blob: 7078ea04b81721f3b9cb2298788fd0048efc5d62 [file] [log] [blame]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001****************************
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +00002 What's New In Python 3.0
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003****************************
4
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +00005.. XXX Add trademark info for Apple, Microsoft.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00006
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +00007.. XXX Remove duplicates; just put info in the most relevant section.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +00008
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +00009:Author: Guido van Rossum
10:Release: |release|
11:Date: |today|
12
13.. $Id$
14 Rules for maintenance:
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +000015
16 * Anyone can add text to this document. Do not spend very much time
17 on the wording of your changes, because your text will probably
18 get rewritten to some degree.
19
20 * The maintainer will go through Misc/NEWS periodically and add
21 changes; it's therefore more important to add your changes to
22 Misc/NEWS than to this file.
23
24 * This is not a complete list of every single change; completeness
25 is the purpose of Misc/NEWS. Some changes I consider too small
26 or esoteric to include. If such a change is added to the text,
27 I'll just remove it. (This is another reason you shouldn't spend
28 too much time on writing your addition.)
29
30 * If you want to draw your new text to the attention of the
31 maintainer, add 'XXX' to the beginning of the paragraph or
32 section.
33
34 * It's OK to just add a fragmentary note about a change. For
35 example: "XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the
36 socket module." The maintainer will research the change and
37 write the necessary text.
38
39 * You can comment out your additions if you like, but it's not
40 necessary (especially when a final release is some months away).
41
42 * Credit the author of a patch or bugfix. Just the name is
43 sufficient; the e-mail address isn't necessary.
44
45 * It's helpful to add the bug/patch number as a comment:
46
47 % Patch 12345
48 XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the socket
49 module.
50 (Contributed by P.Y. Developer.)
51
52 This saves the maintainer the effort of going through the SVN log
53 when researching a change.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000054
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +000055This article explains the new features in Python 3.0, compared to 2.6.
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +000056Python 3.0, also known as "Python 3000" or "Py3K", is the first ever
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +000057*intentionally incompatible* release. There are more changes than in
58a typical release, and more that are important for all Python users.
59Nevertheless, after digesting the changes, you'll find that Python
60really hasn't changed all that much -- by and large, we're merely
61fixing well-known annoyances and warts.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +000062
63This article doesn't attempt to provide a complete specification of
64the new features, but instead provides a convenient overview. For
65full details, you should refer to the documentation for Python 3.0. If
66you want to understand the complete implementation and design
67rationale, refer to the PEP for a particular new feature.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000068
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +000069.. Compare with previous release in 2 - 3 sentences here.
70.. add hyperlink when the documentation becomes available online.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000071
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +000072.. ======================================================================
73.. Large, PEP-level features and changes should be described here.
74.. Should there be a new section here for 3k migration?
75.. Or perhaps a more general section describing module changes/deprecation?
76.. sets module deprecated
77.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000078
79
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +000080Common Stumbling Blocks
81=======================
82
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +000083This section lists those few changes that are most likely to trip you
84up if you're used to Python 2.5.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +000085
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +000086Print Is A Function
87-------------------
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +000088
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +000089The :keyword:`print` statement has been replaced with a :func:`print`
90function, with keyword arguments to replace most of the special syntax
91of the old :keyword:`print` statement (:pep:`3105`). Examples::
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +000092
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +000093 Old: print "The answer is", 2*2
94 New: print("The answer is", 2*2)
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +000095
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +000096 Old: print x, # Trailing comma suppresses newline
97 New: print(x, end=" ") # Appends a space instead of a newline
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +000098
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +000099 Old: print # Prints a newline
100 New: print() # You must call the function!
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000101
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000102 Old: print >>sys.stderr, "fatal error"
103 New: print("fatal error", file=sys.stderr)
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000104
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000105 Old: print (x, y) # prints repr((x, y))
106 New: print((x, y)) # Not the same as print(x, y)!
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000107
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000108You can also customize the separator between items, e.g.::
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000109
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000110 print("There are <", 2**32, "> possibilities!", sep="")
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000111
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000112which produces::
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000113
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000114 There are <4294967296> possibilities!
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000115
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000116Note:
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000117
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000118* The :func:`print` function doesn't support the "softspace" feature of
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000119 the old :keyword:`print` statement. For example, in Python 2.x,
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000120 ``print "A\n", "B"`` would write ``"A\nB\n"``; but in Python 3.0,
121 ``print("A\n", "B")`` writes ``"A\n B\n"``.
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000122
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000123* Initially, you'll be finding yourself typing the old ``print x``
124 a lot in interactive mode. Time to retrain your fingers to type
125 ``print(x)`` instead!
