| **************************** |
| What's New In Python 3.0 |
| **************************** |
| |
| .. XXX Add trademark info for Apple, Microsoft. |
| |
| :Author: Guido van Rossum |
| |
| .. $Id$ |
| Rules for maintenance: |
| |
| * Anyone can add text to this document. Do not spend very much time |
| on the wording of your changes, because your text will probably |
| get rewritten to some degree. |
| |
| * The maintainer will go through Misc/NEWS periodically and add |
| changes; it's therefore more important to add your changes to |
| Misc/NEWS than to this file. (Note: I didn't get to this for 3.0. |
| GvR.) |
| |
| * This is not a complete list of every single change; completeness |
| is the purpose of Misc/NEWS. Some changes I consider too small |
| or esoteric to include. If such a change is added to the text, |
| I'll just remove it. (This is another reason you shouldn't spend |
| too much time on writing your addition.) |
| |
| * If you want to draw your new text to the attention of the |
| maintainer, add 'XXX' to the beginning of the paragraph or |
| section. |
| |
| * It's OK to just add a fragmentary note about a change. For |
| example: "XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the |
| socket module." The maintainer will research the change and |
| write the necessary text. |
| |
| * You can comment out your additions if you like, but it's not |
| necessary (especially when a final release is some months away). |
| |
| * Credit the author of a patch or bugfix. Just the name is |
| sufficient; the e-mail address isn't necessary. (Due to time |
| constraints I haven't managed to do this for 3.0. GvR.) |
| |
| * It's helpful to add the bug/patch number as a comment: |
| |
| % Patch 12345 |
| XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the socket |
| module. |
| (Contributed by P.Y. Developer.) |
| |
| This saves the maintainer the effort of going through the SVN log |
| when researching a change. (Again, I didn't get to this for 3.0. |
| GvR.) |
| |
| This article explains the new features in Python 3.0, compared to 2.6. |
| Python 3.0, also known as "Python 3000" or "Py3K", is the first ever |
| *intentionally backwards incompatible* Python release. There are more |
| changes than in a typical release, and more that are important for all |
| Python users. Nevertheless, after digesting the changes, you'll find |
| that Python really hasn't changed all that much -- by and large, we're |
| mostly fixing well-known annoyances and warts, and removing a lot of |
| old cruft. |
| |
| This article doesn't attempt to provide a complete specification of |
| all new features, but instead tries to give a convenient overview. |
| For full details, you should refer to the documentation for Python |
| 3.0, and/or the many PEPs referenced in the text. If you want to |
| understand the complete implementation and design rationale for a |
| particular feature, PEPs usually have more details than the regular |
| documentation; but note that PEPs usually are not kept up-to-date once |
| a feature has been fully implemented. |
| |
| Due to time constraints this document is not as complete as it should |
| have been. As always for a new release, the ``Misc/NEWS`` file in the |
| source distribution contains a wealth of detailed information about |
| every small thing that was changed. |
| |
| .. Compare with previous release in 2 - 3 sentences here. |
| .. add hyperlink when the documentation becomes available online. |
| |
| .. ====================================================================== |
| .. Large, PEP-level features and changes should be described here. |
| .. Should there be a new section here for 3k migration? |
| .. Or perhaps a more general section describing module changes/deprecation? |
| .. sets module deprecated |
| .. ====================================================================== |
| |
| |
| Common Stumbling Blocks |
| ======================= |
| |
| This section lists those few changes that are most likely to trip you |
| up if you're used to Python 2.5. |
| |
| Print Is A Function |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The ``print`` statement has been replaced with a :func:`print` |
| function, with keyword arguments to replace most of the special syntax |
| of the old ``print`` statement (:pep:`3105`). Examples:: |
| |
| Old: print "The answer is", 2*2 |
| New: print("The answer is", 2*2) |
| |
| Old: print x, # Trailing comma suppresses newline |
| New: print(x, end=" ") # Appends a space instead of a newline |
| |
| Old: print # Prints a newline |
| New: print() # You must call the function! |
| |
| Old: print >>sys.stderr, "fatal error" |
| New: print("fatal error", file=sys.stderr) |
| |
| Old: print (x, y) # prints repr((x, y)) |
| New: print((x, y)) # Not the same as print(x, y)! |
| |
| You can also customize the separator between items, e.g.:: |
| |
| print("There are <", 2**32, "> possibilities!", sep="") |
| |
| which produces: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| There are <4294967296> possibilities! |
| |
| Note: |
| |
| * The :func:`print` function doesn't support the "softspace" feature of |
| the old ``print`` statement. For example, in Python 2.x, |
