defaults to \code{-1},
|
|
so that by default the last item is removed and returned.
|
|
|
|
\item[(7)] The \method{sort()} and \method{reverse()} methods modify the
|
|
list in place for economy of space when sorting or reversing a large
|
|
list. To remind you that they operate by side effect, they don't return
|
|
the sorted or reversed list.
|
|
|
|
\item[(8)] The \method{sort()} method takes optional arguments for
|
|
controlling the comparisons.
|
|
|
|
\var{cmp} specifies a custom comparison function of two arguments
|
|
(list items) which should return a negative, zero or positive number
|
|
depending on whether the first argument is considered smaller than,
|
|
equal to, or larger than the second argument:
|
|
\samp{\var{cmp}=\keyword{lambda} \var{x},\var{y}:
|
|
\function{cmp}(x.lower(), y.lower())}
|
|
|
|
\var{key} specifies a function of one argument that is used to
|
|
extract a comparison key from each list element:
|
|
\samp{\var{key}=\function{str.lower}}
|
|
|
|
\var{reverse} is a boolean value. If set to \code{True}, then the
|
|
list elements are sorted as if each comparison were reversed.
|
|
|
|
In general, the \var{key} and \var{reverse} conversion processes are
|
|
much faster than specifying an equivalent \var{cmp} function. This is
|
|
because \var{cmp} is called multiple times for each list element while
|
|
\var{key} and \var{reverse} touch each element only once.
|
|
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for \code{None} as an equivalent to omitting
|
|
\var{cmp} was added]{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\versionchanged[Support for \var{key} and \var{reverse} was added]{2.4}
|
|
|
|
\item[(9)] Starting with Python 2.3, the \method{sort()} method is
|
|
guaranteed to be stable. A sort is stable if it guarantees not to
|
|
change the relative order of elements that compare equal --- this is
|
|
helpful for sorting in multiple passes (for example, sort by
|
|
department, then by salary grade).
|
|
|
|
\item[(10)] While a list is being sorted, the effect of attempting to
|
|
mutate, or even inspect, the list is undefined. The C
|
|
implementation of Python 2.3 and newer makes the list appear empty
|
|
for the duration, and raises \exception{ValueError} if it can detect
|
|
that the list has been mutated during a sort.
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
\section{Set Types ---
|
|
\class{set}, \class{frozenset}
|
|
\label{types-set}}
|
|
\obindex{set}
|
|
|
|
A \dfn{set} object is an unordered collection of immutable values.
|
|
Common uses include membership testing, removing duplicates from a sequence,
|
|
and computing mathematical operations such as intersection, union, difference,
|
|
and symmetric difference.
|
|
\versionadded{2.4}
|
|
|
|
Like other collections, sets support \code{\var{x} in \var{set}},
|
|
\code{len(\var{set})}, and \code{for \var{x} in \var{set}}. Being an
|
|
unordered collection, sets do not record element position or order of
|
|
insertion. Accordingly, sets do not support indexing, slicing, or
|
|
other sequence-like behavior.
|
|
|
|
There are currently two builtin set types, \class{set} and \class{frozenset}.
|
|
The \class{set} type is mutable --- the contents can be changed using methods
|
|
like \method{add()} and \method{remove()}. Since it is mutable, it has no
|
|
hash value and cannot be used as either a dictionary key or as an element of
|
|
another set. The \class{frozenset} type is immutable and hashable --- its
|
|
contents cannot be altered after is created; however, it can be used as
|
|
a dictionary key or as an element of another set.
|
|
|
|
Instances of \class{set} and \class{frozenset} provide the following operations:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|c|l}{code}{Operation}{Equivalent}{Result}
|
|
\lineiii{len(\var{s})}{}{cardinality of set \var{s}}
|
|
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} in \var{s}}{}
|
|
{test \var{x} for membership in \var{s}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{x} not in \var{s}}{}
|
|
{test \var{x} for non-membership in \var{s}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.issubset(\var{t})}{\code{\var{s} <= \var{t}}}
|
|
{test whether every element in \var{s} is in \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.issuperset(\var{t})}{\code{\var{s} >= \var{t}}}
|
|
{test whether every element in \var{t} is in \var{s}}
|
|
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.union(\var{t})}{\var{s} | \var{t}}
|
|
{new set with elements from both \var{s} and \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.intersection(\var{t})}{\var{s} \&\ \var{t}}
|
|
{new set with elements common to \var{s} and \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.difference(\var{t})}{\var{s} - \var{t}}
|
|
{new set with elements in \var{s} but not in \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.symmetric_difference(\var{t})}{\var{s} \^\ \var{t}}
|
|
{new set with elements in either \var{s} or \var{t} but not both}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.copy()}{}
|
|
{new set with a shallow copy of \var{s}}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
|
|
Note, the non-operator versions of \method{union()}, \method{intersection()},
|
|
\method{difference()}, and \method{symmetric_difference()},
|
|
\method{issubset()}, and \method{issuperset()} methods will accept any
|
|
iterable as an argument. In contrast, their operator based counterparts
|
|
require their arguments to be sets. This precludes error-prone constructions
|
|
like \code{set('abc') \&\ 'cbs'} in favor of the more readable
|
|
\code{set('abc').intersection('cbs')}.
