| \documentclass{howto} |
| |
| \title{What's New in Python 2.0} |
| \release{0.04} |
| \author{A.M. Kuchling and Moshe Zadka} |
| \authoraddress{\email{amk1@bigfoot.com}, \email{moshez@math.huji.ac.il} } |
| \begin{document} |
| \maketitle\tableofcontents |
| |
| \section{Introduction} |
| |
| {\large This is a draft document; please report inaccuracies and |
| omissions to the authors. This document should not be treated as |
| definitive; features described here might be removed or changed during |
| the beta cycle before the final release of Python 2.0. |
| } |
| |
| A new release of Python, version 2.0, will be released some time this |
| summer. Alpha versions are already available from |
| \url{http://www.python.org/2.0/}. This article covers the exciting |
| new features in 2.0, highlights some other useful changes, and points |
| out a few incompatible changes that may require rewriting code. |
| |
| Python's development never completely stops between releases, and a |
| steady flow of bug fixes and improvements are always being submitted. |
| A host of minor fixes, a few optimizations, additional docstrings, and |
| better error messages went into 2.0; to list them all would be |
| impossible, but they're certainly significant. Consult the |
| publicly-available CVS logs if you want to see the full list. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Unicode} |
| |
| The largest new feature in Python 2.0 is a new fundamental data type: |
| Unicode strings. Unicode uses 16-bit numbers to represent characters |
| instead of the 8-bit number used by ASCII, meaning that 65,536 |
| distinct characters can be supported. |
| |
| The final interface for Unicode support was arrived at through |
| countless often-stormy discussions on the python-dev mailing list, and |
| mostly implemented by Marc-Andr\'e Lemburg, based on a Unicode string |
| type implementation by Fredrik Lundh. A detailed explanation of the |
| interface is in the file \file{Misc/unicode.txt} in the Python source |
| distribution; it's also available on the Web at |
| \url{http://starship.python.net/crew/lemburg/unicode-proposal.txt}. |
| This article will simply cover the most significant points from the |
| full interface. |
| |
| In Python source code, Unicode strings are written as |
| \code{u"string"}. Arbitrary Unicode characters can be written using a |
| new escape sequence, \code{\e u\var{HHHH}}, where \var{HHHH} is a |
| 4-digit hexadecimal number from 0000 to FFFF. The existing |
| \code{\e x\var{HHHH}} escape sequence can also be used, and octal |
| escapes can be used for characters up to U+01FF, which is represented |
| by \code{\e 777}. |
| |
| Unicode strings, just like regular strings, are an immutable sequence |
| type. They can be indexed and sliced, but not modified in place. |
| Unicode strings have an \method{encode( \optional{encoding} )} method |
| that returns an 8-bit string in the desired encoding. Encodings are |
| named by strings, such as \code{'ascii'}, \code{'utf-8'}, |
| \code{'iso-8859-1'}, or whatever. A codec API is defined for |
| implementing and registering new encodings that are then available |
| throughout a Python program. If an encoding isn't specified, the |
| default encoding is usually 7-bit ASCII, though it can be changed for |
| your Python installation by calling the |
| \function{sys.setdefaultencoding(\var{encoding})} function in a |
| customised version of \file{site.py}. |
| |
| Combining 8-bit and Unicode strings always coerces to Unicode, using |
| the default ASCII encoding; the result of \code{'a' + u'bc'} is |
| \code{u'abc'}. |
| |
| New built-in functions have been added, and existing built-ins |
| modified to support Unicode: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item \code{unichr(\var{ch})} returns a Unicode string 1 character |
| long, containing the character \var{ch}. |
| |
| \item \code{ord(\var{u})}, where \var{u} is a 1-character regular or Unicode string, returns the number of the character as an integer. |
| |
| \item \code{unicode(\var{string}, \optional{\var{encoding},} |
| \optional{\var{errors}} ) } creates a Unicode string from an 8-bit |
| string. \code{encoding} is a string naming the encoding to use. |
| The \code{errors} parameter specifies the treatment of characters that |
| are invalid for the current encoding; passing \code{'strict'} as the |
| value causes an exception to be raised on any encoding error, while |
| \code{'ignore'} causes errors to be silently ignored and |
| \code{'replace'} uses U+FFFD, the official replacement character, in |
| case of any problems. |
| |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| A new module, \module{unicodedata}, provides an interface to Unicode |
| character properties. For example, \code{unicodedata.category(u'A')} |