Guido van Rossumdff1c312007-09-06 14:46:41 +0000126
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000127* When using the ``2to3`` source-to-source conversion tool, all
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000128 :keyword:`print` statements are automatically converted to
129 :func:`print` function calls, so this is mostly a non-issue for
130 larger projects.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000131
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000132Text Strings Vs. Bytes
133----------------------
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000134
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000135Everything you thought you knew about binary data and Unicode has
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000136changed. There's a longer section below; here's a summary of the
137changes:
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000138
139* Python 3.0 uses *strings* and *bytes* instead of *Unicode strings*
140 and *8-bit strings*. The difference is that any attempt to mix
141 strings and bytes in Python 3.0 raises a TypeError exception,
142 whereas if you were to mix Unicode and 8-bit strings in Python 2.x,
143 you would only get an exception if the 8-bit string contained
144 non-ASCII values. As a consequence, pretty much all code that
145 uses Unicode, encodings or binary data most likely has to change.
146 The change is for the better, as in the 2.x world there were
147 numerous bugs having to do with mixing encoded and unencoded text.
148
149* Files opened as text files (still the default mode for :func:`open`)
150 always use an encoding to map between strings (in memory) and bytes
151 (on disk). Binary files (opened with a ``b`` in the mode argument)
152 always use bytes in memory. This means that if a file is opened
153 using an incorrect mode or encoding, I/O will likely fail. There is
154 a platform-dependent default encoding, which on Unixy platforms can
155 be set with the ``LANG`` environment variable (and sometimes also
156 with some other platform-specific locale-related environment
157 variables). In many cases, but not all, the system default is
Walter Dörwalda4438562008-12-02 11:55:30 +0000158 UTF-8; you should never count on this default. Any application
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000159 reading or writing more than pure ASCII text should probably have a
160 way to override the encoding.
161
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000162* The builtin :class:`basestring` abstract type was removed. Use
163 :class:`str` instead. The :class:`str` and :class:`bytes` types
164 don't have functionality enough in common to warrant a shared base
165 class.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000166
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000167* See also the :ref:`unicode-howto`, which was updated for Python 3.0.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000168
Gregory P. Smithf3655c42008-12-02 23:52:53 +0000169Views And Iterators Instead Of Lists
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000170-------------------------------------
171
172Some well-known APIs no longer return lists:
173
174* :class:`dict` methods :meth:`dict.keys`, :meth:`dict.items` and
175 :meth:`dict.values` return "views" instead of lists. For example,
176 this no longer works: ``k = d.keys(); k.sort()``. Use ``k =
177 sorted(d)`` instead.
178
179* Also, the :meth:`dict.iterkeys`, :meth:`dict.iteritems` and
180 :meth:`dict.itervalues` methods are no longer supported.
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +0000181
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000182* :func:`map` and :func:`filter` return iterators. A quick fix is e.g.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000183 ``list(map(...))``, but a better fix is often to use a list
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000184 comprehension (especially when the original code uses :keyword:`lambda`).
185 Particularly tricky is :func:`map` invoked for the side effects of the
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000186 function; the correct transformation is to use a for-loop.
187
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000188* :func:`range` now behaves like :func:`xrange` used to behave.
189 The latter no longer exists.
190
191* :func:`zip` now returns an iterator.
192
193* XXX More below?
194
195Ordering Comparisons
196--------------------
197
198Python 3.0 has simplified the rules for ordering comparisons:
199
200* The ordering comparison operators (``<``, ``<=``, ``>=``, ``>``)
201 raise a TypeError exception when the operands don't have a
202 meaningful natural ordering. Thus, expressions like ``1 < ''``, ``0
203 > None`` or ``len <= len`` are no longer valid. A corollary is that
204 sorting a heterogeneous list no longer makes sense -- all the
205 elements must be comparable to each other. Note that this does not
206 apply to the ``==`` and ``!=`` operators: objects of different
207 uncomparable types always compare unequal to each other, and an
208 object always compares equal to itself (i.e., ``x is y`` implies ``x
209 = y``; this is true even for ``NaN``).
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000210
Kurt B. Kaiser2bc6b5e2008-02-13 18:03:11 +0000211* :meth:`builtin.sorted` and :meth:`list.sort` no longer accept the *cmp*
Kurt B. Kaiser9d0d6162008-02-14 02:47:50 +0000212 argument providing a comparison function. Use the *key* argument
Kurt B. Kaiser2bc6b5e2008-02-13 18:03:11 +0000213 instead. N.B. the *key* and *reverse* arguments are now "keyword-only".
Kurt B. Kaisera1401012008-02-13 16:09:27 +0000214
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000215* The :func:`cmp` function is gone, and the :meth:`__cmp__` special
216 method is no longer supported. Use :meth:`__lt__` for sorting,
217 :meth:`__eq__` with :meth:`__hash__`, and other rich comparisons as
218 needed. if you really need the :func:`cmp` functionality, the
219 expression ``(a > b) - (a < b)`` is equivalent to ``cmp(a, b)``.
220
221* XXX More below?
