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svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r46755 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-08 18:23:04 +0200 (Thu, 08 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Make binascii.hexlify() use s# for its arguments instead of t# to actually match its documentation stating it accepts any read-only buffer. ........ r46757 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-08 19:00:45 +0200 (Thu, 08 Jun 2006) | 8 lines Buffer objects would return the read or write buffer for a wrapped object when the char buffer was requested. Now it actually returns the char buffer if available or raises a TypeError if it isn't (as is raised for the other buffer types if they are not present but requested). Not a backport candidate since it does change semantics of the buffer object (although it could be argued this is enough of a bug to bother backporting). ........ r46760 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 03:10:17 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Update functools section ........ r46762 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 04:11:02 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Whitespace normalization. Since test_file is implicated in mysterious test failures when followed by test_optparse, if I had any brains I'd look at the checkin that last changed test_file ;-) ........ r46763 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 05:09:42 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 5 lines To boost morale :-), force test_optparse to run immediately after test_file until we can figure out how to fix it. (See python-dev; at the moment we don't even know which checkin caused the problem.) ........ r46764 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 05:51:41 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 6 lines AutoFileTests.tearDown(): Removed mysterious undocumented try/except. Remove TESTFN. Throughout: used open() instead of file(), and wrapped long lines. ........ r46765 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 06:02:06 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 8 lines testUnicodeOpen(): I have no idea why, but making this test clean up after itself appears to fix the test failures when test_optparse follows test_file. test_main(): Get rid of TESTFN no matter what. That's also enough to fix the mystery failures. Doesn't hurt to fix them twice :-) ........ r46766 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 07:12:40 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Remove the temporary hack to force test_optparse to run immediately after test_file. At least 8 buildbot boxes passed since the underlying problem got fixed, and they all failed before the fix, so there's no point to this anymore. ........ r46767 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-09 07:54:18 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix grammar and reflow ........ r46769 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 12:22:35 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Markup fix ........ r46773 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 15:15:57 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1472827] Make saxutils.XMLGenerator handle \r\n\t in attribute values by escaping them properly. 2.4 bugfix candidate. ........ r46778 | kristjan.jonsson | 2006-06-09 18:28:01 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Turn off warning about deprecated CRT functions on for VisualStudio .NET 2005. Make the definition #ARRAYSIZE conditional. VisualStudio .NET 2005 already has it defined using a better gimmick. ........ r46779 | phillip.eby | 2006-06-09 18:40:18 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Import wsgiref into the stdlib, as of the external version 0.1-r2181. ........ r46783 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 18:44:40 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add note about XMLGenerator bugfix ........ r46784 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 18:46:51 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add note about wsgiref ........ r46785 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-09 19:05:48 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Fix inconsistency in naming within an enum. ........ r46787 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 19:47:00 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46792 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-09 20:29:52 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Test file.__exit__. ........ r46794 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-09 20:40:46 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 2 lines svn:ignore .pyc and .pyo files. ........ r46795 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-09 20:45:48 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 3 lines RFE #1491485: str/unicode.endswith()/startswith() now accept a tuple as first argument. ........ r46798 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 21:03:16 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Describe startswith()/endswiith() change; add reminder about wsgiref ........ r46799 | tim.peters | 2006-06-09 21:24:44 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 11 lines Implementing a happy idea from Georg Brandl: make runtest() try to clean up files and directories the tests often leave behind by mistake. This is the first time in history I don't have a bogus "db_home" directory after running the tests ;-) Also worked on runtest's docstring, to say something about all the arguments, and to document the non-obvious return values. New functions runtest_inner() and cleanup_test_droppings() in support of the above. ........ r46800 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 21:43:25 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Remove unused variable ........ r46801 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-09 21:56:05 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add some wsgiref text ........ r46803 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-09 21:59:11 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line set eol-style svn property ........ r46804 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-09 22:01:01 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 1 line set eol-style svn property ........ r46805 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-09 22:43:48 +0200 (Fri, 09 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Make use of new str.startswith/endswith semantics. Occurences in email and compiler were ignored due to backwards compat requirements. ........ r46806 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-10 00:31:23 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 4 lines An object with __call__ as an attribute, when called, will have that attribute checked for __call__ itself, and will continue to look until it finds an object without the attribute. This can lead to an infinite recursion. Closes bug #532646, again. Will be backported. ........ r46808 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-10 00:45:54 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Fix bug introduced in rev. 46806 by not having variable declaration at the top of a block. ........ r46812 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-10 08:40:50 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Apply perky's fix for #1503157: "/".join([u"", u""]) raising OverflowError. Also improve error message on overflow. ........ r46817 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-10 10:14:03 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Port cygwin kill_python changes from 2.4 branch. ........ r46818 | armin.rigo | 2006-06-10 12:57:40 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 4 lines SF bug #1503294. PyThreadState_GET() complains if the tstate is NULL, but only in debug mode. ........ r46819 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-10 14:23:46 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1495999: Part two of Windows CE changes. - update header checks, using autoconf - provide dummies for getenv, environ, and GetVersion - adjust MSC_VER check in socketmodule.c ........ r46820 | skip.montanaro | 2006-06-10 16:09:11 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 1 line document the class, not its initializer ........ r46821 | greg.ward | 2006-06-10 18:40:01 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Sync with Optik docs (rev 518): * restore "Extending optparse" section * document ALWAYS_TYPED_ACTIONS (SF #1449311) ........ r46824 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-10 21:51:46 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 8 lines Upgrade to ctypes version 0.9.9.7. Summary of changes: - support for 'variable sized' data - support for anonymous structure/union fields - fix severe bug with certain arrays or structures containing more than 256 fields ........ r46825 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-10 21:55:36 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 8 lines Upgrade to ctypes version 0.9.9.7. Summary of changes: - support for 'variable sized' data - support for anonymous structure/union fields - fix severe bug with certain arrays or structures containing more than 256 fields ........ r46826 | fred.drake | 2006-06-10 22:01:34 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 4 lines SF patch #1303595: improve description of __builtins__, explaining how it varies between __main__ and other modules, and strongly suggest not touching it but using __builtin__ if absolutely necessary ........ r46827 | fred.drake | 2006-06-10 22:02:58 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 1 line credit for SF patch #1303595 ........ r46831 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-10 22:29:34 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 2 lines New docs for ctypes. ........ r46834 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-10 23:07:19 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix a wrong printf format. ........ r46835 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-10 23:17:58 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix the second occurrence of the problematic printf format. ........ r46837 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-10 23:56:03 +0200 (Sat, 10 Jun 2006) | 1 line Don't use C++ comment. ........ r46838 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-11 00:01:50 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line Handle failure of PyMem_Realloc. ........ r46839 | skip.montanaro | 2006-06-11 00:38:13 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Suppress warning on MacOSX about possible use before set of proc. ........ r46840 | tim.peters | 2006-06-11 00:51:45 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 8 lines shuffle() doscstring: Removed warning about sequence length versus generator period. While this was a real weakness of the older WH generator for lists with just a few dozen elements, and so could potentially bite the naive ;-), the Twister should show excellent behavior up to at least 600 elements. Module docstring: reflowed some jarringly short lines. ........ r46844 | greg.ward | 2006-06-11 02:40:49 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1361643: fix textwrap.dedent() so it handles tabs appropriately, i.e. do *not* expand tabs, but treat them as whitespace that is not equivalent to spaces. Add a couple of test cases. Clarify docs. ........ r46850 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 07:44:18 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Fix Coverity # 146. newDBSequenceObject would deref dbobj, so it can't be NULL. We know it's not NULL from the ParseTuple and DbObject_Check will verify it's not NULL. ........ r46851 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 07:45:25 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Wrap some long lines Top/Bottom factor out some common expressions Add a XXX comment about widing offset. ........ r46852 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 07:45:47 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add versionadded to doc ........ r46853 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 07:47:14 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Update doc to make it agree with code. Bottom factor out some common code. ........ r46854 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 07:48:14 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 3 lines f_code can't be NULL based on Frame_New and other code that derefs it. So there doesn't seem to be much point to checking here. ........ r46855 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 09:26:27 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix errors found by pychecker ........ r46856 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 09:26:50 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line warnings was imported at module scope, no need to import again ........ r46857 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 09:27:56 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Fix errors found by pychecker. I think these changes are correct, but I'm not sure. Could someone who knows how this module works test it? It can at least start on the cmd line. ........ r46858 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 10:35:14 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix errors found by pychecker ........ r46859 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-11 16:33:36 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 4 lines This patch improves the L&F of IDLE on OSX. The changes are conditionalized on being in an IDLE.app bundle on darwin. This does a slight reorganisation of the menus and adds support for file-open events. ........ r46860 | greg.ward | 2006-06-11 16:42:41 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line SF #1366250: optparse docs: fix inconsistency in variable name; minor tweaks. ........ r46861 | greg.ward | 2006-06-11 18:24:11 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1498146: fix optparse to handle Unicode strings in option help, description, and epilog. ........ r46862 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-11 19:04:22 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Release the GIL during COM method calls, to avoid deadlocks in Python coded COM objects. ........ r46863 | tim.peters | 2006-06-11 21:42:51 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46864 | tim.peters | 2006-06-11 21:43:49 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r46865 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-11 21:45:57 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Remove message about using make frameworkinstall, that's no longer necesssary ........ r46866 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-11 22:23:29 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Use configure to substitute the correct prefix instead of hardcoding ........ r46867 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-11 22:24:45 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 4 lines - Change fixapplepython23.py to ensure that it will run with /usr/bin/python on intel macs. - Fix some minor problems in the installer for OSX ........ r46868 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 22:25:56 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Try to fix several networking tests. The problem is that if hosts have a search path setup, some of these hosts resolve to the wrong address. By appending a period to the hostname, the hostname should only resolve to what we want it to resolve to. Hopefully this doesn't break different bots. ........ r46869 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 22:42:02 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 7 lines Try to fix another networking test. The problem is that if hosts have a search path setup, some of these hosts resolve to the wrong address. By appending a period to the hostname, the hostname should only resolve to what we want it to resolve to. Hopefully this doesn't break different bots. Also add more info to failure message to aid debugging test failure. ........ r46870 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 22:46:46 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Fix test on PPC64 buildbot. It raised an IOError (really an URLError which derives from an IOError). That seems valid. Env Error includes both OSError and IOError, so this seems like a reasonable fix. ........ r46871 | tim.peters | 2006-06-11 22:52:59 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 10 lines compare_generic_iter(): Fixed the failure of test_wsgiref's testFileWrapper when running with -O. test_simple_validation_error still fails under -O. That appears to be because wsgiref's validate.py uses `assert` statements all over the place to check arguments for sanity. That should all be changed (it's not a logical error in the software if a user passes bogus arguments, so this isn't a reasonable use for `assert` -- checking external preconditions should generally raise ValueError or TypeError instead, as appropriate). ........ r46872 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-11 23:38:38 +0200 (Sun, 11 Jun 2006) | 1 line Get test to pass on S/390. Shout if you think this change is incorrect. ........ r46873 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:05:55 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Cleanup Py_ssize_t a little (get rid of second #ifdef) ........ r46874 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:06:17 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix some Py_ssize_t issues ........ r46875 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:06:42 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix some Py_ssize_t issues ........ r46876 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:07:24 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Cleanup: Remove import of types to get StringTypes, we can just use basestring. ........ r46877 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:07:57 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Don't truncate if size_t is bigger than uint ........ r46878 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:08:41 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Don't leak the list object if there's an error allocating the item storage. Backport candidate ........ r46879 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:09:03 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix typo. Backport if anyone cares. :-) ........ r46880 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:09:34 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix indentation of case and a Py_ssize_t issue. ........ r46881 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:11:18 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Get rid of f_restricted too. Doc the other 4 ints that were already removed at the NeedForSpeed sprint. ........ r46882 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:13:21 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix the socket tests so they can be run concurrently. Backport candidate ........ r46883 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 04:16:10 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line i and j are initialized below when used. No need to do it twice ........ r46884 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 05:05:03 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Remove unused import ........ r46885 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 05:05:40 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Impl ssize_t ........ r46886 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-12 05:33:09 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Patch #1503046, Conditional compilation of zlib.(de)compressobj.copy copy is only in newer versions of zlib. This should allow zlibmodule to work with older versions like the Tru64 buildbot. ........ r46887 | phillip.eby | 2006-06-12 06:04:32 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Sync w/external release 0.1.2. Please see PEP 360 before making changes to external packages. ........ r46888 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-12 06:26:31 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Get rid of function pointer cast. ........ r46889 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-12 08:05:57 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 3 lines I don't know how that happend, but the entire file contents was duplicated. Thanks to Simon Percivall for the heads up. ........ r46890 | nick.coghlan | 2006-06-12 10:19:37 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix site module docstring to match the code ........ r46891 | nick.coghlan | 2006-06-12 10:23:02 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix site module docstring to match the code for Mac OSX, too ........ r46892 | nick.coghlan | 2006-06-12 10:27:13 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line The site module documentation also described the Windows behaviour incorrectly. ........ r46893 | nick.coghlan | 2006-06-12 12:17:11 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Make the -m switch conform to the documentation of sys.path by behaving like the -c switch ........ r46894 | kristjan.jonsson | 2006-06-12 17:45:12 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Fix the CRT argument error handling for VisualStudio .NET 2005. Install a CRT error handler and disable the assertion for debug builds. This causes CRT to set errno to EINVAL. This update fixes crash cases in the test suite where the default CRT error handler would cause process exit. ........ r46899 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-12 22:56:48 +0200 (Mon, 12 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add pep-291 compatibility markers. ........ r46901 | ka-ping.yee | 2006-06-13 01:47:52 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Add the uuid module. This module has been tested so far on Windows XP (Python 2.4 and 2.5a2), Mac OS X (Python 2.3, 2.4, and 2.5a2), and Linux (Python 2.4 and 2.5a2). ........ r46902 | tim.peters | 2006-06-13 02:30:01 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46903 | tim.peters | 2006-06-13 02:30:50 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Added missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r46905 | tim.peters | 2006-06-13 05:30:07 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 5 lines get_matching_blocks(): rewrote code & comments so they match; added more comments about why it's this way at all; and removed what looked like needless expense (sorting (i, j, k) triples directly should give exactly the same order as sorting (i, (i, j, k)) pairs). ........ r46906 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-13 06:08:53 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 1 line Don't fail if another process is listening on our port. ........ r46908 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-13 10:28:19 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Initialize the type object so pychecker can't crash the interpreter. ........ r46909 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-13 10:41:06 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 1 line Verify the crash due to EncodingMap not initialized does not return ........ r46910 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-13 10:56:14 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Add some windows datatypes that were missing from this file, and add the aliases defined in windows header files for the structures. ........ r46911 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-13 11:40:14 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Add back WCHAR, UINT, DOUBLE, _LARGE_INTEGER, _ULARGE_INTEGER. VARIANT_BOOL is a special _ctypes data type, not c_short. ........ r46912 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-13 13:19:56 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Linecache contains support for PEP302 loaders, but fails to deal with loaders that return None to indicate that the module is valid but no source is available. This patch fixes that. ........ r46913 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-13 13:57:04 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 1 line Mention uuid module ........ r46915 | walter.doerwald | 2006-06-13 14:02:12 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Fix passing errors to the encoder and decoder functions. ........ r46917 | walter.doerwald | 2006-06-13 14:04:43 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 3 lines errors is an attribute in the incremental decoder not an argument. ........ r46919 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-06-13 17:04:24 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 11 lines Patch #1454481: Make thread stack size runtime tunable. Heavily revised, comprising revisions: 46640 - original trunk revision (backed out in r46655) 46647 - markup fix (backed out in r46655) 46692:46918 merged from branch aimacintyre-sf1454481 branch tested on buildbots (Windows buildbots had problems not related to these changes). ........ r46920 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-13 18:06:55 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Remove unused variable. ........ r46921 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-13 18:41:41 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add ability to set stack size ........ r46923 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2006-06-13 19:04:26 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Update pybench to version 2.0. ........ r46924 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2006-06-13 19:07:14 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Revert wrong svn copy. ........ r46925 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-06-13 19:14:36 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines fix exception usage ........ r46927 | tim.peters | 2006-06-13 20:37:07 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46928 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2006-06-13 20:56:56 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 9 lines Updated to pybench 2.0. See svn.python.org/external/pybench-2.0 for the original import of that version. Note that platform.py was not copied over from pybench-2.0 since it is already part of Python 2.5. ........ r46929 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-06-13 21:02:35 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Increase the small thread stack size to get the test to pass reliably on the one buildbot that insists on more than 32kB of thread stack. ........ r46930 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2006-06-13 21:20:07 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46931 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-13 22:18:43 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines More docs for ctypes. ........ r46932 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-13 23:34:24 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Ignore .pyc and .pyo files in Pybench. ........ r46933 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-13 23:46:41 +0200 (Tue, 13 Jun 2006) | 7 lines If a classic class defined a __coerce__() method that just returned its two arguments in reverse, the interpreter would infinitely recourse trying to get a coercion that worked. So put in a recursion check after a coercion is made and the next call to attempt to use the coerced values. Fixes bug #992017 and closes crashers/coerce.py . ........ r46936 | gerhard.haering | 2006-06-14 00:24:47 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Merged changes from external pysqlite 2.3.0 release. Documentation updates will follow in a few hours at the latest. Then we should be ready for beta1. ........ r46937 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-14 00:26:13 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Missed test for rev. 46933; infinite recursion from __coerce__() returning its arguments reversed. ........ r46938 | gerhard.haering | 2006-06-14 00:53:48 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Updated documentation for pysqlite 2.3.0 API. ........ r46939 | tim.peters | 2006-06-14 06:09:25 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 10 lines SequenceMatcher.get_matching_blocks(): This now guarantees that adjacent triples in the result list describe non-adjacent matching blocks. That's _nice_ to have, and Guido said he wanted it. Not a bugfix candidate: Guido or not ;-), this changes visible endcase semantics (note that some tests had to change), and nothing about this was documented before. Since it was working as designed, and behavior was consistent with the docs, it wasn't "a bug". ........ r46940 | tim.peters | 2006-06-14 06:13:00 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Repaired typo in new comment. ........ r46941 | tim.peters | 2006-06-14 06:15:27 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46942 | fred.drake | 2006-06-14 06:25:02 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines - make some disabled tests run what they intend when enabled - remove some over-zealous triple-quoting ........ r46943 | fred.drake | 2006-06-14 07:04:47 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines add tests for two cases that are handled correctly in the current code, but that SF patch 1504676 as written mis-handles ........ r46944 | fred.drake | 2006-06-14 07:15:51 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line explain an XXX in more detail ........ r46945 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-14 07:21:04 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line Patch #1455898: Incremental mode for "mbcs" codec. ........ r46946 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-14 08:08:31 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1339007: Shelf objects now don't raise an exception in their __del__ method when initialization failed. ........ r46948 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-14 08:18:15 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix docstring. ........ r46949 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-14 08:29:07 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1501122: mention __gt__ &co in description of comparison order. ........ r46951 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-14 09:08:38 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line Write more docs. ........ r46952 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-14 10:31:39 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1153163: describe __add__ vs __radd__ behavior when adding objects of same type/of subclasses of the other. ........ r46954 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-14 10:42:11 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1202018: add some common mime.types locations. ........ r46955 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-14 10:50:03 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1117556: SimpleHTTPServer now tries to find and use the system's mime.types file for determining MIME types. ........ r46957 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-14 11:09:08 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line Document paramflags. ........ r46958 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-14 11:20:11 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add an __all__ list, since this module does 'from ctypes import *'. ........ r46959 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-14 15:59:15 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add item ........ r46961 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-14 18:46:43 +0200 (Wed, 14 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Bug #805015: doc error in PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject. ........ r46962 | gerhard.haering | 2006-06-15 00:28:37 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 10 lines - Added version checks in C code to make sure we don't trigger bugs in older SQLite versions. - Added version checks in test suite so that we don't execute tests that we know will fail with older (buggy) SQLite versions. Now, all tests should run against all SQLite versions from 3.0.8 until 3.3.6 (latest one now). The sqlite3 module can be built against all these SQLite versions and the sqlite3 module does its best to not trigger bugs in SQLite, but using SQLite 3.3.3 or later is recommended. ........ r46963 | tim.peters | 2006-06-15 00:38:13 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46964 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-15 06:54:29 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 9 lines Speculative checkin (requires approval of Gerhard Haering) This backs out the test changes in 46962 which prevented crashes by not running the tests via a version check. All the version checks added in that rev were removed from the tests. Code was added to the error handler in connection.c that seems to work with older versions of sqlite including 3.1.3. ........ r46965 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-15 07:55:49 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 1 line Try to narrow window of failure on slow/busy boxes (ppc64 buildbot) ........ r46966 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-15 08:45:05 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Make import/lookup of mbcs fail on non-Windows systems. ........ r46967 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-15 10:14:18 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1446489 (zipfile: support for ZIP64) ........ r46968 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-15 10:16:44 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Re-revert this change. Install the version check and don't run the test until Gerhard has time to fully debug the issue. This affects versions before 3.2.1 (possibly only versions earlier than 3.1.3). Based on discussion on python-checkins. ........ r46969 | gregory.p.smith | 2006-06-15 10:52:32 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 6 lines - bsddb: multithreaded DB access using the simple bsddb module interface now works reliably. It has been updated to use automatic BerkeleyDB deadlock detection and the bsddb.dbutils.DeadlockWrap wrapper to retry database calls that would previously deadlock. [SF python bug #775414] ........ r46970 | gregory.p.smith | 2006-06-15 11:23:52 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines minor documentation cleanup. mention the bsddb.db interface explicitly by name. ........ r46971 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-15 11:57:03 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Steal the trick from test_compiler to print out a slow msg. This will hopefully get the buildbots to pass. Not sure this test will be feasible or even work. But everything is red now, so it can't get much worse. ........ r46972 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-15 12:24:49 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 1 line Print some more info to get an idea of how much longer the test will last ........ r46981 | tim.peters | 2006-06-15 20:04:40 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Try to reduce the extreme peak memory and disk-space use of this test. It probably still requires more disk space than most buildbots have, and in any case is still so intrusive that if we don't find another way to test this I'm taking my buildbot offline permanently ;-) ........ r46982 | tim.peters | 2006-06-15 20:06:29 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r46983 | tim.peters | 2006-06-15 20:07:28 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r46984 | tim.peters | 2006-06-15 20:38:19 +0200 (Thu, 15 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Oops -- I introduced an off-by-6436159488 error. ........ r46990 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-16 06:30:34 +0200 (Fri, 16 Jun 2006) | 1 line Disable this test until we can determine what to do about it ........ r46991 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-16 06:31:06 +0200 (Fri, 16 Jun 2006) | 1 line Param name is dir, not directory. Update docstring. Backport candidate ........ r46992 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-16 06:31:28 +0200 (Fri, 16 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add missing period in comment. ........ r46993 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-16 06:32:43 +0200 (Fri, 16 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix whitespace, there are memory leaks in this module. ........ r46995 | fred.drake | 2006-06-17 01:45:06 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 3 lines SF patch 1504676: Make sgmllib char and entity references pluggable (implementation/tests contributed by Sam Ruby) ........ r46996 | fred.drake | 2006-06-17 03:07:54 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 1 line fix change that broke the htmllib tests ........ r46998 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-17 11:15:14 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Patch #763580: Add name and value arguments to Tkinter variable classes. ........ r46999 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-17 11:20:41 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1096231: Add default argument to wm_iconbitmap. ........ r47000 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-17 11:25:15 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1494750: Destroy master after deleting children. ........ r47003 | george.yoshida | 2006-06-17 18:31:52 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 2 lines markup fix ........ r47005 | george.yoshida | 2006-06-17 18:39:13 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Update url. Old url returned status code:301 Moved permanently. ........ r47007 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-17 20:44:27 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Patch #812986: Update the canvas even if not tracing. ........ r47008 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-17 21:03:26 +0200 (Sat, 17 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Patch #815924: Restore ability to pass type= and icon= ........ r47009 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-18 00:37:45 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix typo in docstring ........ r47010 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-18 00:38:15 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix memory leak reported by valgrind while running test_subprocess ........ r47011 | fred.drake | 2006-06-18 04:57:35 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 1 line remove unnecessary markup ........ r47013 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-18 21:35:01 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 7 lines Prevent spurious leaks when running regrtest.py -R. There may be more issues that crop up from time to time, but this change seems to have been pretty stable (no spurious warnings) for about a week. Other modules which use threads may require similar use of threading_setup/threading_cleanup from test_support. ........ r47014 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-18 21:37:40 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 9 lines The hppa ubuntu box sometimes hangs forever in these tests. My guess is that the wait is failing for some reason. Use WNOHANG, so we won't wait until the buildbot kills the test suite. I haven't been able to reproduce the failure, so I'm not sure if this will help or not. Hopefully, this change will cause the test to fail, rather than hang. That will be better since we will get the rest of the test results. It may also help us debug the real problem. ........ r47015 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-18 22:10:24 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 1 line Revert 47014 until it is more robust ........ r47016 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-18 23:27:04 +0200 (Sun, 18 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Fix typos. Fix doctest example. Mention in the tutorial that 'errcheck' is explained in the ref manual. Use better wording in some places. Remoce code examples that shouldn't be in the tutorial. Remove some XXX notices. ........ r47017 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-19 00:17:29 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1507676: improve exception messages in abstract.c, object.c and typeobject.c. ........ r47018 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-19 07:40:44 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 1 line Use Py_ssize_t ........ r47019 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-19 08:35:54 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Add news entry about error msg improvement. ........ r47020 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-19 09:07:49 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Try to repair the failing test on the OpenBSD buildbot. Trial and error... ........ r47021 | tim.peters | 2006-06-19 09:45:16 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r47022 | walter.doerwald | 2006-06-19 10:07:50 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1506645: add Python wrappers for the curses functions is_term_resized, resize_term and resizeterm. This uses three separate configure checks (one for each function). ........ r47023 | walter.doerwald | 2006-06-19 10:14:09 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Make check order match in configure and configure.in. ........ r47024 | tim.peters | 2006-06-19 10:14:28 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Repair KeyError when running test_threaded_import under -R, as reported by Neal on python-dev. ........ r47025 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-19 10:32:46 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Next try to fix the OpenBSD buildbot tests: Use ctypes.util.find_library to locate the C runtime library on platforms where is returns useful results. ........ r47026 | tim.peters | 2006-06-19 11:09:44 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 13 lines TestHelp.make_parser(): This was making a permanent change to os.environ (setting envar COLUMNS), which at least caused test_float_default() to fail if the tests were run more than once. This repairs the test_optparse -R failures Neal reported on python-dev. It also explains some seemingly bizarre test_optparse failures we saw a couple weeks ago on the buildbots, when test_optparse failed due to test_file failing to clean up after itself, and then test_optparse failed in an entirely different way when regrtest's -w option ran test_optparse a second time. It's now obvious that make_parser() permanently changing os.environ was responsible for the second half of that. ........ r47027 | anthony.baxter | 2006-06-19 14:04:15 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Preparing for 2.5b1. ........ r47029 | fred.drake | 2006-06-19 19:31:16 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 1 line remove non-working document formats from edist ........ r47030 | gerhard.haering | 2006-06-19 23:17:35 +0200 (Mon, 19 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Fixed a memory leak that was introduced with incorrect usage of the Python weak reference API in pysqlite 2.2.1. Bumbed pysqlite version number to upcoming pysqlite 2.3.1 release. ........ r47032 | ka-ping.yee | 2006-06-20 00:49:36 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Remove Python 2.3 compatibility comment. ........ r47033 | trent.mick | 2006-06-20 01:21:25 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Upgrade pyexpat to expat 2.0.0 (http://python.org/sf/1462338). ........ r47034 | trent.mick | 2006-06-20 01:57:41 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 3 lines [ 1295808 ] expat symbols should be namespaced in pyexpat (http://python.org/sf/1295808) ........ r47039 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-20 13:52:16 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 1 line Uncomment wsgiref section ........ r47040 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-20 14:15:09 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add four library items ........ r47041 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-20 14:19:54 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 1 line Terminology and typography fixes ........ r47042 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-20 15:05:12 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 1 line Add introductory paragraphs summarizing the release; minor edits ........ r47043 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-20 15:11:29 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 1 line Minor edits and rearrangements; markup fix ........ r47044 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-20 15:20:30 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1504456] Mention xml -> xmlcore change ........ r47047 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-20 19:30:26 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Raise TestSkipped when the test socket connection is refused. ........ r47049 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-20 21:20:17 +0200 (Tue, 20 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Fix typo of exception name. ........ r47053 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-21 18:57:57 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 5 lines At the C level, tuple arguments are passed in directly to the exception constructor, meaning it is treated as *args, not as a single argument. This means using the 'message' attribute won't work (until Py3K comes around), and so one must grab from 'arg' to get the error number. ........ r47054 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-21 19:10:18 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 1 line Link to LibRef module documentation ........ r47055 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-21 19:17:10 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 1 line Note some of Barry's work ........ r47056 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-21 19:17:28 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 1 line Bump version ........ r47057 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-21 19:45:17 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 3 lines fix [ 1509132 ] compiler module builds incorrect AST for TryExceptFinally ........ r47058 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-21 19:52:36 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Make test_fcntl aware of netbsd3. ........ r47059 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-21 19:53:17 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1509001: expected skips for netbsd3. ........ r47060 | gerhard.haering | 2006-06-21 22:55:04 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Removed call to enable_callback_tracebacks that slipped in by accident. ........ r47061 | armin.rigo | 2006-06-21 23:58:50 +0200 (Wed, 21 Jun 2006) | 13 lines Fix for an obscure bug introduced by revs 46806 and 46808, with a test. The problem of checking too eagerly for recursive calls is the following: if a RuntimeError is caused by recursion, and if code needs to normalize it immediately (as in the 2nd test), then PyErr_NormalizeException() needs a call to the RuntimeError class to instantiate it, and this hits the recursion limit again... causing PyErr_NormalizeException() to never finish. Moved this particular recursion check to slot_tp_call(), which is not involved in instantiating built-in exceptions. Backport candidate. ........ r47064 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-22 08:30:50 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Copy the wsgiref package during make install. ........ r47065 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-22 08:35:30 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 1 line Reset the doc date to today for the automatic doc builds ........ r47067 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-22 15:10:23 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 1 line Mention how to suppress warnings ........ r47069 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-22 16:46:17 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Set lineno correctly on list, tuple and dict literals. ........ r47070 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-22 16:46:46 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 4 lines Test for correct compilation of try-except-finally stmt. Test for correct lineno on list, tuple, dict literals. ........ r47071 | fred.drake | 2006-06-22 17:50:08 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 1 line fix markup nit ........ r47072 | brett.cannon | 2006-06-22 18:49:14 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 6 lines 'warning's was improperly requiring that a command-line Warning category be both a subclass of Warning and a subclass of types.ClassType. The latter is no longer true thanks to new-style exceptions. Closes bug #1510580. Thanks to AMK for the test. ........ r47073 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-22 20:33:54 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 3 lines MacOSX: Add a message to the first screen of the installer that tells users how to avoid updates to their shell profile. ........ r47074 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-22 21:02:18 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Fix my name ;) ........ r47075 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-22 21:07:36 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Small fixes, mostly in the markup. ........ r47076 | peter.astrand | 2006-06-22 22:06:46 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 1 line Make it possible to run test_subprocess.py on Python 2.2, which lacks test_support.is_resource_enabled. ........ r47077 | peter.astrand | 2006-06-22 22:21:26 +0200 (Thu, 22 Jun 2006) | 1 line Applied patch #1506758: Prevent MemoryErrors with large MAXFD. ........ r47079 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-23 05:32:44 +0200 (Fri, 23 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fix refleak ........ r47080 | fred.drake | 2006-06-23 08:03:45 +0200 (Fri, 23 Jun 2006) | 9 lines - SF bug #853506: IP6 address parsing in sgmllib ('[' and ']' were not accepted in unquoted attribute values) - cleaned up tests of character and entity reference decoding so the tests cover the documented relationships among handle_charref, handle_entityref, convert_charref, convert_codepoint, and convert_entityref, without bringing up Unicode issues that sgmllib cannot be involved in ........ r47085 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-23 21:23:40 +0200 (Fri, 23 Jun 2006) | 11 lines Fit Makefile for the Python doc environment better; this is a step toward including the howtos in the build process. * Put LaTeX output in ../paper-<whatever>/. * Put HTML output in ../html/ * Explain some of the Makefile variables * Remove some cruft dating to my environment (e.g. the 'web' target) This makefile isn't currently invoked by the documentation build process, so these changes won't destabilize anything. ........ r47086 | hyeshik.chang | 2006-06-23 23:16:18 +0200 (Fri, 23 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Bug #1511381: codec_getstreamcodec() in codec.c is corrected to omit a default "error" argument for NULL pointer. This allows the parser to take a codec from cjkcodecs again. (Reported by Taewook Kang and reviewed by Walter Doerwald) ........ r47091 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-25 22:44:16 +0200 (Sun, 25 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Workaround for bug #1512124 Without this patch IDLE will get unresponsive when you open the debugger window on OSX. This is both using the system Tcl/Tk on Tiger as the latest universal download from tk-components.sf.net. ........ r47092 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-25 23:14:19 +0200 (Sun, 25 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Drop the calldll demo's for macos, calldll isn't present anymore, no need to keep the demo's around. ........ r47093 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-25 23:15:58 +0200 (Sun, 25 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Use a path without a double slash to compile the .py files after installation (macosx, binary installer). This fixes bug #1508369 for python 2.5. ........ r47094 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-25 23:19:06 +0200 (Sun, 25 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Also install the .egg-info files in Lib. This will cause wsgiref.egg-info to be installed. ........ r47097 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 14:40:02 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1511998] Various comments from Nick Coghlan; thanks! ........ r47098 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 14:43:43 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 1 line Describe workaround for PyRange_New()'s removal ........ r47099 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 15:08:24 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 5 lines [Bug #1512163] Fix typo. This change will probably break tests on FreeBSD buildbots, but I'll check in a fix for that next. ........ r47100 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 15:12:16 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 9 lines [Bug #1512163] Use one set of locking methods, lockf(); remove the flock() calls. On FreeBSD, the two methods lockf() and flock() end up using the same mechanism and the second one fails. A Linux man page claims that the two methods are orthogonal (so locks acquired one way don't interact with locks acquired the other way) but that clearly must be false. ........ r47101 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 15:23:10 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Add a test for a conflicting lock. On slow machines, maybe the time intervals (2 sec, 0.5 sec) will be too tight. I'll see how the buildbots like it. ........ r47103 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 16:33:24 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 1 line Windows doesn't have os.fork(). I'll just disable this test for now ........ r47106 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-26 19:00:35 +0200 (Mon, 26 Jun 2006) | 9 lines Attempt to fix build failure on OS X and Debian alpha; the symptom is consistent with os.wait() returning immediately because some other subprocess had previously exited; the test suite then immediately tries to lock the mailbox and gets an error saying it's already locked. To fix this, do a waitpid() so the test suite only continues once the intended child process has exited. ........ r47113 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-27 06:06:46 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 1 line Ignore some more warnings in the dynamic linker on an older gentoo ........ r47114 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-27 06:09:13 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 6 lines Instead of doing a make test, run the regression tests out of the installed copy. This will hopefully catch problems where directories are added under Lib/ but not to Makefile.pre.in. This breaks out the 2 runs of the test suite with and without -O which is also nicer. ........ r47115 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-27 06:12:58 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Fix SF bug #1513032, 'make install' failure on FreeBSD 5.3. No need to install lib-old, it's empty in 2.5. ........ r47116 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-27 06:23:06 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 1 line Test unimportant change to verify buildbot does not try to build ........ r47117 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-27 06:26:30 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 1 line Try again: test unimportant change to verify buildbot does not try to build ........ r47118 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-27 06:28:56 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 1 line Verify buildbot picks up these changes (really needs testing after last change to Makefile.pre.in) ........ r47121 | vinay.sajip | 2006-06-27 09:34:37 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 1 line Removed buggy exception handling in doRollover of rotating file handlers. Exceptions now propagate to caller. ........ r47123 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-27 12:08:25 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 3 lines MacOSX: fix rather dumb buglet that made it impossible to create extensions on OSX 10.3 when using a binary distribution build on 10.4. ........ r47125 | tim.peters | 2006-06-27 13:52:49 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r47128 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-27 14:53:52 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 8 lines Use staticly build copies of zlib and bzip2 to build the OSX installer, that way the resulting binaries have a better change of running on 10.3. This patch also updates the search logic for sleepycat db3/4, without this patch you cannot use a sleepycat build with a non-standard prefix; with this you can (at least on OSX) if you add the prefix to CPPFLAGS/LDFLAGS at configure-time. This change is needed to build the binary installer for OSX. ........ r47131 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-06-27 17:45:32 +0200 (Tue, 27 Jun 2006) | 5 lines macosx: Install a libpython2.5.a inside the framework as a symlink to the actual dylib at the root of the framework, that way tools that expect a unix-like install (python-config, but more importantly external products like mod_python) work correctly. ........ r47137 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-28 07:03:22 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 4 lines According to the man pages on Gentoo Linux and Tru64, EACCES or EAGAIN can be returned if fcntl (lockf) fails. This fixes the test failure on Tru64 by checking for either error rather than just EAGAIN. ........ r47139 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-28 08:28:31 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 5 lines Fix bug #1512695: cPickle.loads could crash if it was interrupted with a KeyboardInterrupt since PyTuple_Pack was passed a NULL. Will backport. ........ r47142 | nick.coghlan | 2006-06-28 12:41:47 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 1 line Make full module name available as __module_name__ even when __name__ is set to something else (like '__main__') ........ r47143 | armin.rigo | 2006-06-28 12:49:51 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 2 lines A couple of crashers of the "won't fix" kind. ........ r47147 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-28 16:25:20 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1508766] Add docs for uuid module; docs written by George Yoshida, with minor rearrangements by me. ........ r47148 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-06-28 16:27:21 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1508766] Add docs for uuid module; this puts the module in the 'Internet Protocols' section. Arguably this module could also have gone in the chapters on strings or encodings, maybe even the crypto chapter. Fred, please move if you see fit. ........ r47151 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-28 22:23:25 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Fix end_fill(). ........ r47153 | trent.mick | 2006-06-28 22:30:41 +0200 (Wed, 28 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Mention the expat upgrade and pyexpat fix I put in 2.5b1. ........ r47154 | fred.drake | 2006-06-29 02:51:53 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 6 lines SF bug #1504333: sgmlib should allow angle brackets in quoted values (modified patch by Sam Ruby; changed to use separate REs for start and end tags to reduce matching cost for end tags; extended tests; updated to avoid breaking previous changes to support IPv6 addresses in unquoted attribute values) ........ r47156 | fred.drake | 2006-06-29 04:57:48 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 1 line document recent bugfixes in sgmllib ........ r47158 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-29 06:10:08 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 10 lines Add new utility function, reap_children(), to test_support. This should be called at the end of each test that spawns children (perhaps it should be called from regrtest instead?). This will hopefully prevent some of the unexplained failures in the buildbots (hppa and alpha) during tests that spawn children. The problems were not reproducible. There were many zombies that remained at the end of several tests. In the worst case, this shouldn't cause any more problems, though it may not help either. Time will tell. ........ r47159 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-29 07:48:14 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 5 lines This should fix the buildbot failure on s/390 which can't connect to gmail.org. It makes the error message consistent and always sends to stderr. It would be much better for all the networking tests to hit only python.org. ........ r47161 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-29 20:34:15 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Protect the thread api calls in the _ctypes extension module within #ifdef WITH_THREADS/#endif blocks. Found by Sam Rushing. ........ r47162 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-06-29 20:58:44 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1509163: MS Toolkit Compiler no longer available ........ r47163 | skip.montanaro | 2006-06-29 21:20:09 +0200 (Thu, 29 Jun 2006) | 1 line add string methods to index ........ r47164 | vinay.sajip | 2006-06-30 02:13:08 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 1 line Fixed bug in fileConfig() which failed to clear logging._handlerList ........ r47166 | tim.peters | 2006-06-30 08:18:39 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r47170 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-30 09:32:16 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 1 line Silence compiler warning ........ r47171 | neal.norwitz | 2006-06-30 09:32:46 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 1 line Another problem reported by Coverity. Backport candidate. ........ r47175 | thomas.heller | 2006-06-30 19:44:54 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Revert the use of PY_FORMAT_SIZE_T in PyErr_Format. ........ r47176 | tim.peters | 2006-06-30 20:34:51 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 2 lines Remove now-unused fidding with PY_FORMAT_SIZE_T. ........ r47177 | georg.brandl | 2006-06-30 20:47:56 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 3 lines Document decorator usage of property. ........ r47181 | fred.drake | 2006-06-30 21:29:25 +0200 (Fri, 30 Jun 2006) | 4 lines - consistency nit: always include "()" in \function and \method (*should* be done by the presentation, but that requires changes all over) - avoid spreading the __name meme ........ r47188 | vinay.sajip | 2006-07-01 12:45:20 +0200 (Sat, 01 Jul 2006) | 1 line Added entry for fileConfig() bugfix. ........ r47189 | vinay.sajip | 2006-07-01 12:47:20 +0200 (Sat, 01 Jul 2006) | 1 line Added duplicate call to fileConfig() to ensure that it cleans up after itself correctly. ........ r47190 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-01 17:33:37 +0200 (Sat, 01 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Release all forwarded functions in .close. Fixes #1513223. ........ r47191 | fred.drake | 2006-07-01 18:28:20 +0200 (Sat, 01 Jul 2006) | 7 lines SF bug #1296433 (Expat bug #1515266): Unchecked calls to character data handler would cause a segfault. This merges in Expat's lib/xmlparse.c revisions 1.154 and 1.155, which fix this and a closely related problem (the later does not affect Python). Moved the crasher test to the tests for xml.parsers.expat. ........ r47197 | gerhard.haering | 2006-07-02 19:48:30 +0200 (Sun, 02 Jul 2006) | 4 lines The sqlite3 module did cut off data from the SQLite database at the first null character before sending it to a custom converter. This has been fixed now. ........ r47198 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-02 20:44:00 +0200 (Sun, 02 Jul 2006) | 1 line Correct arithmetic in access on Win32. Fixes #1513646. ........ r47203 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-03 09:58:09 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 1 line Cleanup: Remove commented out code. ........ r47204 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-03 09:59:50 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 1 line Don't run the doctests with Python 2.3 because it doesn't have the ELLIPSIS flag. ........ r47205 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-03 10:04:05 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Fixes so that _ctypes can be compiled with the MingW compiler. It seems that the definition of '__attribute__(x)' was responsible for the compiler ignoring the '__fastcall' attribute on the ffi_closure_SYSV function in libffi_msvc/ffi.c, took me quite some time to figure this out. ........ r47206 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-03 10:08:14 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 11 lines Add a new function uses_seh() to the _ctypes extension module. This will return True if Windows Structured Exception handling (SEH) is used when calling functions, False otherwise. Currently, only MSVC supports SEH. Fix the test so that it doesn't crash when run with MingW compiled _ctypes. Note that two tests are still failing when mingw is used, I suspect structure layout differences and function calling conventions between MSVC and MingW. ........ r47207 | tim.peters | 2006-07-03 10:23:19 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r47208 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 11:44:00 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Only setup canvas when it is first created. Fixes #1514703 ........ r47209 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 12:05:30 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Reimplement turtle.circle using a polyline, to allow correct filling of arcs. Also fixes #1514693. ........ r47210 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 12:19:49 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1514693: Update turtle's heading when switching between degrees and radians. ........ r47211 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 13:12:06 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Document functions added in 2.3 and 2.5. ........ r47212 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 14:19:50 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1417699: Reject locale-specific decimal point in float() and atof(). ........ r47213 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 14:28:58 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1267547: Put proper recursive setup.py call into the spec file generated by bdist_rpm. ........ r47215 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 15:01:35 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #825417: Fix timeout processing in expect, read_until. Will backport to 2.4. ........ r47218 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-03 15:47:40 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Put method-wrappers into trashcan. Fixes #927248. ........ r47219 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-03 16:07:30 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1515932] Clarify description of slice assignment ........ r47220 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-03 16:16:09 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 4 lines [Bug #1511911] Clarify description of optional arguments to sorted() by improving the xref to the section on lists, and by copying the explanations of the arguments (with a slight modification). ........ r47223 | kristjan.jonsson | 2006-07-03 16:59:05 +0200 (Mon, 03 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix build problems with the platform SDK on windows. It is not sufficient to test for the C compiler version when determining if we have the secure CRT from microsoft. Must test with an undocumented macro, __STDC_SECURE_LIB__ too. ........ r47224 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-04 14:30:22 +0200 (Tue, 04 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Sync the darwin/x86 port libffi with the copy in PyObjC. This fixes a number of bugs in that port. The most annoying ones were due to some subtle differences between the document ABI and the actual implementation :-( (there are no python unittests that fail without this patch, but without it some of libffi's unittests fail). ........ r47234 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-05 10:21:00 +0200 (Wed, 05 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Remove remaining references to OverflowWarning. ........ r47236 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-05 11:13:56 +0200 (Wed, 05 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix the bitfield test when _ctypes is compiled with MingW. Structures containing bitfields may have different layout on MSVC and MingW . ........ r47237 | thomas.wouters | 2006-07-05 13:03:49 +0200 (Wed, 05 Jul 2006) | 15 lines Fix bug in passing tuples to string.Template. All other values (with working str() or repr()) would work, just not multi-value tuples. Probably not a backport candidate, since it changes the behaviour of passing a single-element tuple: >>> string.Template("$foo").substitute(dict(foo=(1,))) '(1,)' versus '1' ........ r47241 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-05 16:18:45 +0200 (Wed, 05 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1517490: fix glitches in filter() docs. ........ r47244 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-05 17:50:05 +0200 (Wed, 05 Jul 2006) | 2 lines no need to elaborate "string". ........ r47251 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-06 06:28:59 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix refleaks reported by Shane Hathaway in SF patch #1515361. This change contains only the changes related to leaking the copy variable. ........ r47253 | fred.drake | 2006-07-06 07:13:22 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 4 lines - back out Expat change; the final fix to Expat will be different - change the pyexpat wrapper to not be so sensitive to this detail of the Expat implementation (the ex-crasher test still passes) ........ r47257 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-06 08:45:08 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add a NEWS entry for a recent pyexpat fix ........ r47258 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-06 08:55:58 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Add sqlite3.dll to the DLLs component, not to the TkDLLs component. Fixes #1517388. ........ r47259 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-06 09:05:21 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Properly quote compileall and Lib paths in case TARGETDIR has a space. ........ r47260 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-06 09:50:18 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Revert the change done in svn revision 47206: Add a new function uses_seh() to the _ctypes extension module. This will return True if Windows Structured Exception handling (SEH) is used when calling functions, False otherwise. ........ r47261 | armin.rigo | 2006-07-06 09:58:18 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 3 lines A couple of examples about how to attack the fact that _PyType_Lookup() returns a borrowed ref. Many of the calls are open to attack. ........ r47262 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-06 10:28:14 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines The test that calls a function with invalid arguments and catches the resulting Windows access violation will not be run by default. ........ r47263 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-06 10:48:35 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Patch #1517790: It is now possible to use custom objects in the ctypes foreign function argtypes sequence as long as they provide a from_param method, no longer is it required that the object is a ctypes type. ........ r47264 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-06 10:58:40 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Document the Struture and Union constructors. ........ r47265 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-06 11:11:22 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Document the changes in svn revision 47263, from patch #1517790. ........ r47267 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-06 12:13:35 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 7 lines This patch solves the problem Skip was seeing with zlib, this patch ensures that configure uses similar compiler flags as setup.py when doing the zlib test. Without this patch configure would use the first shared library on the linker path, with this patch it uses the first shared or static library on that path just like setup.py. ........ r47268 | thomas.wouters | 2006-07-06 12:48:28 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 4 lines NEWS entry for r47267: fixing configure's zlib probing. ........ r47269 | fredrik.lundh | 2006-07-06 14:29:24 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 3 lines added XMLParser alias for cElementTree compatibility ........ r47271 | nick.coghlan | 2006-07-06 14:53:04 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Revert the __module_name__ changes made in rev 47142. We'll revisit this in Python 2.6 ........ r47272 | nick.coghlan | 2006-07-06 15:04:56 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Update the tutorial section on relative imports ........ r47273 | nick.coghlan | 2006-07-06 15:35:27 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Ignore ImportWarning by default ........ r47274 | nick.coghlan | 2006-07-06 15:41:34 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Cover ImportWarning, PendingDeprecationWarning and simplefilter() in the warnings module docs ........ r47275 | nick.coghlan | 2006-07-06 15:47:18 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add NEWS entries for the ImportWarning change and documentation update ........ r47276 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-06 15:57:28 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 1 line ImportWarning is now silent by default ........ r47277 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-06 17:06:05 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Document the correct return type of PyLong_AsUnsignedLongLongMask. ........ r47278 | hyeshik.chang | 2006-07-06 17:21:52 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Add a testcase for r47086 which fixed a bug in codec_getstreamcodec(). ........ r47279 | hyeshik.chang | 2006-07-06 17:39:24 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Test using all CJK encodings for the testcases which don't require specific encodings. ........ r47280 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-06 21:28:03 +0200 (Thu, 06 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Properly generate logical file ids. Fixes #1515998. Also correct typo in Control.mapping. ........ r47287 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-07 08:03:15 +0200 (Fri, 07 Jul 2006) | 17 lines Restore rev 47014: The hppa ubuntu box sometimes hangs forever in these tests. My guess is that the wait is failing for some reason. Use WNOHANG, so we won't wait until the buildbot kills the test suite. I haven't been able to reproduce the failure, so I'm not sure if this will help or not. Hopefully, this change will cause the test to fail, rather than hang. That will be better since we will get the rest of the test results. It may also help us debug the real problem. *** The reason this originally failed was because there were many zombie children outstanding before rev 47158 cleaned them up. There are still hangs in test_subprocess that need to be addressed, but that will take more work. This should close some holes. ........ r47289 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-07 10:15:12 +0200 (Fri, 07 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix RFC number. ........ r50489 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-08 07:31:37 +0200 (Sat, 08 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix SF bug #1519018: 'as' is now validated properly in import statements ........ r50490 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-08 14:15:27 +0200 (Sat, 08 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Add an additional test for bug #1519018. ........ r50491 | tim.peters | 2006-07-08 21:55:05 +0200 (Sat, 08 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50493 | neil.schemenauer | 2006-07-09 18:16:34 +0200 (Sun, 09 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix AST compiler bug #1501934: incorrect LOAD/STORE_GLOBAL generation. ........ r50495 | neil.schemenauer | 2006-07-09 23:19:29 +0200 (Sun, 09 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix SF bug 1441486: bad unary minus folding in compiler. ........ r50497 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-10 00:14:42 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 4 lines On 64 bit systems, int literals that use less than 64 bits are now ints rather than longs. This also fixes the test for eval(-sys.maxint - 1). ........ r50500 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-10 02:04:44 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1512814, Fix incorrect lineno's when code at module scope started after line 256. ........ r50501 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-10 02:05:34 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix doco. Backport candidate. ........ r50503 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-10 02:23:17 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Part of SF patch #1484695. This removes dead code. The chksum was already verified in .frombuf() on the lines above. If there was a problem an exception is raised, so there was no way this condition could have been true. ........ r50504 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-10 03:18:57 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1516912: improve Modules support for OpenVMS. ........ r50506 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-10 04:36:41 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Patch #1504046: Add documentation for xml.etree. /F wrote the text docs, Englebert Gruber massaged it to latex and I did some more massaging to try and improve the consistency and fix some name mismatches between the declaration and text. ........ r50509 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-10 09:23:48 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Introduce DISTUTILS_USE_SDK as a flag to determine whether the SDK environment should be used. Fixes #1508010. ........ r50510 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-10 09:26:41 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 1 line Change error message to indicate that VS2003 is necessary to build extension modules, not the .NET SDK. ........ r50511 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-10 09:29:41 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add svn:ignore. ........ r50512 | anthony.baxter | 2006-07-10 09:41:04 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 1 line preparing for 2.5b2 ........ r50513 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-10 11:10:28 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix bug #1518190: accept any integer or long value in the ctypes.c_void_p constructor. ........ r50514 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-10 11:31:06 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fixed a segfault when ctypes.wintypes were imported on non-Windows machines. ........ r50516 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-10 13:11:10 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Assigning None to pointer type structure fields possible overwrote wrong fields. ........ r50517 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-10 13:17:37 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Moved the ctypes news entries from the 'Library' section into the 'Extension Modules' section where they belong, probably. This destroyes the original order of the news entries, don't know if that is important or not. ........ r50526 | phillip.eby | 2006-07-10 21:03:29 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix SF#1516184 and add a test to prevent regression. ........ r50528 | phillip.eby | 2006-07-10 21:18:35 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix SF#1457312: bad socket error handling in distutils "upload" command. ........ r50537 | peter.astrand | 2006-07-10 22:39:49 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 1 line Make it possible to run test_subprocess.py with Python 2.2, which lacks test_support.reap_children(). ........ r50541 | tim.peters | 2006-07-10 23:08:24 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 5 lines After approval from Anthony, merge the tim-current_frames branch into the trunk. This adds a new sys._current_frames() function, which returns a dict mapping thread id to topmost thread stack frame. ........ r50542 | tim.peters | 2006-07-10 23:11:49 +0200 (Mon, 10 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50553 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-11 00:11:28 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1519566: Remove unused _tofill member. Make begin_fill idempotent. Update demo2 to demonstrate filling of concave shapes. ........ r50567 | anthony.baxter | 2006-07-11 04:04:09 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 4 lines #1494314: Fix a regression with high-numbered sockets in 2.4.3. This means that select() on sockets > FD_SETSIZE (typically 1024) work again. The patch makes sockets use poll() internally where available. ........ r50568 | tim.peters | 2006-07-11 04:17:48 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50575 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-11 18:42:05 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add missing Py_DECREF. ........ r50576 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-11 18:44:25 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add missing Py_DECREFs. ........ r50579 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-11 19:20:16 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 1 line Bump version number; add sys._current_frames ........ r50582 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-11 20:28:35 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 3 lines When a foreign function is retrived by calling __getitem__ on a ctypes library instance, do not set it as attribute. ........ r50583 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-11 20:40:50 +0200 (Tue, 11 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Change the ctypes version number to 1.0.0. ........ r50597 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-12 07:26:17 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1520864: unpacking singleton tuples in for loop (for x, in) work again. ........ r50598 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-12 07:26:35 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix function name in error msg ........ r50599 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-12 07:27:46 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Fix uninitialized memory read reported by Valgrind when running doctest. This could happen if size == 0. ........ r50600 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-12 09:28:29 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 1 line Actually change the MAGIC #. Create a new section for 2.5c1 and mention the impact of changing the MAGIC #. ........ r50601 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-12 10:43:47 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix #1467450: ctypes now uses RTLD_GLOBAL by default on OSX 10.3 to load shared libraries. ........ r50604 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-12 16:25:18 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix the wrong description of LibraryLoader.LoadLibrary, and document the DEFAULT_MODE constant. ........ r50607 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-12 17:31:17 +0200 (Wed, 12 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Accept long options "--help" and "--version". ........ r50617 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-13 11:53:47 +0200 (Thu, 13 Jul 2006) | 3 lines A misspelled preprocessor symbol caused ctypes to be always compiled without thread support. Replaced WITH_THREADS with WITH_THREAD. ........ r50619 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-13 19:01:14 +0200 (Thu, 13 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix #1521375. When running with root priviledges, 'gcc -o /dev/null' did overwrite /dev/null. Use a temporary file instead of /dev/null. ........ r50620 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-13 19:05:13 +0200 (Thu, 13 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix misleading words. ........ r50622 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-13 19:37:26 +0200 (Thu, 13 Jul 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r50629 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-14 09:12:54 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1521874: grammar errors in doanddont.tex. ........ r50630 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-14 09:20:04 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 1 line Try to improve grammar further. ........ r50631 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-14 11:58:55 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 1 line Extend build_ssl to Win64, using VSExtComp. ........ r50632 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-14 14:10:09 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add debug output to analyse buildbot failure. ........ r50633 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-14 14:31:05 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix Debug build of _ssl. ........ r50636 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-14 15:32:38 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 1 line Mention new options ........ r50638 | peter.astrand | 2006-07-14 16:04:45 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 1 line Bug #1223937: CalledProcessError.errno -> CalledProcessError.returncode. ........ r50640 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-14 17:01:05 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Make the prototypes of our private PyUnicode_FromWideChar and PyUnicode_AsWideChar replacement functions compatible to the official functions by using Py_ssize_t instead of int. ........ r50643 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-14 19:51:14 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1521817: The index range checking on ctypes arrays containing exactly one element is enabled again. ........ r50647 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-14 20:22:50 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Updates for the ctypes documentation. ........ r50655 | fredrik.lundh | 2006-07-14 23:45:48 +0200 (Fri, 14 Jul 2006) | 3 lines typo ........ r50664 | george.yoshida | 2006-07-15 18:03:49 +0200 (Sat, 15 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Bug #15187702 : ext/win-cookbook.html has a broken link to distutils ........ r50667 | bob.ippolito | 2006-07-15 18:53:15 +0200 (Sat, 15 Jul 2006) | 1 line Patch #1220874: Update the binhex module for Mach-O. ........ r50671 | fred.drake | 2006-07-16 03:21:20 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 1 line clean up some link markup ........ r50673 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 03:50:38 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1512814, Fix incorrect lineno's when code within a function had more than 255 blank lines. Byte codes need to go first, line #s second. ........ r50674 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:00:32 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 5 lines a & b were dereffed above, so they are known to be valid pointers. z is known to be NULL, nothing to DECREF. Reported by Klockwork, #107. ........ r50675 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:02:57 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 5 lines self is dereffed (and passed as first arg), so it's known to be good. func is returned from PyArg_ParseTuple and also dereffed. Reported by Klocwork, #30 (self one at least). ........ r50676 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:05:35 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 4 lines proto was dereffed above and is known to be good. No need for X. Reported by Klocwork, #39. ........ r50677 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:15:27 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Fix memory leaks in some conditions. Reported by Klocwork #152. ........ r50678 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:17:36 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Fix memory leak under some conditions. Reported by Klocwork, #98. ........ r50679 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:22:30 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 8 lines Use sizeof(buffer) instead of duplicating the constants to ensure they won't be wrong. The real change is to pass (bufsz - 1) to PyOS_ascii_formatd and 1 to strncat. strncat copies n+1 bytes from src (not dest). Reported by Klocwork #58. ........ r50680 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:32:03 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Handle a NULL name properly. Reported by Klocwork #67 ........ r50681 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-16 04:35:47 +0200 (Sun, 16 Jul 2006) | 6 lines PyFunction_SetDefaults() is documented as taking None or a tuple. A NULL would crash the PyTuple_Check(). Now make NULL return a SystemError. Reported by Klocwork #73. ........ r50683 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-17 02:55:45 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Stop INCREFing name, then checking if it's NULL. name (f_name) should never be NULL so assert it. Fix one place where we could have passed NULL. Reported by Klocwork #66. ........ r50684 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-17 02:57:15 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 5 lines otherset is known to be non-NULL based on checks before and DECREF after. DECREF otherset rather than XDECREF in error conditions too. Reported by Klockwork #154. ........ r50685 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-17 02:59:04 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Reported by Klocwork #151. v2 can be NULL if exception2 is NULL. I don't think that condition can happen, but I'm not sure it can't either. Now the code will protect against either being NULL. ........ r50686 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-17 03:00:16 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add NEWS entry for a bunch of fixes due to warnings produced by Klocworks static analysis tool. ........ r50687 | fred.drake | 2006-07-17 07:47:52 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 3 lines document xmlcore (still minimal; needs mention in each of the xml.* modules) SF bug #1504456 (partial) ........ r50688 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-17 15:23:46 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Remove usage of sets module (patch #1500609). ........ r50689 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-17 15:26:33 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Add missing NEWS item (#1522771) ........ r50690 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-17 18:47:54 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 1 line Attribute more features ........ r50692 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-07-17 23:59:27 +0200 (Mon, 17 Jul 2006) | 8 lines Patch 1479219 - Tal Einat 1. 'as' highlighted as builtin in comment string on import line 2. Comments such as "#False identity" which start with a keyword immediately after the '#' character aren't colored as comments. 3. u or U beginning unicode string not correctly highlighted Closes bug 1325071 ........ r50693 | barry.warsaw | 2006-07-18 01:07:51 +0200 (Tue, 18 Jul 2006) | 16 lines decode_rfc2231(): Be more robust against buggy RFC 2231 encodings. Specifically, instead of raising a ValueError when there is a single tick in the parameter, simply return that the entire string unquoted, with None for both the charset and the language. Also, if there are more than 2 ticks in the parameter, interpret the first three parts as the standard RFC 2231 parts, then the rest of the parts as the encoded string. Test cases added. Original fewer-than-3-parts fix by Tokio Kikuchi. Resolves SF bug # 1218081. I will back port the fix and tests to Python 2.4 (email 3.0) and Python 2.3 (email 2.5). Also, bump the version number to email 4.0.1, removing the 'alpha' moniker. ........ r50695 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-07-18 06:03:16 +0200 (Tue, 18 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Rebinding Tab key was inserting 'tab' instead of 'Tab'. Bug 1179168. ........ r50696 | brett.cannon | 2006-07-18 06:41:36 +0200 (Tue, 18 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Fix bug #1520914. Starting in 2.4, time.strftime() began to check the bounds of values in the time tuple passed in. Unfortunately people came to rely on undocumented behaviour of setting unneeded values to 0, regardless of if it was within the valid range. Now those values force the value internally to the minimum value when 0 is passed in. ........ r50697 | facundo.batista | 2006-07-18 14:16:13 +0200 (Tue, 18 Jul 2006) | 1 line Comments and docs cleanups, and some little fixes, provided by Santiágo Peresón ........ r50704 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-18 19:46:31 +0200 (Tue, 18 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Patch #1524429: Use repr instead of backticks again. ........ r50706 | tim.peters | 2006-07-18 23:55:15 +0200 (Tue, 18 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50708 | tim.peters | 2006-07-19 02:03:19 +0200 (Wed, 19 Jul 2006) | 18 lines SF bug 1524317: configure --without-threads fails to build Moved the code for _PyThread_CurrentFrames() up, so it's no longer in a huge "#ifdef WITH_THREAD" block (I didn't realize it /was/ in one). Changed test_sys's test_current_frames() so it passes with or without thread supported compiled in. Note that test_sys fails when Python is compiled without threads, but for an unrelated reason (the old test_exit() fails with an indirect ImportError on the `thread` module). There are also other unrelated compilation failures without threads, in extension modules (like ctypes); at least the core compiles again. Do we really support --without-threads? If so, there are several problems remaining. ........ r50713 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-19 11:09:32 +0200 (Wed, 19 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Make sure the _ctypes extension can be compiled when WITH_THREAD is not defined on Windows, even if that configuration is probably not supported at all. ........ r50715 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-19 19:18:32 +0200 (Wed, 19 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Revert r50706 (Whitespace normalization) and r50697: Comments and docs cleanups, and some little fixes per recommendation from Raymond Hettinger. ........ r50719 | phillip.eby | 2006-07-20 17:54:16 +0200 (Thu, 20 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Fix SF#1516184 (again) and add a test to prevent regression. (There was a problem with empty filenames still causing recursion) ........ r50720 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-20 18:28:39 +0200 (Thu, 20 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Guard for _active being None in __del__ method. ........ r50721 | vinay.sajip | 2006-07-20 18:28:39 +0200 (Thu, 20 Jul 2006) | 1 line Updated documentation for TimedRotatingFileHandler relating to how rollover files are named. The previous documentation was wrongly the same as for RotatingFileHandler. ........ r50731 | fred.drake | 2006-07-20 22:11:57 +0200 (Thu, 20 Jul 2006) | 1 line markup fix ........ r50739 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-07-21 00:22:52 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Avoid occasional failure to detect closing paren properly. Patch 1407280 Tal Einat M ParenMatch.py M NEWS.txt M CREDITS.txt ........ r50740 | vinay.sajip | 2006-07-21 01:20:12 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 1 line Addressed SF#1524081 by using a dictionary to map level names to syslog priority names, rather than a string.lower(). ........ r50741 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-21 07:29:58 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add some asserts that we got good params passed ........ r50742 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-21 07:31:02 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Move the initialization of some pointers earlier. The problem is that if we call Py_DECREF(frame) like we do if allocating locals fails, frame_dealloc() will try to use these bogus values and crash. ........ r50743 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-21 07:32:28 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Handle allocation failures gracefully. Found with failmalloc. Many (all?) of these could be backported. ........ r50745 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-21 09:59:02 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 1 line Speel initialise write. Tanks Anthony. ........ r50746 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-21 09:59:47 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Handle more memory allocation failures without crashing. ........ r50754 | barry.warsaw | 2006-07-21 16:51:07 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 23 lines More RFC 2231 improvements for the email 4.0 package. As Mark Sapiro rightly points out there are really two types of continued headers defined in this RFC (i.e. "encoded" parameters with the form "name*0*=" and unencoded parameters with the form "name*0="), but we were were handling them both the same way and that isn't correct. This patch should be much more RFC compliant in that only encoded params are %-decoded and the charset/language information is only extract if there are any encoded params in the segments. If there are no encoded params then the RFC says that there will be no charset/language parts. Note however that this will change the return value for Message.get_param() in some cases. For example, whereas before if you had all unencoded param continuations you would have still gotten a 3-tuple back from this method (with charset and language == None), you will now get just a string. I don't believe this is a backward incompatible change though because the documentation for this method already indicates that either return value is possible and that you must do an isinstance(val, tuple) check to discriminate between the two. (Yeah that API kind of sucks but we can't change /that/ without breaking code.) Test cases, some documentation updates, and a NEWS item accompany this patch. ........ r50759 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-21 19:36:31 +0200 (Fri, 21 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix check for empty list (vs. None). ........ r50771 | brett.cannon | 2006-07-22 00:44:07 +0200 (Sat, 22 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Remove an XXX marker in a comment. ........ r50773 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-22 18:20:49 +0200 (Sat, 22 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix more memory allocation issues found with failmalloc. ........ r50774 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-22 19:00:57 +0200 (Sat, 22 Jul 2006) | 1 line Don't fail if the directory already exists ........ r50775 | greg.ward | 2006-07-23 04:25:53 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Be a lot smarter about whether this test passes: instead of assuming that a 2.93 sec audio file will always take 3.1 sec (as it did on the hardware I had when I first wrote the test), expect that it will take 2.93 sec +/- 10%, and only fail if it's outside of that range. Compute the expected ........ r50776 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-07-23 06:19:49 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Tooltips failed on new-syle class __init__ args. Bug 1027566 Loren Guthrie ........ r50777 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 09:50:36 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 1 line Handle more mem alloc issues found with failmalloc ........ r50778 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 09:51:58 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 5 lines If the for loop isn't entered, entryblock will be NULL. If passed to stackdepth_walk it will be dereffed. Not sure if I found with failmalloc or Klockwork #55. ........ r50779 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 09:53:14 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Move the initialization of size_a down below the check for a being NULL. Reported by Klocwork #106 ........ r50780 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 09:55:55 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 9 lines Check the allocation of b_objects and return if there was a failure. Also fix a few memory leaks in other failure scenarios. It seems that if b_objects == Py_None, we will have an extra ref to b_objects. Add XXX comment so hopefully someone documents why the else isn't necessary or adds it in. Reported by Klocwork #20 ........ r50781 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 09:57:11 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix memory leaks spotted by Klocwork #37. ........ r50782 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 09:59:00 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 5 lines nextlink can be NULL if teedataobject_new fails, so use XINCREF. Ensure that dataobj is never NULL. Reported by Klocwork #102 ........ r50783 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-23 10:01:43 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 8 lines Ensure we don't write beyond errText. I think I got this right, but it definitely could use some review to ensure I'm not off by one and there's no possible overflow/wrap-around of bytes_left. Reported by Klocwork #1. Fix a problem if there is a failure allocating self->db. Found with failmalloc. ........ r50784 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-23 11:41:09 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Without this patch CMD-W won't close EditorWindows on MacOS X. This solves part of bug #1517990. ........ r50785 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-23 11:46:11 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Fix for bug #1517996: Class and Path browsers show Tk menu This patch replaces the menubar that is used by AquaTk for windows without a menubar of their own by one that is more appropriate for IDLE. ........ r50786 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-07-23 14:57:02 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Build updates for OS/2 EMX port ........ r50787 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-07-23 15:00:04 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 3 lines bugfix: PyThread_start_new_thread() returns the thread ID, not a flag; will backport. ........ r50789 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-07-23 15:04:00 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Get mailbox module working on OS/2 EMX port. ........ r50791 | greg.ward | 2006-07-23 18:05:51 +0200 (Sun, 23 Jul 2006) | 1 line Resync optparse with Optik 1.5.3: minor tweaks for/to tests. ........ r50794 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-24 07:05:22 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Update list of unsupported systems. Fixes #1510853. ........ r50795 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-24 12:26:33 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 1 line Patch #1448199: Release GIL around ConnectRegistry. ........ r50796 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-24 13:54:53 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1232023: Don't include empty path component from registry, so that the current directory does not get added to sys.path. Also fixes #1526785. ........ r50797 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-24 14:54:17 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1524310: Properly report errors from FindNextFile in os.listdir. Will backport to 2.4. ........ r50800 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-24 15:28:57 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Patch #1523356: fix determining include dirs in python-config. Also don't install "python-config" when doing altinstall, but always install "python-config2.x" and make a link to it like with the main executable. ........ r50802 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-24 15:46:47 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1527744: right order of includes in order to have HAVE_CONIO_H defined properly. ........ r50803 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-24 16:09:56 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1515343: Fix printing of deprecated string exceptions with a value in the traceback module. ........ r50804 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-07-24 19:13:23 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 7 lines EditorWindow failed when used stand-alone if sys.ps1 not set. Bug 1010370 Dave Florek M EditorWindow.py M PyShell.py M NEWS.txt ........ r50805 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-07-24 20:05:51 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 6 lines - EditorWindow.test() was failing. Bug 1417598 M EditorWindow.py M ScriptBinding.py M NEWS.txt ........ r50808 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-24 22:11:35 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Repair accidental NameError. ........ r50809 | tim.peters | 2006-07-24 23:02:15 +0200 (Mon, 24 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50810 | greg.ward | 2006-07-25 04:11:12 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Don't use standard assert: want tests to fail even when run with -O. Delete cruft. ........ r50811 | tim.peters | 2006-07-25 06:07:22 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 10 lines current_frames_with_threads(): There's actually no way to guess /which/ line the spawned thread is in at the time sys._current_frames() is called: we know it finished enter_g.set(), but can't know whether the instruction counter has advanced to the following leave_g.wait(). The latter is overwhelming most likely, but not guaranteed, and I see that the "x86 Ubuntu dapper (icc) trunk" buildbot found it on the other line once. Changed the test so it passes in either case. ........ r50815 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-25 11:53:12 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1525817: Don't truncate short lines in IDLE's tool tips. ........ r50816 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-25 12:05:47 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #978833: Really close underlying socket in _socketobject.close. Will backport to 2.4. ........ r50817 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-25 12:11:14 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 1 line Revert incomplete checkin. ........ r50819 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-25 12:22:34 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1525766: correctly pass onerror arg to recursive calls of pkg.walk_packages. Also improve the docstrings. ........ r50825 | brett.cannon | 2006-07-25 19:32:20 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Add comment for changes to test_ossaudiodev. ........ r50826 | brett.cannon | 2006-07-25 19:34:36 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix a bug in the messages for an assert failure where not enough arguments to a string were being converted in the format. ........ r50828 | armin.rigo | 2006-07-25 20:09:57 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Document why is and is not a good way to fix the gc_inspection crasher. ........ r50829 | armin.rigo | 2006-07-25 20:11:07 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Added another crasher, which hit me today (I was not intentionally writing such code, of course, but it took some gdb time to figure out what my bug was). ........ r50830 | armin.rigo | 2006-07-25 20:38:39 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Document the crashers that will not go away soon as "won't fix", and explain why. ........ r50831 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-25 21:13:35 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Install the compatibility symlink to libpython.a on OSX using 'ln -sf' instead of 'ln -s', this avoid problems when reinstalling python. ........ r50832 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-25 21:20:54 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Fix for bug #1525447 (renaming to MacOSmodule.c would also work, but not without causing problems for anyone that is on a case-insensitive filesystem). Setup.py tries to compile the MacOS extension from MacOSmodule.c, while the actual file is named macosmodule.c. This is no problem on the (default) case-insensitive filesystem, but doesn't work on case-sensitive filesystems. ........ r50833 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-07-25 22:28:55 +0200 (Tue, 25 Jul 2006) | 7 lines Fix bug #1517990: IDLE keybindings on OSX This adds a new key definition for OSX, which is slightly different from the classic mac definition. Also add NEWS item for a couple of bugfixes I added recently. ........ r50834 | tim.peters | 2006-07-26 00:30:24 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50839 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-26 06:00:18 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line Hmm, only python2.x is installed, not plain python. Did that change recently? ........ r50840 | barry.warsaw | 2006-07-26 07:54:46 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Forward port some fixes that were in email 2.5 but for some reason didn't make it into email 4.0. Specifically, in Message.get_content_charset(), handle RFC 2231 headers that contain an encoding not known to Python, or a character in the data that isn't in the charset encoding. Also forward port the appropriate unit tests. ........ r50841 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-26 09:23:32 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 3 lines NEWS entry for #1525766. ........ r50842 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-26 09:40:17 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1459963: properly capitalize HTTP header names. ........ r50843 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-26 10:03:10 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Part of bug #1523610: fix miscalculation of buffer length. Also add a guard against NULL in converttuple and add a test case (that previously would have crashed). ........ r50844 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-26 14:12:56 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #978833: Really close underlying socket in _socketobject.close. Fix httplib.HTTPConnection.getresponse to not close the socket if it is still needed for the response. ........ r50845 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-26 19:16:52 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1471938] Fix build problem on Solaris 8 by conditionalizing the use of mvwgetnstr(); it was conditionalized a few lines below. Fix from Paul Eggert. I also tried out the STRICT_SYSV_CURSES case and am therefore removing the 'untested' comment. ........ r50846 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-26 19:18:01 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line Correct error message ........ r50847 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-26 19:19:39 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line Minor grammar fix ........ r50848 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-26 19:22:21 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line Put news item in right section ........ r50850 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-26 20:03:12 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line Use sys.exc_info() ........ r50851 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-26 20:15:45 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 1 line Use sys.exc_info() ........ r50852 | phillip.eby | 2006-07-26 21:48:27 +0200 (Wed, 26 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Allow the 'onerror' argument to walk_packages() to catch any Exception, not just ImportError. This allows documentation tools to better skip unimportable packages. ........ r50854 | tim.peters | 2006-07-27 01:23:15 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50855 | tim.peters | 2006-07-27 03:14:53 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 21 lines Bug #1521947: possible bug in mystrtol.c with recent gcc. In general, C doesn't define anything about what happens when an operation on a signed integral type overflows, and PyOS_strtol() did several formally undefined things of that nature on signed longs. Some version of gcc apparently tries to exploit that now, and PyOS_strtol() could fail to detect overflow then. Tried to repair all that, although it seems at least as likely to me that we'll get screwed by bad platform definitions for LONG_MIN and/or LONG_MAX now. For that reason, I don't recommend backporting this. Note that I have no box on which this makes a lick of difference -- can't really test it, except to note that it didn't break anything on my boxes. Silent change: PyOS_strtol() used to return the hard-coded 0x7fffffff in case of overflow. Now it returns LONG_MAX. They're the same only on 32-bit boxes (although C doesn't guarantee that either ...). ........ r50856 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-27 05:51:58 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Don't kill a normal instance of python running on windows when checking to kill a cygwin instance. build\\python.exe was matching a normal windows instance. Prefix that with a \\ to ensure build is a directory and not PCbuild. As discussed on python-dev. ........ r50857 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-27 05:55:39 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Closure can't be NULL at this point since we know it's a tuple. Reported by Klocwork # 74. ........ r50858 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-27 06:04:50 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line No functional change. Add comment and assert to describe why there cannot be overflow which was reported by Klocwork. Discussed on python-dev ........ r50859 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-27 08:38:16 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bump distutils version to 2.5, as several new features have been introduced since 2.4. ........ r50860 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 14:18:20 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Reformat docstring; fix typo ........ r50861 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-27 17:05:36 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Add test_main() methods. These three tests were never run by regrtest.py. We really need a simpler testing framework. ........ r50862 | tim.peters | 2006-07-27 17:09:20 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 2 lines News for patch #1529686. ........ r50863 | tim.peters | 2006-07-27 17:11:00 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50864 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-27 17:38:33 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Amend news entry. ........ r50865 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-27 18:08:15 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Make uuid test suite pass on this box by requesting output with LC_ALL=C. ........ r50866 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 20:37:33 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example ........ r50867 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-27 20:39:55 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 9 lines Remove code that is no longer used (ctypes.com). Fix the DllGetClassObject and DllCanUnloadNow so that they forward the call to the comtypes.server.inprocserver module. The latter was never documented, never used by published code, and didn't work anyway, so I think it does not deserve a NEWS entry (but I might be wrong). ........ r50868 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 20:41:21 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ('publically' is rare, poss. non-standard) ........ r50869 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 20:42:41 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add missing word ........ r50870 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 20:44:10 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Repair typos ........ r50872 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 20:53:33 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Update URL; add example ........ r50873 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 21:07:29 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add punctuation mark; add some examples ........ r50874 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 21:11:07 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line Mention base64 module; rewrite last sentence to be more positive ........ r50875 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-27 21:12:49 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 1 line If binhex is higher-level than binascii, it should come first in the chapter ........ r50876 | tim.peters | 2006-07-27 22:47:24 +0200 (Thu, 27 Jul 2006) | 28 lines check_node(): stop spraying mystery output to stderr. When a node number disagrees, keep track of all sources & the node numbers they reported, and stick all that in the error message. Changed all callers to supply a non-empty "source" argument; made the "source" argument non-optional. On my box, test_uuid still fails, but with the less confusing output: AssertionError: different sources disagree on node: from source 'getnode1', node was 00038a000015 from source 'getnode2', node was 00038a000015 from source 'ipconfig', node was 001111b2b7bf Only the last one appears to be correct; e.g., C:\Code\python\PCbuild>getmac Physical Address Transport Name =================== ========================================================== 00-11-11-B2-B7-BF \Device\Tcpip_{190FB163-5AFD-4483-86A1-2FE16AC61FF1} 62-A1-AC-6C-FD-BE \Device\Tcpip_{8F77DF5A-EA3D-4F1D-975E-D472CEE6438A} E2-1F-01-C6-5D-88 \Device\Tcpip_{CD18F76B-2EF3-409F-9B8A-6481EE70A1E4} I can't find anything on my box with MAC 00-03-8a-00-00-15, and am not clear on where that comes from. ........ r50878 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 00:40:05 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Reword paragraph ........ r50879 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 00:49:38 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example ........ r50880 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 00:49:54 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example ........ r50881 | barry.warsaw | 2006-07-28 01:43:15 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 27 lines Patch #1520294: Support for getset and member descriptors in types.py, inspect.py, and pydoc.py. Specifically, this allows for querying the type of an object against these built-in C types and more importantly, for getting their docstrings printed in the interactive interpreter's help() function. This patch includes a new built-in module called _types which provides definitions of getset and member descriptors for use by the types.py module. These types are exposed as types.GetSetDescriptorType and types.MemberDescriptorType. Query functions are provided as inspect.isgetsetdescriptor() and inspect.ismemberdescriptor(). The implementations of these are robust enough to work with Python implementations other than CPython, which may not have these fundamental types. The patch also includes documentation and test suite updates. I commit these changes now under these guiding principles: 1. Silence is assent. The release manager has not said "no", and of the few people that cared enough to respond to the thread, the worst vote was "0". 