|
|
|
|
Both \class{set} and \class{frozenset} support set to set comparisons.
|
|
Two sets are equal if and only if every element of each set is contained in
|
|
the other (each is a subset of the other).
|
|
A set is less than another set if and only if the first set is a proper
|
|
subset of the second set (is a subset, but is not equal).
|
|
A set is greater than another set if and only if the first set is a proper
|
|
superset of the second set (is a superset, but is not equal).
|
|
|
|
Instances of \class{set} are compared to instances of \class{frozenset} based
|
|
on their members. For example, \samp{set('abc') == frozenset('abc')} returns
|
|
\code{True}.
|
|
|
|
The subset and equality comparisons do not generalize to a complete
|
|
ordering function. For example, any two disjoint sets are not equal and
|
|
are not subsets of each other, so \emph{all} of the following return
|
|
\code{False}: \code{\var{a}<\var{b}}, \code{\var{a}==\var{b}}, or
|
|
\code{\var{a}>\var{b}}.
|
|
Accordingly, sets do not implement the \method{__cmp__} method.
|
|
|
|
Since sets only define partial ordering (subset relationships), the output
|
|
of the \method{list.sort()} method is undefined for lists of sets.
|
|
|
|
Set elements are like dictionary keys; they need to define both
|
|
\method{__hash__} and \method{__eq__} methods.
|
|
|
|
Binary operations that mix \class{set} instances with \class{frozenset}
|
|
return the type of the first operand. For example:
|
|
\samp{frozenset('ab') | set('bc')} returns an instance of \class{frozenset}.
|
|
|
|
The following table lists operations available for \class{set}
|
|
that do not apply to immutable instances of \class{frozenset}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|c|l}{code}{Operation}{Equivalent}{Result}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.update(\var{t})}
|
|
{\var{s} |= \var{t}}
|
|
{update set \var{s}, adding elements from \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.intersection_update(\var{t})}
|
|
{\var{s} \&= \var{t}}
|
|
{update set \var{s}, keeping only elements found in both \var{s} and \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.difference_update(\var{t})}
|
|
{\var{s} -= \var{t}}
|
|
{update set \var{s}, removing elements found in \var{t}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.symmetric_difference_update(\var{t})}
|
|
{\var{s} \textasciicircum= \var{t}}
|
|
{update set \var{s}, keeping only elements found in either \var{s} or \var{t}
|
|
but not in both}
|
|
|
|
\hline
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.add(\var{x})}{}
|
|
{add element \var{x} to set \var{s}}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.remove(\var{x})}{}
|
|
{remove \var{x} from set \var{s}; raises \exception{KeyError}
|
|
if not present}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.discard(\var{x})}{}
|
|
{removes \var{x} from set \var{s} if present}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.pop()}{}
|
|
{remove and return an arbitrary element from \var{s}; raises
|
|
\exception{KeyError} if empty}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{s}.clear()}{}
|
|
{remove all elements from set \var{s}}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
|
|
Note, the non-operator versions of the \method{update()},
|
|
\method{intersection_update()}, \method{difference_update()}, and
|
|
\method{symmetric_difference_update()} methods will accept any iterable
|
|
as an argument.
|
|
|
|
The design of the set types was based on lessons learned from the
|
|
\module{sets} module.
|
|
|
|
\begin{seealso}
|
|
\seelink{comparison-to-builtin-set.html}
|
|
{Comparison to the built-in set types}
|
|
{Differences between the \module{sets} module and the
|
|
built-in set types.}
|
|
\end{seealso}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Mapping Types --- \class{dict} \label{typesmapping}}
|
|
\obindex{mapping}
|
|
\obindex{dictionary}
|
|
|
|
A \dfn{mapping} object maps immutable values to
|
|
arbitrary objects. Mappings are mutable objects. There is currently
|
|
only one standard mapping type, the \dfn{dictionary}. A dictionary's keys are
|
|
almost arbitrary values. Only values containing lists, dictionaries
|
|
or other mutable types (that are compared by value rather than by
|
|
object identity) may not be used as keys.
|
|
Numeric types used for keys obey the normal rules for numeric
|
|
comparison: if two numbers compare equal (such as \code{1} and
|
|
\code{1.0}) then they can be used interchangeably to index the same
|
|
dictionary entry.
|
|
|
|
Dictionaries are created by placing a comma-separated list of
|
|
\code{\var{key}: \var{value}} pairs within braces, for example:
|
|
\code{\{'jack': 4098, 'sjoerd': 4127\}} or
|
|
\code{\{4098: 'jack', 4127: 'sjoerd'\}}.