| ``print "A\n", "B"`` would write ``"A\nB\n"``; but in Python 3.0, |
| ``print("A\n", "B")`` writes ``"A\n B\n"``. |
| |
| * Initially, you'll be finding yourself typing the old ``print x`` |
| a lot in interactive mode. Time to retrain your fingers to type |
| ``print(x)`` instead! |
| |
| * When using the ``2to3`` source-to-source conversion tool, all |
| ``print`` statements are automatically converted to |
| :func:`print` function calls, so this is mostly a non-issue for |
| larger projects. |
| |
| Views And Iterators Instead Of Lists |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| Some well-known APIs no longer return lists: |
| |
| * :class:`dict` methods :meth:`dict.keys`, :meth:`dict.items` and |
| :meth:`dict.values` return "views" instead of lists. For example, |
| this no longer works: ``k = d.keys(); k.sort()``. Use ``k = |
| sorted(d)`` instead (this works in Python 2.5 too and is just |
| as efficient). |
| |
| * Also, the :meth:`dict.iterkeys`, :meth:`dict.iteritems` and |
| :meth:`dict.itervalues` methods are no longer supported. |
| |
| * :func:`map` and :func:`filter` return iterators. If you really need |
| a list and the input sequences are all of equal length, a quick |
| fix is to wrap :func:`map` in :func:`list`, e.g. ``list(map(...))``, |
| but a better fix is |
| often to use a list comprehension (especially when the original code |
| uses :keyword:`lambda`), or rewriting the code so it doesn't need a |
| list at all. Particularly tricky is :func:`map` invoked for the |
| side effects of the function; the correct transformation is to use a |
| regular :keyword:`for` loop (since creating a list would just be |
| wasteful). |
| |
| If the input sequences are not of equal length, :func:`map` will |
| stop at the termination of the shortest of the sequences. For full |
| compatibility with :func:`map` from Python 2.x, also wrap the sequences in |
| :func:`itertools.zip_longest`, e.g. ``map(func, *sequences)`` becomes |
| ``list(map(func, itertools.zip_longest(*sequences)))``. |
| |
| * :func:`range` now behaves like :func:`xrange` used to behave, except |
| it works with values of arbitrary size. The latter no longer |
| exists. |
| |
| * :func:`zip` now returns an iterator. |
| |
| Ordering Comparisons |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Python 3.0 has simplified the rules for ordering comparisons: |
| |
| * The ordering comparison operators (``<``, ``<=``, ``>=``, ``>``) |
| raise a TypeError exception when the operands don't have a |
| meaningful natural ordering. Thus, expressions like ``1 < ''``, ``0 |
| > None`` or ``len <= len`` are no longer valid, and e.g. ``None < |
| None`` raises :exc:`TypeError` instead of returning |
| ``False``. A corollary is that sorting a heterogeneous list |
| no longer makes sense -- all the elements must be comparable to each |
| other. Note that this does not apply to the ``==`` and ``!=`` |
| operators: objects of different incomparable types always compare |
| unequal to each other. |
| |
| * :meth:`builtin.sorted` and :meth:`list.sort` no longer accept the |
| *cmp* argument providing a comparison function. Use the *key* |
| argument instead. N.B. the *key* and *reverse* arguments are now |
| "keyword-only". |
| |
| * The :func:`cmp` function should be treated as gone, and the :meth:`__cmp__` |
| special method is no longer supported. Use :meth:`__lt__` for sorting, |
| :meth:`__eq__` with :meth:`__hash__`, and other rich comparisons as needed. |
| (If you really need the :func:`cmp` functionality, you could use the |
| expression ``(a > b) - (a < b)`` as the equivalent for ``cmp(a, b)``.) |
| |
| Integers |
| -------- |
| |
| * :pep:`237`: Essentially, :class:`long` renamed to :class:`int`. |
| That is, there is only one built-in integral type, named |
| :class:`int`; but it behaves mostly like the old :class:`long` type. |
| |
| * :pep:`238`: An expression like ``1/2`` returns a float. Use |
| ``1//2`` to get the truncating behavior. (The latter syntax has |
| existed for years, at least since Python 2.2.) |
| |
| * The :data:`sys.maxint` constant was removed, since there is no |
| longer a limit to the value of integers. However, :data:`sys.maxsize` |
| can be used as an integer larger than any practical list or string |
| index. It conforms to the implementation's "natural" integer size |
| and is typically the same as :data:`sys.maxint` in previous releases |
| on the same platform (assuming the same build options). |
| |
| * The :func:`repr` of a long integer doesn't include the trailing ``L`` |
| anymore, so code that unconditionally strips that character will |
| chop off the last digit instead. (Use :func:`str` instead.) |
| |
| * Octal literals are no longer of the form ``0720``; use ``0o720`` |
| instead. |
| |
| Text Vs. Data Instead Of Unicode Vs. 8-bit |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Everything you thought you knew about binary data and Unicode has |
| changed. |
| |
| * Python 3.0 uses the concepts of *text* and (binary) *data* instead |
| of Unicode strings and 8-bit strings. All text is Unicode; however |
| *encoded* Unicode is represented as binary data. The type used to |
| hold text is :class:`str`, the type used to hold data is |