2. It's easier to ask for forgiveness than permission. 3. It's so dang easy to revert stuff in svn, that you could view this as a forcing function. :) Windows build patches will follow. ........ r50882 | tim.peters | 2006-07-28 01:44:37 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1529297: The rewrite of doctest for Python 2.4 unintentionally lost that tests are sorted by name before being run. ``DocTestFinder`` has been changed to sort the list of tests it returns. ........ r50883 | tim.peters | 2006-07-28 01:45:48 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50884 | tim.peters | 2006-07-28 01:46:36 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r50885 | barry.warsaw | 2006-07-28 01:50:40 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Enable the building of the _types module on Windows. Note that this has only been tested for VS 2003 since that's all I have. ........ r50887 | tim.peters | 2006-07-28 02:23:15 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 7 lines defdict_reduce(): Plug leaks. We didn't notice these before because test_defaultdict didn't actually do anything before Georg fixed that earlier today. Neal's next refleak run then showed test_defaultdict leaking 9 references on each run. That's repaired by this checkin. ........ r50888 | tim.peters | 2006-07-28 02:30:00 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 2 lines News about the repaired memory leak in defaultdict. ........ r50889 | gregory.p.smith | 2006-07-28 03:35:25 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 7 lines - pybsddb Bug #1527939: bsddb module DBEnv dbremove and dbrename methods now allow their database parameter to be None as the sleepycat API allows. Also adds an appropriate test case for DBEnv.dbrename and dbremove. ........ r50895 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-28 06:22:34 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Ensure the actual number matches the expected count ........ r50896 | tim.peters | 2006-07-28 06:51:59 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Live with that "the hardware address" is an ill-defined concept, and that different ways of trying to find "the hardware address" may return different results. Certainly true on both of my Windows boxes, and in different ways (see whining on python-dev). ........ r50897 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-28 09:21:27 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Try to find the MAC addr on various flavours of Unix. This seems hopeless. The reduces the test_uuid failures, but there's still another method failing. ........ r50898 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-28 09:45:49 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Add UUID for upcoming 2.5b3. ........ r50899 | matt.fleming | 2006-07-28 13:27:27 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Allow socketmodule to compile on NetBSD -current, whose bluetooth API differs from both Linux and FreeBSD. Accepted by Neal Norwitz. ........ r50900 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 14:07:12 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Patch #1529811] Correction to description of r|* mode ........ r50901 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 14:18:22 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r50902 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 14:32:43 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example ........ r50903 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 14:33:19 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example ........ r50904 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 14:45:55 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Don't overwrite built-in name; add some blank lines for readability ........ r50905 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-28 14:48:07 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example. Should I propagate this example to all the other DBM-ish modules, too? ........ r50912 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-28 20:31:39 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1529686: also run test_email_codecs with regrtest.py. ........ r50913 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-28 20:36:01 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix spelling. ........ r50915 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-28 21:42:40 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Remove a useless XXX comment. Cosmetic changes to the code so that the #ifdef _UNICODE block doesn't mess emacs code formatting. ........ r50916 | phillip.eby | 2006-07-28 23:12:07 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Bug #1529871: The speed enhancement patch #921466 broke Python's compliance with PEP 302. This was fixed by adding an ``imp.NullImporter`` type that is used in ``sys.path_importer_cache`` to cache non-directory paths and avoid excessive filesystem operations during imports. ........ r50917 | phillip.eby | 2006-07-28 23:31:54 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix svn merge spew. ........ r50918 | thomas.heller | 2006-07-28 23:43:20 +0200 (Fri, 28 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1529514: More openbsd platforms for ctypes. Regenerated Modules/_ctypes/libffi/configure with autoconf 2.59. Approved by Neal. ........ r50922 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-29 10:51:21 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Bug #835255: The "closure" argument to new.function() is now documented. ........ r50924 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-29 11:33:26 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1441397: The compiler module now recognizes module and function docstrings correctly as it did in Python 2.4. ........ r50925 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-29 12:25:46 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Revert rev 42617, it was introduced to work around bug #1441397. test_compiler now passes again. ........ r50926 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 15:22:49 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line update target version number ........ r50927 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 15:56:48 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add example ........ r50928 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 16:04:47 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Update URL ........ r50930 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 16:08:15 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Reword paragraph to match the order of the subsequent sections ........ r50931 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 16:21:15 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1529157] Mention raw_input() and input(); while I'm at it, reword the description a bit ........ r50932 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 16:42:48 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1519571] Document some missing functions: setup(), title(), done() ........ r50933 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 16:43:55 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix docstring punctuation ........ r50934 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 17:10:32 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1414697] Change docstring of set/frozenset types to specify that the contents are unique. Raymond, please feel free to edit or revert. ........ r50935 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 17:35:21 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1530382] Document SSL.server(), .issuer() methods ........ r50936 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 17:42:46 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r50937 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 17:43:13 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Tweak wording ........ r50938 | matt.fleming | 2006-07-29 17:55:30 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Fix typo ........ r50939 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 17:57:08 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 6 lines [Bug #1528258] Mention that the 'data' argument can be None. The constructor docs referred the reader to the add_data() method's docs, but they weren't very helpful. I've simply copied an earlier explanation of 'data' that's more useful. ........ r50940 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 18:08:40 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Set bug/patch count. Take a bow, everyone! ........ r50941 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 18:56:15 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 18 lines expunge the xmlcore changes: 41667, 41668 - initial switch to xmlcore 47044 - mention of xmlcore in What's New 50687 - mention of xmlcore in the library reference re-apply xmlcore changes to xml: 41674 - line ending changes (re-applied manually), directory props 41677 - add cElementTree wrapper 41678 - PSF licensing for etree 41812 - whitespace normalization 42724 - fix svn:eol-style settings 43681, 43682 - remove Python version-compatibility cruft from minidom 46773 - fix encoding of \r\n\t in attr values in saxutils 47269 - added XMLParser alias for cElementTree compatibility additional tests were added in Lib/test/test_sax.py that failed with the xmlcore changes; these relate to SF bugs #1511497, #1513611 ........ r50942 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 20:14:07 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 17 lines Reorganize the docs for 'file' and 'open()' after some discussion with Fred. We want to encourage users to write open() when opening a file, but open() was described with a single paragraph and 'file' had lots of explanation of the mode and bufsize arguments. I've shrunk the description of 'file' to cross-reference to the 'File objects' section, and to open() for an explanation of the arguments. open() now has all the paragraphs about the mode string. The bufsize argument was moved up so that it isn't buried at the end; now there's 1 paragraph on mode, 1 on bufsize, and then 3 more on mode. Various other edits and rearrangements were made in the process. It's probably best to read the final text and not to try to make sense of the diffs. ........ r50943 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 20:19:19 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line restore test un-intentionally removed in the xmlcore purge (revision 50941) ........ r50944 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 20:33:29 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 3 lines make the reference to older versions of the documentation a link to the right page on python.org ........ r50945 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 21:09:01 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line document the footnote usage pattern ........ r50947 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 21:14:10 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line emphasize and oddball nuance of LaTeX comment syntax ........ r50948 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 21:24:04 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Patch #1490989 from Skip Montanaro] Mention debugging builds in the API documentation. I've changed Skip's patch to point to Misc/SpecialBuilds and fiddled with the markup a bit. ........ r50949 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-29 21:29:35 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 6 lines Disable these tests until they are reliable across platforms. These problems may mask more important, real problems. One or both methods are known to fail on: Solaris, OpenBSD, Debian, Ubuntu. They pass on Windows and some Linux boxes. ........ r50950 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 21:50:37 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Patch #1068277] Clarify that os.path.exists() can return False depending on permissions. Fred approved committing this patch in December 2004! ........ r50952 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 22:04:42 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 6 lines SF bug #1193966: Weakref types documentation misplaced The information about supporting weakrefs with types defined in C extensions is moved to the Extending & Embedding manual. Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_WEAKREFS is no longer mentioned since it is part of Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT. ........ r50953 | skip.montanaro | 2006-07-29 22:06:05 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Add a comment to the csv reader documentation that explains why the treatment of newlines changed in 2.5. Pulled almost verbatim from a comment by Andrew McNamara in <http://python.org/sf/1465014>. ........ r50954 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-29 22:20:52 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 3 lines If the executable doesn't exist, there's no reason to try to start it. This prevents garbage about command not found being printed on Solaris. ........ r50955 | fred.drake | 2006-07-29 22:21:25 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line fix minor markup error that introduced extra punctuation ........ r50957 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-29 22:37:08 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Disable test_getnode too, since this is also unreliable. ........ r50958 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 23:27:12 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Follow TeX's conventions for hyphens ........ r50959 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-29 23:30:21 +0200 (Sat, 29 Jul 2006) | 1 line Fix case for 'Unix' ........ r50960 | fred.drake | 2006-07-30 01:34:57 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line markup cleanups ........ r50961 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-30 02:27:34 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line Minor typo fixes ........ r50962 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-30 02:37:56 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #793553] Correct description of keyword arguments for SSL authentication ........ r50963 | tim.peters | 2006-07-30 02:58:15 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50964 | fred.drake | 2006-07-30 05:03:43 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line lots of markup nits, most commonly Unix/unix --> \UNIX ........ r50965 | fred.drake | 2006-07-30 07:41:28 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line update information on wxPython, from Robin Dunn ........ r50966 | fred.drake | 2006-07-30 07:49:49 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 4 lines remove possibly-outdated comment on what GUI toolkit is most commonly used; it is hard to know whether this is right, and it does not add valuable reference information at any rate ........ r50967 | fred.drake | 2006-07-30 07:55:39 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines - remove yet another reference to how commonly Tkinter is (thought to be) used - fix an internal section reference ........ r50968 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 08:53:31 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 4 lines Patch #1531113: Fix augmented assignment with yield expressions. Also fix a SystemError when trying to assign to yield expressions. ........ r50969 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 08:55:48 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Add PyErr_WarnEx() so C code can pass the stacklevel to warnings.warn(). This provides the proper warning for struct.pack(). PyErr_Warn() is now deprecated in favor of PyErr_WarnEx(). As mentioned by Tim Peters on python-dev. ........ r50970 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 08:57:04 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1515471: string.replace() accepts character buffers again. Pass the char* and size around rather than PyObject's. ........ r50971 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 08:59:13 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line Whitespace normalization ........ r50973 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-30 12:53:32 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Clarify that __op__ methods must return NotImplemented if they don't support the operation. ........ r50974 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-30 13:07:23 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1002398: The documentation for os.path.sameopenfile now correctly refers to file descriptors, not file objects. ........ r50977 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-30 15:00:31 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Don't copy directory stat times in shutil.copytree on Windows Fixes #1525866. ........ r50978 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-30 15:14:05 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Base __version__ on sys.version_info, as distutils is no longer maintained separatedly. ........ r50979 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-30 15:27:31 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Mention Cygwin in distutils error message about a missing VS 2003. Fixes #1257728. ........ r50982 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-07-30 16:09:47 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 5 lines Drop usage of test -e in configure as it is not portable. Fixes #1439538 Will backport to 2.4 Also regenerate pyconfig.h.in. ........ r50984 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-30 18:20:10 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix makefile changes for python-config. ........ r50985 | george.yoshida | 2006-07-30 18:37:37 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Rename struct.pack_to to struct.pack_into as changed in revision 46642. ........ r50986 | george.yoshida | 2006-07-30 18:41:30 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Typo fix ........ r50987 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 21:18:13 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add some asserts and update comments ........ r50988 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 21:18:38 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 1 line Verify that the signal handlers were really called ........ r50989 | neal.norwitz | 2006-07-30 21:20:42 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Try to prevent hangs on Tru64/Alpha buildbot. I'm not certain this will help and may need to be reverted if it causes problems. ........ r50990 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-30 22:18:51 +0200 (Sun, 30 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1531349: right <-> left glitch in __rop__ description. ........ r50992 | tim.peters | 2006-07-31 03:46:03 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r50993 | andrew.mcnamara | 2006-07-31 04:27:48 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 2 lines Redo the comment about the 2.5 change in quoted-newline handling. ........ r50994 | tim.peters | 2006-07-31 04:40:23 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 10 lines ZipFile.close(): Killed one of the struct.pack deprecation warnings on Win32. Also added an XXX about the line: pos3 = self.fp.tell() `pos3` is never referenced, and I have no idea what the code intended to do instead. ........ r50996 | tim.peters | 2006-07-31 04:53:03 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 8 lines ZipFile.close(): Kill the other struct.pack deprecation warning on Windows. Afraid I can't detect a pattern to when the pack formats decide to use a signed or unsigned format code -- appears nearly arbitrary to my eyes. So I left all the pack formats alone and changed the special-case data values instead. ........ r50997 | skip.montanaro | 2006-07-31 05:09:45 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line minor tweaks ........ r50998 | skip.montanaro | 2006-07-31 05:11:11 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line minor tweaks ........ r50999 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 14:20:24 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add refcounts for PyErr_WarnEx ........ r51000 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 14:39:05 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 9 lines Document PyErr_WarnEx. (Bad Neal! No biscuit!) Is the explanation of the 'stacklevel' parameter clear? Please feel free to edit it. I don't have LaTeX installed on this machine, so haven't verified that the markup is correct. Will check tonight, or maybe the automatic doc build will tell me. ........ r51001 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 14:52:26 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line Add PyErr_WarnEx() ........ r51002 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 15:18:27 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line Mention csv newline changes ........ r51003 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 17:22:58 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r51004 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 17:23:43 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line Remove reference to notation ........ r51005 | georg.brandl | 2006-07-31 18:00:34 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 3 lines Fix function name. ........ r51006 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 18:10:24 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1514540] Instead of putting the standard types in a section, put them in a chapter of their own. This means string methods will now show up in the ToC. (Should the types come before or after the functions+exceptions+constants chapter? I've put them after, for now.) ........ r51007 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 18:22:05 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line [Bug #848556] Remove \d* from second alternative to avoid exponential case when repeating match ........ r51008 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-07-31 18:27:57 +0200 (Mon, 31 Jul 2006) | 1 line Update list of files; fix a typo ........ r51013 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-01 18:24:30 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 1 line typo fix ........ r51018 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-01 18:54:43 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Fix a potential segfault and various potentail refcount leaks in the cast() function. ........ r51020 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-01 19:46:10 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 1 line Minimal useful docstring for CopyComPointer. ........ r51021 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-01 20:16:15 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 8 lines [Patch #1520905] Attempt to suppress core file created by test_subprocess.py. Patch by Douglas Greiman. The test_run_abort() testcase produces a core file on Unix systems, even though the test is successful. This can be confusing or alarming to someone who runs 'make test' and then finds that the Python interpreter apparently crashed. ........ r51023 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-01 20:49:24 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 3 lines os.urandom no longer masks unrelated exceptions like SystemExit or KeyboardInterrupt. ........ r51025 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-01 21:14:15 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Speed up PyType_stgdict and PyObject_stgdict. ........ r51027 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-08-01 22:30:31 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Make sure the postinstall action that optionally updates the user's profile on MacOS X actually works correctly in all cases. ........ r51028 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-08-01 23:00:57 +0200 (Tue, 01 Aug 2006) | 4 lines This fixes bug #1527397: PythonLauncher runs scripts with the wrong working directory. It also fixes a bug where PythonLauncher failed to launch scripts when the scriptname (or the path to the script) contains quotes. ........ r51031 | tim.peters | 2006-08-02 05:27:46 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r51032 | tim.peters | 2006-08-02 06:12:36 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 19 lines Try to squash struct.pack warnings on the "amd64 gentoo trunk" buildbot (& possibly other 64-bit boxes) during test_gzip. The native zlib crc32 function returns an unsigned 32-bit integer, which the Python wrapper implicitly casts to C long. Therefore the same crc can "look negative" on a 32-bit box but "look positive" on a 64-bit box. This patch papers over that platform difference when writing the crc to file. It may be better to change the Python wrapper, either to make the result "look positive" on all platforms (which means it may have to return a Python long at times on a 32-bit box), or to keep the sign the same across boxes. But that would be a visible change in what users see, while the current hack changes no visible behavior (well, apart from stopping the struct deprecation warning). Note that the module-level write32() function is no longer used. ........ r51033 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-02 06:27:11 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Prevent memory leak on error. Reported by Klocwork #36 ........ r51034 | tim.peters | 2006-08-02 07:20:08 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 9 lines _Stream.close(): Try to kill struct.pack() warnings when writing the crc to file on the "PPC64 Debian trunk" buildbot when running test_tarfile. This is again a case where the native zlib crc is an unsigned 32-bit int, but the Python wrapper implicitly casts it to signed C long, so that "the sign bit looks different" on different platforms. ........ r51035 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-08-02 08:10:10 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Updated documentation for the script that builds the OSX installer. ........ r51036 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-02 08:14:22 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 2 lines _PyWeakref_GetWeakrefCount() now returns a Py_ssize_t instead of long. ........ r51037 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-02 08:15:10 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 1 line v is already checked for NULL, so just DECREF it ........ r51038 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-02 08:19:19 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 1 line Let us know when there was a problem and the child had to kill the parent ........ r51039 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-02 08:46:21 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 5 lines Patch #1519025 and bug #926423: If a KeyboardInterrupt occurs during a socket operation on a socket with a timeout, the exception will be caught correctly. Previously, the exception was not caught. ........ r51040 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-02 09:09:32 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 1 line Add some explanation about Klocwork and Coverity static analysis ........ r51041 | anthony.baxter | 2006-08-02 09:43:09 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 1 line pre-release machinations ........ r51043 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-02 13:35:31 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 4 lines A few nore words about what ctypes does. Document that using the wrong calling convention can also raise 'ValueError: Procedure called with the wrong number of arguments'. ........ r51045 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-02 14:00:13 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 1 line Fix a mistake. ........ r51046 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-08-02 15:53:55 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Correction of patch #1455898: In the mbcs decoder, set final=False for stream decoder, but final=True for the decode function. ........ r51049 | tim.peters | 2006-08-02 20:19:35 +0200 (Wed, 02 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r51079 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-04 06:50:21 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1531405, format_exception no longer raises an exception if str(exception) raised an exception. ........ r51080 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-04 06:58:47 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 11 lines Bug #1191458: tracing over for loops now produces a line event on each iteration. I'm not positive this is the best way to handle this. I'm also not sure that there aren't other cases where the lnotab is generated incorrectly. It would be great if people that use pdb or tracing could test heavily. Also: * Remove dead/duplicated code that wasn't used/necessary because we already handled the docstring prior to entering the loop. * add some debugging code into the compiler (#if 0'd out). ........ r51081 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-04 07:09:28 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1333982: string/number constants were inappropriately stored in the byte code and co_consts even if they were not used, ie immediately popped off the stack. ........ r51082 | neal.norwitz | 2006-08-04 07:12:19 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 1 line There were really two issues ........ r51084 | fred.drake | 2006-08-04 07:17:21 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 1 line SF patch #1534048 (bug #1531003): fix typo in error message ........ r51085 | gregory.p.smith | 2006-08-04 07:17:47 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 3 lines fix typos ........ r51087 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-04 08:03:53 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Fix bug caused by first decrefing, then increfing. ........ r51109 | neil.schemenauer | 2006-08-04 18:20:30 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 5 lines Fix the 'compiler' package to generate correct code for MAKE_CLOSURE. In the 2.5 development cycle, MAKE_CLOSURE as changed to take free variables as a tuple rather than as individual items on the stack. Closes patch #1534084. ........ r51110 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-04 20:03:37 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Change fix for segfaulting property(), add a NEWS entry and a test. ........ r51111 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-04 20:07:34 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Better fix for bug #1531405, not executing str(value) twice. ........ r51112 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-04 20:17:40 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 1 line On Windows, make PyErr_Warn an exported function again. ........ r51113 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-04 20:57:34 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Fix #1530448 - fix ctypes build failure on solaris 10. The '-mimpure-text' linker flag is required when linking _ctypes.so. ........ r51114 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-04 21:49:31 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Fix #1534738: win32 debug version of _msi must be _msi_d.pyd, not _msi.pyd. Fix the name of the pdb file as well. ........ r51115 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-04 22:37:43 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 1 line Typo fixes ........ r51116 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-04 23:10:03 +0200 (Fri, 04 Aug 2006) | 1 line Fix mangled sentence ........ r51118 | tim.peters | 2006-08-05 00:00:35 +0200 (Sat, 05 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r51119 | bob.ippolito | 2006-08-05 01:59:21 +0200 (Sat, 05 Aug 2006) | 5 lines Fix #1530559, struct.pack raises TypeError where it used to convert. Passing float arguments to struct.pack when integers are expected now triggers a DeprecationWarning. ........ r51123 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-05 08:10:54 +0200 (Sat, 05 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Patch #1534922: correct and enhance unittest docs. ........ r51126 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-06 09:06:33 +0200 (Sun, 06 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1535182: really test the xreadlines() method of bz2 objects. ........ r51128 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-06 09:26:21 +0200 (Sun, 06 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Bug #1535081: A leading underscore has been added to the names of the md5 and sha modules, so add it in Modules/Setup.dist too. ........ r51129 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-06 10:23:54 +0200 (Sun, 06 Aug 2006) | 3 lines Bug #1535165: fixed a segfault in input() and raw_input() when sys.stdin is closed. ........ r51131 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-06 11:17:16 +0200 (Sun, 06 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Don't produce output in test_builtin. ........ r51133 | andrew.macintyre | 2006-08-06 14:37:03 +0200 (Sun, 06 Aug 2006) | 4 lines test_threading now skips testing alternate thread stack sizes on platforms that don't support changing thread stack size. ........ r51134 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-07 00:07:04 +0200 (Mon, 07 Aug 2006) | 2 lines [Patch #1464056] Ensure that we use the panelw library when linking with ncursesw. Once I see how the buildbots react, I'll backport this to 2.4. ........ r51137 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-08 13:52:34 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 3 lines webbrowser: Silence stderr output if no gconftool or gnome browser found ........ r51138 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-08 13:56:21 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 7 lines Remove "non-mapping" and "non-sequence" from TypeErrors raised by PyMapping_Size and PySequence_Size. Because len() tries first sequence, then mapping size, it will always raise a "non-mapping object has no len" error which is confusing. ........ r51139 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-08 19:37:00 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 3 lines memcmp() can return values other than -1, 0, and +1 but tp_compare must not. ........ r51140 | thomas.heller | 2006-08-08 19:39:20 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 1 line Remove accidently committed, duplicated test. ........ r51147 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-08 20:50:14 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 1 line Reword paragraph to clarify ........ r51148 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-08 20:56:08 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 1 line Move obmalloc item into C API section ........ r51149 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-08 21:00:14 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 1 line 'Other changes' section now has only one item; move the item elsewhere and remove the section ........ r51150 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-08 21:00:34 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 1 line Bump version number ........ r51151 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-08 22:11:22 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1536828: typo: TypeType should have been StringType. ........ r51153 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-08 22:13:13 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Bug #1536660: separate two words. ........ r51155 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-08 22:48:10 +0200 (Tue, 08 Aug 2006) | 3 lines ``str`` is now the same object as ``types.StringType``. ........ r51156 | tim.peters | 2006-08-09 02:52:26 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Whitespace normalization. ........ r51158 | georg.brandl | 2006-08-09 09:03:22 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 4 lines Introduce an upper bound on tuple nesting depth in C argument format strings; fixes rest of #1523610. ........ r51160 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-08-09 09:57:39 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 4 lines __hash__ may now return long int; the final hash value is obtained by invoking hash on the long int. Fixes #1536021. ........ r51168 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-09 15:03:41 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 1 line [Bug #1536021] Mention __hash__ change ........ r51169 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-09 15:57:05 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 1 line [Patch #1534027] Add notes on locale module changes ........ r51170 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-09 16:05:35 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 1 line Add missing 'self' parameters ........ r51171 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-09 16:06:19 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 1 line Reindent code ........ r51172 | armin.rigo | 2006-08-09 16:55:26 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Fix and test for an infinite C recursion. ........ r51173 | ronald.oussoren | 2006-08-09 16:56:33 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 2 lines It's unlikely that future versions will require _POSIX_C_SOURCE ........ r51178 | armin.rigo | 2006-08-09 17:37:26 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Concatenation on a long string breaks (SF #1526585). ........ r51180 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-08-09 18:46:15 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 8 lines 1. When used w/o subprocess, all exceptions were preceeded by an error message claiming they were IDLE internal errors (since 1.2a1). 2. Add Ronald Oussoren to CREDITS M NEWS.txt M PyShell.py M CREDITS.txt ........ r51181 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-08-09 19:47:15 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 4 lines As a slight enhancement to the previous checkin, improve the internal error reporting by moving message to IDLE console. ........ r51182 | andrew.kuchling | 2006-08-09 20:23:14 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 1 line Typo fix ........ r51183 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-08-09 22:34:46 +0200 (Wed, 09 Aug 2006) | 2 lines ToggleTab dialog was setting indent to 8 even if cancelled (since 1.2a1). ........ r51184 | martin.v.loewis | 2006-08-10 01:42:18 +0200 (Thu, 10 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Add some commentary on -mimpure-text. ........ r51185 | tim.peters | 2006-08-10 02:58:49 +0200 (Thu, 10 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Add missing svn:eol-style property to text files. ........ r51186 | kurt.kaiser | 2006-08-10 03:41:17 +0200 (Thu, 10 Aug 2006) | 2 lines Changing tokenize (39046) to detect dedent broke tabnanny check (since 1.2a1) ........ r51187 | tim.peters | 2006-08-10 05:01:26 +0200 (Thu, 10 Aug 2006) | 13 lines test_copytree_simple(): This was leaving behind two new temp directories each time it ran, at least on Windows. Several changes: explicitly closed all files; wrapped long lines; stopped suppressing errors when removing a file or directory fails (removing /shouldn't/ fail!); and changed what appeared to be incorrect usage of os.removedirs() (that doesn't remove empty directories at and /under/ the given path, instead it must be given an empty leaf directory and then deletes empty directories moving /up/ the path -- could be that the conceptually simpler shutil.rmtree() was really actually intended here). ........
