#4069: aSet.remove(otherSet) would always report the empty frozenset([]) as the missing key.
Now it correctly refers to the initial otherset.
Reviewed by Raymond. Will backport to 2.6.
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_set.py b/Lib/test/test_set.py
index 1b01954..499406f 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_set.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_set.py
@@ -382,6 +382,17 @@
else:
self.fail()
+ def test_remove_keyerror_set(self):
+ key = self.thetype([3, 4])
+ try:
+ self.s.remove(key)
+ except KeyError as e:
+ self.assert_(e.args[0] is key,
+ "KeyError should be {0}, not {1}".format(key,
+ e.args[0]))
+ else:
+ self.fail()
+
def test_discard(self):
self.s.discard('a')
self.assert_('a' not in self.s)
diff --git a/Misc/NEWS b/Misc/NEWS
index c32bd68..50494f4 100644
--- a/Misc/NEWS
+++ b/Misc/NEWS
@@ -12,6 +12,11 @@
Core and Builtins
-----------------
+- Issue #4069: When set.remove(element) is used with a set element, the element
+ is temporarily replaced with an equivalent frozenset. But the eventual
+ KeyError would always report the empty frozenset([]) as the missing key. Now
+ it correctly refers to the initial element.
+
Library
-------
diff --git a/Objects/setobject.c b/Objects/setobject.c
index 075f8e7..ea3970e 100644
--- a/Objects/setobject.c
+++ b/Objects/setobject.c
@@ -1874,7 +1874,7 @@
static PyObject *
set_remove(PySetObject *so, PyObject *key)
{
- PyObject *tmpkey, *result;
+ PyObject *tmpkey;
int rv;
rv = set_discard_key(so, key);
@@ -1886,11 +1886,14 @@
if (tmpkey == NULL)
return NULL;
set_swap_bodies((PySetObject *)tmpkey, (PySetObject *)key);
- result = set_remove(so, tmpkey);
+ rv = set_discard_key(so, tmpkey);
set_swap_bodies((PySetObject *)tmpkey, (PySetObject *)key);
Py_DECREF(tmpkey);
- return result;
- } else if (rv == DISCARD_NOTFOUND) {
+ if (rv == -1)
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ if (rv == DISCARD_NOTFOUND) {
set_key_error(key);
return NULL;
}