| :class:`bytes`. The biggest difference with the 2.x situation is |
| that any attempt to mix text and data in Python 3.0 raises |
| :exc:`TypeError`, whereas if you were to mix Unicode and 8-bit |
| strings in Python 2.x, it would work if the 8-bit string happened to |
| contain only 7-bit (ASCII) bytes, but you would get |
| :exc:`UnicodeDecodeError` if it contained non-ASCII values. This |
| value-specific behavior has caused numerous sad faces over the |
| years. |
| |
| * As a consequence of this change in philosophy, pretty much all code |
| that uses Unicode, encodings or binary data most likely has to |
| change. The change is for the better, as in the 2.x world there |
| were numerous bugs having to do with mixing encoded and unencoded |
| text. To be prepared in Python 2.x, start using :class:`unicode` |
| for all unencoded text, and :class:`str` for binary or encoded data |
| only. Then the ``2to3`` tool will do most of the work for you. |
| |
| * You can no longer use ``u"..."`` literals for Unicode text. |
| However, you must use ``b"..."`` literals for binary data. |
| |
| * As the :class:`str` and :class:`bytes` types cannot be mixed, you |
| must always explicitly convert between them. Use :meth:`str.encode` |
| to go from :class:`str` to :class:`bytes`, and :meth:`bytes.decode` |
| to go from :class:`bytes` to :class:`str`. You can also use |
| ``bytes(s, encoding=...)`` and ``str(b, encoding=...)``, |
| respectively. |
| |
| * Like :class:`str`, the :class:`bytes` type is immutable. There is a |
| separate *mutable* type to hold buffered binary data, |
| :class:`bytearray`. Nearly all APIs that accept :class:`bytes` also |
| accept :class:`bytearray`. The mutable API is based on |
| :class:`collections.MutableSequence`. |
| |
| * All backslashes in raw string literals are interpreted literally. |
| This means that ``'\U'`` and ``'\u'`` escapes in raw strings are not |
| treated specially. For example, ``r'\u20ac'`` is a string of 6 |
| characters in Python 3.0, whereas in 2.6, ``ur'\u20ac'`` was the |
| single "euro" character. (Of course, this change only affects raw |
| string literals; the euro character is ``'\u20ac'`` in Python 3.0.) |
| |
| * The built-in :class:`basestring` abstract type was removed. Use |
| :class:`str` instead. The :class:`str` and :class:`bytes` types |
| don't have functionality enough in common to warrant a shared base |
| class. The ``2to3`` tool (see below) replaces every occurrence of |
| :class:`basestring` with :class:`str`. |
| |
| * Files opened as text files (still the default mode for :func:`open`) |
| always use an encoding to map between strings (in memory) and bytes |
| (on disk). Binary files (opened with a ``b`` in the mode argument) |
| always use bytes in memory. This means that if a file is opened |
| using an incorrect mode or encoding, I/O will likely fail loudly, |
| instead of silently producing incorrect data. It also means that |
| even Unix users will have to specify the correct mode (text or |
| binary) when opening a file. There is a platform-dependent default |
| encoding, which on Unixy platforms can be set with the ``LANG`` |
| environment variable (and sometimes also with some other |
| platform-specific locale-related environment variables). In many |
| cases, but not all, the system default is UTF-8; you should never |
| count on this default. Any application reading or writing more than |
| pure ASCII text should probably have a way to override the encoding. |
| There is no longer any need for using the encoding-aware streams |
| in the :mod:`codecs` module. |
| |
| * The initial values of :data:`sys.stdin`, :data:`sys.stdout` and |
| :data:`sys.stderr` are now unicode-only text files (i.e., they are |
| instances of :class:`io.TextIOBase`). To read and write bytes data |
| with these streams, you need to use their :data:`io.TextIOBase.buffer` |
| attribute. |
| |
| * Filenames are passed to and returned from APIs as (Unicode) strings. |
| This can present platform-specific problems because on some |
| platforms filenames are arbitrary byte strings. (On the other hand, |
| on Windows filenames are natively stored as Unicode.) As a |
| work-around, most APIs (e.g. :func:`open` and many functions in the |
| :mod:`os` module) that take filenames accept :class:`bytes` objects |
| as well as strings, and a few APIs have a way to ask for a |
| :class:`bytes` return value. Thus, :func:`os.listdir` returns a |
| list of :class:`bytes` instances if the argument is a :class:`bytes` |
| instance, and :func:`os.getcwdb` returns the current working |
| directory as a :class:`bytes` instance. Note that when |
| :func:`os.listdir` returns a list of strings, filenames that |
| cannot be decoded properly are omitted rather than raising |
| :exc:`UnicodeError`. |
| |
| * Some system APIs like :data:`os.environ` and :data:`sys.argv` can |
| also present problems when the bytes made available by the system is |
| not interpretable using the default encoding. Setting the ``LANG`` |
| variable and rerunning the program is probably the best approach. |
| |
| * :pep:`3138`: The :func:`repr` of a string no longer escapes |
| non-ASCII characters. It still escapes control characters and code |