2188 lines
95 KiB
TeX
2188 lines
95 KiB
TeX
\chapter{Data model\label{datamodel}}
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\section{Objects, values and types\label{objects}}
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\dfn{Objects} are Python's abstraction for data. All data in a Python
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program is represented by objects or by relations between objects.
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(In a sense, and in conformance to Von Neumann's model of a
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``stored program computer,'' code is also represented by objects.)
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\index{object}
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\index{data}
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Every object has an identity, a type and a value. An object's
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\emph{identity} never changes once it has been created; you may think
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of it as the object's address in memory. The `\keyword{is}' operator
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compares the identity of two objects; the
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\function{id()}\bifuncindex{id} function returns an integer
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representing its identity (currently implemented as its address).
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An object's \dfn{type} is
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also unchangeable.\footnote{Since Python 2.2, a gradual merging of
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types and classes has been started that makes this and a few other
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assertions made in this manual not 100\% accurate and complete:
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for example, it \emph{is} now possible in some cases to change an
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object's type, under certain controlled conditions. Until this manual
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undergoes extensive revision, it must now be taken as authoritative
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only regarding ``classic classes'', that are still the default, for
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compatibility purposes, in Python 2.2 and 2.3. For more information,
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see \url{http://www.python.org/doc/newstyle.html}.}
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An object's type determines the operations that the object
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supports (e.g., ``does it have a length?'') and also defines the
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possible values for objects of that type. The
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\function{type()}\bifuncindex{type} function returns an object's type
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(which is an object itself). The \emph{value} of some
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objects can change. Objects whose value can change are said to be
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\emph{mutable}; objects whose value is unchangeable once they are
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created are called \emph{immutable}.
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(The value of an immutable container object that contains a reference
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to a mutable object can change when the latter's value is changed;
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however the container is still considered immutable, because the
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collection of objects it contains cannot be changed. So, immutability
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is not strictly the same as having an unchangeable value, it is more
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subtle.)
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An object's mutability is determined by its type; for instance,
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numbers, strings and tuples are immutable, while dictionaries and
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lists are mutable.
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\index{identity of an object}
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\index{value of an object}
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\index{type of an object}
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\index{mutable object}
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\index{immutable object}
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Objects are never explicitly destroyed; however, when they become
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unreachable they may be garbage-collected. An implementation is
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allowed to postpone garbage collection or omit it altogether --- it is
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a matter of implementation quality how garbage collection is
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implemented, as long as no objects are collected that are still
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reachable. (Implementation note: the current implementation uses a
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reference-counting scheme with (optional) delayed detection of
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cyclically linked garbage, which collects most objects as soon as they
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become unreachable, but is not guaranteed to collect garbage
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containing circular references. See the
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\citetitle[../lib/module-gc.html]{Python Library Reference} for
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information on controlling the collection of cyclic garbage.)
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\index{garbage collection}
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\index{reference counting}
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\index{unreachable object}
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Note that the use of the implementation's tracing or debugging
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facilities may keep objects alive that would normally be collectable.
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Also note that catching an exception with a
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`\keyword{try}...\keyword{except}' statement may keep objects alive.
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Some objects contain references to ``external'' resources such as open
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files or windows. It is understood that these resources are freed
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when the object is garbage-collected, but since garbage collection is
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not guaranteed to happen, such objects also provide an explicit way to
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release the external resource, usually a \method{close()} method.
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Programs are strongly recommended to explicitly close such
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objects. The `\keyword{try}...\keyword{finally}' statement provides
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a convenient way to do this.
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Some objects contain references to other objects; these are called
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\emph{containers}. Examples of containers are tuples, lists and
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dictionaries. The references are part of a container's value. In
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most cases, when we talk about the value of a container, we imply the
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values, not the identities of the contained objects; however, when we
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talk about the mutability of a container, only the identities of
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the immediately contained objects are implied. So, if an immutable
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container (like a tuple)
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contains a reference to a mutable object, its value changes
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if that mutable object is changed.
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\index{container}
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Types affect almost all aspects of object behavior. Even the importance
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of object identity is affected in some sense: for immutable types,
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operations that compute new values may actually return a reference to
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any existing object with the same type and value, while for mutable
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objects this is not allowed. E.g., after
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\samp{a = 1; b = 1},
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\code{a} and \code{b} may or may not refer to the same object with the
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value one, depending on the implementation, but after
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\samp{c = []; d = []}, \code{c} and \code{d}
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are guaranteed to refer to two different, unique, newly created empty
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lists.
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(Note that \samp{c = d = []} assigns the same object to both
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\code{c} and \code{d}.)
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\section{The standard type hierarchy\label{types}}
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Below is a list of the types that are built into Python. Extension
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modules (written in C, Java, or other languages, depending on
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the implementation) can define additional types. Future versions of
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Python may add types to the type hierarchy (e.g., rational
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numbers, efficiently stored arrays of integers, etc.).
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\index{type}
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\indexii{data}{type}
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\indexii{type}{hierarchy}
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\indexii{extension}{module}
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\indexii{C}{language}
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|
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Some of the type descriptions below contain a paragraph listing
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`special attributes.' These are attributes that provide access to the
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implementation and are not intended for general use. Their definition
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may change in the future.
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\index{attribute}
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\indexii{special}{attribute}
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\indexiii{generic}{special}{attribute}
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\begin{description}
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\item[None]
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This type has a single value. There is a single object with this value.
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This object is accessed through the built-in name \code{None}.
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It is used to signify the absence of a value in many situations, e.g.,
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it is returned from functions that don't explicitly return anything.
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Its truth value is false.
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\obindex{None}
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\item[NotImplemented]
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This type has a single value. There is a single object with this value.
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This object is accessed through the built-in name \code{NotImplemented}.
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Numeric methods and rich comparison methods may return this value if
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they do not implement the operation for the operands provided. (The
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interpreter will then try the reflected operation, or some other
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fallback, depending on the operator.) Its truth value is true.
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\obindex{NotImplemented}
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\item[Ellipsis]
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This type has a single value. There is a single object with this value.
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This object is accessed through the built-in name \code{Ellipsis}.
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It is used to indicate the presence of the \samp{...} syntax in a
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slice. Its truth value is true.
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\obindex{Ellipsis}
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\item[Numbers]
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These are created by numeric literals and returned as results by
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arithmetic operators and arithmetic built-in functions. Numeric
|
|
objects are immutable; once created their value never changes. Python
|
|
numbers are of course strongly related to mathematical numbers, but
|
|
subject to the limitations of numerical representation in computers.
|
|
\obindex{numeric}
|
|
|
|
Python distinguishes between integers, floating point numbers, and
|
|
complex numbers:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[Integers]
|
|
These represent elements from the mathematical set of integers
|
|
(positive and negative).
|
|
\obindex{integer}
|
|
|
|
There are three types of integers:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Plain integers]
|
|
These represent numbers in the range -2147483648 through 2147483647.
|
|
(The range may be larger on machines with a larger natural word
|
|
size, but not smaller.)
|
|
When the result of an operation would fall outside this range, the
|
|
result is normally returned as a long integer (in some cases, the
|
|
exception \exception{OverflowError} is raised instead).
|
|
For the purpose of shift and mask operations, integers are assumed to
|
|
have a binary, 2's complement notation using 32 or more bits, and
|
|
hiding no bits from the user (i.e., all 4294967296 different bit
|
|
patterns correspond to different values).
|
|
\obindex{plain integer}
|
|
\withsubitem{(built-in exception)}{\ttindex{OverflowError}}
|
|
|
|
\item[Long integers]
|
|
These represent numbers in an unlimited range, subject to available
|
|
(virtual) memory only. For the purpose of shift and mask operations,
|
|
a binary representation is assumed, and negative numbers are
|
|
represented in a variant of 2's complement which gives the illusion of
|
|
an infinite string of sign bits extending to the left.
|
|
\obindex{long integer}
|
|
|
|
\item[Booleans]
|
|
These represent the truth values False and True. The two objects
|
|
representing the values False and True are the only Boolean objects.
|
|
The Boolean type is a subtype of plain integers, and Boolean values
|
|
behave like the values 0 and 1, respectively, in almost all contexts,
|
|
the exception being that when converted to a string, the strings
|
|
\code{"False"} or \code{"True"} are returned, respectively.
|
|
\obindex{Boolean}
|
|
\ttindex{False}
|
|
\ttindex{True}
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Integers
|
|
|
|
The rules for integer representation are intended to give the most
|
|
meaningful interpretation of shift and mask operations involving
|
|
negative integers and the least surprises when switching between the
|
|
plain and long integer domains. Any operation except left shift,
|
|
if it yields a result in the plain integer domain without causing
|
|
overflow, will yield the same result in the long integer domain or
|
|
when using mixed operands.
|
|
\indexii{integer}{representation}
|
|
|
|
\item[Floating point numbers]
|
|
These represent machine-level double precision floating point numbers.
|
|
You are at the mercy of the underlying machine architecture (and
|
|
C or Java implementation) for the accepted range and handling of overflow.
|
|
Python does not support single-precision floating point numbers; the
|
|
savings in processor and memory usage that are usually the reason for using
|
|
these is dwarfed by the overhead of using objects in Python, so there
|
|
is no reason to complicate the language with two kinds of floating
|
|
point numbers.
|
|
\obindex{floating point}
|
|
\indexii{floating point}{number}
|
|
\indexii{C}{language}
|
|
\indexii{Java}{language}
|
|
|
|
\item[Complex numbers]
|
|
These represent complex numbers as a pair of machine-level double
|
|
precision floating point numbers. The same caveats apply as for
|
|
floating point numbers. The real and imaginary parts of a complex
|
|
number \code{z} can be retrieved through the read-only attributes
|
|
\code{z.real} and \code{z.imag}.
|
|
\obindex{complex}
|
|
\indexii{complex}{number}
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Numbers
|
|
|
|
|
|
\item[Sequences]
|
|
These represent finite ordered sets indexed by non-negative numbers.
|
|
The built-in function \function{len()}\bifuncindex{len} returns the
|
|
number of items of a sequence.
|
|
When the length of a sequence is \var{n}, the
|
|
index set contains the numbers 0, 1, \ldots, \var{n}-1. Item
|
|
\var{i} of sequence \var{a} is selected by \code{\var{a}[\var{i}]}.
|
|
\obindex{sequence}
|
|
\index{index operation}
|
|
\index{item selection}
|
|
\index{subscription}
|
|
|
|
Sequences also support slicing: \code{\var{a}[\var{i}:\var{j}]}
|
|
selects all items with index \var{k} such that \var{i} \code{<=}
|
|
\var{k} \code{<} \var{j}. When used as an expression, a slice is a
|
|
sequence of the same type. This implies that the index set is
|
|
renumbered so that it starts at 0.
|
|
\index{slicing}
|
|
|
|
Some sequences also support ``extended slicing'' with a third ``step''
|
|
parameter: \code{\var{a}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]} selects all items
|
|
of \var{a} with index \var{x} where \code{\var{x} = \var{i} +
|
|
\var{n}*\var{k}}, \var{n} \code{>=} \code{0} and \var{i} \code{<=}
|
|
\var{x} \code{<} \var{j}.
|
|
\index{extended slicing}
|
|
|
|
Sequences are distinguished according to their mutability:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Immutable sequences]
|
|
An object of an immutable sequence type cannot change once it is
|
|
created. (If the object contains references to other objects,
|
|
these other objects may be mutable and may be changed; however,
|
|
the collection of objects directly referenced by an immutable object
|
|
cannot change.)
|
|
\obindex{immutable sequence}
|
|
\obindex{immutable}
|
|
|
|
The following types are immutable sequences:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Strings]
|
|
The items of a string are characters. There is no separate
|
|
character type; a character is represented by a string of one item.
|
|
Characters represent (at least) 8-bit bytes. The built-in
|
|
functions \function{chr()}\bifuncindex{chr} and
|
|
\function{ord()}\bifuncindex{ord} convert between characters and
|
|
nonnegative integers representing the byte values. Bytes with the
|
|
values 0-127 usually represent the corresponding \ASCII{} values, but
|
|
the interpretation of values is up to the program. The string
|
|
data type is also used to represent arrays of bytes, e.g., to hold data
|
|
read from a file.
|
|
\obindex{string}
|
|
\index{character}
|
|
\index{byte}
|
|
\index{ASCII@\ASCII}
|
|
|
|
(On systems whose native character set is not \ASCII, strings may use
|
|
EBCDIC in their internal representation, provided the functions
|
|
\function{chr()} and \function{ord()} implement a mapping between \ASCII{} and
|
|
EBCDIC, and string comparison preserves the \ASCII{} order.
|
|
Or perhaps someone can propose a better rule?)
|
|
\index{ASCII@\ASCII}
|
|
\index{EBCDIC}
|
|
\index{character set}
|
|
\indexii{string}{comparison}
|
|
\bifuncindex{chr}
|
|
\bifuncindex{ord}
|
|
|
|
\item[Unicode]
|
|
The items of a Unicode object are Unicode code units. A Unicode code
|
|
unit is represented by a Unicode object of one item and can hold
|
|
either a 16-bit or 32-bit value representing a Unicode ordinal (the
|
|
maximum value for the ordinal is given in \code{sys.maxunicode}, and
|
|
depends on how Python is configured at compile time). Surrogate pairs
|
|
may be present in the Unicode object, and will be reported as two
|
|
separate items. The built-in functions
|
|
\function{unichr()}\bifuncindex{unichr} and
|
|
\function{ord()}\bifuncindex{ord} convert between code units and
|
|
nonnegative integers representing the Unicode ordinals as defined in
|
|
the Unicode Standard 3.0. Conversion from and to other encodings are
|
|
possible through the Unicode method \method{encode()} and the built-in
|
|
function \function{unicode()}.\bifuncindex{unicode}
|
|
\obindex{unicode}
|
|
\index{character}
|
|
\index{integer}
|
|
\index{Unicode}
|
|
|
|
\item[Tuples]
|
|
The items of a tuple are arbitrary Python objects.
|
|
Tuples of two or more items are formed by comma-separated lists
|
|
of expressions. A tuple of one item (a `singleton') can be formed
|
|
by affixing a comma to an expression (an expression by itself does
|
|
not create a tuple, since parentheses must be usable for grouping of
|
|
expressions). An empty tuple can be formed by an empty pair of
|
|
parentheses.
|
|
\obindex{tuple}
|
|
\indexii{singleton}{tuple}
|
|
\indexii{empty}{tuple}
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Immutable sequences
|
|
|
|
\item[Mutable sequences]
|
|
Mutable sequences can be changed after they are created. The
|
|
subscription and slicing notations can be used as the target of
|
|
assignment and \keyword{del} (delete) statements.
|
|
\obindex{mutable sequence}
|
|
\obindex{mutable}
|
|
\indexii{assignment}{statement}
|
|
\index{delete}
|
|
\stindex{del}
|
|
\index{subscription}
|
|
\index{slicing}
|
|
|
|
There is currently a single intrinsic mutable sequence type:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Lists]
|
|
The items of a list are arbitrary Python objects. Lists are formed
|
|
by placing a comma-separated list of expressions in square brackets.
|
|
(Note that there are no special cases needed to form lists of length 0
|
|
or 1.)
|
|
\obindex{list}
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Mutable sequences
|
|
|
|
The extension module \module{array}\refstmodindex{array} provides an
|
|
additional example of a mutable sequence type.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Sequences
|
|
|
|
\item[Mappings]
|
|
These represent finite sets of objects indexed by arbitrary index sets.
|
|
The subscript notation \code{a[k]} selects the item indexed
|
|
by \code{k} from the mapping \code{a}; this can be used in
|
|
expressions and as the target of assignments or \keyword{del} statements.
|
|
The built-in function \function{len()} returns the number of items
|
|
in a mapping.
|
|
\bifuncindex{len}
|
|
\index{subscription}
|
|
\obindex{mapping}
|
|
|
|
There is currently a single intrinsic mapping type:
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Dictionaries]
|
|
These\obindex{dictionary} represent finite sets of objects indexed by
|
|
nearly arbitrary values. The only types of values not acceptable as
|
|
keys are values containing lists or dictionaries or other mutable
|
|
types that are compared by value rather than by object identity, the
|
|
reason being that the efficient implementation of dictionaries
|
|
requires a key's hash value to remain constant.
|
|
Numeric types used for keys obey the normal rules for numeric
|
|
comparison: if two numbers compare equal (e.g., \code{1} and
|
|
\code{1.0}) then they can be used interchangeably to index the same
|
|
dictionary entry.
|
|
|
|
Dictionaries are mutable; they can be created by the
|
|
\code{\{...\}} notation (see section~\ref{dict}, ``Dictionary
|
|
Displays'').
|
|
|
|
The extension modules \module{dbm}\refstmodindex{dbm},
|
|
\module{gdbm}\refstmodindex{gdbm}, and
|
|
\module{bsddb}\refstmodindex{bsddb} provide additional examples of
|
|
mapping types.