222
223Integers
224--------
225
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000226* :pep:`0237`: :class:`long` renamed to :class:`int`. That is, there
227 is only one built-in integral type, named :class:`int`; but it
228 behaves mostly like the old :class:`long` type.
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +0000229
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000230* The :func:`repr` of a long integer doesn't include the trailing ``L``
Georg Brandlcc595bd2007-12-09 09:04:01 +0000231 anymore, so code that unconditionally strips that character will
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000232 chop off the last digit instead. (Use :func:`str` instead.)
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000233
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000234* The :data:`sys.maxint` constant was removed, since there is no
235 longer a limit to the value of ints. However, :data:`sys.maxsize`
236 can be used as an integer larger than any practical list or string
237 index. It conforms to the implementation's "natural" integer size
238 and is typically the same as :data:`sys.maxint` in previous releases
239 on the same platform (assuming the same build options).
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000240
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000241* ``1/2`` returns a float. Use ``1//2`` to get the truncating behavior.
242 (The latter syntax has existed for years, at least since Python 2.2.)
243 See :pep:`0238`.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000244
245
246Overview Of Syntactic Changes
247=============================
248
249This section gives a brief overview of every *syntactic* change.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000250
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000251Additions
252---------
253
254* Function argument and return value annotations (see below). XXX
255
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000256* :pep:`3102`: Keyword-only arguments. Named parameters occurring
257 after ``*args`` in the parameter list *must* be specified using
258 keyword syntax in the call. You can also use a bare ``*`` in the
259 parameter list to indicate that you don't accept a variable-length
260 argument list, but you do have keyword-only arguments.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000261
262* Keyword arguments are allowed after the list of base classes in a
263 class definition. This is used by the new convention for specifying
264 a metaclass, but can be used for other purposes as well, as long as
265 the metaclass supports it.
266
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000267* :pep:`3104`: :keyword:`nonlocal` statement. Using ``nonlocal x``
268 you can now assign directly to a variable in an outer (but
269 non-global) scope. :keyword:`nonlocal` is a new reserved word.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000270
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000271* :pep:`3132`: Extended Iterable Unpacking. You can now write things
272 like ``a, b, *rest = some_sequence``. And even ``*rest, a =
273 stuff``. The ``rest`` object is always a (possibly empty) list; the
274 right-hand side may be any iterable. Example::
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000275
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000276 (a, *rest, b) = range(5)
277
278 This sets *a* to ``0``, *b* to ``4``, and \*rest to ``[1, 2, 3]``.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000279
280* Dictionary comprehensions: ``{k: v for k, v in stuff}`` means the
281 same thing as ``dict(stuff)`` but is more flexible.
282
283* Set literals, e.g. ``{1, 2}``. Note that ``{}`` is an empty
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000284 dictionary; use ``set()`` for an empty set. Set comprehensions are
285 also supported; ``{x for x in stuff}`` means the same thing as
286 ``set(stuff)`` but is more flexible.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000287
288* New octal literals, e.g. ``0o720`` (already in 2.6). The old octal
Walter Dörwaldeab34c92008-12-02 11:58:09 +0000289 literals (``0720``) are gone.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000290
291* New binary literals, e.g. ``0b1010`` (already in 2.6).
292
293* Bytes literals are introduced with a leading ``b`` or ``B``.
294
295Changes
296-------
297
298* New :keyword:`raise` statement syntax: ``raise [expr [from expr]]``.
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000299 Also note that string exceptions are no longer legal (:pep:`0352`).
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000300
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000301* :keyword:`as` and :keyword:`with` are now reserved words. (Since
302 2.6, actually.)
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000303
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000304* :keyword:`True`, :keyword:`False`, and :keyword:`None` are reserved
305 words. (2.6 partially enforced the restrictions on :keyword:`None`
306 already.)
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000307
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000308* Change from :keyword:`except` *exc*, *var* to
309 :keyword:`except` *exc* :keyword:`as` *var*. See :pep:`3110`.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000310
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000311* List comprehensions no longer support the syntactic form
312 ``[... for var in item1, item2, ...]``. Use
313 ``[... for var in (item1, item2, ...)]`` instead.
314 Also note that list comprehensions have different semantics: they
315 are closer to syntactic sugar for a generator expression inside a
316 :func:`list` constructor, and in particular the loop control
317 variables are no longer leaked into the surrounding scope.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000318
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000319* The *ellipsis* (``...``) can be used as an atomic expression
320 anywhere. (Previously it was only allowed in slices.) Also, it
321 *must* now be spelled as ``...``. (Previously it could also be
322 spelled as ``. . .``, by a mere accident of the grammar.)
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000323
324Removals
325--------
326
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000327* :pep:`3113`: Tuple parameter unpacking removed. You can no longer
328 write ``def foo(a, (b, c)): ...``.