|
|
|
|
The following operations are defined on mappings (where \var{a} and
|
|
\var{b} are mappings, \var{k} is a key, and \var{v} and \var{x} are
|
|
arbitrary objects):
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{mapping}{types}
|
|
\indexiii{operations on}{dictionary}{type}
|
|
\stindex{del}
|
|
\bifuncindex{len}
|
|
\withsubitem{(dictionary method)}{
|
|
\ttindex{clear()}
|
|
\ttindex{copy()}
|
|
\ttindex{has_key()}
|
|
\ttindex{fromkeys()}
|
|
\ttindex{items()}
|
|
\ttindex{keys()}
|
|
\ttindex{update()}
|
|
\ttindex{values()}
|
|
\ttindex{get()}
|
|
\ttindex{setdefault()}
|
|
\ttindex{pop()}
|
|
\ttindex{popitem()}
|
|
\ttindex{iteritems()}
|
|
\ttindex{iterkeys()}
|
|
\ttindex{itervalues()}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{code}{Operation}{Result}{Notes}
|
|
\lineiii{len(\var{a})}{the number of items in \var{a}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}[\var{k}]}{the item of \var{a} with key \var{k}}{(1), (10)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}[\var{k}] = \var{v}}
|
|
{set \code{\var{a}[\var{k}]} to \var{v}}
|
|
{}
|
|
\lineiii{del \var{a}[\var{k}]}
|
|
{remove \code{\var{a}[\var{k}]} from \var{a}}
|
|
{(1)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.clear()}{remove all items from \code{a}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.copy()}{a (shallow) copy of \code{a}}{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{k} in \var{a}}
|
|
{\code{True} if \var{a} has a key \var{k}, else \code{False}}
|
|
{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{k} not in \var{a}}
|
|
{Equivalent to \code{not} \var{k} in \var{a}}
|
|
{(2)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.has_key(\var{k})}
|
|
{Equivalent to \var{k} \code{in} \var{a}, use that form in new code}
|
|
{}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.items()}
|
|
{a copy of \var{a}'s list of (\var{key}, \var{value}) pairs}
|
|
{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.keys()}{a copy of \var{a}'s list of keys}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.update(\optional{\var{b}})}
|
|
{updates \var{a} with key/value pairs from \var{b}, overwriting
|
|
existing keys, returns \code{None}}
|
|
{(9)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.fromkeys(\var{seq}\optional{, \var{value}})}
|
|
{Creates a new dictionary with keys from \var{seq} and values set to \var{value}}
|
|
{(7)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.values()}{a copy of \var{a}'s list of values}{(3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.get(\var{k}\optional{, \var{x}})}
|
|
{\code{\var{a}[\var{k}]} if \code{\var{k} in \var{a}},
|
|
else \var{x}}
|
|
{(4)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.setdefault(\var{k}\optional{, \var{x}})}
|
|
{\code{\var{a}[\var{k}]} if \code{\var{k} in \var{a}},
|
|
else \var{x} (also setting it)}
|
|
{(5)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.pop(\var{k}\optional{, \var{x}})}
|
|
{\code{\var{a}[\var{k}]} if \code{\var{k} in \var{a}},
|
|
else \var{x} (and remove k)}
|
|
{(8)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.popitem()}
|
|
{remove and return an arbitrary (\var{key}, \var{value}) pair}
|
|
{(6)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.iteritems()}
|
|
{return an iterator over (\var{key}, \var{value}) pairs}
|
|
{(2), (3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.iterkeys()}
|
|
{return an iterator over the mapping's keys}
|
|
{(2), (3)}
|
|
\lineiii{\var{a}.itervalues()}
|
|
{return an iterator over the mapping's values}
|
|
{(2), (3)}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes:
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[(1)] Raises a \exception{KeyError} exception if \var{k} is not
|
|
in the map.
|
|
|
|
\item[(2)] \versionadded{2.2}
|
|
|
|
\item[(3)] Keys and values are listed in an arbitrary order which is
|
|
non-random, varies across Python implementations, and depends on the
|
|
dictionary's history of insertions and deletions.
|
|
If \method{items()}, \method{keys()}, \method{values()},
|
|
\method{iteritems()}, \method{iterkeys()}, and \method{itervalues()}
|
|
are called with no intervening modifications to the dictionary, the
|
|
lists will directly correspond. This allows the creation of
|
|
\code{(\var{value}, \var{key})} pairs using \function{zip()}:
|
|
\samp{pairs = zip(\var{a}.values(), \var{a}.keys())}. The same
|
|
relationship holds for the \method{iterkeys()} and
|
|
\method{itervalues()} methods: \samp{pairs = zip(\var{a}.itervalues(),
|
|
\var{a}.iterkeys())} provides the same value for \code{pairs}.
|
|
Another way to create the same list is \samp{pairs = [(v, k) for (k,
|
|
v) in \var{a}.iteritems()]}.