| returns the 2-character string 'Lu', the 'L' denoting it's a letter, |
| and 'u' meaning that it's uppercase. |
| \code{u.bidirectional(u'\e x0660')} returns 'AN', meaning that U+0660 is |
| an Arabic number. |
| |
| The \module{codecs} module contains functions to look up existing encodings |
| and register new ones. Unless you want to implement a |
| new encoding, you'll most often use the |
| \function{codecs.lookup(\var{encoding})} function, which returns a |
| 4-element tuple: \code{(\var{encode_func}, |
| \var{decode_func}, \var{stream_reader}, \var{stream_writer})}. |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item \var{encode_func} is a function that takes a Unicode string, and |
| returns a 2-tuple \code{(\var{string}, \var{length})}. \var{string} |
| is an 8-bit string containing a portion (perhaps all) of the Unicode |
| string converted into the given encoding, and \var{length} tells you how much of the Unicode string was converted. |
| |
| \item \var{decode_func} is the mirror of \var{encode_func}, |
| taking a Unicode string and |
| returns a 2-tuple \code{(\var{ustring}, \var{length})} containing a Unicode string |
| and \var{length} telling you how much of the string was consumed. |
| |
| \item \var{stream_reader} is a class that supports decoding input from |
| a stream. \var{stream_reader(\var{file_obj})} returns an object that |
| supports the \method{read()}, \method{readline()}, and |
| \method{readlines()} methods. These methods will all translate from |
| the given encoding and return Unicode strings. |
| |
| \item \var{stream_writer}, similarly, is a class that supports |
| encoding output to a stream. \var{stream_writer(\var{file_obj})} |
| returns an object that supports the \method{write()} and |
| \method{writelines()} methods. These methods expect Unicode strings, |
| translating them to the given encoding on output. |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| For example, the following code writes a Unicode string into a file, |
| encoding it as UTF-8: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| import codecs |
| |
| unistr = u'\u0660\u2000ab ...' |
| |
| (UTF8_encode, UTF8_decode, |
| UTF8_streamreader, UTF8_streamwriter) = codecs.lookup('UTF-8') |
| |
| output = UTF8_streamwriter( open( '/tmp/output', 'wb') ) |
| output.write( unistr ) |
| output.close() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The following code would then read UTF-8 input from the file: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| input = UTF8_streamread( open( '/tmp/output', 'rb') ) |
| print repr(input.read()) |
| input.close() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Unicode-aware regular expressions are available through the |
| \module{re} module, which has a new underlying implementation called |
| SRE written by Fredrik Lundh of Secret Labs AB. |
| |
| A \code{-U} command line option was added which causes the Python |
| compiler to interpret all string literals as Unicode string literals. |
| This is intended to be used in testing and future-proofing your Python |
| code, since some future version of Python may drop support for 8-bit |
| strings and provide only Unicode strings. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Distutils: Making Modules Easy to Install} |
| |
| Before Python 2.0, installing modules was a tedious affair -- there |
| was no way to figure out automatically where Python is installed, or |
| what compiler options to use for extension modules. Software authors |
| had to go through an ardous ritual of editing Makefiles and |
| configuration files, which only really work on Unix and leave Windows |
| and MacOS unsupported. Software users faced wildly differing |
| installation instructions |
| |
| The SIG for distribution utilities, shepherded by Greg Ward, has |
| created the Distutils, a system to make package installation much |
| easier. They form the \module{distutils} package, a new part of |
| Python's standard library. In the best case, installing a Python |
| module from source will require the same steps: first you simply mean |
| unpack the tarball or zip archive, and the run ``\code{python setup.py |
| install}''. The platform will be automatically detected, the compiler |
| will be recognized, C extension modules will be compiled, and the |
| distribution installed into the proper directory. Optional |
| command-line arguments provide more control over the installation |
| process, the distutils package offers many places to override defaults |
| -- separating the build from the install, building or installing in |
| non-default directories, and more. |
| |
| In order to use the Distutils, you need to write a \file{setup.py} |
| script. For the simple case, when the software contains only .py |