329 Use ``def foo(a, b_c): b, c = b_c`` instead.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000330
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000331* Removed backticks (use :func:`repr` instead).
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000332
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000333* Removed ``<>`` (use ``!=`` instead).
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000334
335* Removed keyword: :func:`exec` is no longer a keyword; it remains as
336 a function. (Fortunately the function syntax was also accepted in
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000337 2.x.) Also note that :func:`exec` no longer takes a stream argument;
338 instead of ``exec(f)`` you can use ``exec(f.read())``.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000339
340* Integer literals no longer support a trailing ``l`` or ``L``.
341
342* String literals no longer support a leading ``u`` or ``U``.
343
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000344* The :keyword:`from` *module* :keyword:`import` ``*`` syntax is only
345 allowed at the module level, no longer inside functions.
346
347* The only acceptable syntax for relative imports is :keyword:`from`
348 ``.``[*module*] :keyword:`import` *name*; :keyword:`import` forms
349 not starting with ``.`` are always interpreted as absolute imports.
350 (:pep:`0328`)
351
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000352
353
354Changes Already Present In Python 2.6
355=====================================
356
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000357Since many users presumably make the jump straight from Python 2.5 to
358Python 3.0, this section reminds the reader of new features that were
359originally designed for Python 3.0 but that were back-ported to Python
3602.6. The corresponding sections in :ref:`whats-new-in-2.6` should be
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000361consulted for longer descriptions.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000362
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000363* :ref:`pep-0343`. The :keyword:`with` statement is now a standard
364 feature and no longer needs to be imported from the ``__future__``.
365 Also check out :ref:`new-26-context-managers` and
366 :ref:`new-module-contextlib`.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000367
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000368* :ref:`pep-0366`. This enhances the usefulness of the :option:`-m`
369 option when the referenced module lives in a package.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000370
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000371* :ref:`pep-0370`.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000372
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000373* :ref:`pep-0371`.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000374
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000375* :ref:`pep-3101`. Note: the 2.6 description mentions the
376 :meth:`format` method for both 8-bit and Unicode strings. In 3.0,
377 only the :class:`str` type (text strings with Unicode support)
378 supports this method; the :class:`bytes` type does not. The plan is
379 to eventually make this the only API for string formatting, and to
380 start deprecating the ``%`` operator in Python 3.1.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000381
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000382* :ref:`pep-3105`. This is now a standard feature and no longer needs
383 to be imported from :mod:`__future__`.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000384
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000385* :ref:`pep-3110`. The :keyword:`except` *exc* :keyword:`as` *var*
386 syntax is now standard and :keyword:`except` *exc*, *var* is no
387 longer supported. (Of course, the :keyword:`as` *var* part is still
388 optional.)
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000389
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000390* :ref:`pep-3112`. The ``b"..."`` string literal notation (and its
391 variants like ``b'...'``, ``b"""..."""``, and ``br"..."``) now
392 produces a literal of type :class:`bytes`. More about
393 :class:`bytes` below.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000394
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000395* :ref:`pep-3116`. The :mod:`io` module is now the standard way of
396 doing file I/O, and the initial values of :data:`sys.stdin`,
397 :data:`sys.stdout` and :data:`sys.stderr` are now instances of
398 :class:`io.TextIOBase`. The builtin :func:`open` function is now an
399 alias for :func:`io.open` and has additional keyword arguments
400 *encoding*, *errors*, *newline* and *closefd*. Also note that an
401 invalid *mode* argument now raises :exc:`ValueError`, not
402 :exc:`IOError`.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000403
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000404* :ref:`pep-3118`. The old builtin :func:`buffer` is now really gone;
405 the new builtin :func:`memoryview` provides (mostly) similar
406 functionality.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000407
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000408* :ref:`pep-3119`. The :mod:`abc` module and the ABCs defined in the
409 :mod:`collections` module plays a slightly more prominent role in
410 the language now, and builtin collection types like :class:`dict`
411 and :class:`list` conform to the :class:`collections.MutableMapping`
412 and :class:`collections.MutableSequence` ABC, respectively.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000413
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000414* :ref:`pep-3127`. As mentioned above, the new octal literal
415 notation is the only one supported, and binary literals have been
416 added.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000417
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000418* :ref:`pep-3129`. This speaks for itself.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000419
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000420* :ref:`pep-3141`. The :mod:`numbers` module is another new use of
421 ABCs, defining Python's "numeric tower". Also note the new
422 :mod:`fractions` module.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000423
424
425Library Changes
426===============
427
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000428Due to time constraints, this document does not exhaustively cover the
429very extensive changes to the standard library. :pep:`3108` is the
430reference for the major changes to the library. Here's a capsule
431review:
Guido van Rossum56076da2008-12-02 22:58:36 +0000432
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000433* Many old modules were removed. Some, like :mod:`gopherlib` (no
434 longer used) and :mod:`md5` (replaced by :mod:`hashlib`), were
435 already deprecated by :pep:`0004`. Others were removed as a result
436 of the removal of support for various platforms such as Irix, BeOS
437 and Mac OS 9 (see :pep:`0011`). Some modules were also selected for
438 removal in Python 3.0 due to lack of use or because a better
439 replacement exists. See :pep:`3108` for an exhaustive list.