| points with non-printable status in the Unicode standard, however. |
| |
| * :pep:`3120`: The default source encoding is now UTF-8. |
| |
| * :pep:`3131`: Non-ASCII letters are now allowed in identifiers. |
| (However, the standard library remains ASCII-only with the exception |
| of contributor names in comments.) |
| |
| * The :mod:`StringIO` and :mod:`cStringIO` modules are gone. Instead, |
| import the :mod:`io` module and use :class:`io.StringIO` or |
| :class:`io.BytesIO` for text and data respectively. |
| |
| * See also the :ref:`unicode-howto`, which was updated for Python 3.0. |
| |
| |
| Overview Of Syntax Changes |
| ========================== |
| |
| This section gives a brief overview of every *syntactic* change in |
| Python 3.0. |
| |
| New Syntax |
| ---------- |
| |
| * :pep:`3107`: Function argument and return value annotations. This |
| provides a standardized way of annotating a function's parameters |
| and return value. There are no semantics attached to such |
| annotations except that they can be introspected at runtime using |
| the :attr:`__annotations__` attribute. The intent is to encourage |
| experimentation through metaclasses, decorators or frameworks. |
| |
| * :pep:`3102`: Keyword-only arguments. Named parameters occurring |
| after ``*args`` in the parameter list *must* be specified using |
| keyword syntax in the call. You can also use a bare ``*`` in the |
| parameter list to indicate that you don't accept a variable-length |
| argument list, but you do have keyword-only arguments. |
| |
| * Keyword arguments are allowed after the list of base classes in a |
| class definition. This is used by the new convention for specifying |
| a metaclass (see next section), but can be used for other purposes |
| as well, as long as the metaclass supports it. |
| |
| * :pep:`3104`: :keyword:`nonlocal` statement. Using ``nonlocal x`` |
| you can now assign directly to a variable in an outer (but |
| non-global) scope. :keyword:`nonlocal` is a new reserved word. |
| |
| * :pep:`3132`: Extended Iterable Unpacking. You can now write things |
| like ``a, b, *rest = some_sequence``. And even ``*rest, a = |
| stuff``. The ``rest`` object is always a (possibly empty) list; the |
| right-hand side may be any iterable. Example:: |
| |
| (a, *rest, b) = range(5) |
| |
| This sets *a* to ``0``, *b* to ``4``, and *rest* to ``[1, 2, 3]``. |
| |
| * Dictionary comprehensions: ``{k: v for k, v in stuff}`` means the |
| same thing as ``dict(stuff)`` but is more flexible. (This is |
| :pep:`274` vindicated. :-) |
| |
| * Set literals, e.g. ``{1, 2}``. Note that ``{}`` is an empty |
| dictionary; use ``set()`` for an empty set. Set comprehensions are |
| also supported; e.g., ``{x for x in stuff}`` means the same thing as |
| ``set(stuff)`` but is more flexible. |
| |
| * New octal literals, e.g. ``0o720`` (already in 2.6). The old octal |
| literals (``0720``) are gone. |
| |
| * New binary literals, e.g. ``0b1010`` (already in 2.6), and |
| there is a new corresponding built-in function, :func:`bin`. |
| |
| * Bytes literals are introduced with a leading ``b`` or ``B``, and |
| there is a new corresponding built-in function, :func:`bytes`. |
| |
| Changed Syntax |
| -------------- |
| |
| * :pep:`3109` and :pep:`3134`: new :keyword:`raise` statement syntax: |
| :samp:`raise [{expr} [from {expr}]]`. See below. |
| |
| * :keyword:`as` and :keyword:`with` are now reserved words. (Since |
| 2.6, actually.) |
| |
| * ``True``, ``False``, and ``None`` are reserved words. (2.6 partially enforced |
| the restrictions on ``None`` already.) |
| |
| * Change from :keyword:`except` *exc*, *var* to |
| :keyword:`except` *exc* :keyword:`as` *var*. See :pep:`3110`. |
| |
| * :pep:`3115`: New Metaclass Syntax. Instead of:: |
| |
| class C: |
| __metaclass__ = M |
| ... |
| |
| you must now use:: |
| |
| class C(metaclass=M): |
| ... |
| |
| The module-global :data:`__metaclass__` variable is no longer |
| supported. (It was a crutch to make it easier to default to |
| new-style classes without deriving every class from |
| :class:`object`.) |
| |
| * List comprehensions no longer support the syntactic form |
| :samp:`[... for {var} in {item1}, {item2}, ...]`. Use |
| :samp:`[... for {var} in ({item1}, {item2}, ...)]` instead. |
| Also note that list comprehensions have different semantics: they |
| are closer to syntactic sugar for a generator expression inside a |
| :func:`list` constructor, and in particular the loop control |
| variables are no longer leaked into the surrounding scope. |
| |
| * The *ellipsis* (``...``) can be used as an atomic expression |
| anywhere. (Previously it was only allowed in slices.) Also, it |
| *must* now be spelled as ``...``. (Previously it could also be |
| spelled as ``. . .``, by a mere accident of the grammar.) |
| |
| Removed Syntax |
| -------------- |
| |
| * :pep:`3113`: Tuple parameter unpacking removed. You can no longer |
| write ``def foo(a, (b, c)): ...``. |
| Use ``def foo(a, b_c): b, c = b_c`` instead. |
| |
| * Removed backticks (use :func:`repr` instead). |
| |
| * Removed ``<>`` (use ``!=`` instead). |
| |
| * Removed keyword: :func:`exec` is no longer a keyword; it remains as |
| a function. (Fortunately the function syntax was also accepted in |