| files, a minimal \file{setup.py} can be just a few lines long: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| from distutils.core import setup |
| setup (name = "foo", version = "1.0", |
| py_modules = ["module1", "module2"]) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The \file{setup.py} file isn't much more complicated if the software |
| consists of a few packages: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| from distutils.core import setup |
| setup (name = "foo", version = "1.0", |
| packages = ["package", "package.subpackage"]) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| A C extension can be the most complicated case; here's an example taken from |
| the PyXML package: |
| |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| from distutils.core import setup, Extension |
| |
| expat_extension = Extension('xml.parsers.pyexpat', |
| define_macros = [('XML_NS', None)], |
| include_dirs = [ 'extensions/expat/xmltok', |
| 'extensions/expat/xmlparse' ], |
| sources = [ 'extensions/pyexpat.c', |
| 'extensions/expat/xmltok/xmltok.c', |
| 'extensions/expat/xmltok/xmlrole.c', |
| ] |
| ) |
| setup (name = "PyXML", version = "0.5.4", |
| ext_modules =[ expat_extension ] ) |
| |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The Distutils can also take care of creating source and binary |
| distributions. The ``sdist'' command, run by ``\code{python setup.py |
| sdist}', builds a source distribution such as \file{foo-1.0.tar.gz}. |
| Adding new commands isn't difficult, and a ``bdist_rpm'' command has |
| already been contributed to create an RPM distribution for the |
| software. Commands to create Windows installer programs, Debian |
| packages, and Solaris .pkg files have been discussed and are in |
| various stages of development. |
| |
| All this is documented in a new manual, \textit{Distributing Python |
| Modules}, that joins the basic set of Python documentation. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{String Methods} |
| |
| Until now string-manipulation functionality was in the \module{string} |
| Python module, which was usually a front-end for the \module{strop} |
| module written in C. The addition of Unicode posed a difficulty for |
| the \module{strop} module, because the functions would all need to be |
| rewritten in order to accept either 8-bit or Unicode strings. For |
| functions such as \function{string.replace()}, which takes 3 string |
| arguments, that means eight possible permutations, and correspondingly |
| complicated code. |
| |
| Instead, Python 2.0 pushes the problem onto the string type, making |
| string manipulation functionality available through methods on both |
| 8-bit strings and Unicode strings. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> 'andrew'.capitalize() |
| 'Andrew' |
| >>> 'hostname'.replace('os', 'linux') |
| 'hlinuxtname' |
| >>> 'moshe'.find('sh') |
| 2 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| One thing that hasn't changed, April Fools' jokes notwithstanding, is |
| that Python strings are immutable. Thus, the string methods return new |
| strings, and do not modify the string on which they operate. |
| |
| The old \module{string} module is still around for backwards |
| compatibility, but it mostly acts as a front-end to the new string |
| methods. |
| |
| Two methods which have no parallel in pre-2.0 versions, although they |
| did exist in JPython for quite some time, are \method{startswith()} |
| and \method{endswith}. \code{s.startswith(t)} is equivalent to \code{s[:len(t)] |
| == t}, while \code{s.endswith(t)} is equivalent to \code{s[-len(t):] == t}. |
| |
| %One other method which deserves special mention is \method{join}. The |
| %\method{join} method of a string receives one parameter, a sequence of |
| %strings, and is equivalent to the \function{string.join} function from |
| %the old \module{string} module, with the arguments reversed. In other |
| %words, \code{s.join(seq)} is equivalent to the old |
| %\code{string.join(seq, s)}. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Porting to 2.0} |
| |
| New Python releases try hard to be compatible with previous releases, |
| and the record has been pretty good. However, some changes are |
| considered useful enough, often fixing initial design decisions that |
| turned to be actively mistaken, that breaking backward compatibility |
| can't always be avoided. This section lists the changes in Python 2.0 |
| that may cause old Python code to break. |
| |
| The change which will probably break the most code is tightening up |
| the arguments accepted by some methods. Some methods would take |
| multiple arguments and treat them as a tuple, particularly various |
| list methods such as \method{.append()} and \method{.insert()}. |
