blob: 0f8b88325c8ba9f88b0a5434b0d2f896660cc754 [file] [log] [blame]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001****************************
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002 What's New in Python 2.6
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003****************************
4
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00005.. XXX add trademark info for Apple, Microsoft, SourceForge.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00006
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00007:Author: A.M. Kuchling
8:Release: |release|
9:Date: |today|
10
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000011.. $Id: whatsnew26.tex 55746 2007-06-02 18:33:53Z neal.norwitz $
12 Rules for maintenance:
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000013
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000014 * Anyone can add text to this document. Do not spend very much time
15 on the wording of your changes, because your text will probably
16 get rewritten to some degree.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000017
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000018 * The maintainer will go through Misc/NEWS periodically and add
19 changes; it's therefore more important to add your changes to
20 Misc/NEWS than to this file.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000021
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000022 * This is not a complete list of every single change; completeness
23 is the purpose of Misc/NEWS. Some changes I consider too small
24 or esoteric to include. If such a change is added to the text,
25 I'll just remove it. (This is another reason you shouldn't spend
26 too much time on writing your addition.)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000027
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000028 * If you want to draw your new text to the attention of the
29 maintainer, add 'XXX' to the beginning of the paragraph or
30 section.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000031
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000032 * It's OK to just add a fragmentary note about a change. For
33 example: "XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the
34 socket module." The maintainer will research the change and
35 write the necessary text.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000036
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000037 * You can comment out your additions if you like, but it's not
38 necessary (especially when a final release is some months away).
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000039
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000040 * Credit the author of a patch or bugfix. Just the name is
41 sufficient; the e-mail address isn't necessary.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000042
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +000043 * It's helpful to add the bug/patch number in a parenthetical comment.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000044
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000045 XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the socket
46 module.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +000047 (Contributed by P.Y. Developer; :issue:`12345`.)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000048
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +000049 This saves the maintainer some effort going through the SVN logs
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000050 when researching a change.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000051
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +000052This article explains the new features in Python 2.6. The release
53schedule is described in :pep:`361`; currently the final release is
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +000054scheduled for October 1 2008.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000055
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +000056This article doesn't attempt to provide a complete specification of
57the new features, but instead provides a convenient overview. For
58full details, you should refer to the documentation for Python 2.6. If
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +000059you want to understand the rationale for the design and
60implementation, refer to the PEP for a particular new feature.
61Whenever possible, "What's New in Python" links to the bug/patch item
62for each change.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000063
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000064.. Compare with previous release in 2 - 3 sentences here.
65 add hyperlink when the documentation becomes available online.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000066
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000067.. ========================================================================
68.. Large, PEP-level features and changes should be described here.
69.. Should there be a new section here for 3k migration?
70.. Or perhaps a more general section describing module changes/deprecation?
71.. ========================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000072
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +000073Python 3.0
74================
75
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +000076The development cycle for Python 2.6 also saw the release of the first
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000077alphas of Python 3.0, and the development of 3.0 has influenced
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +000078a number of features in 2.6.
79
80Python 3.0 is a far-ranging redesign of Python that breaks
81compatibility with the 2.x series. This means that existing Python
82code will need a certain amount of conversion in order to run on
83Python 3.0. However, not all the changes in 3.0 necessarily break
84compatibility. In cases where new features won't cause existing code
85to break, they've been backported to 2.6 and are described in this
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000086document in the appropriate place. Some of the 3.0-derived features
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +000087are:
88
89* A :meth:`__complex__` method for converting objects to a complex number.
90* Alternate syntax for catching exceptions: ``except TypeError as exc``.
91* The addition of :func:`functools.reduce` as a synonym for the built-in
92 :func:`reduce` function.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +000093
94A new command-line switch, :option:`-3`, enables warnings
95about features that will be removed in Python 3.0. You can run code
96with this switch to see how much work will be necessary to port
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +000097code to 3.0. The value of this switch is available
98to Python code as the boolean variable :data:`sys.py3kwarning`,
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +000099and to C extension code as :cdata:`Py_Py3kWarningFlag`.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000100
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000101Python 3.0 adds several new built-in functions and change the
102semantics of some existing built-ins. Entirely new functions such as
103:func:`bin` have simply been added to Python 2.6, but existing
104built-ins haven't been changed; instead, the :mod:`future_builtins`
105module has versions with the new 3.0 semantics. Code written to be
106compatible with 3.0 can do ``from future_builtins import hex, map``
107as necessary.
108
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000109.. seealso::
110
111 The 3xxx series of PEPs, which describes the development process for
112 Python 3.0 and various features that have been accepted, rejected,
113 or are still under consideration.