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Mapping types
|
|
|
|
\item[Callable types]
|
|
These\obindex{callable} are the types to which the function call
|
|
operation (see section~\ref{calls}, ``Calls'') can be applied:
|
|
\indexii{function}{call}
|
|
\index{invocation}
|
|
\indexii{function}{argument}
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[User-defined functions]
|
|
A user-defined function object is created by a function definition
|
|
(see section~\ref{function}, ``Function definitions''). It should be
|
|
called with an argument
|
|
list containing the same number of items as the function's formal
|
|
parameter list.
|
|
\indexii{user-defined}{function}
|
|
\obindex{function}
|
|
\obindex{user-defined function}
|
|
|
|
Special attributes:
|
|
|
|
\begin{tableiii}{lll}{member}{Attribute}{Meaning}{}
|
|
\lineiii{func_doc}{The function's documentation string, or
|
|
\code{None} if unavailable}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{__doc__}{Another way of spelling
|
|
\member{func_doc}}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{func_name}{The function's name}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{__name__}{Another way of spelling
|
|
\member{func_name}}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{__module__}{The name of the module the function was defined
|
|
in, or \code{None} if unavailable.}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{func_defaults}{A tuple containing default argument values
|
|
for those arguments that have defaults, or \code{None} if no
|
|
arguments have a default value}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{func_code}{The code object representing the compiled
|
|
function body.}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{func_globals}{A reference to the dictionary that holds the
|
|
function's global variables --- the global namespace of the module
|
|
in which the function was defined.}{Read-only}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{func_dict}{The namespace supporting arbitrary function
|
|
attributes.}{Writable}
|
|
|
|
\lineiii{func_closure}{\code{None} or a tuple of cells that contain
|
|
bindings for the function's free variables.}{Read-only}
|
|
\end{tableiii}
|
|
|
|
Most of the attributes labelled ``Writable'' check the type of the
|
|
assigned value.
|
|
|
|
\versionchanged[\code{func_name} is now writable]{2.4}
|
|
|
|
Function objects also support getting and setting arbitrary
|
|
attributes, which can be used, for example, to attach metadata to
|
|
functions. Regular attribute dot-notation is used to get and set such
|
|
attributes. \emph{Note that the current implementation only supports
|
|
function attributes on user-defined functions. Function attributes on
|
|
built-in functions may be supported in the future.}
|
|
|
|
Additional information about a function's definition can be retrieved
|
|
from its code object; see the description of internal types below.
|
|
|
|
\withsubitem{(function attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{func_doc}
|
|
\ttindex{__doc__}
|
|
\ttindex{__name__}
|
|
\ttindex{__module__}
|
|
\ttindex{__dict__}
|
|
\ttindex{func_defaults}
|
|
\ttindex{func_closure}
|
|
\ttindex{func_code}
|
|
\ttindex{func_globals}
|
|
\ttindex{func_dict}}
|
|
\indexii{global}{namespace}
|
|
|
|
\item[User-defined methods]
|
|
A user-defined method object combines a class, a class instance (or
|
|
\code{None}) and any callable object (normally a user-defined
|
|
function).
|
|
\obindex{method}
|
|
\obindex{user-defined method}
|
|
\indexii{user-defined}{method}
|
|
|
|
Special read-only attributes: \member{im_self} is the class instance
|
|
object, \member{im_func} is the function object;
|
|
\member{im_class} is the class of \member{im_self} for bound methods
|
|
or the class that asked for the method for unbound methods;
|
|
\member{__doc__} is the method's documentation (same as
|
|
\code{im_func.__doc__}); \member{__name__} is the method name (same as
|
|
\code{im_func.__name__}); \member{__module__} is the name of the
|
|
module the method was defined in, or \code{None} if unavailable.
|
|
\versionchanged[\member{im_self} used to refer to the class that
|
|
defined the method]{2.2}
|
|
\withsubitem{(method attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{__doc__}
|
|
\ttindex{__name__}
|
|
\ttindex{__module__}
|
|
\ttindex{im_func}
|
|
\ttindex{im_self}}
|
|
|
|
Methods also support accessing (but not setting) the arbitrary
|
|
function attributes on the underlying function object.
|
|
|
|
User-defined method objects may be created when getting an attribute
|
|
of a class (perhaps via an instance of that class), if that attribute
|
|
is a user-defined function object, an unbound user-defined method object,
|
|
or a class method object.
|
|
When the attribute is a user-defined method object, a new
|
|
method object is only created if the class from which it is being
|
|
retrieved is the same as, or a derived class of, the class stored
|
|
in the original method object; otherwise, the original method object
|
|
is used as it is.
|
|
|
|
When a user-defined method object is created by retrieving
|
|
a user-defined function object from a class, its \member{im_self}
|
|
attribute is \code{None} and the method object is said to be unbound.
|
|
When one is created by retrieving a user-defined function object
|
|
from a class via one of its instances, its \member{im_self} attribute
|
|
is the instance, and the method object is said to be bound.
|
|
In either case, the new method's \member{im_class} attribute
|
|
is the class from which the retrieval takes place, and
|
|
its \member{im_func} attribute is the original function object.
|
|
\withsubitem{(method attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{im_class}\ttindex{im_func}\ttindex{im_self}}
|
|
|
|
When a user-defined method object is created by retrieving another
|
|
method object from a class or instance, the behaviour is the same
|
|
as for a function object, except that the \member{im_func} attribute
|
|
of the new instance is not the original method object but its
|
|
\member{im_func} attribute.
|
|
\withsubitem{(method attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{im_func}}
|
|
|
|
When a user-defined method object is created by retrieving a
|
|
class method object from a class or instance, its \member{im_self}
|
|
attribute is the class itself (the same as the \member{im_class}
|
|
attribute), and its \member{im_func} attribute is the function
|
|
object underlying the class method.
|
|
\withsubitem{(method attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{im_class}\ttindex{im_func}\ttindex{im_self}}
|
|
|
|
When an unbound user-defined method object is called, the underlying
|
|
function (\member{im_func}) is called, with the restriction that the
|
|
first argument must be an instance of the proper class
|
|
(\member{im_class}) or of a derived class thereof.
|
|
|
|
When a bound user-defined method object is called, the underlying
|
|
function (\member{im_func}) is called, inserting the class instance
|
|
(\member{im_self}) in front of the argument list. For instance, when
|
|
\class{C} is a class which contains a definition for a function
|
|
\method{f()}, and \code{x} is an instance of \class{C}, calling
|
|
\code{x.f(1)} is equivalent to calling \code{C.f(x, 1)}.
|
|
|
|
When a user-defined method object is derived from a class method object,
|
|
the ``class instance'' stored in \member{im_self} will actually be the
|
|
class itself, so that calling either \code{x.f(1)} or \code{C.f(1)} is
|
|
equivalent to calling \code{f(C,1)} where \code{f} is the underlying
|
|
function.
|
|
|
|
Note that the transformation from function object to (unbound or
|
|
bound) method object happens each time the attribute is retrieved from
|
|
the class or instance. In some cases, a fruitful optimization is to
|
|
assign the attribute to a local variable and call that local variable.
|
|
Also notice that this transformation only happens for user-defined
|
|
functions; other callable objects (and all non-callable objects) are
|
|
retrieved without transformation. It is also important to note that
|
|
user-defined functions which are attributes of a class instance are
|
|
not converted to bound methods; this \emph{only} happens when the
|
|
function is an attribute of the class.
|
|
|
|
\item[Generator functions\index{generator!function}\index{generator!iterator}]
|
|
A function or method which uses the \keyword{yield} statement (see
|
|
section~\ref{yield}, ``The \keyword{yield} statement'') is called a
|
|
\dfn{generator function}. Such a function, when called, always
|
|
returns an iterator object which can be used to execute the body of
|
|
the function: calling the iterator's \method{next()} method will
|
|
cause the function to execute until it provides a value using the
|
|
\keyword{yield} statement. When the function executes a
|
|
\keyword{return} statement or falls off the end, a
|
|
\exception{StopIteration} exception is raised and the iterator will
|
|
have reached the end of the set of values to be returned.
|
|
|
|
\item[Built-in functions]
|
|
A built-in function object is a wrapper around a C function. Examples
|
|
of built-in functions are \function{len()} and \function{math.sin()}
|
|
(\module{math} is a standard built-in module).
|
|
The number and type of the arguments are
|
|
determined by the C function.
|
|
Special read-only attributes: \member{__doc__} is the function's
|
|
documentation string, or \code{None} if unavailable; \member{__name__}
|
|
is the function's name; \member{__self__} is set to \code{None} (but see
|
|
the next item); \member{__module__} is the name of the module the
|
|
function was defined in or \code{None} if unavailable.
|
|
\obindex{built-in function}
|
|
\obindex{function}
|
|
\indexii{C}{language}
|
|
|
|
\item[Built-in methods]
|
|
This is really a different disguise of a built-in function, this time
|
|
containing an object passed to the C function as an implicit extra
|
|
argument. An example of a built-in method is
|
|
\code{\var{alist}.append()}, assuming
|
|
\var{alist} is a list object.
|
|
In this case, the special read-only attribute \member{__self__} is set
|
|
to the object denoted by \var{list}.
|
|
\obindex{built-in method}
|
|
\obindex{method}
|
|
\indexii{built-in}{method}
|
|
|
|
\item[Class Types]
|
|
Class types, or ``new-style classes,'' are callable. These objects
|
|
normally act as factories for new instances of themselves, but
|
|
variations are possible for class types that override
|
|
\method{__new__()}. The arguments of the call are passed to
|
|
\method{__new__()} and, in the typical case, to \method{__init__()} to
|
|
initialize the new instance.
|
|
|
|
\item[Classic Classes]
|
|
Class objects are described below. When a class object is called,
|
|
a new class instance (also described below) is created and
|
|
returned. This implies a call to the class's \method{__init__()} method
|
|
if it has one. Any arguments are passed on to the \method{__init__()}
|
|
method. If there is no \method{__init__()} method, the class must be called
|
|
without arguments.
|
|
\withsubitem{(object method)}{\ttindex{__init__()}}
|
|
\obindex{class}
|
|
\obindex{class instance}
|
|
\obindex{instance}
|
|
\indexii{class object}{call}
|
|
|
|
\item[Class instances]
|
|
Class instances are described below. Class instances are callable
|
|
only when the class has a \method{__call__()} method; \code{x(arguments)}
|
|
is a shorthand for \code{x.__call__(arguments)}.
|
|
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Modules]
|
|
Modules are imported by the \keyword{import} statement (see
|
|
section~\ref{import}, ``The \keyword{import} statement'').%
|
|
\stindex{import}\obindex{module}
|
|
A module object has a namespace implemented by a dictionary object
|
|
(this is the dictionary referenced by the func_globals attribute of
|
|
functions defined in the module). Attribute references are translated
|
|
to lookups in this dictionary, e.g., \code{m.x} is equivalent to
|
|
\code{m.__dict__["x"]}.
|
|
A module object does not contain the code object used to
|
|
initialize the module (since it isn't needed once the initialization
|
|
is done).
|
|
|
|
Attribute assignment updates the module's namespace dictionary,
|
|
e.g., \samp{m.x = 1} is equivalent to \samp{m.__dict__["x"] = 1}.
|
|
|
|
Special read-only attribute: \member{__dict__} is the module's
|
|
namespace as a dictionary object.
|
|
\withsubitem{(module attribute)}{\ttindex{__dict__}}
|
|
|
|
Predefined (writable) attributes: \member{__name__}
|
|
is the module's name; \member{__doc__} is the
|
|
module's documentation string, or
|
|
\code{None} if unavailable; \member{__file__} is the pathname of the
|
|
file from which the module was loaded, if it was loaded from a file.
|
|
The \member{__file__} attribute is not present for C{} modules that are
|
|
statically linked into the interpreter; for extension modules loaded
|
|
dynamically from a shared library, it is the pathname of the shared
|
|
library file.
|
|
\withsubitem{(module attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{__name__}
|
|
\ttindex{__doc__}
|
|
\ttindex{__file__}}
|
|
\indexii{module}{namespace}
|
|
|
|
\item[Classes]
|
|
Class objects are created by class definitions (see
|
|
section~\ref{class}, ``Class definitions'').
|
|
A class has a namespace implemented by a dictionary object.
|
|
Class attribute references are translated to
|
|
lookups in this dictionary,
|
|
e.g., \samp{C.x} is translated to \samp{C.__dict__["x"]}.
|
|
When the attribute name is not found
|
|
there, the attribute search continues in the base classes. The search
|
|
is depth-first, left-to-right in the order of occurrence in the
|
|
base class list.
|
|
|
|
When a class attribute reference (for class \class{C}, say)
|
|
would yield a user-defined function object or
|
|
an unbound user-defined method object whose associated class is either
|
|
\class{C} or one of its base classes, it is transformed into an unbound
|
|
user-defined method object whose \member{im_class} attribute is~\class{C}.
|
|
When it would yield a class method object, it is transformed into
|
|
a bound user-defined method object whose \member{im_class} and
|
|
\member{im_self} attributes are both~\class{C}. When it would yield
|
|
a static method object, it is transformed into the object wrapped
|
|
by the static method object. See section~\ref{descriptors} for another
|
|
way in which attributes retrieved from a class may differ from those
|
|
actually contained in its \member{__dict__}.
|
|
\obindex{class}
|
|
\obindex{class instance}
|
|
\obindex{instance}
|
|
\indexii{class object}{call}
|
|
\index{container}
|
|
\obindex{dictionary}
|
|
\indexii{class}{attribute}
|
|
|
|
Class attribute assignments update the class's dictionary, never the
|
|
dictionary of a base class.
|
|
\indexiii{class}{attribute}{assignment}
|
|
|
|
A class object can be called (see above) to yield a class instance (see
|
|
below).
|
|
\indexii{class object}{call}
|
|
|
|
Special attributes: \member{__name__} is the class name;
|
|
\member{__module__} is the module name in which the class was defined;
|
|
\member{__dict__} is the dictionary containing the class's namespace;
|
|
\member{__bases__} is a tuple (possibly empty or a singleton)
|
|
containing the base classes, in the order of their occurrence in the
|
|
base class list; \member{__doc__} is the class's documentation string,
|
|
or None if undefined.
|
|
\withsubitem{(class attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{__name__}
|
|
\ttindex{__module__}
|
|
\ttindex{__dict__}
|
|
\ttindex{__bases__}
|
|
\ttindex{__doc__}}
|
|
|
|
\item[Class instances]
|
|
A class instance is created by calling a class object (see above).
|
|
A class instance has a namespace implemented as a dictionary which
|
|
is the first place in which
|
|
attribute references are searched. When an attribute is not found
|
|
there, and the instance's class has an attribute by that name,
|
|
the search continues with the class attributes. If a class attribute
|
|
is found that is a user-defined function object or an unbound
|
|
user-defined method object whose associated class is the class
|
|
(call it~\class{C}) of the instance for which the attribute reference
|
|
was initiated or one of its bases,
|
|
it is transformed into a bound user-defined method object whose
|
|
\member{im_class} attribute is~\class{C} whose \member{im_self} attribute
|
|
is the instance. Static method and class method objects are also
|
|
transformed, as if they had been retrieved from class~\class{C};
|
|
see above under ``Classes''. See section~\ref{descriptors} for
|
|
another way in which attributes of a class retrieved via its
|
|
instances may differ from the objects actually stored in the
|
|
class's \member{__dict__}.
|
|
If no class attribute is found, and the object's class has a
|
|
\method{__getattr__()} method, that is called to satisfy the lookup.
|
|
\obindex{class instance}
|
|
\obindex{instance}
|
|
\indexii{class}{instance}
|
|
\indexii{class instance}{attribute}
|
|
|
|
Attribute assignments and deletions update the instance's dictionary,
|
|
never a class's dictionary. If the class has a \method{__setattr__()} or
|
|
\method{__delattr__()} method, this is called instead of updating the
|
|
instance dictionary directly.
|
|
\indexiii{class instance}{attribute}{assignment}
|
|
|
|
Class instances can pretend to be numbers, sequences, or mappings if
|
|
they have methods with certain special names. See
|
|
section~\ref{specialnames}, ``Special method names.''
|
|
\obindex{numeric}
|
|
\obindex{sequence}
|
|
\obindex{mapping}
|
|
|
|
Special attributes: \member{__dict__} is the attribute
|
|
dictionary; \member{__class__} is the instance's class.
|
|
\withsubitem{(instance attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{__dict__}
|
|
\ttindex{__class__}}
|
|
|
|
\item[Files]
|
|
A file\obindex{file} object represents an open file. File objects are
|
|
created by the \function{open()}\bifuncindex{open} built-in function,
|
|
and also by
|
|
\withsubitem{(in module os)}{\ttindex{popen()}}\function{os.popen()},
|
|
\function{os.fdopen()}, and the
|
|
\method{makefile()}\withsubitem{(socket method)}{\ttindex{makefile()}}
|
|
method of socket objects (and perhaps by other functions or methods
|
|
provided by extension modules). The objects
|
|
\ttindex{sys.stdin}\code{sys.stdin},
|
|
\ttindex{sys.stdout}\code{sys.stdout} and
|
|
\ttindex{sys.stderr}\code{sys.stderr} are initialized to file objects
|
|
corresponding to the interpreter's standard\index{stdio} input, output
|
|
and error streams. See the \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library
|
|
Reference} for complete documentation of file objects.
|
|
\withsubitem{(in module sys)}{
|
|
\ttindex{stdin}
|
|
\ttindex{stdout}
|
|
\ttindex{stderr}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\item[Internal types]
|
|
A few types used internally by the interpreter are exposed to the user.
|
|
Their definitions may change with future versions of the interpreter,
|
|
but they are mentioned here for completeness.
|
|
\index{internal type}
|
|
\index{types, internal}
|
|
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
|
|
\item[Code objects]
|
|
Code objects represent \emph{byte-compiled} executable Python code, or
|
|
\emph{bytecode}.
|
|
The difference between a code
|
|
object and a function object is that the function object contains an
|
|
explicit reference to the function's globals (the module in which it
|
|
was defined), while a code object contains no context;
|
|
also the default argument values are stored in the function object,
|
|
not in the code object (because they represent values calculated at
|
|
run-time). Unlike function objects, code objects are immutable and
|
|
contain no references (directly or indirectly) to mutable objects.
|
|
\index{bytecode}
|
|
\obindex{code}
|
|
|
|
Special read-only attributes: \member{co_name} gives the function
|
|
name; \member{co_argcount} is the number of positional arguments
|
|
(including arguments with default values); \member{co_nlocals} is the
|
|
number of local variables used by the function (including arguments);
|
|
\member{co_varnames} is a tuple containing the names of the local
|
|
variables (starting with the argument names); \member{co_cellvars} is
|
|
a tuple containing the names of local variables that are referenced by
|
|
nested functions; \member{co_freevars} is a tuple containing the names
|
|
of free variables; \member{co_code} is a string representing the
|
|
sequence of bytecode instructions;
|
|
\member{co_consts} is a tuple containing the literals used by the
|
|
bytecode; \member{co_names} is a tuple containing the names used by
|
|
the bytecode; \member{co_filename} is the filename from which the code
|
|
was compiled; \member{co_firstlineno} is the first line number of the
|
|
function; \member{co_lnotab} is a string encoding the mapping from
|
|
byte code offsets to line numbers (for details see the source code of
|
|
the interpreter); \member{co_stacksize} is the required stack size
|
|
(including local variables); \member{co_flags} is an integer encoding
|
|
a number of flags for the interpreter.
|
|
|
|
\withsubitem{(code object attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{co_argcount}
|
|
\ttindex{co_code}
|
|
\ttindex{co_consts}
|
|
\ttindex{co_filename}
|
|
\ttindex{co_firstlineno}
|
|
\ttindex{co_flags}
|
|
\ttindex{co_lnotab}
|
|
\ttindex{co_name}
|
|
\ttindex{co_names}
|
|
\ttindex{co_nlocals}
|
|
\ttindex{co_stacksize}
|
|
\ttindex{co_varnames}
|
|
\ttindex{co_cellvars}
|
|
\ttindex{co_freevars}}
|
|
|
|
The following flag bits are defined for \member{co_flags}: bit
|
|
\code{0x04} is set if the function uses the \samp{*arguments} syntax
|
|
to accept an arbitrary number of positional arguments; bit
|
|
\code{0x08} is set if the function uses the \samp{**keywords} syntax
|
|
to accept arbitrary keyword arguments; bit \code{0x20} is set if the
|
|
function is a generator.
|
|
\obindex{generator}
|
|
|
|
Future feature declarations (\samp{from __future__ import division})
|
|
also use bits in \member{co_flags} to indicate whether a code object
|
|
was compiled with a particular feature enabled: bit \code{0x2000} is
|
|
set if the function was compiled with future division enabled; bits
|
|
\code{0x10} and \code{0x1000} were used in earlier versions of Python.
|
|
|
|
Other bits in \member{co_flags} are reserved for internal use.
|
|
|
|
If\index{documentation string} a code object represents a function,
|
|
the first item in
|
|
\member{co_consts} is the documentation string of the function, or
|
|
\code{None} if undefined.
|
|
|
|
\item[Frame objects]
|
|
Frame objects represent execution frames. They may occur in traceback
|
|
objects (see below).
|
|
\obindex{frame}
|
|
|
|
Special read-only attributes: \member{f_back} is to the previous
|
|
stack frame (towards the caller), or \code{None} if this is the bottom
|
|
stack frame; \member{f_code} is the code object being executed in this
|
|
frame; \member{f_locals} is the dictionary used to look up local
|
|
variables; \member{f_globals} is used for global variables;
|
|
\member{f_builtins} is used for built-in (intrinsic) names;
|
|
\member{f_restricted} is a flag indicating whether the function is
|
|
executing in restricted execution mode; \member{f_lasti} gives the
|
|
precise instruction (this is an index into the bytecode string of
|
|
the code object).
|
|
\withsubitem{(frame attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{f_back}
|
|
\ttindex{f_code}
|
|
\ttindex{f_globals}
|
|
\ttindex{f_locals}
|
|
\ttindex{f_lasti}
|
|
\ttindex{f_builtins}
|
|
\ttindex{f_restricted}}
|
|
|
|
Special writable attributes: \member{f_trace}, if not \code{None}, is
|
|
a function called at the start of each source code line (this is used
|
|
by the debugger); \member{f_exc_type}, \member{f_exc_value},
|
|
\member{f_exc_traceback} represent the last exception raised in the
|
|
parent frame provided another exception was ever raised in the current
|
|
frame (in all other cases they are None); \member{f_lineno} is the
|
|
current line number of the frame --- writing to this from within a
|
|
trace function jumps to the given line (only for the bottom-most
|
|
frame). A debugger can implement a Jump command (aka Set Next
|
|
Statement) by writing to f_lineno.
|
|
\withsubitem{(frame attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{f_trace}
|
|
\ttindex{f_exc_type}
|
|
\ttindex{f_exc_value}
|
|
\ttindex{f_exc_traceback}
|
|
\ttindex{f_lineno}}
|
|
|
|
\item[Traceback objects] \label{traceback}
|
|
Traceback objects represent a stack trace of an exception. A
|
|
traceback object is created when an exception occurs. When the search
|
|
for an exception handler unwinds the execution stack, at each unwound
|
|
level a traceback object is inserted in front of the current
|
|
traceback. When an exception handler is entered, the stack trace is
|
|
made available to the program.
|
|
(See section~\ref{try}, ``The \code{try} statement.'')
|
|
It is accessible as \code{sys.exc_traceback}, and also as the third
|
|
item of the tuple returned by \code{sys.exc_info()}. The latter is
|
|
the preferred interface, since it works correctly when the program is
|
|
using multiple threads.
|
|
When the program contains no suitable handler, the stack trace is written
|
|
(nicely formatted) to the standard error stream; if the interpreter is
|
|
interactive, it is also made available to the user as
|
|
\code{sys.last_traceback}.
|
|
\obindex{traceback}
|
|
\indexii{stack}{trace}
|
|
\indexii{exception}{handler}
|
|
\indexii{execution}{stack}
|
|
\withsubitem{(in module sys)}{
|
|
\ttindex{exc_info}
|
|
\ttindex{exc_traceback}
|
|
\ttindex{last_traceback}}
|
|
\ttindex{sys.exc_info}
|
|
\ttindex{sys.exc_traceback}
|
|
\ttindex{sys.last_traceback}
|
|
|
|
Special read-only attributes: \member{tb_next} is the next level in the
|
|
stack trace (towards the frame where the exception occurred), or
|
|
\code{None} if there is no next level; \member{tb_frame} points to the
|
|
execution frame of the current level; \member{tb_lineno} gives the line
|
|
number where the exception occurred; \member{tb_lasti} indicates the
|
|
precise instruction. The line number and last instruction in the
|
|
traceback may differ from the line number of its frame object if the
|
|
exception occurred in a \keyword{try} statement with no matching
|
|
except clause or with a finally clause.
|
|
\withsubitem{(traceback attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{tb_next}
|
|
\ttindex{tb_frame}
|
|
\ttindex{tb_lineno}
|
|
\ttindex{tb_lasti}}
|
|
\stindex{try}
|
|
|
|
\item[Slice objects]
|
|
Slice objects are used to represent slices when \emph{extended slice
|
|
syntax} is used. This is a slice using two colons, or multiple slices
|
|
or ellipses separated by commas, e.g., \code{a[i:j:step]}, \code{a[i:j,
|
|
k:l]}, or \code{a[..., i:j]}. They are also created by the built-in
|
|
\function{slice()}\bifuncindex{slice} function.
|
|
|
|
Special read-only attributes: \member{start} is the lower bound;
|
|
\member{stop} is the upper bound; \member{step} is the step value; each is
|
|
\code{None} if omitted. These attributes can have any type.
|
|
\withsubitem{(slice object attribute)}{
|
|
\ttindex{start}
|
|
\ttindex{stop}
|
|
\ttindex{step}}
|
|
|
|
Slice objects support one method:
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[slice]{indices}{self, length}
|
|
This method takes a single integer argument \var{length} and computes
|
|
information about the extended slice that the slice object would
|
|
describe if applied to a sequence of \var{length} items. It returns a
|
|
tuple of three integers; respectively these are the \var{start} and
|
|
\var{stop} indices and the \var{step} or stride length of the slice.
|
|
Missing or out-of-bounds indices are handled in a manner consistent
|
|
with regular slices.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\item[Static method objects]
|
|
Static method objects provide a way of defeating the transformation
|
|
of function objects to method objects described above. A static method
|
|
object is a wrapper around any other object, usually a user-defined
|
|
method object. When a static method object is retrieved from a class
|
|
or a class instance, the object actually returned is the wrapped object,
|
|
which is not subject to any further transformation. Static method
|
|
objects are not themselves callable, although the objects they
|
|
wrap usually are. Static method objects are created by the built-in
|
|
\function{staticmethod()} constructor.
|
|
|
|
\item[Class method objects]
|
|
A class method object, like a static method object, is a wrapper
|
|
around another object that alters the way in which that object
|
|
is retrieved from classes and class instances. The behaviour of
|
|
class method objects upon such retrieval is described above,
|
|
under ``User-defined methods''. Class method objects are created
|
|
by the built-in \function{classmethod()} constructor.