|
|
|
|
\item[(4)] Never raises an exception if \var{k} is not in the map,
|
|
instead it returns \var{x}. \var{x} is optional; when \var{x} is not
|
|
provided and \var{k} is not in the map, \code{None} is returned.
|
|
|
|
\item[(5)] \function{setdefault()} is like \function{get()}, except
|
|
that if \var{k} is missing, \var{x} is both returned and inserted into
|
|
the dictionary as the value of \var{k}. \var{x} defaults to \var{None}.
|
|
|
|
\item[(6)] \function{popitem()} is useful to destructively iterate
|
|
over a dictionary, as often used in set algorithms. If the dictionary
|
|
is empty, calling \function{popitem()} raises a \exception{KeyError}.
|
|
|
|
\item[(7)] \function{fromkeys()} is a class method that returns a
|
|
new dictionary. \var{value} defaults to \code{None}. \versionadded{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\item[(8)] \function{pop()} raises a \exception{KeyError} when no default
|
|
value is given and the key is not found. \versionadded{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\item[(9)] \function{update()} accepts either another mapping object
|
|
or an iterable of key/value pairs (as a tuple or other iterable of
|
|
length two). If keyword arguments are specified, the mapping is
|
|
then is updated with those key/value pairs:
|
|
\samp{d.update(red=1, blue=2)}.
|
|
\versionchanged[Allowed the argument to be an iterable of key/value
|
|
pairs and allowed keyword arguments]{2.4}
|
|
|
|
\item[(10)] If a subclass of dict defines a method \method{__missing__},
|
|
if the key \var{k} is not present, the \var{a}[\var{k}] operation calls
|
|
that method with the key \var{k} as argument. The \var{a}[\var{k}]
|
|
operation then returns or raises whatever is returned or raised by the
|
|
\function{__missing__}(\var{k}) call if the key is not present.
|
|
No other operations or methods invoke \method{__missing__}().
|
|
If \method{__missing__} is not defined, \exception{KeyError} is raised.
|
|
\method{__missing__} must be a method; it cannot be an instance variable.
|
|
For an example, see \module{collections}.\class{defaultdict}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
\section{File Objects
|
|
\label{bltin-file-objects}}
|
|
|
|
File objects\obindex{file} are implemented using C's \code{stdio}
|
|
package and can be created with the built-in constructor
|
|
\function{file()}\bifuncindex{file} described in section
|
|
\ref{built-in-funcs}, ``Built-in Functions.''\footnote{\function{file()}
|
|
is new in Python 2.2. The older built-in \function{open()} is an
|
|
alias for \function{file()}.} File objects are also returned
|
|
by some other built-in functions and methods, such as
|
|
\function{os.popen()} and \function{os.fdopen()} and the
|
|
\method{makefile()} method of socket objects.
|
|
\refstmodindex{os}
|
|
\refbimodindex{socket}
|
|
|
|
When a file operation fails for an I/O-related reason, the exception
|
|
\exception{IOError} is raised. This includes situations where the
|
|
operation is not defined for some reason, like \method{seek()} on a tty
|
|
device or writing a file opened for reading.
|
|
|
|
Files have the following methods:
|
|
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{close}{}
|
|
Close the file. A closed file cannot be read or written any more.
|
|
Any operation which requires that the file be open will raise a
|
|
\exception{ValueError} after the file has been closed. Calling
|
|
\method{close()} more than once is allowed.
|
|
|
|
As of Python 2.5, you can avoid having to call this method explicitly
|
|
if you use the \keyword{with} statement. For example, the following
|
|
code will automatically close \code{f} when the \keyword{with} block
|
|
is exited:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
from __future__ import with_statement
|
|
|
|
with open("hello.txt") as f:
|
|
for line in f:
|
|
print line
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
In older versions of Python, you would have needed to do this to get
|
|
the same effect:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
f = open("hello.txt")
|
|
try:
|
|
for line in f:
|
|
print line
|
|
finally:
|
|
f.close()
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
\note{Not all ``file-like'' types in Python support use as a context
|
|
manager for the \keyword{with} statement. If your code is intended to
|
|
work with any file-like object, you can use the \function{closing()}
|
|
function in the \module{contextlib} module instead of using the object
|
|
directly. See section~\ref{context-closing} for details.}
|
|
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{flush}{}
|
|
Flush the internal buffer, like \code{stdio}'s
|
|
\cfunction{fflush()}. This may be a no-op on some file-like
|
|
objects.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{fileno}{}
|
|
\index{file descriptor}
|
|
\index{descriptor, file}
|
|
Return the integer ``file descriptor'' that is used by the
|
|
underlying implementation to request I/O operations from the
|
|
operating system. This can be useful for other, lower level
|
|
interfaces that use file descriptors, such as the
|
|
\refmodule{fcntl}\refbimodindex{fcntl} module or
|
|
\function{os.read()} and friends. \note{File-like objects
|
|
which do not have a real file descriptor should \emph{not} provide
|
|
this method!}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{isatty}{}
|
|
Return \code{True} if the file is connected to a tty(-like) device, else
|
|
\code{False}. \note{If a file-like object is not associated
|
|
with a real file, this method should \emph{not} be implemented.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{next}{}
|
|
A file object is its own iterator, for example \code{iter(\var{f})} returns
|
|
\var{f} (unless \var{f} is closed). When a file is used as an