114
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000115
116Development Changes
117==================================================
118
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000119While 2.6 was being developed, the Python development process
120underwent two significant changes: the developer group
121switched from SourceForge's issue tracker to a customized
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000122Roundup installation, and the documentation was converted from
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000123LaTeX to reStructuredText.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000124
125
126New Issue Tracker: Roundup
127--------------------------------------------------
128
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000129For a long time, the Python developers have been growing increasingly
130annoyed by SourceForge's bug tracker. SourceForge's hosted solution
131doesn't permit much customization; for example, it wasn't possible to
132customize the life cycle of issues.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000133
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000134The infrastructure committee of the Python Software Foundation
135therefore posted a call for issue trackers, asking volunteers to set
136up different products and import some of the bugs and patches from
137SourceForge. Four different trackers were examined: Atlassian's `Jira
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000138<http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/>`__,
139`Launchpad <http://www.launchpad.net>`__,
140`Roundup <http://roundup.sourceforge.net/>`__, and
141`Trac <http://trac.edgewall.org/>`__.
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +0000142The committee eventually settled on Jira
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000143and Roundup as the two candidates. Jira is a commercial product that
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000144offers a no-cost hosted instance to free-software projects; Roundup
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000145is an open-source project that requires volunteers
146to administer it and a server to host it.
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000147
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000148After posting a call for volunteers, a new Roundup installation was
149set up at http://bugs.python.org. One installation of Roundup can
150host multiple trackers, and this server now also hosts issue trackers
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000151for Jython and for the Python web site. It will surely find
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +0000152other uses in the future. Where possible,
153this edition of "What's New in Python" links to the bug/patch
154item for each change.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000155
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000156Hosting is kindly provided by
157`Upfront Systems <http://www.upfrontsystems.co.za/>`__
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +0000158of Stellenbosch, South Africa. Martin von Loewis put a
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +0000159lot of effort into importing existing bugs and patches from
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000160SourceForge; his scripts for this import operation are at
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +0000161http://svn.python.org/view/tracker/importer/.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000162
163.. seealso::
164
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000165 http://bugs.python.org
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +0000166 The Python bug tracker.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000167
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +0000168 http://bugs.jython.org:
169 The Jython bug tracker.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000170
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +0000171 http://roundup.sourceforge.net/
172 Roundup downloads and documentation.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000173
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000174
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000175New Documentation Format: reStructuredText Using Sphinx
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +0000176-----------------------------------------------------------
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000177
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000178Since the Python project's inception around 1989, the documentation
179had been written using LaTeX. At that time, most documentation was
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000180printed out for later study, not viewed online. LaTeX was widely used
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000181because it provided attractive printed output while remaining
182straightforward to write, once the basic rules of the markup have been
183learned.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000184
185LaTeX is still used today for writing technical publications destined
186for printing, but the landscape for programming tools has shifted. We
187no longer print out reams of documentation; instead, we browse through
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000188it online and HTML has become the most important format to support.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000189Unfortunately, converting LaTeX to HTML is fairly complicated, and
190Fred L. Drake Jr., the Python documentation editor for many years,
191spent a lot of time wrestling the conversion process into shape.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000192Occasionally people would suggest converting the documentation into
193SGML or, later, XML, but performing a good conversion is a major task
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000194and no one pursued the task to completion.
195
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +0000196During the 2.6 development cycle, Georg Brandl put a substantial
197effort into building a new toolchain for processing the documentation.
198The resulting package is called Sphinx, and is available from
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000199http://sphinx.pocoo.org/. The input format is reStructuredText, a
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +0000200markup commonly used in the Python community that supports custom
201extensions and directives. Sphinx concentrates on HTML output,
202producing attractively styled and modern HTML, though printed output
203is still supported through conversion to LaTeX. Sphinx is a
204standalone package that can be used in documenting other projects.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000205
206.. seealso::
207
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +0000208 :ref:`documenting-index`
209 Describes how to write for Python's documentation.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000210
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +0000211 `Sphinx <http://sphinx.pocoo.org/>`__
212 Documentation and code for the Sphinx toolchain.
213
214 `Docutils <http://docutils.sf.net>`__
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000215 The underlying reStructuredText parser and toolset.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000216
217
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000218PEP 343: The 'with' statement
219=============================
220
221The previous version, Python 2.5, added the ':keyword:`with`'
222statement an optional feature, to be enabled by a ``from __future__
Guido van Rossumb00324f2007-12-04 01:13:14 +0000223import with_statement`` directive. In 2.6 the statement no longer needs to
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000224be specially enabled; this means that :keyword:`with` is now always a
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000225keyword. The rest of this section is a copy of the corresponding
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000226section from "What's New in Python 2.5" document; if you read
227it back when Python 2.5 came out, you can skip the rest of this
228section.
229
230The ':keyword:`with`' statement clarifies code that previously would use
231``try...finally`` blocks to ensure that clean-up code is executed. In this
232section, I'll discuss the statement as it will commonly be used. In the next
233section, I'll examine the implementation details and show how to write objects
234for use with this statement.
235
236The ':keyword:`with`' statement is a new control-flow structure whose basic
237structure is::
238
239 with expression [as variable]:
240 with-block
241
242The expression is evaluated, and it should result in an object that supports the
243context management protocol (that is, has :meth:`__enter__` and :meth:`__exit__`
244methods.