| 2.x.) Also note that :func:`exec` no longer takes a stream argument; |
| instead of ``exec(f)`` you can use ``exec(f.read())``. |
| |
| * Integer literals no longer support a trailing ``l`` or ``L``. |
| |
| * String literals no longer support a leading ``u`` or ``U``. |
| |
| * The :keyword:`from` *module* :keyword:`import` ``*`` syntax is only |
| allowed at the module level, no longer inside functions. |
| |
| * The only acceptable syntax for relative imports is :samp:`from .[{module}] |
| import {name}`. All :keyword:`import` forms not starting with ``.`` are |
| interpreted as absolute imports. (:pep:`328`) |
| |
| * Classic classes are gone. |
| |
| |
| Changes Already Present In Python 2.6 |
| ===================================== |
| |
| Since many users presumably make the jump straight from Python 2.5 to |
| Python 3.0, this section reminds the reader of new features that were |
| originally designed for Python 3.0 but that were back-ported to Python |
| 2.6. The corresponding sections in :ref:`whats-new-in-2.6` should be |
| consulted for longer descriptions. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-0343`. The :keyword:`with` statement is now a standard |
| feature and no longer needs to be imported from the :mod:`__future__`. |
| Also check out :ref:`new-26-context-managers` and |
| :ref:`new-module-contextlib`. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-0366`. This enhances the usefulness of the :option:`-m` |
| option when the referenced module lives in a package. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-0370`. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-0371`. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3101`. Note: the 2.6 description mentions the |
| :meth:`format` method for both 8-bit and Unicode strings. In 3.0, |
| only the :class:`str` type (text strings with Unicode support) |
| supports this method; the :class:`bytes` type does not. The plan is |
| to eventually make this the only API for string formatting, and to |
| start deprecating the ``%`` operator in Python 3.1. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3105`. This is now a standard feature and no longer needs |
| to be imported from :mod:`__future__`. More details were given above. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3110`. The :keyword:`except` *exc* :keyword:`as` *var* |
| syntax is now standard and :keyword:`except` *exc*, *var* is no |
| longer supported. (Of course, the :keyword:`as` *var* part is still |
| optional.) |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3112`. The ``b"..."`` string literal notation (and its |
| variants like ``b'...'``, ``b"""..."""``, and ``br"..."``) now |
| produces a literal of type :class:`bytes`. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3116`. The :mod:`io` module is now the standard way of |
| doing file I/O. The built-in :func:`open` function is now an |
| alias for :func:`io.open` and has additional keyword arguments |
| *encoding*, *errors*, *newline* and *closefd*. Also note that an |
| invalid *mode* argument now raises :exc:`ValueError`, not |
| :exc:`IOError`. The binary file object underlying a text file |
| object can be accessed as :attr:`f.buffer` (but beware that the |
| text object maintains a buffer of itself in order to speed up |
| the encoding and decoding operations). |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3118`. The old builtin :func:`buffer` is now really gone; |
| the new builtin :func:`memoryview` provides (mostly) similar |
| functionality. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3119`. The :mod:`abc` module and the ABCs defined in the |
| :mod:`collections` module plays a somewhat more prominent role in |
| the language now, and built-in collection types like :class:`dict` |
| and :class:`list` conform to the :class:`collections.MutableMapping` |
| and :class:`collections.MutableSequence` ABCs, respectively. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3127`. As mentioned above, the new octal literal |
| notation is the only one supported, and binary literals have been |
| added. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3129`. |
| |
| * :ref:`pep-3141`. The :mod:`numbers` module is another new use of |
| ABCs, defining Python's "numeric tower". Also note the new |
| :mod:`fractions` module which implements :class:`numbers.Rational`. |
| |
| |
| Library Changes |
| =============== |
| |
| Due to time constraints, this document does not exhaustively cover the |
| very extensive changes to the standard library. :pep:`3108` is the |
| reference for the major changes to the library. Here's a capsule |
| review: |
| |
| * Many old modules were removed. Some, like :mod:`gopherlib` (no |
| longer used) and :mod:`md5` (replaced by :mod:`hashlib`), were |
| already deprecated by :pep:`4`. Others were removed as a result |
| of the removal of support for various platforms such as Irix, BeOS |
| and Mac OS 9 (see :pep:`11`). Some modules were also selected for |
| removal in Python 3.0 due to lack of use or because a better |
| replacement exists. See :pep:`3108` for an exhaustive list. |
| |
| * The :mod:`bsddb3` package was removed because its presence in the |