|
|
iterator, typically in a \keyword{for} loop (for example,
|
|
\code{for line in f: print line}), the \method{next()} method is
|
|
called repeatedly. This method returns the next input line, or raises
|
|
\exception{StopIteration} when \EOF{} is hit. In order to make a
|
|
\keyword{for} loop the most efficient way of looping over the lines of
|
|
a file (a very common operation), the \method{next()} method uses a
|
|
hidden read-ahead buffer. As a consequence of using a read-ahead
|
|
buffer, combining \method{next()} with other file methods (like
|
|
\method{readline()}) does not work right. However, using
|
|
\method{seek()} to reposition the file to an absolute position will
|
|
flush the read-ahead buffer.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{read}{\optional{size}}
|
|
Read at most \var{size} bytes from the file (less if the read hits
|
|
\EOF{} before obtaining \var{size} bytes). If the \var{size}
|
|
argument is negative or omitted, read all data until \EOF{} is
|
|
reached. The bytes are returned as a string object. An empty
|
|
string is returned when \EOF{} is encountered immediately. (For
|
|
certain files, like ttys, it makes sense to continue reading after
|
|
an \EOF{} is hit.) Note that this method may call the underlying
|
|
C function \cfunction{fread()} more than once in an effort to
|
|
acquire as close to \var{size} bytes as possible. Also note that
|
|
when in non-blocking mode, less data than what was requested may
|
|
be returned, even if no \var{size} parameter was given.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{readline}{\optional{size}}
|
|
Read one entire line from the file. A trailing newline character is
|
|
kept in the string (but may be absent when a file ends with an
|
|
incomplete line).\footnote{
|
|
The advantage of leaving the newline on is that
|
|
returning an empty string is then an unambiguous \EOF{}
|
|
indication. It is also possible (in cases where it might
|
|
matter, for example, if you
|
|
want to make an exact copy of a file while scanning its lines)
|
|
to tell whether the last line of a file ended in a newline
|
|
or not (yes this happens!).
|
|
} If the \var{size} argument is present and
|
|
non-negative, it is a maximum byte count (including the trailing
|
|
newline) and an incomplete line may be returned.
|
|
An empty string is returned \emph{only} when \EOF{} is encountered
|
|
immediately. \note{Unlike \code{stdio}'s \cfunction{fgets()}, the
|
|
returned string contains null characters (\code{'\e 0'}) if they
|
|
occurred in the input.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{readlines}{\optional{sizehint}}
|
|
Read until \EOF{} using \method{readline()} and return a list containing
|
|
the lines thus read. If the optional \var{sizehint} argument is
|
|
present, instead of reading up to \EOF, whole lines totalling
|
|
approximately \var{sizehint} bytes (possibly after rounding up to an
|
|
internal buffer size) are read. Objects implementing a file-like
|
|
interface may choose to ignore \var{sizehint} if it cannot be
|
|
implemented, or cannot be implemented efficiently.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{seek}{offset\optional{, whence}}
|
|
Set the file's current position, like \code{stdio}'s \cfunction{fseek()}.
|
|
The \var{whence} argument is optional and defaults to \code{0}
|
|
(absolute file positioning); other values are \code{1} (seek
|
|
relative to the current position) and \code{2} (seek relative to the
|
|
file's end). There is no return value. Note that if the file is
|
|
opened for appending (mode \code{'a'} or \code{'a+'}), any
|
|
\method{seek()} operations will be undone at the next write. If the
|
|
file is only opened for writing in append mode (mode \code{'a'}),
|
|
this method is essentially a no-op, but it remains useful for files
|
|
opened in append mode with reading enabled (mode \code{'a+'}). If the
|
|
file is opened in text mode (without \code{'b'}), only offsets returned
|
|
by \method{tell()} are legal. Use of other offsets causes undefined
|
|
behavior.
|
|
|
|
Note that not all file objects are seekable.
|
|
\versionchanged{Passing float values as offset has been deprecated}[2.6]
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{tell}{}
|
|
Return the file's current position, like \code{stdio}'s
|
|
\cfunction{ftell()}.
|
|
|
|
\note{On Windows, \method{tell()} can return illegal values (after an
|
|
\cfunction{fgets()}) when reading files with \UNIX{}-style line-endings.
|
|
Use binary mode (\code{'rb'}) to circumvent this problem.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{truncate}{\optional{size}}
|
|
Truncate the file's size. If the optional \var{size} argument is
|
|
present, the file is truncated to (at most) that size. The size
|
|
defaults to the current position. The current file position is
|
|
not changed. Note that if a specified size exceeds the file's
|
|
current size, the result is platform-dependent: possibilities
|
|
include that the file may remain unchanged, increase to the specified
|
|
size as if zero-filled, or increase to the specified size with
|
|
undefined new content.
|
|
Availability: Windows, many \UNIX{} variants.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{write}{str}
|
|
Write a string to the file. There is no return value. Due to
|
|
buffering, the string may not actually show up in the file until
|
|
the \method{flush()} or \method{close()} method is called.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[file]{writelines}{sequence}
|
|
Write a sequence of strings to the file. The sequence can be any
|
|
iterable object producing strings, typically a list of strings.
|
|
There is no return value.
|
|
(The name is intended to match \method{readlines()};
|
|
\method{writelines()} does not add line separators.)