245
246The object's :meth:`__enter__` is called before *with-block* is executed and
247therefore can run set-up code. It also may return a value that is bound to the
248name *variable*, if given. (Note carefully that *variable* is *not* assigned
249the result of *expression*.)
250
251After execution of the *with-block* is finished, the object's :meth:`__exit__`
252method is called, even if the block raised an exception, and can therefore run
253clean-up code.
254
255Some standard Python objects now support the context management protocol and can
256be used with the ':keyword:`with`' statement. File objects are one example::
257
258 with open('/etc/passwd', 'r') as f:
259 for line in f:
260 print line
261 ... more processing code ...
262
263After this statement has executed, the file object in *f* will have been
264automatically closed, even if the :keyword:`for` loop raised an exception part-
265way through the block.
266
267.. note::
268
269 In this case, *f* is the same object created by :func:`open`, because
270 :meth:`file.__enter__` returns *self*.
271
272The :mod:`threading` module's locks and condition variables also support the
273':keyword:`with`' statement::
274
275 lock = threading.Lock()
276 with lock:
277 # Critical section of code
278 ...
279
280The lock is acquired before the block is executed and always released once the
281block is complete.
282
283The new :func:`localcontext` function in the :mod:`decimal` module makes it easy
284to save and restore the current decimal context, which encapsulates the desired
285precision and rounding characteristics for computations::
286
287 from decimal import Decimal, Context, localcontext
288
289 # Displays with default precision of 28 digits
290 v = Decimal('578')
291 print v.sqrt()
292
293 with localcontext(Context(prec=16)):
294 # All code in this block uses a precision of 16 digits.
295 # The original context is restored on exiting the block.
296 print v.sqrt()
297
298
299.. _new-26-context-managers:
300
301Writing Context Managers
302------------------------
303
304Under the hood, the ':keyword:`with`' statement is fairly complicated. Most
305people will only use ':keyword:`with`' in company with existing objects and
306don't need to know these details, so you can skip the rest of this section if
307you like. Authors of new objects will need to understand the details of the
308underlying implementation and should keep reading.
309
310A high-level explanation of the context management protocol is:
311
312* The expression is evaluated and should result in an object called a "context
313 manager". The context manager must have :meth:`__enter__` and :meth:`__exit__`
314 methods.
315
316* The context manager's :meth:`__enter__` method is called. The value returned
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000317 is assigned to *VAR*. If no ``as VAR`` clause is present, the value is simply
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000318 discarded.
319
320* The code in *BLOCK* is executed.
321
322* If *BLOCK* raises an exception, the :meth:`__exit__(type, value, traceback)`
323 is called with the exception details, the same values returned by
324 :func:`sys.exc_info`. The method's return value controls whether the exception
325 is re-raised: any false value re-raises the exception, and ``True`` will result
326 in suppressing it. You'll only rarely want to suppress the exception, because
327 if you do the author of the code containing the ':keyword:`with`' statement will
328 never realize anything went wrong.
329
330* If *BLOCK* didn't raise an exception, the :meth:`__exit__` method is still
331 called, but *type*, *value*, and *traceback* are all ``None``.
332
333Let's think through an example. I won't present detailed code but will only
334sketch the methods necessary for a database that supports transactions.
335
336(For people unfamiliar with database terminology: a set of changes to the
337database are grouped into a transaction. Transactions can be either committed,
338meaning that all the changes are written into the database, or rolled back,
339meaning that the changes are all discarded and the database is unchanged. See
340any database textbook for more information.)
341
342Let's assume there's an object representing a database connection. Our goal will
343be to let the user write code like this::
344
345 db_connection = DatabaseConnection()
346 with db_connection as cursor:
347 cursor.execute('insert into ...')
348 cursor.execute('delete from ...')
349 # ... more operations ...
350
351The transaction should be committed if the code in the block runs flawlessly or
352rolled back if there's an exception. Here's the basic interface for
353:class:`DatabaseConnection` that I'll assume::
354
355 class DatabaseConnection:
356 # Database interface
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000357 def cursor(self):
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000358 "Returns a cursor object and starts a new transaction"
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000359 def commit(self):
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000360 "Commits current transaction"
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000361 def rollback(self):
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000362 "Rolls back current transaction"
363
364The :meth:`__enter__` method is pretty easy, having only to start a new
365transaction. For this application the resulting cursor object would be a useful
366result, so the method will return it. The user can then add ``as cursor`` to
367their ':keyword:`with`' statement to bind the cursor to a variable name. ::
368
369 class DatabaseConnection:
370 ...
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000371 def __enter__(self):
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000372 # Code to start a new transaction
373 cursor = self.cursor()
374 return cursor
375
376The :meth:`__exit__` method is the most complicated because it's where most of
377the work has to be done. The method has to check if an exception occurred. If
378there was no exception, the transaction is committed. The transaction is rolled
379back if there was an exception.