| core standard library has proved over time to be a particular burden |
| for the core developers due to testing instability and Berkeley DB's |
| release schedule. However, the package is alive and well, |
| externally maintained at https://www.jcea.es/programacion/pybsddb.htm. |
| |
| * Some modules were renamed because their old name disobeyed |
| :pep:`8`, or for various other reasons. Here's the list: |
| |
| ======================= ======================= |
| Old Name New Name |
| ======================= ======================= |
| _winreg winreg |
| ConfigParser configparser |
| copy_reg copyreg |
| Queue queue |
| SocketServer socketserver |
| markupbase _markupbase |
| repr reprlib |
| test.test_support test.support |
| ======================= ======================= |
| |
| * A common pattern in Python 2.x is to have one version of a module |
| implemented in pure Python, with an optional accelerated version |
| implemented as a C extension; for example, :mod:`pickle` and |
| :mod:`cPickle`. This places the burden of importing the accelerated |
| version and falling back on the pure Python version on each user of |
| these modules. In Python 3.0, the accelerated versions are |
| considered implementation details of the pure Python versions. |
| Users should always import the standard version, which attempts to |
| import the accelerated version and falls back to the pure Python |
| version. The :mod:`pickle` / :mod:`cPickle` pair received this |
| treatment. The :mod:`profile` module is on the list for 3.1. The |
| :mod:`StringIO` module has been turned into a class in the :mod:`io` |
| module. |
| |
| * Some related modules have been grouped into packages, and usually |
| the submodule names have been simplified. The resulting new |
| packages are: |
| |
| * :mod:`dbm` (:mod:`anydbm`, :mod:`dbhash`, :mod:`dbm`, |
| :mod:`dumbdbm`, :mod:`gdbm`, :mod:`whichdb`). |
| |
| * :mod:`html` (:mod:`HTMLParser`, :mod:`htmlentitydefs`). |
| |
| * :mod:`http` (:mod:`httplib`, :mod:`BaseHTTPServer`, |
| :mod:`CGIHTTPServer`, :mod:`SimpleHTTPServer`, :mod:`Cookie`, |
| :mod:`cookielib`). |
| |
| * :mod:`tkinter` (all :mod:`Tkinter`-related modules except |
| :mod:`turtle`). The target audience of :mod:`turtle` doesn't |
| really care about :mod:`tkinter`. Also note that as of Python |
| 2.6, the functionality of :mod:`turtle` has been greatly enhanced. |
| |
| * :mod:`urllib` (:mod:`urllib`, :mod:`urllib2`, :mod:`urlparse`, |
| :mod:`robotparse`). |
| |
| * :mod:`xmlrpc` (:mod:`xmlrpclib`, :mod:`DocXMLRPCServer`, |
| :mod:`SimpleXMLRPCServer`). |
| |
| Some other changes to standard library modules, not covered by |
| :pep:`3108`: |
| |
| * Killed :mod:`sets`. Use the built-in :func:`set` class. |
| |
| * Cleanup of the :mod:`sys` module: removed :func:`sys.exitfunc`, |
| :func:`sys.exc_clear`, :data:`sys.exc_type`, :data:`sys.exc_value`, |
| :data:`sys.exc_traceback`. (Note that :data:`sys.last_type` |
| etc. remain.) |
| |
| * Cleanup of the :class:`array.array` type: the :meth:`read` and |
| :meth:`write` methods are gone; use :meth:`fromfile` and |
| :meth:`tofile` instead. Also, the ``'c'`` typecode for array is |
| gone -- use either ``'b'`` for bytes or ``'u'`` for Unicode |
| characters. |
| |
| * Cleanup of the :mod:`operator` module: removed |
| :func:`sequenceIncludes` and :func:`isCallable`. |
| |
| * Cleanup of the :mod:`thread` module: :func:`acquire_lock` and |
| :func:`release_lock` are gone; use :func:`acquire` and |
| :func:`release` instead. |
| |
| * Cleanup of the :mod:`random` module: removed the :func:`jumpahead` API. |
| |
| * The :mod:`new` module is gone. |
| |
| * The functions :func:`os.tmpnam`, :func:`os.tempnam` and |
| :func:`os.tmpfile` have been removed in favor of the :mod:`tempfile` |
| module. |
| |
| * The :mod:`tokenize` module has been changed to work with bytes. The |
| main entry point is now :func:`tokenize.tokenize`, instead of |
| generate_tokens. |
| |
| * :data:`string.letters` and its friends (:data:`string.lowercase` and |
| :data:`string.uppercase`) are gone. Use |
| :data:`string.ascii_letters` etc. instead. (The reason for the |
| removal is that :data:`string.letters` and friends had |
| locale-specific behavior, which is a bad idea for such |
| attractively-named global "constants".) |
| |
| * Renamed module :mod:`__builtin__` to :mod:`builtins` (removing the |
| underscores, adding an 's'). The :data:`__builtins__` variable |
| found in most global namespaces is unchanged. To modify a builtin, |
| you should use :mod:`builtins`, not :data:`__builtins__`! |
| |
| |
| :pep:`3101`: A New Approach To String Formatting |
| ================================================ |
| |
| * A new system for built-in string formatting operations replaces the |
| ``%`` string formatting operator. (However, the ``%`` operator is |
| still supported; it will be deprecated in Python 3.1 and removed |
| from the language at some later time.) Read :pep:`3101` for the full |
| scoop. |
| |
| |
| Changes To Exceptions |
| ===================== |
| |
| The APIs for raising and catching exception have been cleaned up and |
| new powerful features added: |
| |
| * :pep:`352`: All exceptions must be derived (directly or indirectly) |