| In earlier versions of Python, if \code{L} is a list, \code{L.append( |
| 1,2 )} appends the tuple \code{(1,2)} to the list. In Python 2.0 this |
| causes a \exception{TypeError} exception to be raised, with the |
| message: 'append requires exactly 1 argument; 2 given'. The fix is to |
| simply add an extra set of parentheses to pass both values as a tuple: |
| \code{L.append( (1,2) )}. |
| |
| The earlier versions of these methods were more forgiving because they |
| used an old function in Python's C interface to parse their arguments; |
| 2.0 modernizes them to use \function{PyArg_ParseTuple}, the current |
| argument parsing function, which provides more helpful error messages |
| and treats multi-argument calls as errors. If you absolutely must use |
| 2.0 but can't fix your code, you can edit \file{Objects/listobject.c} |
| and define the preprocessor symbol \code{NO_STRICT_LIST_APPEND} to |
| preserve the old behaviour; this isn't recommended. |
| |
| Some of the functions in the \module{socket} module are still |
| forgiving in this way. For example, \function{socket.connect( |
| ('hostname', 25) )} is the correct form, passing a tuple representing |
| an IP address, but \function{socket.connect( 'hostname', 25 )} also |
| works. \function{socket.connect_ex()} and \function{socket.bind()} are |
| similarly easy-going. 2.0alpha1 tightened these functions up, but |
| because the documentation actually used the erroneous multiple |
| argument form, many people wrote code which would break with the |
| stricter checking. GvR backed out the changes in the face of public |
| reaction, so for the\module{socket} module, the documentation was |
| fixed and the multiple argument form is simply marked as deprecated; |
| it \emph{will} be tightened up again in a future Python version. |
| |
| Some work has been done to make integers and long integers a bit more |
| interchangeable. In 1.5.2, large-file support was added for Solaris, |
| to allow reading files larger than 2Gb; this made the \method{tell()} |
| method of file objects return a long integer instead of a regular |
| integer. Some code would subtract two file offsets and attempt to use |
| the result to multiply a sequence or slice a string, but this raised a |
| \exception{TypeError}. In 2.0, long integers can be used to multiply |
| or slice a sequence, and it'll behave as you'd intuitively expect it |
| to; \code{3L * 'abc'} produces 'abcabcabc', and \code{ |
| (0,1,2,3)[2L:4L]} produces (2,3). Long integers can also be used in |
| various new places where previously only integers were accepted, such |
| as in the \method{seek()} method of file objects. |
| |
| The subtlest long integer change of all is that the \function{str()} |
| of a long integer no longer has a trailing 'L' character, though |
| \function{repr()} still includes it. The 'L' annoyed many people who |
| wanted to print long integers that looked just like regular integers, |
| since they had to go out of their way to chop off the character. This |
| is no longer a problem in 2.0, but code which assumes the 'L' is |
| there, and does \code{str(longval)[:-1]} will now lose the final |
| digit. |
| |
| Taking the \function{repr()} of a float now uses a different |
| formatting precision than \function{str()}. \function{repr()} uses |
| \code{\%.17g} format string for C's \function{sprintf()}, while |
| \function{str()} uses \code{\%.12g} as before. The effect is that |
| \function{repr()} may occasionally show more decimal places than |
| \function{str()}, for numbers |
| For example, the number 8.1 can't be represented exactly in binary, so |
| \code{repr(8.1)} is \code{'8.0999999999999996'}, while str(8.1) is |
| \code{'8.1'}. |
| |
| The \code{-X} command-line option, which turned all standard |
| exceptions into strings instead of classes, has been removed; the |
| standard exceptions will now always be classes. The |
| \module{exceptions} module containing the standard exceptions was |
| translated from Python to a built-in C module, written by Barry Warsaw |
| and Fredrik Lundh. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Optional Collection of Cycles} |
| |
| The C implementation of Python uses reference counting to implement |
| garbage collection. Every Python object maintains a count of the |
| number of references pointing to itself, and adjusts the count as |
| references are created or destroyed. Once the reference count reaches |
| zero, the object is no longer accessible, since you need to have a |
| reference to an object to access it, and if the count is zero, no |
| references exist any longer. |
| |
| Reference counting has some pleasant properties: it's easy to |
| understand and implement, and the resulting implementation is |
| portable, fairly fast, and reacts well with other libraries that |