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
Files support the iterator protocol. Each iteration returns the same
|
|
result as \code{\var{file}.readline()}, and iteration ends when the
|
|
\method{readline()} method returns an empty string.
|
|
|
|
|
|
File objects also offer a number of other interesting attributes.
|
|
These are not required for file-like objects, but should be
|
|
implemented if they make sense for the particular object.
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[file]{closed}
|
|
bool indicating the current state of the file object. This is a
|
|
read-only attribute; the \method{close()} method changes the value.
|
|
It may not be available on all file-like objects.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[file]{encoding}
|
|
The encoding that this file uses. When Unicode strings are written
|
|
to a file, they will be converted to byte strings using this encoding.
|
|
In addition, when the file is connected to a terminal, the attribute
|
|
gives the encoding that the terminal is likely to use (that
|
|
information might be incorrect if the user has misconfigured the
|
|
terminal). The attribute is read-only and may not be present on
|
|
all file-like objects. It may also be \code{None}, in which case
|
|
the file uses the system default encoding for converting Unicode
|
|
strings.
|
|
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[file]{mode}
|
|
The I/O mode for the file. If the file was created using the
|
|
\function{open()} built-in function, this will be the value of the
|
|
\var{mode} parameter. This is a read-only attribute and may not be
|
|
present on all file-like objects.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[file]{name}
|
|
If the file object was created using \function{open()}, the name of
|
|
the file. Otherwise, some string that indicates the source of the
|
|
file object, of the form \samp{<\mbox{\ldots}>}. This is a read-only
|
|
attribute and may not be present on all file-like objects.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[file]{newlines}
|
|
If Python was built with the \longprogramopt{with-universal-newlines}
|
|
option to \program{configure} (the default) this read-only attribute
|
|
exists, and for files opened in
|
|
universal newline read mode it keeps track of the types of newlines
|
|
encountered while reading the file. The values it can take are
|
|
\code{'\e r'}, \code{'\e n'}, \code{'\e r\e n'}, \code{None} (unknown,
|
|
no newlines read yet) or a tuple containing all the newline
|
|
types seen, to indicate that multiple
|
|
newline conventions were encountered. For files not opened in universal
|
|
newline read mode the value of this attribute will be \code{None}.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[file]{softspace}
|
|
Boolean that indicates whether a space character needs to be printed
|
|
before another value when using the \keyword{print} statement.
|
|
Classes that are trying to simulate a file object should also have a
|
|
writable \member{softspace} attribute, which should be initialized to
|
|
zero. This will be automatic for most classes implemented in Python
|
|
(care may be needed for objects that override attribute access); types
|
|
implemented in C will have to provide a writable
|
|
\member{softspace} attribute.
|
|
\note{This attribute is not used to control the
|
|
\keyword{print} statement, but to allow the implementation of
|
|
\keyword{print} to keep track of its internal state.}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Context Manager Types \label{typecontextmanager}}
|
|
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\index{context manager}
|
|
\index{context management protocol}
|
|
\index{protocol!context management}
|
|
|
|
Python's \keyword{with} statement supports the concept of a runtime
|
|
context defined by a context manager. This is implemented using
|
|
two separate methods that allow user-defined classes to define
|
|
a runtime context that is entered before the statement body is
|
|
executed and exited when the statement ends.
|
|
|
|
The \dfn{context management protocol} consists of a pair of
|
|
methods that need to be provided for a context manager object to
|
|
define a runtime context:
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[context manager]{__enter__}{}
|
|
Enter the runtime context and return either this object or another
|
|
object related to the runtime context. The value returned by this
|
|
method is bound to the identifier in the \keyword{as} clause of
|
|
\keyword{with} statements using this context manager.
|
|
|
|
An example of a context manager that returns itself is a file object.
|
|
File objects return themselves from __enter__() to allow
|
|
\function{open()} to be used as the context expression in a
|
|
\keyword{with} statement.
|
|
|
|
An example of a context manager that returns a related
|
|
object is the one returned by \code{decimal.Context.get_manager()}.