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Internal types
|
|
|
|
\end{description} % Types
|
|
|
|
%=========================================================================
|
|
\section{New-style and classic classes}
|
|
|
|
Classes and instances come in two flavors: old-style or classic, and new-style.
|
|
|
|
Up to Python 2.1, old-style classes were the only flavour available to the
|
|
user. The concept of (old-style) class is unrelated to the concept of type: if
|
|
\var{x} is an instance of an old-style class, then \code{x.__class__}
|
|
designates the class of \var{x}, but \code{type(x)} is always \code{<type
|
|
'instance'>}. This reflects the fact that all old-style instances,
|
|
independently of their class, are implemented with a single built-in type,
|
|
called \code{instance}.
|
|
|
|
New-style classes were introduced in Python 2.2 to unify classes and types. A
|
|
new-style class neither more nor less than a user-defined type. If \var{x} is
|
|
an instance of a new-style class, then \code{type(x)} is the same as
|
|
\code{x.__class__}.
|
|
|
|
The major motivation for introducing new-style classes is to provide a unified
|
|
object model with a full meta-model. It also has a number of immediate
|
|
benefits, like the ability to subclass most built-in types, or the introduction
|
|
of "descriptors", which enable computed properties.
|
|
|
|
For compatibility reasons, classes are still old-style by default. New-style
|
|
classes are created by specifying another new-style class (i.e.\ a type) as a
|
|
parent class, or the "top-level type" \class{object} if no other parent is
|
|
needed. The behaviour of new-style classes differs from that of old-style
|
|
classes in a number of important details in addition to what \function{type}
|
|
returns. Some of these changes are fundamental to the new object model, like
|
|
the way special methods are invoked. Others are "fixes" that could not be
|
|
implemented before for compatibility concerns, like the method resolution order
|
|
in case of multiple inheritance.
|
|
|
|
This manual is not up-to-date with respect to new-style classes. For now,
|
|
please see \url{http://www.python.org/doc/newstyle.html} for more information.
|
|
|
|
The plan is to eventually drop old-style classes, leaving only the semantics of
|
|
new-style classes. This change will probably only be feasible in Python 3.0.
|
|
\index{class}{new-style}
|
|
\index{class}{classic}
|
|
\index{class}{old-style}
|
|
|
|
%=========================================================================
|
|
\section{Special method names\label{specialnames}}
|
|
|
|
A class can implement certain operations that are invoked by special
|
|
syntax (such as arithmetic operations or subscripting and slicing) by
|
|
defining methods with special names.\indexii{operator}{overloading}
|
|
This is Python's approach to \dfn{operator overloading}, allowing
|
|
classes to define their own behavior with respect to language
|
|
operators. For instance, if a class defines
|
|
a method named \method{__getitem__()}, and \code{x} is an instance of
|
|
this class, then \code{x[i]} is equivalent\footnote{This, and other
|
|
statements, are only roughly true for instances of new-style
|
|
classes.} to
|
|
\code{x.__getitem__(i)}. Except where mentioned, attempts to execute
|
|
an operation raise an exception when no appropriate method is defined.
|
|
\withsubitem{(mapping object method)}{\ttindex{__getitem__()}}
|
|
|
|
When implementing a class that emulates any built-in type, it is
|
|
important that the emulation only be implemented to the degree that it
|
|
makes sense for the object being modelled. For example, some
|
|
sequences may work well with retrieval of individual elements, but
|
|
extracting a slice may not make sense. (One example of this is the
|
|
\class{NodeList} interface in the W3C's Document Object Model.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Basic customization\label{customization}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__new__}{cls\optional{, \moreargs}}
|
|
Called to create a new instance of class \var{cls}. \method{__new__()}
|
|
is a static method (special-cased so you need not declare it as such)
|
|
that takes the class of which an instance was requested as its first
|
|
argument. The remaining arguments are those passed to the object
|
|
constructor expression (the call to the class). The return value of
|
|
\method{__new__()} should be the new object instance (usually an
|
|
instance of \var{cls}).
|
|
|
|
Typical implementations create a new instance of the class by invoking
|
|
the superclass's \method{__new__()} method using
|
|
\samp{super(\var{currentclass}, \var{cls}).__new__(\var{cls}[, ...])}
|
|
with appropriate arguments and then modifying the newly-created instance
|
|
as necessary before returning it.
|
|
|
|
If \method{__new__()} returns an instance of \var{cls}, then the new
|
|
instance's \method{__init__()} method will be invoked like
|
|
\samp{__init__(\var{self}[, ...])}, where \var{self} is the new instance
|
|
and the remaining arguments are the same as were passed to
|
|
\method{__new__()}.
|
|
|
|
If \method{__new__()} does not return an instance of \var{cls}, then the
|
|
new instance's \method{__init__()} method will not be invoked.
|
|
|
|
\method{__new__()} is intended mainly to allow subclasses of
|
|
immutable types (like int, str, or tuple) to customize instance
|
|
creation.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__init__}{self\optional{, \moreargs}}
|
|
Called\indexii{class}{constructor} when the instance is created. The
|
|
arguments are those passed to the class constructor expression. If a
|
|
base class has an \method{__init__()} method, the derived class's
|
|
\method{__init__()} method, if any, must explicitly call it to ensure proper
|
|
initialization of the base class part of the instance; for example:
|
|
\samp{BaseClass.__init__(\var{self}, [\var{args}...])}. As a special
|
|
constraint on constructors, no value may be returned; doing so will
|
|
cause a \exception{TypeError} to be raised at runtime.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__del__}{self}
|
|
Called when the instance is about to be destroyed. This is also
|
|
called a destructor\index{destructor}. If a base class
|
|
has a \method{__del__()} method, the derived class's \method{__del__()}
|
|
method, if any,
|
|
must explicitly call it to ensure proper deletion of the base class
|
|
part of the instance. Note that it is possible (though not recommended!)
|
|
for the \method{__del__()}
|
|
method to postpone destruction of the instance by creating a new
|
|
reference to it. It may then be called at a later time when this new
|
|
reference is deleted. It is not guaranteed that
|
|
\method{__del__()} methods are called for objects that still exist when
|
|
the interpreter exits.
|
|
\stindex{del}
|
|
|
|
\begin{notice}
|
|
\samp{del x} doesn't directly call
|
|
\code{x.__del__()} --- the former decrements the reference count for
|
|
\code{x} by one, and the latter is only called when \code{x}'s reference
|
|
count reaches zero. Some common situations that may prevent the
|
|
reference count of an object from going to zero include: circular
|
|
references between objects (e.g., a doubly-linked list or a tree data
|
|
structure with parent and child pointers); a reference to the object
|
|
on the stack frame of a function that caught an exception (the
|
|
traceback stored in \code{sys.exc_traceback} keeps the stack frame
|
|
alive); or a reference to the object on the stack frame that raised an
|
|
unhandled exception in interactive mode (the traceback stored in
|
|
\code{sys.last_traceback} keeps the stack frame alive). The first
|
|
situation can only be remedied by explicitly breaking the cycles; the
|
|
latter two situations can be resolved by storing \code{None} in
|
|
\code{sys.exc_traceback} or \code{sys.last_traceback}. Circular
|
|
references which are garbage are detected when the option cycle
|
|
detector is enabled (it's on by default), but can only be cleaned up
|
|
if there are no Python-level \method{__del__()} methods involved.
|
|
Refer to the documentation for the \ulink{\module{gc}
|
|
module}{../lib/module-gc.html} for more information about how
|
|
\method{__del__()} methods are handled by the cycle detector,
|
|
particularly the description of the \code{garbage} value.
|
|
\end{notice}
|
|
|
|
\begin{notice}[warning]
|
|
Due to the precarious circumstances under which
|
|
\method{__del__()} methods are invoked, exceptions that occur during their
|
|
execution are ignored, and a warning is printed to \code{sys.stderr}
|
|
instead. Also, when \method{__del__()} is invoked in response to a module
|
|
being deleted (e.g., when execution of the program is done), other
|
|
globals referenced by the \method{__del__()} method may already have been
|
|
deleted. For this reason, \method{__del__()} methods should do the
|
|
absolute minimum needed to maintain external invariants. Starting with
|
|
version 1.5, Python guarantees that globals whose name begins with a single
|
|
underscore are deleted from their module before other globals are deleted;
|
|
if no other references to such globals exist, this may help in assuring that
|
|
imported modules are still available at the time when the
|
|
\method{__del__()} method is called.
|
|
\end{notice}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__repr__}{self}
|
|
Called by the \function{repr()}\bifuncindex{repr} built-in function
|
|
and by string conversions (reverse quotes) to compute the ``official''
|
|
string representation of an object. If at all possible, this should
|
|
look like a valid Python expression that could be used to recreate an
|
|
object with the same value (given an appropriate environment). If
|
|
this is not possible, a string of the form \samp{<\var{...some useful
|
|
description...}>} should be returned. The return value must be a
|
|
string object.
|
|
If a class defines \method{__repr__()} but not \method{__str__()},
|
|
then \method{__repr__()} is also used when an ``informal'' string
|
|
representation of instances of that class is required.
|
|
|
|
This is typically used for debugging, so it is important that the
|
|
representation is information-rich and unambiguous.
|
|
\indexii{string}{conversion}
|
|
\indexii{reverse}{quotes}
|
|
\indexii{backward}{quotes}
|
|
\index{back-quotes}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__str__}{self}
|
|
Called by the \function{str()}\bifuncindex{str} built-in function and
|
|
by the \keyword{print}\stindex{print} statement to compute the
|
|
``informal'' string representation of an object. This differs from
|
|
\method{__repr__()} in that it does not have to be a valid Python
|
|
expression: a more convenient or concise representation may be used
|
|
instead. The return value must be a string object.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__lt__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[object]{__le__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[object]{__eq__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[object]{__ne__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[object]{__gt__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[object]{__ge__}{self, other}
|
|
\versionadded{2.1}
|
|
These are the so-called ``rich comparison'' methods, and are called
|
|
for comparison operators in preference to \method{__cmp__()} below.
|
|
The correspondence between operator symbols and method names is as
|
|
follows:
|
|
\code{\var{x}<\var{y}} calls \code{\var{x}.__lt__(\var{y})},
|
|
\code{\var{x}<=\var{y}} calls \code{\var{x}.__le__(\var{y})},
|
|
\code{\var{x}==\var{y}} calls \code{\var{x}.__eq__(\var{y})},
|
|
\code{\var{x}!=\var{y}} and \code{\var{x}<>\var{y}} call
|
|
\code{\var{x}.__ne__(\var{y})},
|
|
\code{\var{x}>\var{y}} calls \code{\var{x}.__gt__(\var{y})}, and
|
|
\code{\var{x}>=\var{y}} calls \code{\var{x}.__ge__(\var{y})}.
|
|
These methods can return any value, but if the comparison operator is
|
|
used in a Boolean context, the return value should be interpretable as
|
|
a Boolean value, else a \exception{TypeError} will be raised.
|
|
By convention, \code{False} is used for false and \code{True} for true.
|
|
|
|
There are no implied relationships among the comparison operators.
|
|
The truth of \code{\var{x}==\var{y}} does not imply that \code{\var{x}!=\var{y}}
|
|
is false. Accordingly, when defining \method{__eq__()}, one should also
|
|
define \method{__ne__()} so that the operators will behave as expected.
|
|
|
|
There are no reflected (swapped-argument) versions of these methods
|
|
(to be used when the left argument does not support the operation but
|
|
the right argument does); rather, \method{__lt__()} and
|
|
\method{__gt__()} are each other's reflection, \method{__le__()} and
|
|
\method{__ge__()} are each other's reflection, and \method{__eq__()}
|
|
and \method{__ne__()} are their own reflection.
|
|
|
|
Arguments to rich comparison methods are never coerced. A rich
|
|
comparison method may return \code{NotImplemented} if it does not
|
|
implement the operation for a given pair of arguments.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__cmp__}{self, other}
|
|
Called by comparison operations if rich comparison (see above) is not
|
|
defined. Should return a negative integer if \code{self < other},
|
|
zero if \code{self == other}, a positive integer if \code{self >
|
|
other}. If no \method{__cmp__()}, \method{__eq__()} or
|
|
\method{__ne__()} operation is defined, class instances are compared
|
|
by object identity (``address''). See also the description of
|
|
\method{__hash__()} for some important notes on creating objects which
|
|
support custom comparison operations and are usable as dictionary
|
|
keys.
|
|
(Note: the restriction that exceptions are not propagated by
|
|
\method{__cmp__()} has been removed since Python 1.5.)
|
|
\bifuncindex{cmp}
|
|
\index{comparisons}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__rcmp__}{self, other}
|
|
\versionchanged[No longer supported]{2.1}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__hash__}{self}
|
|
Called for the key object for dictionary \obindex{dictionary}
|
|
operations, and by the built-in function
|
|
\function{hash()}\bifuncindex{hash}. Should return a 32-bit integer
|
|
usable as a hash value
|
|
for dictionary operations. The only required property is that objects
|
|
which compare equal have the same hash value; it is advised to somehow
|
|
mix together (e.g., using exclusive or) the hash values for the
|
|
components of the object that also play a part in comparison of
|
|
objects. If a class does not define a \method{__cmp__()} method it should
|
|
not define a \method{__hash__()} operation either; if it defines
|
|
\method{__cmp__()} or \method{__eq__()} but not \method{__hash__()},
|
|
its instances will not be usable as dictionary keys. If a class
|
|
defines mutable objects and implements a \method{__cmp__()} or
|
|
\method{__eq__()} method, it should not implement \method{__hash__()},
|
|
since the dictionary implementation requires that a key's hash value
|
|
is immutable (if the object's hash value changes, it will be in the
|
|
wrong hash bucket).
|
|
|
|
\versionchanged[\method{__hash__()} may now also return a long
|
|
integer object; the 32-bit integer is then derived from the hash
|
|
of that object]{2.5}
|
|
|
|
\withsubitem{(object method)}{\ttindex{__cmp__()}}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__nonzero__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement truth value testing, and the built-in operation
|
|
\code{bool()}; should return \code{False} or \code{True}, or their
|
|
integer equivalents \code{0} or \code{1}.
|
|
When this method is not defined, \method{__len__()} is
|
|
called, if it is defined (see below). If a class defines neither
|
|
\method{__len__()} nor \method{__nonzero__()}, all its instances are
|
|
considered true.
|
|
\withsubitem{(mapping object method)}{\ttindex{__len__()}}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__unicode__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement \function{unicode()}\bifuncindex{unicode} builtin;
|
|
should return a Unicode object. When this method is not defined, string
|
|
conversion is attempted, and the result of string conversion is converted
|
|
to Unicode using the system default encoding.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Customizing attribute access\label{attribute-access}}
|
|
|
|
The following methods can be defined to customize the meaning of
|
|
attribute access (use of, assignment to, or deletion of \code{x.name})
|
|
for class instances.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__getattr__}{self, name}
|
|
Called when an attribute lookup has not found the attribute in the
|
|
usual places (i.e. it is not an instance attribute nor is it found in
|
|
the class tree for \code{self}). \code{name} is the attribute name.
|
|
This method should return the (computed) attribute value or raise an
|
|
\exception{AttributeError} exception.
|
|
|
|
Note that if the attribute is found through the normal mechanism,
|
|
\method{__getattr__()} is not called. (This is an intentional
|
|
asymmetry between \method{__getattr__()} and \method{__setattr__()}.)
|
|
This is done both for efficiency reasons and because otherwise
|
|
\method{__setattr__()} would have no way to access other attributes of
|
|
the instance. Note that at least for instance variables, you can fake
|
|
total control by not inserting any values in the instance attribute
|
|
dictionary (but instead inserting them in another object). See the
|
|
\method{__getattribute__()} method below for a way to actually get
|
|
total control in new-style classes.
|
|
\withsubitem{(object method)}{\ttindex{__setattr__()}}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__setattr__}{self, name, value}
|
|
Called when an attribute assignment is attempted. This is called
|
|
instead of the normal mechanism (i.e.\ store the value in the instance
|
|
dictionary). \var{name} is the attribute name, \var{value} is the
|
|
value to be assigned to it.
|
|
|
|
If \method{__setattr__()} wants to assign to an instance attribute, it
|
|
should not simply execute \samp{self.\var{name} = value} --- this
|
|
would cause a recursive call to itself. Instead, it should insert the
|
|
value in the dictionary of instance attributes, e.g.,
|
|
\samp{self.__dict__[\var{name}] = value}. For new-style classes,
|
|
rather than accessing the instance dictionary, it should call the base
|
|
class method with the same name, for example,
|
|
\samp{object.__setattr__(self, name, value)}.
|
|
\withsubitem{(instance attribute)}{\ttindex{__dict__}}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__delattr__}{self, name}
|
|
Like \method{__setattr__()} but for attribute deletion instead of
|
|
assignment. This should only be implemented if \samp{del
|
|
obj.\var{name}} is meaningful for the object.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{More attribute access for new-style classes \label{new-style-attribute-access}}
|
|
|
|
The following methods only apply to new-style classes.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__getattribute__}{self, name}
|
|
Called unconditionally to implement attribute accesses for instances
|
|
of the class. If the class also defines \method{__getattr__()}, the latter
|
|
will not be called unless \method{__getattribute__()} either calls it
|
|
explicitly or raises an \exception{AttributeError}.
|
|
This method should return the (computed) attribute
|
|
value or raise an \exception{AttributeError} exception.
|
|
In order to avoid infinite recursion in this method, its
|
|
implementation should always call the base class method with the same
|
|
name to access any attributes it needs, for example,
|
|
\samp{object.__getattribute__(self, name)}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Implementing Descriptors \label{descriptors}}
|
|
|
|
The following methods only apply when an instance of the class
|
|
containing the method (a so-called \emph{descriptor} class) appears in
|
|
the class dictionary of another new-style class, known as the
|
|
\emph{owner} class. In the examples below, ``the attribute'' refers to
|
|
the attribute whose name is the key of the property in the owner
|
|
class' \code{__dict__}. Descriptors can only be implemented as
|
|
new-style classes themselves.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__get__}{self, instance, owner}
|
|
Called to get the attribute of the owner class (class attribute access)
|
|
or of an instance of that class (instance attribute access).
|
|
\var{owner} is always the owner class, while \var{instance} is the
|
|
instance that the attribute was accessed through, or \code{None} when
|
|
the attribute is accessed through the \var{owner}. This method should
|
|
return the (computed) attribute value or raise an
|
|
\exception{AttributeError} exception.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__set__}{self, instance, value}
|
|
Called to set the attribute on an instance \var{instance} of the owner
|
|
class to a new value, \var{value}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__delete__}{self, instance}
|
|
Called to delete the attribute on an instance \var{instance} of the
|
|
owner class.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Invoking Descriptors \label{descriptor-invocation}}
|
|
|
|
In general, a descriptor is an object attribute with ``binding behavior'',
|
|
one whose attribute access has been overridden by methods in the descriptor
|
|
protocol: \method{__get__()}, \method{__set__()}, and \method{__delete__()}.
|
|
If any of those methods are defined for an object, it is said to be a
|
|
descriptor.
|
|
|
|
The default behavior for attribute access is to get, set, or delete the
|
|
attribute from an object's dictionary. For instance, \code{a.x} has a
|
|
lookup chain starting with \code{a.__dict__['x']}, then
|
|
\code{type(a).__dict__['x']}, and continuing
|
|
through the base classes of \code{type(a)} excluding metaclasses.
|
|
|
|
However, if the looked-up value is an object defining one of the descriptor
|
|
methods, then Python may override the default behavior and invoke the
|
|
descriptor method instead. Where this occurs in the precedence chain depends
|
|
on which descriptor methods were defined and how they were called. Note that
|
|
descriptors are only invoked for new style objects or classes
|
|
(ones that subclass \class{object()} or \class{type()}).
|
|
|
|
The starting point for descriptor invocation is a binding, \code{a.x}.
|
|
How the arguments are assembled depends on \code{a}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item[Direct Call] The simplest and least common call is when user code
|
|
directly invokes a descriptor method: \code{x.__get__(a)}.
|
|
|
|
\item[Instance Binding] If binding to a new-style object instance,
|
|
\code{a.x} is transformed into the call:
|
|
\code{type(a).__dict__['x'].__get__(a, type(a))}.
|
|
|
|
\item[Class Binding] If binding to a new-style class, \code{A.x}
|
|
is transformed into the call: \code{A.__dict__['x'].__get__(None, A)}.
|
|
|
|
\item[Super Binding] If \code{a} is an instance of \class{super},
|
|
then the binding \code{super(B, obj).m()} searches
|
|
\code{obj.__class__.__mro__} for the base class \code{A} immediately
|
|
preceding \code{B} and then invokes the descriptor with the call:
|
|
\code{A.__dict__['m'].__get__(obj, A)}.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
For instance bindings, the precedence of descriptor invocation depends
|
|
on the which descriptor methods are defined. Data descriptors define
|
|
both \method{__get__()} and \method{__set__()}. Non-data descriptors have
|
|
just the \method{__get__()} method. Data descriptors always override
|
|
a redefinition in an instance dictionary. In contrast, non-data
|
|
descriptors can be overridden by instances.
|
|
|
|
Python methods (including \function{staticmethod()} and \function{classmethod()})
|
|
are implemented as non-data descriptors. Accordingly, instances can
|
|
redefine and override methods. This allows individual instances to acquire
|
|
behaviors that differ from other instances of the same class.
|
|
|
|
The \function{property()} function is implemented as a data descriptor.
|
|
Accordingly, instances cannot override the behavior of a property.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{__slots__\label{slots}}
|
|
|
|
By default, instances of both old and new-style classes have a dictionary
|
|
for attribute storage. This wastes space for objects having very few instance
|
|
variables. The space consumption can become acute when creating large numbers
|
|
of instances.
|
|
|
|
The default can be overridden by defining \var{__slots__} in a new-style class
|
|
definition. The \var{__slots__} declaration takes a sequence of instance
|
|
variables and reserves just enough space in each instance to hold a value
|
|
for each variable. Space is saved because \var{__dict__} is not created for
|
|
each instance.
|
|
|
|
\begin{datadesc}{__slots__}
|
|
This class variable can be assigned a string, iterable, or sequence of strings
|
|
with variable names used by instances. If defined in a new-style class,
|
|
\var{__slots__} reserves space for the declared variables
|
|
and prevents the automatic creation of \var{__dict__} and \var{__weakref__}
|
|
for each instance.
|
|
\versionadded{2.2}
|
|
\end{datadesc}
|
|
|
|
\noindent
|
|
Notes on using \var{__slots__}
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item Without a \var{__dict__} variable, instances cannot be assigned new
|
|
variables not listed in the \var{__slots__} definition. Attempts to assign
|
|
to an unlisted variable name raises \exception{AttributeError}. If dynamic
|
|
assignment of new variables is desired, then add \code{'__dict__'} to the
|
|
sequence of strings in the \var{__slots__} declaration.
|
|
\versionchanged[Previously, adding \code{'__dict__'} to the \var{__slots__}
|
|
declaration would not enable the assignment of new attributes not
|
|
specifically listed in the sequence of instance variable names]{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\item Without a \var{__weakref__} variable for each instance, classes
|
|
defining \var{__slots__} do not support weak references to its instances.
|
|
If weak reference support is needed, then add \code{'__weakref__'} to the
|
|
sequence of strings in the \var{__slots__} declaration.
|
|
\versionchanged[Previously, adding \code{'__weakref__'} to the \var{__slots__}
|
|
declaration would not enable support for weak references]{2.3}
|
|
|
|
\item \var{__slots__} are implemented at the class level by creating
|
|
descriptors (\ref{descriptors}) for each variable name. As a result,
|
|
class attributes cannot be used to set default values for instance
|
|
variables defined by \var{__slots__}; otherwise, the class attribute would
|
|
overwrite the descriptor assignment.
|
|
|
|
\item If a class defines a slot also defined in a base class, the instance
|
|
variable defined by the base class slot is inaccessible (except by retrieving
|
|
its descriptor directly from the base class). This renders the meaning of the
|
|
program undefined. In the future, a check may be added to prevent this.
|
|
|
|
\item The action of a \var{__slots__} declaration is limited to the class
|
|
where it is defined. As a result, subclasses will have a \var{__dict__}
|
|
unless they also define \var{__slots__}.
|
|
|
|
\item \var{__slots__} do not work for classes derived from ``variable-length''
|
|
built-in types such as \class{long}, \class{str} and \class{tuple}.
|
|
|
|
\item Any non-string iterable may be assigned to \var{__slots__}.
|
|
Mappings may also be used; however, in the future, special meaning may
|
|
be assigned to the values corresponding to each key.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Customizing class creation\label{metaclasses}}
|
|
|
|
By default, new-style classes are constructed using \function{type()}.
|
|
A class definition is read into a separate namespace and the value
|
|
of class name is bound to the result of \code{type(name, bases, dict)}.
|
|
|
|
When the class definition is read, if \var{__metaclass__} is defined
|
|
then the callable assigned to it will be called instead of \function{type()}.
|
|
The allows classes or functions to be written which monitor or alter the class
|
|
creation process:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item Modifying the class dictionary prior to the class being created.
|
|
\item Returning an instance of another class -- essentially performing
|
|
the role of a factory function.