| implement their own memory handling schemes. The major problem with |
| reference counting is that it sometimes doesn't realise that objects |
| are no longer accessible, resulting in a memory leak. This happens |
| when there are cycles of references. |
| |
| Consider the simplest possible cycle, |
| a class instance which has a reference to itself: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| instance = SomeClass() |
| instance.myself = instance |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| After the above two lines of code have been executed, the reference |
| count of \code{instance} is 2; one reference is from the variable |
| named \samp{'instance'}, and the other is from the \samp{myself} |
| attribute of the instance. |
| |
| If the next line of code is \code{del instance}, what happens? The |
| reference count of \code{instance} is decreased by 1, so it has a |
| reference count of 1; the reference in the \samp{myself} attribute |
| still exists. Yet the instance is no longer accessible through Python |
| code, and it could be deleted. Several objects can participate in a |
| cycle if they have references to each other, causing all of the |
| objects to be leaked. |
| |
| An experimental step has been made toward fixing this problem. When |
| compiling Python, the \verb|--with-cycle-gc| option can be specified. |
| This causes a cycle detection algorithm to be periodically executed, |
| which looks for inaccessible cycles and deletes the objects involved. |
| A new \module{gc} module provides functions to perform a garbage |
| collection, obtain debugging statistics, and tuning the collector's parameters. |
| |
| Why isn't cycle detection enabled by default? Running the cycle detection |
| algorithm takes some time, and some tuning will be required to |
| minimize the overhead cost. It's not yet obvious how much performance |
| is lost, because benchmarking this is tricky and depends crucially |
| on how often the program creates and destroys objects. |
| |
| Several people tackled this problem and contributed to a solution. An |
| early implementation of the cycle detection approach was written by |
| Toby Kelsey. The current algorithm was suggested by Eric Tiedemann |
| during a visit to CNRI, and Guido van Rossum and Neil Schemenauer |
| wrote two different implementations, which were later integrated by |
| Neil. Lots of other people offered suggestions along the way; the |
| March 2000 archives of the python-dev mailing list contain most of the |
| relevant discussion, especially in the threads titled ``Reference |
| cycle collection for Python'' and ``Finalization again''. |
| |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Core Changes} |
| |
| Various minor changes have been made to Python's syntax and built-in |
| functions. None of the changes are very far-reaching, but they're |
| handy conveniences. |
| |
| A change to syntax makes it more convenient to call a given function |
| with a tuple of arguments and/or a dictionary of keyword arguments. |
| In Python 1.5 and earlier, you do this with the \function{apply()} |
| built-in function: \code{apply(f, \var{args}, \var{kw})} calls the |
| function \function{f()} with the argument tuple \var{args} and the |
| keyword arguments in the dictionary \var{kw}. Thanks to a patch from |
| Greg Ewing, 2.0 adds \code{f(*\var{args}, **\var{kw})} as a shorter |
| and clearer way to achieve the same effect. This syntax is |
| symmetrical with the syntax for defining functions: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def f(*args, **kw): |
| # args is a tuple of positional args, |
| # kw is a dictionary of keyword args |
| ... |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| A new format style is available when using the \code{\%} operator. |
| '\%r' will insert the \function{repr()} of its argument. This was |
| also added from symmetry considerations, this time for symmetry with |
| the existing '\%s' format style, which inserts the \function{str()} of |
| its argument. For example, \code{'\%r \%s' \% ('abc', 'abc')} returns a |
| string containing \verb|'abc' abc|. |
| |
| The \function{int()} and \function{long()} functions now accept an |
| optional ``base'' parameter when the first argument is a string. |
| \code{int('123', 10)} returns 123, while \code{int('123', 16)} returns |
| 291. \code{int(123, 16)} raises a \exception{TypeError} exception |
| with the message ``can't convert non-string with explicit base''. |
| |
| Previously there was no way to implement a class that overrode |
| Python's built-in \keyword{in} operator and implemented a custom |
| version. \code{\var{obj} in \var{seq}} returns true if \var{obj} is |
| present in the sequence \var{seq}; Python computes this by simply |