380
381In the code below, execution will just fall off the end of the function,
382returning the default value of ``None``. ``None`` is false, so the exception
383will be re-raised automatically. If you wished, you could be more explicit and
384add a :keyword:`return` statement at the marked location. ::
385
386 class DatabaseConnection:
387 ...
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000388 def __exit__(self, type, value, tb):
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000389 if tb is None:
390 # No exception, so commit
391 self.commit()
392 else:
393 # Exception occurred, so rollback.
394 self.rollback()
395 # return False
396
397
398.. _module-contextlib:
399
400The contextlib module
401---------------------
402
403The new :mod:`contextlib` module provides some functions and a decorator that
404are useful for writing objects for use with the ':keyword:`with`' statement.
405
406The decorator is called :func:`contextmanager`, and lets you write a single
407generator function instead of defining a new class. The generator should yield
408exactly one value. The code up to the :keyword:`yield` will be executed as the
409:meth:`__enter__` method, and the value yielded will be the method's return
410value that will get bound to the variable in the ':keyword:`with`' statement's
411:keyword:`as` clause, if any. The code after the :keyword:`yield` will be
412executed in the :meth:`__exit__` method. Any exception raised in the block will
413be raised by the :keyword:`yield` statement.
414
415Our database example from the previous section could be written using this
416decorator as::
417
418 from contextlib import contextmanager
419
420 @contextmanager
Christian Heimes2c181612007-12-17 20:04:13 +0000421 def db_transaction(connection):
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000422 cursor = connection.cursor()
423 try:
424 yield cursor
425 except:
426 connection.rollback()
427 raise
428 else:
429 connection.commit()
430
431 db = DatabaseConnection()
432 with db_transaction(db) as cursor:
433 ...
434
435The :mod:`contextlib` module also has a :func:`nested(mgr1, mgr2, ...)` function
436that combines a number of context managers so you don't need to write nested
437':keyword:`with`' statements. In this example, the single ':keyword:`with`'
438statement both starts a database transaction and acquires a thread lock::
439
440 lock = threading.Lock()
441 with nested (db_transaction(db), lock) as (cursor, locked):
442 ...
443
444Finally, the :func:`closing(object)` function returns *object* so that it can be
445bound to a variable, and calls ``object.close`` at the end of the block. ::
446
447 import urllib, sys
448 from contextlib import closing
449
450 with closing(urllib.urlopen('http://www.yahoo.com')) as f:
451 for line in f:
452 sys.stdout.write(line)
453
454
455.. seealso::
456
457 :pep:`343` - The "with" statement
458 PEP written by Guido van Rossum and Nick Coghlan; implemented by Mike Bland,
459 Guido van Rossum, and Neal Norwitz. The PEP shows the code generated for a
460 ':keyword:`with`' statement, which can be helpful in learning how the statement
461 works.
462
463 The documentation for the :mod:`contextlib` module.
464
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000465.. ======================================================================
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000466
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000467.. _pep-0366:
468
469PEP 366: Explicit Relative Imports From a Main Module
470============================================================
471
472Python's :option:`-m` switch allows running a module as a script.
473When you ran a module that was located inside a package, relative
474imports didn't work correctly.
475
476The fix in Python 2.6 adds a :attr:`__package__` attribute to modules.
477When present, relative imports will be relative to the value of this
478attribute instead of the :attr:`__name__` attribute. PEP 302-style
479importers can then set :attr:`__package__`. The :mod:`runpy` module
480that implements the :option:`-m` switch now does this, so relative imports
481can now be used in scripts running from inside a package.
482
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000483.. ======================================================================
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +0000484
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000485.. _pep-0370:
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000486
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000487PEP 370: Per-user ``site-packages`` Directory
488=====================================================
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000489
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000490When you run Python, the module search path ``sys.modules`` usually
491includes a directory whose path ends in ``"site-packages"``. This
492directory is intended to hold locally-installed packages available to
493all users on a machine or using a particular site installation.
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000494
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000495Python 2.6 introduces a convention for user-specific site directories.
496The directory varies depending on the platform:
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000497
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000498* Unix and MacOS: :file:`~/.local/`
499* Windows: :file:`%APPDATA%/Python`
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000500
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000501Within this directory, there will be version-specific subdirectories,
502such as :file:`lib/python2.6/site-packages` on Unix/MacOS and
503:file:`Python26/site-packages` on Windows.
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000504
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +0000505If you don't like the default directory, it can be overridden by an
506environment variable. :envvar:`PYTHONUSERBASE` sets the root
507directory used for all Python versions supporting this feature. On
508Windows, the directory for application-specific data can be changed by
509setting the :envvar:`APPDATA` environment variable. You can also
510modify the :file:`site.py` file for your Python installation.
511
512The feature can be disabled entirely by running Python with the
513:option:`-s` option or setting the :envvar:`PYTHONNOUSERSITE`
514environment variable.