Guido van Rossum5b78dd92008-12-02 17:31:14 +0000440
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000441* The :mod:`bsddb3` package was removed because its presence in the
442 core standard library has proved over time to be a particular burden
443 for the core developers due to testing instability and Berlekey DB's
444 release schedule. However, the package is alive and well,
445 externally maintained at http://www.jcea.es/programacion/pybsddb.htm.
446
447* Some modules were renamed because their old name flaunted
448 :pep:`0008`, or for various other reasons:
449
450 ======================= =======================
451 Old Name New Name
452 ======================= =======================
453 _winreg winreg
454 ConfigParser configparser
455 copy_reg copyreg
456 Queue queue
457 SocketServer socketserver
458 markupbase _markupbase
459 repr reprlib
460 test.test_support test.support
461 ======================= =======================
462
463* A common pattern in Python 2.x is to have one version of a module
464 implemented in pure Python, with an optional accelerated version
465 implemented as a C extension; for example, :mod:`pickle` and
466 :mod:`cPickle`. This places the burden of importing the accelerated
467 version and falling back on the pure Python version on each user of
468 these modules. In Python 3.0, the accelerated versions are
469 considered implementation details of the pure Python versions.
470 Users should always import the standard version, which attempts to
471 import the accelerated version and falls back to the pure Python
472 version. The :mod:`pickle` module received this treatment. The
473 :mod:`profile` module is on the list for 3.1. The :mod:`StringIO`
474 module has been turned into a class in the :mod:`io` module.
475
476* Some related modules have been grouped into packages, and usually
477 the submodule names have been simplified. The resulting new
478 packages are:
479
480 * :mod:`dbm` (:mod:`anydbm`, :mod:`dbhash`, :mod:`dbm`,
481 :mod:`dumbdbm`, :mod:`gdbm`, :mod:`whichdb`).
482
483 * :mod:`html` (:mod:`HTMLParser`, :mod:`htmlentitydefs`).
484
485 * :mod:`http` (:mod:`httplib`, :mod:`BaseHTTPServer`,
486 :mod:`CGIHTTPServer`, :mod:`SimpleHTTPServer`, :mod:`Cookie`,
487 :mod:`cookielib`).
488
489 * :mod:`tkinter` (all :mod:`Tkinter`-related modules except
490 :mod:`turtle`). The target audience of :mod:`turtle` doesn't
491 really care about :mod:`tkinter`. Also note that as of Python
492 2.6, the functionality of :mod:`turtle` has been greatly enhanced.
493
494 * :mod:`urllib` (:mod:`urllib`, :mod:`urllib`2, :mod:`urlparse`,
495 :mod:`robotparse`).
496
497 * :mod:`xmlrpc` (:mod:`xmlrpclib`, :mod:`DocXMLRPCServer`,
498 :mod:`SimpleXMLRPCServer`).
499
500Some other library changes (not covered by :pep:`3108`):
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000501
502* Killed :mod:`sets`. Use the builtin :func:`set` function.
503
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000504* Cleanup of the :mod:`sys` module: removed :func:`sys.exitfunc`,
505 :func:`sys.exc_clear`, :data:`sys.exc_type`, :data:`sys.exc_value`,
506 :data:`sys.exc_traceback`. (Note that :data:`sys.last_type`
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000507 etc. remain.)
508
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000509* Cleanup of the :class:`array.array` type: the :meth:`read` and
510 :meth:`write` methods are gone; use :meth:`fromfile` and
511 :meth:`tofile` instead.
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000512
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000513* Cleanup of the :mod:`operator` module: removed
514 :func:`sequenceIncludes` and :func:`isCallable`.
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000515
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000516* Cleanup of the :mod:`thread` module: :func:`acquire_lock` and
517 :func:`release_lock` are gone; use :func:`acquire` and
518 :func:`release` instead.
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000519
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000520* Cleanup of the :mod:`random` module: removed the :func:`jumpahead` API.
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000521
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000522
523Strings And Bytes
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000524=================
525
Guido van Rossumc46ee542008-12-02 23:46:46 +0000526This section discusses the many changes in string XXX
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000527
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000528* There is only one string type; its name is :class:`str` but its behavior and
529 implementation are like :class:`unicode` in 2.x.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000530
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000531* The :class:`basestring` superclass has been removed. The ``2to3`` tool
Raymond Hettinger6a883842008-07-22 19:27:12 +0000532 replaces every occurrence of :class:`basestring` with :class:`str`.