|
|
These managers set the active decimal context to a copy of the
|
|
original decimal context and then return the copy. This allows
|
|
changes to be made to the current decimal context in the body of
|
|
the \keyword{with} statement without affecting code outside
|
|
the \keyword{with} statement.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[context manager]{__exit__}{exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb}
|
|
Exit the runtime context and return a Boolean flag indicating if any
|
|
expection that occurred should be suppressed. If an exception
|
|
occurred while executing the body of the \keyword{with} statement, the
|
|
arguments contain the exception type, value and traceback information.
|
|
Otherwise, all three arguments are \var{None}.
|
|
|
|
Returning a true value from this method will cause the \keyword{with}
|
|
statement to suppress the exception and continue execution with the
|
|
statement immediately following the \keyword{with} statement. Otherwise
|
|
the exception continues propagating after this method has finished
|
|
executing. Exceptions that occur during execution of this method will
|
|
replace any exception that occurred in the body of the \keyword{with}
|
|
statement.
|
|
|
|
The exception passed in should never be reraised explicitly - instead,
|
|
this method should return a false value to indicate that the method
|
|
completed successfully and does not want to suppress the raised
|
|
exception. This allows context management code (such as
|
|
\code{contextlib.nested}) to easily detect whether or not an
|
|
\method{__exit__()} method has actually failed.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
Python defines several context managers to support easy thread
|
|
synchronisation, prompt closure of files or other objects, and
|
|
simpler manipulation of the active decimal arithmetic
|
|
context. The specific types are not treated specially beyond
|
|
their implementation of the context management protocol.
|
|
|
|
Python's generators and the \code{contextlib.contextfactory} decorator
|
|
provide a convenient way to implement these protocols. If a generator
|
|
function is decorated with the \code{contextlib.contextfactory}
|
|
decorator, it will return a context manager implementing the necessary
|
|
\method{__enter__()} and \method{__exit__()} methods, rather than the
|
|
iterator produced by an undecorated generator function.
|
|
|
|
Note that there is no specific slot for any of these methods in the
|
|
type structure for Python objects in the Python/C API. Extension
|
|
types wanting to define these methods must provide them as a normal
|
|
Python accessible method. Compared to the overhead of setting up the
|
|
runtime context, the overhead of a single class dictionary lookup
|
|
is negligible.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Other Built-in Types \label{typesother}}
|
|
|
|
The interpreter supports several other kinds of objects.
|
|
Most of these support only one or two operations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Modules \label{typesmodules}}
|
|
|
|
The only special operation on a module is attribute access:
|
|
\code{\var{m}.\var{name}}, where \var{m} is a module and \var{name}
|
|
accesses a name defined in \var{m}'s symbol table. Module attributes
|
|
can be assigned to. (Note that the \keyword{import} statement is not,
|
|
strictly speaking, an operation on a module object; \code{import
|
|
\var{foo}} does not require a module object named \var{foo} to exist,
|
|
rather it requires an (external) \emph{definition} for a module named
|
|
\var{foo} somewhere.)
|
|
|
|
A special member of every module is \member{__dict__}.
|
|
This is the dictionary containing the module's symbol table.
|
|
Modifying this dictionary will actually change the module's symbol
|
|
table, but direct assignment to the \member{__dict__} attribute is not
|
|
possible (you can write \code{\var{m}.__dict__['a'] = 1}, which
|
|
defines \code{\var{m}.a} to be \code{1}, but you can't write
|
|
\code{\var{m}.__dict__ = \{\}}). Modifying \member{__dict__} directly
|
|
is not recommended.
|
|
|
|
Modules built into the interpreter are written like this:
|
|
\code{<module 'sys' (built-in)>}. If loaded from a file, they are
|
|
written as \code{<module 'os' from
|
|
'/usr/local/lib/python\shortversion/os.pyc'>}.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Classes and Class Instances \label{typesobjects}}
|
|
\nodename{Classes and Instances}
|
|
|
|
See chapters 3 and 7 of the \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python
|
|
Reference Manual} for these.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Functions \label{typesfunctions}}
|
|
|
|
Function objects are created by function definitions. The only
|
|
operation on a function object is to call it:
|
|
\code{\var{func}(\var{argument-list})}.
|
|
|
|
There are really two flavors of function objects: built-in functions
|
|
and user-defined functions. Both support the same operation (to call
|
|
the function), but the implementation is different, hence the
|
|
different object types.
|
|
|
|
See the \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} for more
|
|
information.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Methods \label{typesmethods}}
|
|
\obindex{method}
|
|
|
|
Methods are functions that are called using the attribute notation.
|
|
There are two flavors: built-in methods (such as \method{append()} on
|
|
lists) and class instance methods. Built-in methods are described
|
|
with the types that support them.
|
|
|
|
The implementation adds two special read-only attributes to class
|
|
instance methods: \code{\var{m}.im_self} is the object on which the
|
|
method operates, and \code{\var{m}.im_func} is the function
|
|
implementing the method. Calling \code{\var{m}(\var{arg-1},
|
|
\var{arg-2}, \textrm{\ldots}, \var{arg-n})} is completely equivalent to
|
|
calling \code{\var{m}.im_func(\var{m}.im_self, \var{arg-1},
|
|
\var{arg-2}, \textrm{\ldots}, \var{arg-n})}.