515
516.. seealso::
517
518 :pep:`370` - Per-user ``site-packages`` Directory
519 PEP written and implemented by Christian Heimes.
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000520
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000521
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +0000522.. ======================================================================
523
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc35c86582008-06-17 21:11:29 +0000524.. _pep-0371:
525
526PEP 371: The ``multiprocessing`` Package
527=====================================================
528
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000529The new :mod:`multiprocessing` package lets Python programs create new
530processes that will perform a computation and return a result to the
531parent. The parent and child processes can communicate using queues
532and pipes, synchronize their operations using locks and semaphores,
533and can share simple arrays of data.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000534
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000535The :mod:`multiprocessing` module started out as an exact emulation of
536the :mod:`threading` module using processes instead of threads. That
537goal was discarded along the path to Python 2.6, but the general
538approach of the module is still similar. The fundamental class
539is the :class:`Process`, which is passed a callable object and
540a collection of arguments. The :meth:`start` method
541sets the callable running in a subprocess, after which you can call
542the :meth:`is_alive` method to check whether the subprocess is still running
543and the :meth:`join` method to wait for the process to exit.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000544
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000545Here's a simple example where the subprocess will calculate a
546factorial. The function doing the calculation is a bit strange; it's
547written to take significantly longer when the input argument is a
548multiple of 4.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000549
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000550::
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000551
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000552 import time
553 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000554
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000555
556 def factorial(queue, N):
557 "Compute a factorial."
558 # If N is a multiple of 4, this function will take much longer.
559 if (N % 4) == 0:
560 time.sleep(.05 * N/4)
561
562 # Calculate the result
563 fact = 1L
564 for i in range(1, N+1):
565 fact = fact * i
566
567 # Put the result on the queue
568 queue.put(fact)
569
570 if __name__ == '__main__':
571 queue = Queue()
572
573 N = 5
574
575 p = Process(target=factorial, args=(queue, N))
576 p.start()
577 p.join()
578
579 result = queue.get()
580 print 'Factorial', N, '=', result
581
582A :class:`Queue` object is created and stored as a global. The child
583process will use the value of the variable when the child was created;
584because it's a :class:`Queue`, parent and child can use the object to
585communicate. (If the parent were to change the value of the global
586variable, the child's value would be unaffected, and vice versa.)
587
588Two other classes, :class:`Pool` and :class:`Manager`, provide
589higher-level interfaces. :class:`Pool` will create a fixed number of
590worker processes, and requests can then be distributed to the workers
591by calling :meth:`apply` or `apply_async`, adding a single request,
592and :meth:`map` or :meth:`map_async` to distribute a number of
593requests. The following code uses a :class:`Pool` to spread requests
594across 5 worker processes, receiving a list of results back.
595
596::
597
598 from multiprocessing import Pool
599
600 p = Pool(5)
601 result = p.map(factorial, range(1, 1000, 10))
602 for v in result:
603 print v
604
605This produces the following output::
606
607 1
608 39916800
609 51090942171709440000
610 8222838654177922817725562880000000
611 33452526613163807108170062053440751665152000000000
612 ...
613
614The :class:`Manager` class creates a separate server process that can
615hold master copies of Python data structures. Other processes can
616then access and modify these data structures by using proxy objects.
617The following example creates a shared dictionary by calling the
618:meth:`dict` method; the worker processes then insert values into the
619dictionary. (No locking is done automatically, which doesn't matter
620in this example. :class:`Manager`'s methods also include
621:meth:`Lock`, :meth:`RLock`, and :meth:`Semaphore` to create shared locks.
622
623::
624
625 import time
626 from multiprocessing import Pool, Manager
627
628 def factorial(N, dictionary):
629 "Compute a factorial."
630 # Calculate the result
631 fact = 1L
632 for i in range(1, N+1):
633 fact = fact * i
634
635 # Store result in dictionary
636 dictionary[N] = fact
637
638 if __name__ == '__main__':
639 p = Pool(5)
640 mgr = Manager()
641 d = mgr.dict() # Create shared dictionary
642
643 # Run tasks using the pool
644 for N in range(1, 1000, 10):
645 p.apply_async(factorial, (N, d))
646
647 # Mark pool as closed -- no more tasks can be added.
648 p.close()
649
650 # Wait for tasks to exit
651 p.join()
652
653 # Output results
654 for k, v in sorted(d.items()):
655 print k, v
656
657This will produce the output::
658
659 1 1
660 11 39916800
661 21 51090942171709440000
662 31 8222838654177922817725562880000000
663 41 33452526613163807108170062053440751665152000000000
664 51 1551118753287382280224243016469303211063259720016986112000000000000
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc35c86582008-06-17 21:11:29 +0000665
666.. seealso::
667
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000668 The documentation for the :mod:`multiprocessing` module.
669
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000670 :pep:`371` - Addition of the multiprocessing package
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc35c86582008-06-17 21:11:29 +0000671 PEP written by Jesse Noller and Richard Oudkerk;
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000672 implemented by Richard Oudkerk and Jesse Noller.