Christian Heimesf534f7b2008-01-25 11:02:28 +0000533
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000534* :pep:`3137`: There is a new type, :class:`bytes`, to represent
535 binary data (and encoded text, which is treated as binary data until
536 you decide to decode it). The :class:`str` and :class:`bytes` types
537 cannot be mixed; you must always explicitly convert between them,
538 using the :meth:`str.encode` (str -> bytes) or :meth:`bytes.decode`
539 (bytes -> str) methods.
540
541.. XXX add bytearray
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000542
Benjamin Petersona2f837f2008-04-28 21:05:10 +0000543* All backslashes in raw strings are interpreted literally. This means that
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +0000544 ``'\U'`` and ``'\u'`` escapes in raw strings are not treated specially.
Benjamin Petersona2f837f2008-04-28 21:05:10 +0000545
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000546* :pep:`3138`: :func:`repr` of a string no longer escapes all
547 non-ASCII characters. XXX
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000548
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000549* :pep:`3112`: Bytes literals, e.g. ``b"abc"``, create :class:`bytes`
550 instances.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000551
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000552* :pep:`3120`: UTF-8 default source encoding.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000553
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000554* :pep:`3131`: Non-ASCII identifiers. (However, the standard library remains
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000555 ASCII-only with the exception of contributor names in comments.)
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000556
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000557* :pep:`3116`: New I/O Implementation. The API is nearly 100% backwards
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000558 compatible, but completely reimplemented (currently mostly in Python). Also,
559 binary files use bytes instead of strings.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000560
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000561* The :mod:`StringIO` and :mod:`cStringIO` modules are gone. Instead, import
562 :class:`io.StringIO` or :class:`io.BytesIO`.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000563
Benjamin Petersona2f837f2008-04-28 21:05:10 +0000564
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000565
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000566:pep:`3101`: A New Approach To String Formatting
567================================================
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000568
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +0000569* A new system for built-in string formatting operations replaces the
570 ``%`` string formatting operator. (However, the ``%`` operator is
571 still supported; it will be deprecated in Python 3.1 and removed
572 from the language at some later time.)
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000573
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +0000574.. XXX expand this
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000575
576
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000577:pep:`3106`: Revamping dict :meth:`dict.keys`, :meth:`dict.items` and :meth:`dict.values`
578=========================================================================================
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000579
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000580.. XXX expand this (but note that the "pitfalls" section currently has
581.. XXX more detail :-)
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000582
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000583* The :meth:`dict.iterkeys`, :meth:`dict.itervalues` and :meth:`dict.iteritems`
584 methods have been removed.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000585
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000586* :meth:`dict.keys`, :meth:`dict.values` and :meth:`dict.items` return objects
Guido van Rossum4a98a2a2008-11-21 18:35:43 +0000587 with set behavior that reference the underlying dict; these are often
588 referred to as *dictionary views*.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000589
590
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000591:pep:`3107`: Function Annotations
592=================================
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000593
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000594.. XXX expand this
595
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000596* A standardized way of annotating a function's parameters and return values.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000597
598
599Exception Stuff
600===============
601
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000602* :pep:`0352`: All exceptions must be derived (directly or indirectly)
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000603 from :exc:`BaseException`. This is the root of the exception
604 hierarchy. Most exceptions should actually be derived from
605 :exc:`Exception`. This is not a new recommendation, but the
606 *requirement* to inherit from :exc:`BaseException` is new. (Python
607 2.6 still allowed classic classes to be raised, and placed no
608 restriction on what you can catch.)
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000609
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000610* :exc:`StandardError` was removed (in 2.6, actually).
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000611
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000612* Dropping sequence behavior (slicing!) and :attr:`message` attribute of
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000613 exception instances.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000614
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000615* :pep:`3109`: Raising exceptions. You must now use ``raise Exception(args)``
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000616 instead of ``raise Exception, args``.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000617
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000618* :pep:`3110`: Catching exceptions. You must now use ``except SomeException as
Georg Brandle06de8b2008-05-05 21:42:51 +0000619 identifier:`` instead of ``except Exception, identifier:``
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000620
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000621* :pep:`3134`: Exception chaining. XXX
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000622
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000623* A few exception messages are improved when Windows fails to load an extension
624 module. For example, ``error code 193`` is now ``%1 is not a valid Win32
625 application``. Strings now deal with non-English locales.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000626
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000627
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000628New Class And Metaclass Stuff
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000629=============================
630
631* Classic classes are gone.
632
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000633* :pep:`3115`: New Metaclass Syntax.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000634
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000635* :pep:`3119`: Abstract Base Classes (ABCs); ``@abstractmethod`` and
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000636 ``@abstractproperty`` decorators; collection ABCs.
637
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000638* :pep:`3129`: Class decorators.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000639
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000640* :pep:`3141`: Numeric ABCs.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000641
642
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000643Other Language Changes
644======================
645
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000646* Moved :func:`intern` to :func:`sys.intern`.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000647
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000648* ``!=`` now returns the opposite of ``==``, unless ``==`` returns
649 ``NotImplemented``.