| from :exc:`BaseException`. This is the root of the exception |
| hierarchy. This is not new as a recommendation, but the |
| *requirement* to inherit from :exc:`BaseException` is new. (Python |
| 2.6 still allowed classic classes to be raised, and placed no |
| restriction on what you can catch.) As a consequence, string |
| exceptions are finally truly and utterly dead. |
| |
| * Almost all exceptions should actually derive from :exc:`Exception`; |
| :exc:`BaseException` should only be used as a base class for |
| exceptions that should only be handled at the top level, such as |
| :exc:`SystemExit` or :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt`. The recommended |
| idiom for handling all exceptions except for this latter category is |
| to use :keyword:`except` :exc:`Exception`. |
| |
| * :exc:`StandardError` was removed. |
| |
| * Exceptions no longer behave as sequences. Use the :attr:`args` |
| attribute instead. |
| |
| * :pep:`3109`: Raising exceptions. You must now use :samp:`raise |
| {Exception}({args})` instead of :samp:`raise {Exception}, {args}`. |
| Additionally, you can no longer explicitly specify a traceback; |
| instead, if you *have* to do this, you can assign directly to the |
| :attr:`__traceback__` attribute (see below). |
| |
| * :pep:`3110`: Catching exceptions. You must now use |
| :samp:`except {SomeException} as {variable}` instead |
| of :samp:`except {SomeException}, {variable}`. Moreover, the |
| *variable* is explicitly deleted when the :keyword:`except` block |
| is left. |
| |
| * :pep:`3134`: Exception chaining. There are two cases: implicit |
| chaining and explicit chaining. Implicit chaining happens when an |
| exception is raised in an :keyword:`except` or :keyword:`finally` |
| handler block. This usually happens due to a bug in the handler |
| block; we call this a *secondary* exception. In this case, the |
| original exception (that was being handled) is saved as the |
| :attr:`__context__` attribute of the secondary exception. |
| Explicit chaining is invoked with this syntax:: |
| |
| raise SecondaryException() from primary_exception |
| |
| (where *primary_exception* is any expression that produces an |
| exception object, probably an exception that was previously caught). |
| In this case, the primary exception is stored on the |
| :attr:`__cause__` attribute of the secondary exception. The |
| traceback printed when an unhandled exception occurs walks the chain |
| of :attr:`__cause__` and :attr:`__context__` attributes and prints a |
| separate traceback for each component of the chain, with the primary |
| exception at the top. (Java users may recognize this behavior.) |
| |
| * :pep:`3134`: Exception objects now store their traceback as the |
| :attr:`__traceback__` attribute. This means that an exception |
| object now contains all the information pertaining to an exception, |
| and there are fewer reasons to use :func:`sys.exc_info` (though the |
| latter is not removed). |
| |
| * A few exception messages are improved when Windows fails to load an |
| extension module. For example, ``error code 193`` is now ``%1 is |
| not a valid Win32 application``. Strings now deal with non-English |
| locales. |
| |
| |
| Miscellaneous Other Changes |
| =========================== |
| |
| Operators And Special Methods |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| * ``!=`` now returns the opposite of ``==``, unless ``==`` returns |
| :data:`NotImplemented`. |
| |
| * The concept of "unbound methods" has been removed from the language. |
| When referencing a method as a class attribute, you now get a plain |
| function object. |
| |
| * :meth:`__getslice__`, :meth:`__setslice__` and :meth:`__delslice__` |
| were killed. The syntax ``a[i:j]`` now translates to |
| ``a.__getitem__(slice(i, j))`` (or :meth:`__setitem__` or |
| :meth:`__delitem__`, when used as an assignment or deletion target, |
| respectively). |
| |
| * :pep:`3114`: the standard :meth:`next` method has been renamed to |
| :meth:`~iterator.__next__`. |
| |
| * The :meth:`__oct__` and :meth:`__hex__` special methods are removed |
| -- :func:`oct` and :func:`hex` use :meth:`__index__` now to convert |
| the argument to an integer. |
| |
| * Removed support for :attr:`__members__` and :attr:`__methods__`. |
| |
| * The function attributes named :attr:`func_X` have been renamed to |
| use the :data:`__X__` form, freeing up these names in the function |
| attribute namespace for user-defined attributes. To wit, |
| :attr:`func_closure`, :attr:`func_code`, :attr:`func_defaults`, |
| :attr:`func_dict`, :attr:`func_doc`, :attr:`func_globals`, |
| :attr:`func_name` were renamed to :attr:`__closure__`, |
| :attr:`__code__`, :attr:`__defaults__`, :attr:`~object.__dict__`, |
| :attr:`__doc__`, :attr:`__globals__`, :attr:`~definition.__name__`, |
| respectively. |
| |
| * :meth:`__nonzero__` is now :meth:`__bool__`. |
| |
| Builtins |
| -------- |
| |
| * :pep:`3135`: New :func:`super`. You can now invoke :func:`super` |
| without arguments and (assuming this is in a regular instance method |
| defined inside a :keyword:`class` statement) the right class and |
| instance will automatically be chosen. With arguments, the behavior |
| of :func:`super` is unchanged. |
| |