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc35c86582008-06-17 21:11:29 +0000673
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000674
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc35c86582008-06-17 21:11:29 +0000675.. ======================================================================
676
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +0000677.. _pep-3101:
678
679PEP 3101: Advanced String Formatting
680=====================================================
681
Benjamin Peterson1e2f0502008-05-26 12:52:02 +0000682In Python 3.0, the `%` operator is supplemented by a more powerful string
683formatting method, :meth:`format`. Support for the :meth:`str.format` method
684has been backported to Python 2.6.
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000685
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000686In 2.6, both 8-bit and Unicode strings have a `.format()` method that
687treats the string as a template and takes the arguments to be formatted.
688The formatting template uses curly brackets (`{`, `}`) as special characters::
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000689
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000690 # Substitute positional argument 0 into the string.
691 "User ID: {0}".format("root") -> "User ID: root"
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000692
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000693 # Use the named keyword arguments
694 uid = 'root'
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000695
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000696 'User ID: {uid} Last seen: {last_login}'.format(uid='root',
697 last_login = '5 Mar 2008 07:20') ->
698 'User ID: root Last seen: 5 Mar 2008 07:20'
699
700Curly brackets can be escaped by doubling them::
701
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000702 format("Empty dict: {{}}") -> "Empty dict: {}"
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000703
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000704Field names can be integers indicating positional arguments, such as
705``{0}``, ``{1}``, etc. or names of keyword arguments. You can also
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000706supply compound field names that read attributes or access dictionary keys::
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000707
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000708 import sys
709 'Platform: {0.platform}\nPython version: {0.version}'.format(sys) ->
710 'Platform: darwin\n
711 Python version: 2.6a1+ (trunk:61261M, Mar 5 2008, 20:29:41) \n
712 [GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 5367)]'
713
714 import mimetypes
715 'Content-type: {0[.mp4]}'.format(mimetypes.types_map) ->
716 'Content-type: video/mp4'
717
718Note that when using dictionary-style notation such as ``[.mp4]``, you
719don't need to put any quotation marks around the string; it will look
720up the value using ``.mp4`` as the key. Strings beginning with a
721number will be converted to an integer. You can't write more
722complicated expressions inside a format string.
723
724So far we've shown how to specify which field to substitute into the
725resulting string. The precise formatting used is also controllable by
Christian Heimes4fbc72b2008-03-22 00:47:35 +0000726adding a colon followed by a format specifier. For example::
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000727
728 # Field 0: left justify, pad to 15 characters
729 # Field 1: right justify, pad to 6 characters
730 fmt = '{0:15} ${1:>6}'
731 fmt.format('Registration', 35) ->
732 'Registration $ 35'
733 fmt.format('Tutorial', 50) ->
734 'Tutorial $ 50'
735 fmt.format('Banquet', 125) ->
736 'Banquet $ 125'
737
Christian Heimes4fbc72b2008-03-22 00:47:35 +0000738Format specifiers can reference other fields through nesting::
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000739
740 fmt = '{0:{1}}'
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000741 fmt.format('Invoice #1234', 15) ->
742 'Invoice #1234 '
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +0000743 width = 35
744 fmt.format('Invoice #1234', width) ->
745 'Invoice #1234 '
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000746
747The alignment of a field within the desired width can be specified:
748
749================ ============================================
750Character Effect
751================ ============================================
752< (default) Left-align
753> Right-align
754^ Center
755= (For numeric types only) Pad after the sign.
756================ ============================================
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000757
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000758Format specifiers can also include a presentation type, which
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +0000759controls how the value is formatted. For example, floating-point numbers
760can be formatted as a general number or in exponential notation:
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000761
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +0000762 >>> '{0:g}'.format(3.75)
763 '3.75'
764 >>> '{0:e}'.format(3.75)
765 '3.750000e+00'
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000766
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +0000767A variety of presentation types are available. Consult the 2.6
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000768documentation for a :ref:`complete list <formatstrings>`; here's a sample::
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +0000769
770 'b' - Binary. Outputs the number in base 2.
771 'c' - Character. Converts the integer to the corresponding
772 Unicode character before printing.
773 'd' - Decimal Integer. Outputs the number in base 10.
774 'o' - Octal format. Outputs the number in base 8.
775 'x' - Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using lower-
776 case letters for the digits above 9.
777 'e' - Exponent notation. Prints the number in scientific
778 notation using the letter 'e' to indicate the exponent.
779 'g' - General format. This prints the number as a fixed-point
780 number, unless the number is too large, in which case
781 it switches to 'e' exponent notation.
Alexandre Vassalottieca20b62008-05-16 02:54:33 +0000782 'n' - Number. This is the same as 'g' (for floats) or 'd' (for
783 integers), except that it uses the current locale setting to
784 insert the appropriate number separator characters.
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +0000785 '%' - Percentage. Multiplies the number by 100 and displays
786 in fixed ('f') format, followed by a percent sign.