650
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000651* The concept of "unbound methods" was removed from the language.
652 When referencing a method as a class attribute, you now get a plain
653 function object.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000654
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000655* :meth:`__getslice__`, :meth:`__setslice__` and :meth:`__delslice__`
656 were killed. The syntax ``a[i:j]`` now translates to
657 ``a.__getitem__(slice(i, j))`` (or :meth:`__setitem__` or
658 :meth:`__delitem__`, when used as an assignment or deletion target,
659 respectively).
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000660
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000661* :pep:`3111`: :func:`raw_input` renamed to :func:`input`. That is,
662 the new :func:`input` function reads a line from :data:`sys.stdin`
663 and returns it with the trailing newline stripped. It raises
664 :exc:`EOFError` if the input is terminated prematurely. To get the
665 old behavior of :func:`input`, use ``eval(input())``.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000666
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000667* :func:`xrange` renamed to :func:`range`, so :func:`range` will no
668 longer produce a list but an iterable yielding integers when
669 iterated over. XXX dupe
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000670
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000671* :pep:`3114`: ``.next()`` renamed to :meth:`__next__`, new builtin
672 :func:`next` to call the :meth:`__next__` method on an object.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000673
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000674* :pep:`3135`: New :func:`super`. You can now invoke :func:`super`
675 without arguments and the right class and instance will
676 automatically be chosen. With arguments, its behavior is unchanged.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000677
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000678* :func:`zip`, :func:`map` and :func:`filter` return iterators.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000679
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000680* :data:`string.letters` and its friends (:data:`string.lowercase` and
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000681 :data:`string.uppercase`) are gone. Use
682 :data:`string.ascii_letters` etc. instead. (The reason for the
683 removal is that :data:string.letters` and friends had
684 locale-specific behavior, which is a bad idea for such
685 attractively-named global "constants".)
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000686
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000687* Removed: :func:`apply`. Instead of ``apply(f, args)`` use
688 ``f(*args)``.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000689
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000690* Removed :func:`callable`. Instead of ``callable(f)`` you can use
691 ``hasattr(f, '__call__')``. The :func:`operator.isCallable` function
692 is also gone.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000693
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000694* Removed :func:`coerce`. This function no longer serves a purpose
695 now that classic classes are gone.
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000696
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000697* Removed :func:`execfile`. Instead of ``execfile(fn)`` use
698 ``exec(open(fn).read())``.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000699
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000700* Removed :class:`file`. Use :func:`open`.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000701
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000702* Removed :func:`reduce`. Use :func:`functools.reduce` if you really
703 need it; however, 99 percent of the time an explicit :keyword:`for`
704 loop is more readable.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000705
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000706* Removed :func:`reload`. Use :func:`imp.reload`.
707
708* Removed. :meth:`dict.has_key` -- use the :keyword:`in` operator
709 instead.
710
711* The :meth:`__oct__` and :meth:`__hex__` special methods are removed
712 -- :func:`oct` and :func:`hex` use :meth:`__index__` now to convert
713 the argument to an integer.
714
715* Removed support for :attr:`__members__` and :attr:`__methods__`.
716
717* Renamed the boolean conversion C-level slot and method:
718 ``nb_nonzero`` is now ``nb_bool`` and :meth:`__nonzero__` is now
719 :meth:`__bool__`.
720
721* Renamed module :mod:`__builtin__` to :mod:`builtins` (removing the
722 underscores, adding an 's'). The :data:`__builtins__` variable
723 found in most global namespaces is unchanged. To modify a builtin,
724 you should use :mod:`builtins`, not :data:`__builtins__`!
725
726* Renamed function attributes :attr:`func_whatever` to
727 :attr:`__whatever__`. XXX list every single one.
728
729* Removed :exc:`StandardError`.
730
731* Removed METH_OLDARGS and WITH_CYCLE_GC. XXX more.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000732
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000733.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000734
735
736Optimizations
737-------------
738
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000739The net result of the 3.0 generalizations is that Python 3.0 runs the
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000740pystone benchmark around 10% slower than Python 2.5. Most likely the
741biggest cause is the removal of special-casing for small integers.
742There's room for improvement, but it will happen after 3.0 is
743released!