| trying every index of the sequence until either \var{obj} is found or |
| an \exception{IndexError} is encountered. Moshe Zadka contributed a |
| patch which adds a \method{__contains__} magic method for providing a |
| custom implementation for \keyword{in}. Additionally, new built-in |
| objects written in C can define what \keyword{in} means for them via a |
| new slot in the sequence protocol. |
| |
| Earlier versions of Python used a recursive algorithm for deleting |
| objects. Deeply nested data structures could cause the interpreter to |
| fill up the C stack and crash; Christian Tismer rewrote the deletion |
| logic to fix this problem. On a related note, comparing recursive |
| objects recursed infinitely and crashed; Jeremy Hylton rewrote the |
| code to no longer crash, producing a useful result instead. For |
| example, after this code: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| a = [] |
| b = [] |
| a.append(a) |
| b.append(b) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The comparison \code{a==b} returns true, because the two recursive |
| data structures are isomorphic. |
| \footnote{See the thread ``trashcan and PR\#7'' in the April 2000 archives of the python-dev mailing list for the discussion leading up to this implementation, and some useful relevant links. |
| %http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-April/004834.html |
| } |
| |
| Work has been done on porting Python to 64-bit Windows on the Itanium |
| processor, mostly by Trent Mick of ActiveState. (Confusingly, \code{sys.platform} is still \code{'win32'} on |
| Win64 because it seems that for ease of porting, MS Visual C++ treats code |
| as 32 bit. |
| ) PythonWin also supports Windows CE; see the Python CE page at |
| \url{http://starship.python.net/crew/mhammond/ce/} for more information. |
| |
| An attempt has been made to alleviate one of Python's warts, the |
| often-confusing \exception{NameError} exception when code refers to a |
| local variable before the variable has been assigned a value. For |
| example, the following code raises an exception on the \keyword{print} |
| statement in both 1.5.2 and 2.0; in 1.5.2 a \exception{NameError} |
| exception is raised, while 2.0 raises a new |
| \exception{UnboundLocalError} exception. |
| \exception{UnboundLocalError} is a subclass of \exception{NameError}, |
| so any existing code that expects \exception{NameError} to be raised |
| should still work. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def f(): |
| print "i=",i |
| i = i + 1 |
| f() |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| A new variable holding more detailed version information has been |
| added to the \module{sys} module. \code{sys.version_info} is a tuple |
| \code{(\var{major}, \var{minor}, \var{micro}, \var{level}, |
| \var{serial})} For example, in 2.0a2 \code{sys.version_info} is |
| \code{(1, 6, 0, 'alpha', 2)}. \var{level} is a string such as |
| \code{"alpha"}, \code{"beta"}, or \code{""} for a final release. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Extending/Embedding Changes} |
| |
| Some of the changes are under the covers, and will only be apparent to |
| people writing C extension modules, or embedding a Python interpreter |
| in a larger application. If you aren't dealing with Python's C API, |
| you can safely skip this section. |
| |
| The version number of the Python C API was incremented, so C |
| extensions compiled for 1.5.2 must be recompiled in order to work with |
| 2.0. On Windows, attempting to import a third party extension built |
| for Python 1.5.x usually results in an immediate crash; there's not |
| much we can do about this. (Here's Mark Hammond's explanation of the |
| reasons for the crash. The 1.5 module is linked against |
| \file{Python15.dll}. When \file{Python.exe} , linked against |
| \file{Python16.dll}, starts up, it initializes the Python data |
| structures in \file{Python16.dll}. When Python then imports the |
| module \file{foo.pyd} linked against \file{Python15.dll}, it |
| immediately tries to call the functions in that DLL. As Python has |
| not been initialized in that DLL, the program immediately crashes.) |
| |
| Users of Jim Fulton's ExtensionClass module will be pleased to find |
| out that hooks have been added so that ExtensionClasses are now |
| supported by \function{isinstance()} and \function{issubclass()}. |
| This means you no longer have to remember to write code such as |
| \code{if type(obj) == myExtensionClass}, but can use the more natural |
| \code{if isinstance(obj, myExtensionClass)}. |
| |
| The \file{Python/importdl.c} file, which was a mass of \#ifdefs to |
| support dynamic loading on many different platforms, was cleaned up |
| and reorganised by Greg Stein. \file{importdl.c} is now quite small, |