787
Georg Brandl734e2682008-08-12 08:18:18 +0000788Classes and types can define a :meth:`__format__` method to control how they're
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000789formatted. It receives a single argument, the format specifier::
790
791 def __format__(self, format_spec):
792 if isinstance(format_spec, unicode):
793 return unicode(str(self))
794 else:
795 return str(self)
796
797There's also a format() built-in that will format a single value. It calls
798the type's :meth:`__format__` method with the provided specifier::
799
800 >>> format(75.6564, '.2f')
801 '75.66'
802
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +0000803
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000804.. seealso::
805
Benjamin Peterson1e2f0502008-05-26 12:52:02 +0000806 :ref:`formatstrings`
807 The reference format fields.
808
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000809 :pep:`3101` - Advanced String Formatting
Benjamin Peterson1e2f0502008-05-26 12:52:02 +0000810 PEP written by Talin. Implemented by Eric Smith.
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +0000811
812.. ======================================================================
813
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000814.. _pep-3105:
815
816PEP 3105: ``print`` As a Function
817=====================================================
818
819The ``print`` statement becomes the :func:`print` function in Python 3.0.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000820Making :func:`print` a function makes it easier to change
821by doing 'def print(...)' or importing a new function from somewhere else.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000822
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000823Python 2.6 has a ``__future__`` import that removes ``print`` as language
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000824syntax, letting you use the functional form instead. For example::
825
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000826 from __future__ import print_function
827 print('# of entries', len(dictionary), file=sys.stderr)
828
829The signature of the new function is::
830
831 def print(*args, sep=' ', end='\n', file=None)
832
833The parameters are:
834
835 * **args**: positional arguments whose values will be printed out.
836 * **sep**: the separator, which will be printed between arguments.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000837 * **end**: the ending text, which will be printed after all of the
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +0000838 arguments have been output.
839 * **file**: the file object to which the output will be sent.
840
841.. seealso::
842
843 :pep:`3105` - Make print a function
844 PEP written by Georg Brandl.
845
846.. ======================================================================
847
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000848.. _pep-3110:
849
850PEP 3110: Exception-Handling Changes
851=====================================================
852
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000853One error that Python programmers occasionally make
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000854is the following::
855
856 try:
857 ...
858 except TypeError, ValueError:
859 ...
860
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000861The author is probably trying to catch both
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000862:exc:`TypeError` and :exc:`ValueError` exceptions, but this code
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000863actually does something different: it will catch
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000864:exc:`TypeError` and bind the resulting exception object
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000865to the local name ``"ValueError"``. The correct code
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000866would have specified a tuple::
867
868 try:
869 ...
870 except (TypeError, ValueError):
871 ...
872
873This error is possible because the use of the comma here is ambiguous:
874does it indicate two different nodes in the parse tree, or a single
875node that's a tuple.
876
877Python 3.0 changes the syntax to make this unambiguous by replacing
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000878the comma with the word "as". To catch an exception and store the
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000879exception object in the variable ``exc``, you must write::
880
881 try:
882 ...
883 except TypeError as exc:
884 ...
885
886Python 3.0 will only support the use of "as", and therefore interprets
887the first example as catching two different exceptions. Python 2.6
888supports both the comma and "as", so existing code will continue to
889work.
890
891.. seealso::
892
893 :pep:`3110` - Catching Exceptions in Python 3000
894 PEP written and implemented by Collin Winter.
895
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000896.. ======================================================================
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000897
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000898.. _pep-3112:
899
900PEP 3112: Byte Literals
901=====================================================
902
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000903Python 3.0 adopts Unicode as the language's fundamental string type and
904denotes 8-bit literals differently, either as ``b'string'``
905or using a :class:`bytes` constructor. For future compatibility,
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000906Python 2.6 adds :class:`bytes` as a synonym for the :class:`str` type,
907and it also supports the ``b''`` notation.
908
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000909There's also a ``__future__`` import that causes all string literals
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000910to become Unicode strings. This means that ``\u`` escape sequences
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000911can be used to include Unicode characters::
912
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000913
Neal Norwitz32dde222008-04-15 06:43:13 +0000914 from __future__ import unicode_literals
915
916 s = ('\u751f\u3080\u304e\u3000\u751f\u3054'
917 '\u3081\u3000\u751f\u305f\u307e\u3054')
918
919 print len(s) # 12 Unicode characters
920
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000921At the C level, Python 3.0 will rename the existing 8-bit
922string type, called :ctype:`PyStringObject` in Python 2.x,
923to :ctype:`PyBytesObject`. Python 2.6 uses ``#define``
924to support using the names :cfunc:`PyBytesObject`,
925:cfunc:`PyBytes_Check`, :cfunc:`PyBytes_FromStringAndSize`,
926and all the other functions and macros used with strings.