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\begin{datadesc}{__metaclass__}
|
|
This variable can be any callable accepting arguments for \code{name},
|
|
\code{bases}, and \code{dict}. Upon class creation, the callable is
|
|
used instead of the built-in \function{type()}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.2}
|
|
\end{datadesc}
|
|
|
|
The appropriate metaclass is determined by the following precedence rules:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item If \code{dict['__metaclass__']} exists, it is used.
|
|
|
|
\item Otherwise, if there is at least one base class, its metaclass is used
|
|
(this looks for a \var{__class__} attribute first and if not found, uses its
|
|
type).
|
|
|
|
\item Otherwise, if a global variable named __metaclass__ exists, it is used.
|
|
|
|
\item Otherwise, the old-style, classic metaclass (types.ClassType) is used.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
The potential uses for metaclasses are boundless. Some ideas that have
|
|
been explored including logging, interface checking, automatic delegation,
|
|
automatic property creation, proxies, frameworks, and automatic resource
|
|
locking/synchronization.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Emulating callable objects\label{callable-types}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[object]{__call__}{self\optional{, args...}}
|
|
Called when the instance is ``called'' as a function; if this method
|
|
is defined, \code{\var{x}(arg1, arg2, ...)} is a shorthand for
|
|
\code{\var{x}.__call__(arg1, arg2, ...)}.
|
|
\indexii{call}{instance}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Emulating container types\label{sequence-types}}
|
|
|
|
The following methods can be defined to implement container
|
|
objects. Containers usually are sequences (such as lists or tuples)
|
|
or mappings (like dictionaries), but can represent other containers as
|
|
well. The first set of methods is used either to emulate a
|
|
sequence or to emulate a mapping; the difference is that for a
|
|
sequence, the allowable keys should be the integers \var{k} for which
|
|
\code{0 <= \var{k} < \var{N}} where \var{N} is the length of the
|
|
sequence, or slice objects, which define a range of items. (For backwards
|
|
compatibility, the method \method{__getslice__()} (see below) can also be
|
|
defined to handle simple, but not extended slices.) It is also recommended
|
|
that mappings provide the methods \method{keys()}, \method{values()},
|
|
\method{items()}, \method{has_key()}, \method{get()}, \method{clear()},
|
|
\method{setdefault()}, \method{iterkeys()}, \method{itervalues()},
|
|
\method{iteritems()}, \method{pop()}, \method{popitem()},
|
|
\method{copy()}, and \method{update()} behaving similar to those for
|
|
Python's standard dictionary objects. The \module{UserDict} module
|
|
provides a \class{DictMixin} class to help create those methods
|
|
from a base set of \method{__getitem__()}, \method{__setitem__()},
|
|
\method{__delitem__()}, and \method{keys()}.
|
|
Mutable sequences should provide
|
|
methods \method{append()}, \method{count()}, \method{index()},
|
|
\method{extend()},
|
|
\method{insert()}, \method{pop()}, \method{remove()}, \method{reverse()}
|
|
and \method{sort()}, like Python standard list objects. Finally,
|
|
sequence types should implement addition (meaning concatenation) and
|
|
multiplication (meaning repetition) by defining the methods
|
|
\method{__add__()}, \method{__radd__()}, \method{__iadd__()},
|
|
\method{__mul__()}, \method{__rmul__()} and \method{__imul__()} described
|
|
below; they should not define \method{__coerce__()} or other numerical
|
|
operators. It is recommended that both mappings and sequences
|
|
implement the \method{__contains__()} method to allow efficient use of
|
|
the \code{in} operator; for mappings, \code{in} should be equivalent
|
|
of \method{has_key()}; for sequences, it should search through the
|
|
values. It is further recommended that both mappings and sequences
|
|
implement the \method{__iter__()} method to allow efficient iteration
|
|
through the container; for mappings, \method{__iter__()} should be
|
|
the same as \method{iterkeys()}; for sequences, it should iterate
|
|
through the values.
|
|
\withsubitem{(mapping object method)}{
|
|
\ttindex{keys()}
|
|
\ttindex{values()}
|
|
\ttindex{items()}
|
|
\ttindex{iterkeys()}
|
|
\ttindex{itervalues()}
|
|
\ttindex{iteritems()}
|
|
\ttindex{has_key()}
|
|
\ttindex{get()}
|
|
\ttindex{setdefault()}
|
|
\ttindex{pop()}
|
|
\ttindex{popitem()}
|
|
\ttindex{clear()}
|
|
\ttindex{copy()}
|
|
\ttindex{update()}
|
|
\ttindex{__contains__()}}
|
|
\withsubitem{(sequence object method)}{
|
|
\ttindex{append()}
|
|
\ttindex{count()}
|
|
\ttindex{extend()}
|
|
\ttindex{index()}
|
|
\ttindex{insert()}
|
|
\ttindex{pop()}
|
|
\ttindex{remove()}
|
|
\ttindex{reverse()}
|
|
\ttindex{sort()}
|
|
\ttindex{__add__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__radd__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__iadd__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__mul__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__rmul__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__imul__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__contains__()}
|
|
\ttindex{__iter__()}}
|
|
\withsubitem{(numeric object method)}{\ttindex{__coerce__()}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container object]{__len__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement the built-in function
|
|
\function{len()}\bifuncindex{len}. Should return the length of the
|
|
object, an integer \code{>=} 0. Also, an object that doesn't define a
|
|
\method{__nonzero__()} method and whose \method{__len__()} method
|
|
returns zero is considered to be false in a Boolean context.
|
|
\withsubitem{(object method)}{\ttindex{__nonzero__()}}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container object]{__getitem__}{self, key}
|
|
Called to implement evaluation of \code{\var{self}[\var{key}]}.
|
|
For sequence types, the accepted keys should be integers and slice
|
|
objects.\obindex{slice} Note that
|
|
the special interpretation of negative indexes (if the class wishes to
|
|
emulate a sequence type) is up to the \method{__getitem__()} method.
|
|
If \var{key} is of an inappropriate type, \exception{TypeError} may be
|
|
raised; if of a value outside the set of indexes for the sequence
|
|
(after any special interpretation of negative values),
|
|
\exception{IndexError} should be raised.
|
|
For mapping types, if \var{key} is missing (not in the container),
|
|
\exception{KeyError} should be raised.
|
|
\note{\keyword{for} loops expect that an
|
|
\exception{IndexError} will be raised for illegal indexes to allow
|
|
proper detection of the end of the sequence.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container object]{__setitem__}{self, key, value}
|
|
Called to implement assignment to \code{\var{self}[\var{key}]}. Same
|
|
note as for \method{__getitem__()}. This should only be implemented
|
|
for mappings if the objects support changes to the values for keys, or
|
|
if new keys can be added, or for sequences if elements can be
|
|
replaced. The same exceptions should be raised for improper
|
|
\var{key} values as for the \method{__getitem__()} method.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container object]{__delitem__}{self, key}
|
|
Called to implement deletion of \code{\var{self}[\var{key}]}. Same
|
|
note as for \method{__getitem__()}. This should only be implemented
|
|
for mappings if the objects support removal of keys, or for sequences
|
|
if elements can be removed from the sequence. The same exceptions
|
|
should be raised for improper \var{key} values as for the
|
|
\method{__getitem__()} method.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container object]{__iter__}{self}
|
|
This method is called when an iterator is required for a container.
|
|
This method should return a new iterator object that can iterate over
|
|
all the objects in the container. For mappings, it should iterate
|
|
over the keys of the container, and should also be made available as
|
|
the method \method{iterkeys()}.
|
|
|
|
Iterator objects also need to implement this method; they are required
|
|
to return themselves. For more information on iterator objects, see
|
|
``\ulink{Iterator Types}{../lib/typeiter.html}'' in the
|
|
\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
The membership test operators (\keyword{in} and \keyword{not in}) are
|
|
normally implemented as an iteration through a sequence. However,
|
|
container objects can supply the following special method with a more
|
|
efficient implementation, which also does not require the object be a
|
|
sequence.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[container object]{__contains__}{self, item}
|
|
Called to implement membership test operators. Should return true if
|
|
\var{item} is in \var{self}, false otherwise. For mapping objects,
|
|
this should consider the keys of the mapping rather than the values or
|
|
the key-item pairs.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Additional methods for emulation of sequence types
|
|
\label{sequence-methods}}
|
|
|
|
The following optional methods can be defined to further emulate sequence
|
|
objects. Immutable sequences methods should at most only define
|
|
\method{__getslice__()}; mutable sequences might define all three
|
|
methods.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[sequence object]{__getslice__}{self, i, j}
|
|
\deprecated{2.0}{Support slice objects as parameters to the
|
|
\method{__getitem__()} method.}
|
|
Called to implement evaluation of \code{\var{self}[\var{i}:\var{j}]}.
|
|
The returned object should be of the same type as \var{self}. Note
|
|
that missing \var{i} or \var{j} in the slice expression are replaced
|
|
by zero or \code{sys.maxint}, respectively. If negative indexes are
|
|
used in the slice, the length of the sequence is added to that index.
|
|
If the instance does not implement the \method{__len__()} method, an
|
|
\exception{AttributeError} is raised.
|
|
No guarantee is made that indexes adjusted this way are not still
|
|
negative. Indexes which are greater than the length of the sequence
|
|
are not modified.
|
|
If no \method{__getslice__()} is found, a slice
|
|
object is created instead, and passed to \method{__getitem__()} instead.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[sequence object]{__setslice__}{self, i, j, sequence}
|
|
Called to implement assignment to \code{\var{self}[\var{i}:\var{j}]}.
|
|
Same notes for \var{i} and \var{j} as for \method{__getslice__()}.
|
|
|
|
This method is deprecated. If no \method{__setslice__()} is found,
|
|
or for extended slicing of the form
|
|
\code{\var{self}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]}, a
|
|
slice object is created, and passed to \method{__setitem__()},
|
|
instead of \method{__setslice__()} being called.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[sequence object]{__delslice__}{self, i, j}
|
|
Called to implement deletion of \code{\var{self}[\var{i}:\var{j}]}.
|
|
Same notes for \var{i} and \var{j} as for \method{__getslice__()}.
|
|
This method is deprecated. If no \method{__delslice__()} is found,
|
|
or for extended slicing of the form
|
|
\code{\var{self}[\var{i}:\var{j}:\var{k}]}, a
|
|
slice object is created, and passed to \method{__delitem__()},
|
|
instead of \method{__delslice__()} being called.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
Notice that these methods are only invoked when a single slice with a
|
|
single colon is used, and the slice method is available. For slice
|
|
operations involving extended slice notation, or in absence of the
|
|
slice methods, \method{__getitem__()}, \method{__setitem__()} or
|
|
\method{__delitem__()} is called with a slice object as argument.
|
|
|
|
The following example demonstrate how to make your program or module
|
|
compatible with earlier versions of Python (assuming that methods
|
|
\method{__getitem__()}, \method{__setitem__()} and \method{__delitem__()}
|
|
support slice objects as arguments):
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
class MyClass:
|
|
...
|
|
def __getitem__(self, index):
|
|
...
|
|
def __setitem__(self, index, value):
|
|
...
|
|
def __delitem__(self, index):
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
if sys.version_info < (2, 0):
|
|
# They won't be defined if version is at least 2.0 final
|
|
|
|
def __getslice__(self, i, j):
|
|
return self[max(0, i):max(0, j):]
|
|
def __setslice__(self, i, j, seq):
|
|
self[max(0, i):max(0, j):] = seq
|
|
def __delslice__(self, i, j):
|
|
del self[max(0, i):max(0, j):]
|
|
...
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
Note the calls to \function{max()}; these are necessary because of
|
|
the handling of negative indices before the
|
|
\method{__*slice__()} methods are called. When negative indexes are
|
|
used, the \method{__*item__()} methods receive them as provided, but
|
|
the \method{__*slice__()} methods get a ``cooked'' form of the index
|
|
values. For each negative index value, the length of the sequence is
|
|
added to the index before calling the method (which may still result
|
|
in a negative index); this is the customary handling of negative
|
|
indexes by the built-in sequence types, and the \method{__*item__()}
|
|
methods are expected to do this as well. However, since they should
|
|
already be doing that, negative indexes cannot be passed in; they must
|
|
be constrained to the bounds of the sequence before being passed to
|
|
the \method{__*item__()} methods.
|
|
Calling \code{max(0, i)} conveniently returns the proper value.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Emulating numeric types\label{numeric-types}}
|
|
|
|
The following methods can be defined to emulate numeric objects.
|
|
Methods corresponding to operations that are not supported by the
|
|
particular kind of number implemented (e.g., bitwise operations for
|
|
non-integral numbers) should be left undefined.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__add__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__sub__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__mul__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__floordiv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__mod__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__divmod__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__pow__}{self, other\optional{, modulo}}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__lshift__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rshift__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__and__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__xor__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__or__}{self, other}
|
|
These methods are
|
|
called to implement the binary arithmetic operations (\code{+},
|
|
\code{-}, \code{*}, \code{//}, \code{\%},
|
|
\function{divmod()}\bifuncindex{divmod},
|
|
\function{pow()}\bifuncindex{pow}, \code{**}, \code{<<},
|
|
\code{>>}, \code{\&}, \code{\^}, \code{|}). For instance, to
|
|
evaluate the expression \var{x}\code{+}\var{y}, where \var{x} is an
|
|
instance of a class that has an \method{__add__()} method,
|
|
\code{\var{x}.__add__(\var{y})} is called. The \method{__divmod__()}
|
|
method should be the equivalent to using \method{__floordiv__()} and
|
|
\method{__mod__()}; it should not be related to \method{__truediv__()}
|
|
(described below). Note that
|
|
\method{__pow__()} should be defined to accept an optional third
|
|
argument if the ternary version of the built-in
|
|
\function{pow()}\bifuncindex{pow} function is to be supported.
|
|
|
|
If one of those methods does not support the operation with the
|
|
supplied arguments, it should return \code{NotImplemented}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__div__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__truediv__}{self, other}
|
|
The division operator (\code{/}) is implemented by these methods. The
|
|
\method{__truediv__()} method is used when \code{__future__.division}
|
|
is in effect, otherwise \method{__div__()} is used. If only one of
|
|
these two methods is defined, the object will not support division in
|
|
the alternate context; \exception{TypeError} will be raised instead.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__radd__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rsub__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rmul__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rdiv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rtruediv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rfloordiv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rmod__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rdivmod__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rpow__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rlshift__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rrshift__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rand__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__rxor__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__ror__}{self, other}
|
|
These methods are
|
|
called to implement the binary arithmetic operations (\code{+},
|
|
\code{-}, \code{*}, \code{/}, \code{\%},
|
|
\function{divmod()}\bifuncindex{divmod},
|
|
\function{pow()}\bifuncindex{pow}, \code{**}, \code{<<},
|
|
\code{>>}, \code{\&}, \code{\^}, \code{|}) with reflected
|
|
(swapped) operands. These functions are only called if the left
|
|
operand does not support the corresponding operation and the
|
|
operands are of different types.\footnote{
|
|
For operands of the same type, it is assumed that if the
|
|
non-reflected method (such as \method{__add__()}) fails the
|
|
operation is not supported, which is why the reflected method
|
|
is not called.}
|
|
For instance, to evaluate the expression \var{x}\code{-}\var{y},
|
|
where \var{y} is an instance of a class that has an
|
|
\method{__rsub__()} method, \code{\var{y}.__rsub__(\var{x})}
|
|
is called if \code{\var{x}.__sub__(\var{y})} returns
|
|
\var{NotImplemented}.
|
|
|
|
Note that ternary
|
|
\function{pow()}\bifuncindex{pow} will not try calling
|
|
\method{__rpow__()} (the coercion rules would become too
|
|
complicated).
|
|
|
|
\note{If the right operand's type is a subclass of the left operand's
|
|
type and that subclass provides the reflected method for the
|
|
operation, this method will be called before the left operand's
|
|
non-reflected method. This behavior allows subclasses to
|
|
override their ancestors' operations.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__iadd__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__isub__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__imul__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__idiv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__itruediv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__ifloordiv__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__imod__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__ipow__}{self, other\optional{, modulo}}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__ilshift__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__irshift__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__iand__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__ixor__}{self, other}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__ior__}{self, other}
|
|
These methods are called to implement the augmented arithmetic
|
|
operations (\code{+=}, \code{-=}, \code{*=}, \code{/=}, \code{\%=},
|
|
\code{**=}, \code{<<=}, \code{>>=}, \code{\&=},
|
|
\code{\textasciicircum=}, \code{|=}). These methods should attempt to do the
|
|
operation in-place (modifying \var{self}) and return the result (which
|
|
could be, but does not have to be, \var{self}). If a specific method
|
|
is not defined, the augmented operation falls back to the normal
|
|
methods. For instance, to evaluate the expression
|
|
\var{x}\code{+=}\var{y}, where \var{x} is an instance of a class that
|
|
has an \method{__iadd__()} method, \code{\var{x}.__iadd__(\var{y})} is
|
|
called. If \var{x} is an instance of a class that does not define a
|
|
\method{__iadd__()} method, \code{\var{x}.__add__(\var{y})} and
|
|
\code{\var{y}.__radd__(\var{x})} are considered, as with the
|
|
evaluation of \var{x}\code{+}\var{y}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__neg__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__pos__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__abs__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__invert__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement the unary arithmetic operations (\code{-},
|
|
\code{+}, \function{abs()}\bifuncindex{abs} and \code{\~{}}).
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__complex__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__int__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__long__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__float__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement the built-in functions
|
|
\function{complex()}\bifuncindex{complex},
|
|
\function{int()}\bifuncindex{int}, \function{long()}\bifuncindex{long},
|
|
and \function{float()}\bifuncindex{float}. Should return a value of
|
|
the appropriate type.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__oct__}{self}
|
|
\methodline[numeric object]{__hex__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement the built-in functions
|
|
\function{oct()}\bifuncindex{oct} and
|
|
\function{hex()}\bifuncindex{hex}. Should return a string value.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__index__}{self}
|
|
Called to implement \function{operator.index()}. Also called whenever
|
|
Python needs an integer object (such as in slicing). Must return an
|
|
integer (int or long).
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[numeric object]{__coerce__}{self, other}
|
|
Called to implement ``mixed-mode'' numeric arithmetic. Should either
|
|
return a 2-tuple containing \var{self} and \var{other} converted to
|
|
a common numeric type, or \code{None} if conversion is impossible. When
|
|
the common type would be the type of \code{other}, it is sufficient to
|
|
return \code{None}, since the interpreter will also ask the other
|
|
object to attempt a coercion (but sometimes, if the implementation of
|
|
the other type cannot be changed, it is useful to do the conversion to
|
|
the other type here). A return value of \code{NotImplemented} is
|
|
equivalent to returning \code{None}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Coercion rules\label{coercion-rules}}
|
|
|
|
This section used to document the rules for coercion. As the language
|
|
has evolved, the coercion rules have become hard to document
|
|
precisely; documenting what one version of one particular
|
|
implementation does is undesirable. Instead, here are some informal
|
|
guidelines regarding coercion. In Python 3.0, coercion will not be
|
|
supported.
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
If the left operand of a \% operator is a string or Unicode object, no
|
|
coercion takes place and the string formatting operation is invoked
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
It is no longer recommended to define a coercion operation.
|
|
Mixed-mode operations on types that don't define coercion pass the
|
|
original arguments to the operation.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
New-style classes (those derived from \class{object}) never invoke the
|
|
\method{__coerce__()} method in response to a binary operator; the only
|
|
time \method{__coerce__()} is invoked is when the built-in function
|
|
\function{coerce()} is called.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
For most intents and purposes, an operator that returns
|
|
\code{NotImplemented} is treated the same as one that is not
|
|
implemented at all.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
Below, \method{__op__()} and \method{__rop__()} are used to signify
|
|
the generic method names corresponding to an operator;
|
|
\method{__iop__()} is used for the corresponding in-place operator. For
|
|
example, for the operator `\code{+}', \method{__add__()} and
|
|
\method{__radd__()} are used for the left and right variant of the
|
|
binary operator, and \method{__iadd__()} for the in-place variant.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
For objects \var{x} and \var{y}, first \code{\var{x}.__op__(\var{y})}
|
|
is tried. If this is not implemented or returns \code{NotImplemented},
|
|
\code{\var{y}.__rop__(\var{x})} is tried. If this is also not
|
|
implemented or returns \code{NotImplemented}, a \exception{TypeError}
|
|
exception is raised. But see the following exception:
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
Exception to the previous item: if the left operand is an instance of
|
|
a built-in type or a new-style class, and the right operand is an instance
|
|
of a proper subclass of that type or class and overrides the base's
|
|
\method{__rop__()} method, the right operand's \method{__rop__()} method
|
|
is tried \emph{before} the left operand's \method{__op__()} method.
|
|
|
|
This is done so that a subclass can completely override binary operators.
|
|
Otherwise, the left operand's \method{__op__()} method would always
|
|
accept the right operand: when an instance of a given class is expected,
|
|
an instance of a subclass of that class is always acceptable.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
When either operand type defines a coercion, this coercion is called
|
|
before that type's \method{__op__()} or \method{__rop__()} method is
|
|
called, but no sooner. If the coercion returns an object of a
|
|
different type for the operand whose coercion is invoked, part of the
|
|
process is redone using the new object.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
When an in-place operator (like `\code{+=}') is used, if the left
|
|
operand implements \method{__iop__()}, it is invoked without any
|
|
coercion. When the operation falls back to \method{__op__()} and/or
|
|
\method{__rop__()}, the normal coercion rules apply.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
In \var{x}\code{+}\var{y}, if \var{x} is a sequence that implements
|
|
sequence concatenation, sequence concatenation is invoked.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
In \var{x}\code{*}\var{y}, if one operator is a sequence that
|
|
implements sequence repetition, and the other is an integer
|
|
(\class{int} or \class{long}), sequence repetition is invoked.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
Rich comparisons (implemented by methods \method{__eq__()} and so on)
|
|
never use coercion. Three-way comparison (implemented by
|
|
\method{__cmp__()}) does use coercion under the same conditions as
|
|
other binary operations use it.
|
|
|
|
\item
|
|
|
|
In the current implementation, the built-in numeric types \class{int},
|
|
\class{long} and \class{float} do not use coercion; the type
|
|
\class{complex} however does use it. The difference can become
|
|
apparent when subclassing these types. Over time, the type
|
|
\class{complex} may be fixed to avoid coercion. All these types
|
|
implement a \method{__coerce__()} method, for use by the built-in
|
|
\function{coerce()} function.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{With Statement Context Managers\label{context-managers}}
|
|
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
|
|
A \dfn{context manager} is an object that defines the runtime
|
|
context to be established when executing a \keyword{with}
|
|
statement. The context manager handles the entry into,
|
|
and the exit from, the desired runtime context for the execution
|
|
of the block of code. Context managers are normally invoked using
|
|
the \keyword{with} statement (described in section~\ref{with}), but
|
|
can also be used by directly invoking their methods.
|
|
|
|
\stindex{with}
|
|
\index{context manager}
|
|
|
|
Typical uses of context managers include saving and
|
|
restoring various kinds of global state, locking and unlocking
|
|
resources, closing opened files, etc.
|
|
|
|
For more information on context managers, see
|
|
``\ulink{Context Types}{../lib/typecontextmanager.html}'' in the
|
|
\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[context manager]{__enter__}{self}
|
|
Enter the runtime context related to this object. The \keyword{with}
|
|
statement will bind this method's return value to the target(s)
|
|
specified in the \keyword{as} clause of the statement, if any.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[context manager]{__exit__}
|
|
{self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback}
|
|
Exit the runtime context related to this object. The parameters
|
|
describe the exception that caused the context to be exited. If
|
|
the context was exited without an exception, all three arguments
|
|
will be \constant{None}.
|
|
|
|
If an exception is supplied, and the method wishes to suppress the
|
|
exception (i.e., prevent it from being propagated), it should return a
|
|
true value. Otherwise, the exception will be processed normally upon
|
|
exit from this method.
|
|
|
|
Note that \method{__exit__} methods should not reraise the passed-in
|
|
exception; this is the caller's responsibility.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{seealso}
|
|
\seepep{0343}{The "with" statement}
|
|
{The specification, background, and examples for the
|
|
Python \keyword{with} statement.}
|
|
\end{seealso}
|
|
|