| and platform-specific code has been moved into a bunch of |
| \file{Python/dynload_*.c} files. |
| |
| Vladimir Marangozov's long-awaited malloc restructuring was completed, |
| to make it easy to have the Python interpreter use a custom allocator |
| instead of C's standard \function{malloc()}. For documentation, read |
| the comments in \file{Include/mymalloc.h} and |
| \file{Include/objimpl.h}. For the lengthy discussions during which |
| the interface was hammered out, see the Web archives of the 'patches' |
| and 'python-dev' lists at python.org. |
| |
| Recent versions of the GUSI development environment for MacOS support |
| POSIX threads. Therefore, Python's POSIX threading support now works |
| on the Macintosh. Threading support using the user-space GNU \texttt{pth} |
| library was also contributed. |
| |
| Threading support on Windows was enhanced, too. Windows supports |
| thread locks that use kernel objects only in case of contention; in |
| the common case when there's no contention, they use simpler functions |
| which are an order of magnitude faster. A threaded version of Python |
| 1.5.2 on NT is twice as slow as an unthreaded version; with the 2.0 |
| changes, the difference is only 10\%. These improvements were |
| contributed by Yakov Markovitch. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Module changes} |
| |
| Lots of improvements and bugfixes were made to Python's extensive |
| standard library; some of the affected modules include |
| \module{readline}, \module{ConfigParser}, \module{cgi}, |
| \module{calendar}, \module{posix}, \module{readline}, \module{xmllib}, |
| \module{aifc}, \module{chunk, wave}, \module{random}, \module{shelve}, |
| and \module{nntplib}. Consult the CVS logs for the exact |
| patch-by-patch details. |
| |
| Brian Gallew contributed OpenSSL support for the \module{socket} |
| module. OpenSSL is an implementation of the Secure Socket Layer, |
| which encrypts the data being sent over a socket. When compiling |
| Python, you can edit \file{Modules/Setup} to include SSL support, |
| which adds an additional function to the \module{socket} module: |
| \function{socket.ssl(\var{socket}, \var{keyfile}, \var{certfile})}, |
| which takes a socket object and returns an SSL socket. The |
| \module{httplib} and \module{urllib} modules were also changed to |
| support ``https://'' URLs, though no one has implemented FTP or SMTP |
| over SSL. |
| |
| The \module{httplib} module has been rewritten by Greg Stein to |
| support HTTP/1.1. Backward compatibility with the 1.5 version of |
| \module{httplib} is provided, though using HTTP/1.1 features such as |
| pipelining will require rewriting code to use a different set of |
| interfaces. |
| |
| The \module{Tkinter} module now supports Tcl/Tk version 8.1, 8.2, or |
| 8.3, and support for the older 7.x versions has been dropped. The |
| Tkinter module also supports displaying Unicode strings in Tk |
| widgets. |
| |
| The \module{curses} module has been greatly extended, starting from |
| Oliver Andrich's enhanced version, to provide many additional |
| functions from ncurses and SYSV curses, such as colour, alternative |
| character set support, pads, and mouse support. This means the module |
| is no longer compatible with operating systems that only have BSD |
| curses, but there don't seem to be any currently maintained OSes that |
| fall into this category. |
| |
| As mentioned in the earlier discussion of 2.0's Unicode support, the |
| underlying implementation of the regular expressions provided by the |
| \module{re} module has been changed. SRE, a new regular expression |
| engine written by Fredrik Lundh and partially funded by Hewlett |
| Packard, supports matching against both 8-bit strings and Unicode |
| strings. |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{New modules} |
| |
| A number of new modules were added. We'll simply list them with brief |
| descriptions; consult the 2.0 documentation for the details of a |
| particular module. |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| |
| \item{\module{atexit}}: |
| For registering functions to be called before the Python interpreter exits. |
| Code that currently sets |
| \code{sys.exitfunc} directly should be changed to |
| use the \module{atexit} module instead, importing \module{atexit} |
| and calling \function{atexit.register()} with |
| the function to be called on exit. |
| (Contributed by Skip Montanaro.) |
| |
| \item{\module{codecs}, \module{encodings}, \module{unicodedata}:} Added as part of the new Unicode support. |
| |
| \item{\module{filecmp}:} Supersedes the old \module{cmp} and |
| \module{dircmp} modules, which have now become deprecated. |
| (Contributed by Gordon MacMillan and Moshe Zadka.) |
| |
| \item{\module{linuxaudio}:} Support for the \file{/dev/audio} device on Linux, |