| * :pep:`3111`: :func:`raw_input` was renamed to :func:`input`. That |
| is, the new :func:`input` function reads a line from |
| :data:`sys.stdin` and returns it with the trailing newline stripped. |
| It raises :exc:`EOFError` if the input is terminated prematurely. |
| To get the old behavior of :func:`input`, use ``eval(input())``. |
| |
| * A new built-in function :func:`next` was added to call the |
| :meth:`~iterator.__next__` method on an object. |
| |
| * The :func:`round` function rounding strategy and return type have |
| changed. Exact halfway cases are now rounded to the nearest even |
| result instead of away from zero. (For example, ``round(2.5)`` now |
| returns ``2`` rather than ``3``.) ``round(x[, n])`` now |
| delegates to ``x.__round__([n])`` instead of always returning a |
| float. It generally returns an integer when called with a single |
| argument and a value of the same type as ``x`` when called with two |
| arguments. |
| |
| * Moved :func:`intern` to :func:`sys.intern`. |
| |
| * Removed: :func:`apply`. Instead of ``apply(f, args)`` use |
| ``f(*args)``. |
| |
| * Removed :func:`callable`. Instead of ``callable(f)`` you can use |
| ``isinstance(f, collections.Callable)``. The :func:`operator.isCallable` |
| function is also gone. |
| |
| * Removed :func:`coerce`. This function no longer serves a purpose |
| now that classic classes are gone. |
| |
| * Removed :func:`execfile`. Instead of ``execfile(fn)`` use |
| ``exec(open(fn).read())``. |
| |
| * Removed the :class:`file` type. Use :func:`open`. There are now several |
| different kinds of streams that open can return in the :mod:`io` module. |
| |
| * Removed :func:`reduce`. Use :func:`functools.reduce` if you really |
| need it; however, 99 percent of the time an explicit :keyword:`for` |
| loop is more readable. |
| |
| * Removed :func:`reload`. Use :func:`imp.reload`. |
| |
| * Removed. :meth:`dict.has_key` -- use the :keyword:`in` operator |
| instead. |
| |
| .. ====================================================================== |
| |
| |
| Build and C API Changes |
| ======================= |
| |
| Due to time constraints, here is a *very* incomplete list of changes |
| to the C API. |
| |
| * Support for several platforms was dropped, including but not limited |
| to Mac OS 9, BeOS, RISCOS, Irix, and Tru64. |
| |
| * :pep:`3118`: New Buffer API. |
| |
| * :pep:`3121`: Extension Module Initialization & Finalization. |
| |
| * :pep:`3123`: Making :c:macro:`PyObject_HEAD` conform to standard C. |
| |
| * No more C API support for restricted execution. |
| |
| * :c:func:`PyNumber_Coerce`, :c:func:`PyNumber_CoerceEx`, |
| :c:func:`PyMember_Get`, and :c:func:`PyMember_Set` C APIs are removed. |
| |
| * New C API :c:func:`PyImport_ImportModuleNoBlock`, works like |
| :c:func:`PyImport_ImportModule` but won't block on the import lock |
| (returning an error instead). |
| |
| * Renamed the boolean conversion C-level slot and method: |
| ``nb_nonzero`` is now ``nb_bool``. |
| |
| * Removed :c:macro:`METH_OLDARGS` and :c:macro:`WITH_CYCLE_GC` from the C API. |
| |
| .. ====================================================================== |
| |
| |
| Performance |
| =========== |
| |
| The net result of the 3.0 generalizations is that Python 3.0 runs the |
| pystone benchmark around 10% slower than Python 2.5. Most likely the |
| biggest cause is the removal of special-casing for small integers. |
| There's room for improvement, but it will happen after 3.0 is |
| released! |
| |
| .. ====================================================================== |
| |
| |
| Porting To Python 3.0 |
| ===================== |
| |
| For porting existing Python 2.5 or 2.6 source code to Python 3.0, the |
| best strategy is the following: |
| |
| 0. (Prerequisite:) Start with excellent test coverage. |
| |
| 1. Port to Python 2.6. This should be no more work than the average |
| port from Python 2.x to Python 2.(x+1). Make sure all your tests |
| pass. |
| |
| 2. (Still using 2.6:) Turn on the :option:`!-3` command line switch. |
| This enables warnings about features that will be removed (or |
| change) in 3.0. Run your test suite again, and fix code that you |
| get warnings about until there are no warnings left, and all your |
| tests still pass. |
| |
| 3. Run the ``2to3`` source-to-source translator over your source code |
| tree. (See :ref:`2to3-reference` for more on this tool.) Run the |
| result of the translation under Python 3.0. Manually fix up any |
| remaining issues, fixing problems until all tests pass again. |
| |
| It is not recommended to try to write source code that runs unchanged |
| under both Python 2.6 and 3.0; you'd have to use a very contorted |
| coding style, e.g. avoiding ``print`` statements, metaclasses, |
| and much more. If you are maintaining a library that needs to support |
| both Python 2.6 and Python 3.0, the best approach is to modify step 3 |
| above by editing the 2.6 version of the source code and running the |
| ``2to3`` translator again, rather than editing the 3.0 version of the |
| source code. |
| |
| For porting C extensions to Python 3.0, please see :ref:`cporting-howto`. |
| |
| .. ====================================================================== |