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000744
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000745.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000746
747
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000748New, Improved, And Deprecated Modules
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000749=====================================
750
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000751As usual, Python's standard library received a number of enhancements and bug
752fixes. Here's a partial list of the most notable changes, sorted alphabetically
753by module name. Consult the :file:`Misc/NEWS` file in the source tree for a more
754complete list of changes, or look through the Subversion logs for all the
755details.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000756
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000757* The :mod:`cPickle` module is gone. Use :mod:`pickle` instead. Eventually
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000758 we'll have a transparent accelerator module.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000759
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000760* The :mod:`imageop` module is gone.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000761
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000762* The :mod:`audiodev`, :mod:`Bastion`, :mod:`bsddb185`, :mod:`exceptions`,
763 :mod:`linuxaudiodev`, :mod:`md5`, :mod:`MimeWriter`, :mod:`mimify`,
764 :mod:`popen2`, :mod:`rexec`, :mod:`sets`, :mod:`sha`, :mod:`stringold`,
765 :mod:`strop`, :mod:`sunaudiodev`, :mod:`timing`, and :mod:`xmllib` modules are
766 gone.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000767
Gregory P. Smith7b9a2222008-09-04 05:07:03 +0000768* The :mod:`bsddb` module is gone. It is being maintained externally
769 with its own release schedule better mirroring that of BerkeleyDB.
770 See http://www.jcea.es/programacion/pybsddb.htm.
771
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000772* The :mod:`new` module is gone.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000773
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000774* The functions :func:`os.tmpnam`, :func:`os.tempnam` and :func:`os.tmpfile`
775 have been removed in favor of the :mod:`tempfile` module.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000776
Trent Nelson428de652008-03-18 22:41:35 +0000777* The :mod:`tokenize` module has been changed to work with bytes. The main
778 entry point is now :func:`tokenize.tokenize`, instead of generate_tokens.
779
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000780.. ======================================================================
781.. whole new modules get described in subsections here
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000782
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000783.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000784
785
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000786Build And C API Changes
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000787=======================
788
789Changes to Python's build process and to the C API include:
790
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000791* :pep:`3118`: New Buffer API. XXX
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000792
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000793* :pep:`3121`: Extension Module Initialization & Finalization. XXX
Guido van Rossumb197f3c2007-08-31 00:37:00 +0000794
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000795* :pep:`3123`: Making :cmacro:`PyObject_HEAD` conform to standard C. XXX
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000796
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000797* No more C API support for restricted execution.
798
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000799* :cfunc:`PyNumber_Coerce`, :cfunc:`PyNumber_CoerceEx`, :cfunc:`PyMember_Get`,
800 and :cfunc:`PyMember_Set` C APIs are removed.
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000801
Georg Brandlec17d202008-02-02 10:44:37 +0000802* New C API :cfunc:`PyImport_ImportModuleNoBlock`, works like
803 :cfunc:`PyImport_ImportModule` but won't block on the import lock (returning
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000804 an error instead).
805
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000806.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000807
808
809Port-Specific Changes
810---------------------
811
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000812XXX Platform-specific changes go here.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000813
Guido van Rossum715287f2008-12-02 22:34:15 +0000814* XXX BeOS, RISCOS, Irix, Tru64 support
Georg Brandl396ef802008-02-02 10:30:18 +0000815
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000816.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000817
818
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000819Porting To Python 3.0
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000820=====================
821
Guido van Rossum56076da2008-12-02 22:58:36 +0000822For porting existing Python 2.5 or 2.6 source code to Python 3.0, the
823best strategy is the following:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000824
Guido van Rossum56076da2008-12-02 22:58:36 +00008250. (Prerequisite:) Start with excellent test coverage.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000826
Guido van Rossum56076da2008-12-02 22:58:36 +00008271. Port to Python 2.6. This should be no more work than the average
828 port from Python 2.x to Python 2.(x+1). Make sure all your tests
829 pass.
Christian Heimesf78b1c62007-12-02 16:52:32 +0000830
Guido van Rossum56076da2008-12-02 22:58:36 +00008312. (Still using 2.6:) Turn on the :option:`-3` command line switch.
832 This enables warnings about features that will be removed (or
833 change) in 3.0. Run your test suite again, and fix code that you
834 get warnings about until there are no warnings left, and all your
835 tests still pass.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000836
Guido van Rossum56076da2008-12-02 22:58:36 +00008373. Run the ``2to3`` source-to-source translator over your source code
838 tree. (See :ref:`2to3-reference` for more on this tool.) Run the
839 result of the translation under Python 3.0. Manually fix up any
840 remaining issues, fixing problems until all tests pass again.
841
842It is not recommended to try to write source code that runs unchanged
843under both Python 2.6 and 3.0; you'd have to use a very contorted
844coding style, e.g. avoiding :keyword:`print` statements, metaclasses,
845and much more. If you are maintaining a library that needs to support
846both Python 2.6 and Python 3.0, the best approach is to modify step 3
847above by editing the 2.6 version of the source code and running the
848``2to3`` translator again, rather than editing the 3.0 version of the
849source code.
850
851For porting C extensions to Python 3.0, please see :ref:`cporting-howto`.
Guido van Rossumeb3d8d42008-12-02 00:56:25 +0000852
Georg Brandl5a165582007-08-31 06:15:01 +0000853.. ======================================================================