| a twin to the existing \module{sunaudiodev} module. |
| (Contributed by Peter Bosch.) |
| |
| \item{\module{mmap}:} An interface to memory-mapped files on both |
| Windows and Unix. A file's contents can be mapped directly into |
| memory, at which point it behaves like a mutable string, so its |
| contents can be read and modified. They can even be passed to |
| functions that expect ordinary strings, such as the \module{re} |
| module. (Contributed by Sam Rushing, with some extensions by |
| A.M. Kuchling.) |
| |
| \item{\module{PyExpat}:} An interface to the Expat XML parser. |
| (Contributed by Paul Prescod.) |
| |
| \item{\module{robotparser}:} Parse a \file{robots.txt} file, which is |
| used for writing Web spiders that politely avoid certain areas of a |
| Web site. The parser accepts the contents of a \file{robots.txt} file |
| builds a set of rules from it, and can then answer questions about |
| the fetchability of a given URL. (Contributed by Skip Montanaro.) |
| |
| \item{\module{tabnanny}:} A module/script to |
| checks Python source code for ambiguous indentation. |
| (Contributed by Tim Peters.) |
| |
| \item{\module{UserString}:} A base class useful for deriving objects that behave like strings. |
| |
| \item{\module{winreg} and \module{_winreg}:} An interface to the |
| Windows registry. \module{winreg} has been part of PythonWin since |
| 1995, but now has been added to the core distribution, and enhanced to |
| support Unicode. \module{_winreg} is a low-level wrapper of the |
| Windows registry functions, contributed by Bill Tutt and Mark Hammond, |
| while \module{winreg} is a higher-level, more object-oriented API on top of |
| \module{_winreg}, designed by Thomas Heller and implemented by Paul Prescod. |
| |
| \item{\module{zipfile}:} A module for reading and writing ZIP-format |
| archives. These are archives produced by \program{PKZIP} on |
| DOS/Windows or \program{zip} on Unix, not to be confused with |
| \program{gzip}-format files (which are supported by the \module{gzip} |
| module) |
| (Contributed by James C. Ahlstrom.) |
| |
| \item{\module{imputil}:} A module that provides a simpler way for |
| writing customised import hooks, in comparison to the existing |
| \module{ihooks} module. (Implemented by Greg Stein, with much |
| discussion on python-dev along the way.) |
| |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{IDLE Improvements} |
| |
| IDLE is the official Python cross-platform IDE, written using Tkinter. |
| Python 2.0 includes IDLE 0.6, which adds a number of new features and |
| improvements. A partial list: |
| |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item UI improvements and optimizations, |
| especially in the area of syntax highlighting and auto-indentation. |
| |
| \item The class browser now shows more information, such as the top |
| level functions in a module. |
| |
| \item Tab width is now a user settable option. When opening an existing Python |
| file, IDLE automatically detects the indentation conventions, and adapts. |
| |
| \item There is now support for calling browsers on various platforms, |
| used to open the Python documentation in a browser. |
| |
| \item IDLE now has a command line, which is largely similar to |
| the vanilla Python interpreter. |
| |
| \item Call tips were added in many places. |
| |
| \item IDLE can now be installed as a package. |
| |
| \item In the editor window, there is now a line/column bar at the bottom. |
| |
| \item Three new keystroke commands: Check module (Alt-F5), Import |
| module (F5) and Run script (Ctrl-F5). |
| |
| \end{itemize} |
| |
| % ====================================================================== |
| \section{Deleted and Deprecated Modules} |
| |
| A few modules have been dropped because they're obsolete, or because |
| there are now better ways to do the same thing. The \module{stdwin} |
| module is gone; it was for a platform-independent windowing toolkit |
| that's no longer developed. |
| |
| A number of modules have been moved to the |
| \file{lib-old} subdirectory: |
| \module{cmp}, \module{cmpcache}, \module{dircmp}, \module{dump}, |
| \module{find}, \module{grep}, \module{packmail}, |
| \module{poly}, \module{util}, \module{whatsound}, \module{zmod}. |
| If you have code which relies on a module that's been moved to |
| \file{lib-old}, you can simply add that directory to \code{sys.path} |
| to get them back, but you're encouraged to update any code that uses |
| these modules. |
| |
| \section{Acknowledgements} |
| |
| The author would like to thank the following people for offering |
| suggestions on drafts of this article: Fredrik Lundh, Skip |
| Montanaro, Vladimir Marangozov, Guido van Rossum, Neil Schemenauer. |
| |
| \end{document} |
| |