|
|
|
|
Class instance methods are either \emph{bound} or \emph{unbound},
|
|
referring to whether the method was accessed through an instance or a
|
|
class, respectively. When a method is unbound, its \code{im_self}
|
|
attribute will be \code{None} and if called, an explicit \code{self}
|
|
object must be passed as the first argument. In this case,
|
|
\code{self} must be an instance of the unbound method's class (or a
|
|
subclass of that class), otherwise a \exception{TypeError} is raised.
|
|
|
|
Like function objects, methods objects support getting
|
|
arbitrary attributes. However, since method attributes are actually
|
|
stored on the underlying function object (\code{meth.im_func}),
|
|
setting method attributes on either bound or unbound methods is
|
|
disallowed. Attempting to set a method attribute results in a
|
|
\exception{TypeError} being raised. In order to set a method attribute,
|
|
you need to explicitly set it on the underlying function object:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
class C:
|
|
def method(self):
|
|
pass
|
|
|
|
c = C()
|
|
c.method.im_func.whoami = 'my name is c'
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
See the \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} for more
|
|
information.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Code Objects \label{bltin-code-objects}}
|
|
\obindex{code}
|
|
|
|
Code objects are used by the implementation to represent
|
|
``pseudo-compiled'' executable Python code such as a function body.
|
|
They differ from function objects because they don't contain a
|
|
reference to their global execution environment. Code objects are
|
|
returned by the built-in \function{compile()} function and can be
|
|
extracted from function objects through their \member{func_code}
|
|
attribute.
|
|
\bifuncindex{compile}
|
|
\withsubitem{(function object attribute)}{\ttindex{func_code}}
|
|
|
|
A code object can be executed or evaluated by passing it (instead of a
|
|
source string) to the \function{exec()} or \function{eval()}
|
|
built-in functions.
|
|
\bifuncindex{exec}
|
|
\bifuncindex{eval}
|
|
|
|
See the \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} for more
|
|
information.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Type Objects \label{bltin-type-objects}}
|
|
|
|
Type objects represent the various object types. An object's type is
|
|
accessed by the built-in function \function{type()}. There are no special
|
|
operations on types. The standard module \refmodule{types} defines names
|
|
for all standard built-in types.
|
|
\bifuncindex{type}
|
|
\refstmodindex{types}
|
|
|
|
Types are written like this: \code{<type 'int'>}.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Null Object \label{bltin-null-object}}
|
|
|
|
This object is returned by functions that don't explicitly return a
|
|
value. It supports no special operations. There is exactly one null
|
|
object, named \code{None} (a built-in name).
|
|
|
|
It is written as \code{None}.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Ellipsis Object \label{bltin-ellipsis-object}}
|
|
|
|
This object is mostly used by extended slice notation (see the
|
|
\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual}). It supports no
|
|
special operations. There is exactly one ellipsis object, named
|
|
\constant{Ellipsis} (a built-in name).
|
|
|
|
It is written as \code{Ellipsis} or \code{...}.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Boolean Values}
|
|
|
|
Boolean values are the two constant objects \code{False} and
|
|
\code{True}. They are used to represent truth values (although other
|
|
values can also be considered false or true). In numeric contexts
|
|
(for example when used as the argument to an arithmetic operator),
|
|
they behave like the integers 0 and 1, respectively. The built-in
|
|
function \function{bool()} can be used to cast any value to a Boolean,
|
|
if the value can be interpreted as a truth value (see section Truth
|
|
Value Testing above).
|
|
|
|
They are written as \code{False} and \code{True}, respectively.
|
|
\index{False}
|
|
\index{True}
|
|
\indexii{Boolean}{values}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Internal Objects \label{typesinternal}}
|
|
|
|
See the \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} for this
|
|
information. It describes stack frame objects, traceback objects, and
|
|
slice objects.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{Special Attributes \label{specialattrs}}
|
|
|
|
The implementation adds a few special read-only attributes to several
|
|
object types, where they are relevant. Some of these are not reported
|
|
by the \function{dir()} built-in function.
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[object]{__dict__}
|
|
A dictionary or other mapping object used to store an
|
|
object's (writable) attributes.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[object]{__methods__}
|
|
\deprecated{2.2}{Use the built-in function \function{dir()} to get a
|
|
list of an object's attributes. This attribute is no longer available.}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[object]{__members__}
|
|
\deprecated{2.2}{Use the built-in function \function{dir()} to get a
|
|
list of an object's attributes. This attribute is no longer available.}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[instance]{__class__}
|
|
The class to which a class instance belongs.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[class]{__bases__}
|
|
The tuple of base classes of a class object. If there are no base
|
|
classes, this will be an empty tuple.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[class]{__name__}
|
|
The name of the class or type.
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|