| PYTHON RELEASE NOTES FOR THE MACINTOSH |
| |
| VERSION 1.1 |
| |
| For the most part, Python on the Mac works just like Python under UNIX. |
| The most important differences are: |
| |
| - Since there is no shell environment on the Mac, the start-up file |
| has a fixed name: PythonStartup. If a file by this name exists |
| (either in the current folder or in the system folder) it is executed |
| when an interactive interpreter is started. |
| |
| - The default search path for modules is different: first the current |
| directory is searched, then the subdirectories 'lib', 'lib:stdwin' and |
| 'demo'. As always, you can change this (e.g. in your PythonStartup |
| file) by assigning or appending to sys.path -- use Macintosh pathnames! |
| (The default contains no absolute paths because these are unlikely |
| to make sense on other people's hard disks.) |
| |
| - The user interface for typing interactive commands is different. |
| This is actually the THINK C console I/O module, which is based on |
| the Mac toolbox TextEdit. A standard Edit menu provides Cut, Copy, |
| Paste and Clear (Undo is only there for Desk Accessories). A minimal |
| File menu provides Quit, which immediately exits the application, |
| without the usual cleanup. You can Copy from previous output, |
| but you can't scroll back beyond the 24x80 screen. The TAB key |
| always brings you to the end of the current input line; indentation |
| must be entered with spaces (a single space is enough). |
| End-of-file is generated by Command-D; Command-Period interrupts. |
| There is an annoying limit in the length of an input line to a single |
| screen line (less the prompt). Use \ to input long statements. |
| Change your program if it requires long lines typed on input. |
| Even though there is no resize box, the window can be resized by |
| dragging its bottom right corner, but the maximum size is 24x80. |
| |
| - Tabs in module files are interpreted as 4 (four!) spaces. This is |
| consistent with most Mac editors that I know. For individual files |
| you can change the tab size with a comment like |
| |
| # vi:set tabsize=8: |
| |
| (exactly as shown here, including the colons!). If you are consistent |
| in always using tabs for indentation on UNIX, your files will be |
| parsed correctly on the Mac, although they may look funny if you |
| have nicely lined-up comments or tables using tabs. Never using tabs |
| also works. Mixing tabs and spaces to simulate 4-character indentation |
| levels is likely to fail. |
| |
| - You can start a script from the Finder by selecting the script and |
| the Python interpreter together and then double clicking. If you |
| make the owner of the script PYTH (the type should always be TEXT) |
| Python will be launched if you double click it! |
| There is no way to pass command line arguments to Python scripts. |
| |
| - The set of built-in modules is different: |
| |
| = Operating system functions for the 'os' module is provided by the |
| built-in module 'mac', not 'posix'. This doesn't have all the |
| functions from posix, for obvious reasons (if you know the Mac |
| O/S a little bit). The functions in os.path are provided by |
| macpath, they know about Mac pathnames etc. |
| |
| = None of the UNIX specific modules ('socket', 'pwd', 'grp' etc.) |
| exists. |
| |
| = Module 'stdwin' is always available. It uses the Mac version of |
| STDWIN, which interfaces directly with the Mac toolbox. The most |
| important difference is in the font names; setfont() has a second |
| argument specifying the point size and an optional third one |
| specifying the variation: a single letter character string, |
| 'i' for italics, 'b' for bold. Note that when STDWIN is waiting |
| for events, the standard File and Edit menus are inactive but |
| still visible, and (most annoyingly) the Apple menu is also inactive; |
| conversely, menus put up by STDWIN are not active when the Python is |
| reading from the keyboard. If you open Python together with a text |
| file containing a Python script, the script will be executed and |
| a console window is only generated when the script uses standard |
| input or output. A script that uses STDWIN exclusively for its I/O |
| will have a working Apple menu and no extraneous File/Edit menus. |
| (This is because both stdwin and stdio try to initialize the |
| windowing environment; whoever gets there first owns the Apple menu.) |
| LIMITATIONS: a few recent additions to STDWIN for X11 have not yet |
| been added to the Mac version. There are no bitmap objects, and |
| the setwinpos() and setwinsize() methods are non--functional. |
| |
| - Because launching an application on the Mac is so tedious, you will |
| want to edit your program with a desk accessory editor (e.g., Sigma |
| edit) and test the changed version without leaving Python. This is |
| possible but requires some care. Make sure the program is a module |
| file (filename must be a Python identifier followed by '.py'). You |
| can then import it when you test it for the first time. There are |
| now three possibilities: it contains a syntax error; it gets a runtime |
| error (unhandled exception); or it runs OK but gives wrong results. |
| (If it gives correct results, you are done testing and don't need |
| to read the rest of this paragraph. :-) Note that the following |
| is not Mac-specific -- it's just that on UNIX it's easier to restart |
| the entire script so it's rarely useful. |
| |
| Recovery from a syntax error is easy: edit the file and import it |
| again. |
| |
| Recovery from wrong output is almost as easy: edit the file and, |
| instead of importing it, call the function reload() with the module |
| name as argument (e.g., if your module is called foo, type |
| "reload(foo)"). |
| |
| Recovery from an exception is trickier. Once the syntax is correct, |
| a 'module' entry is placed in an internal table, and following import |
| statements will not re-read the file, even if the module's initialization |
| terminated with an error (one reason why this is done is so that |
| mutually recursive modules are initialized only once). You must |
| therefore force re-reading the module with reload(), however, if this |
| happens the first time you try to import the module, the import statement |
| itself has not completed, and your workspace does not know the module |
| name (even though the internal table of moduesl does!). The trick is |
| to first import the module again, then reload it. For instance, |
| "import foo; reload(foo)". Because the module object already exists |
| internally, the import statement does not attempt to execute the |
| module again -- it just places it in your workspace. |
| |
| When you edit a module you don't have to worry about the corresponding |
| '.pyc' file (a "compiled" version of the module, which loads much faster |
| than the textual version): the interpreter notices that the '.py' file |
| has changed (because its modification time has changed) and ignores the |
| '.pyc' file. When parsing is successful, a new '.pyc' file is written; |
| if this fails (no write permission, disk full or whatever) it is |
| silently skipped but attempted again the next time the same module |
| is loaded. (Thus, if you plan to place a Python library on a read-only |
| disk, it is advisable to "warm the cache" by making the disk writable |
| and importing all modules once. The standard module 'importall' helps |
| in doing this.) |