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000927
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000928Instances of the :class:`bytes` type are immutable just
929as strings are. A new :class:`bytearray` type stores a mutable
930sequence of bytes::
931
932 >>> bytearray([65, 66, 67])
933 bytearray(b'ABC')
934 >>> b = bytearray(u'\u21ef\u3244', 'utf-8')
935 >>> b
936 bytearray(b'\xe2\x87\xaf \xe3\x89\x84')
937 >>> b[0] = '\xe3'
938 >>> b
939 bytearray(b'\xe3\x87\xaf \xe3\x89\x84')
940 >>> unicode(str(b), 'utf-8')
941 u'\u31ef \u3244'
942
943Byte arrays support most of the methods of string types, such as
944:meth:`startswith`/:meth:`endswith`, :meth:`find`/:meth:`rfind`,
945and some of the methods of lists, such as :meth:`append`,
946:meth:`pop`, and :meth:`reverse`.
947
948 >>> b = bytearray('ABC')
949 >>> b.append('d')
950 >>> b.append(ord('e'))
951 >>> b
952 bytearray(b'ABCde')
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000953
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +0000954.. seealso::
955
956 :pep:`3112` - Bytes literals in Python 3000
957 PEP written by Jason Orendorff; backported to 2.6 by Christian Heimes.
958
959.. ======================================================================
960
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +0000961.. _pep-3116:
962
963PEP 3116: New I/O Library
964=====================================================
965
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000966Python's built-in file objects support a number of methods, but
967file-like objects don't necessarily support all of them. Objects that
968imitate files usually support :meth:`read` and :meth:`write`, but they
969may not support :meth:`readline`. Python 3.0 introduces a layered I/O
970library in the :mod:`io` module that separates buffering and
971text-handling features from the fundamental read and write operations.
972
973There are three levels of abstract base classes provided by
974the :mod:`io` module:
975
976* :class:`RawIOBase`: defines raw I/O operations: :meth:`read`,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000977 :meth:`readinto`,
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000978 :meth:`write`, :meth:`seek`, :meth:`tell`, :meth:`truncate`,
979 and :meth:`close`.
980 Most of the methods of this class will often map to a single system call.
981 There are also :meth:`readable`, :meth:`writable`, and :meth:`seekable`
982 methods for determining what operations a given object will allow.
983
984 Python 3.0 has concrete implementations of this class for files and
985 sockets, but Python 2.6 hasn't restructured its file and socket objects
986 in this way.
987
988 .. XXX should 2.6 register them in io.py?
989
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000990* :class:`BufferedIOBase`: is an abstract base class that
991 buffers data in memory to reduce the number of
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000992 system calls used, making I/O processing more efficient.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000993 It supports all of the methods of :class:`RawIOBase`,
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000994 and adds a :attr:`raw` attribute holding the underlying raw object.
995
996 There are four concrete classes implementing this ABC:
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +0000997 :class:`BufferedWriter` and
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +0000998 :class:`BufferedReader` for objects that only support
999 writing or reading and don't support random access,
1000 :class:`BufferedRandom` for objects that support the :meth:`seek` method
1001 for random access,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001002 and :class:`BufferedRWPair` for objects such as TTYs that have
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001003 both read and write operations that act upon unconnected streams of data.
1004
1005* :class:`TextIOBase`: Provides functions for reading and writing
1006 strings (remember, strings will be Unicode in Python 3.0),
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001007 and supporting universal newlines. :class:`TextIOBase` defines
1008 the :meth:`readline` method and supports iteration upon
1009 objects.
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001010
1011 There are two concrete implementations. :class:`TextIOWrapper`
1012 wraps a buffered I/O object, supporting all of the methods for
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001013 text I/O and adding a :attr:`buffer` attribute for access
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001014 to the underlying object. :class:`StringIO` simply buffers
1015 everything in memory without ever writing anything to disk.
1016
1017 (In current 2.6 alpha releases, :class:`io.StringIO` is implemented in
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001018 pure Python, so it's pretty slow. You should therefore stick with the
1019 existing :mod:`StringIO` module or :mod:`cStringIO` for now. At some
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001020 point Python 3.0's :mod:`io` module will be rewritten into C for speed,
1021 and perhaps the C implementation will be backported to the 2.x releases.)
1022
1023 .. XXX check before final release: is io.py still written in Python?
1024
1025In Python 2.6, the underlying implementations haven't been
1026restructured to build on top of the :mod:`io` module's classes. The
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001027module is being provided to make it easier to write code that's
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001028forward-compatible with 3.0, and to save developers the effort of writing
1029their own implementations of buffering and text I/O.
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00001030
1031.. seealso::
1032
1033 :pep:`3116` - New I/O
1034 PEP written by Daniel Stutzbach, Mike Verdone, and Guido van Rossum.
Neal Norwitz32dde222008-04-15 06:43:13 +00001035 Code by Guido van Rossum, Georg Brandl, Walter Doerwald,
1036 Jeremy Hylton, Martin von Loewis, Tony Lownds, and others.
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00001037
1038.. ======================================================================
1039
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00001040.. _pep-3118:
1041
1042PEP 3118: Revised Buffer Protocol
1043=====================================================
1044
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001045The buffer protocol is a C-level API that lets Python types
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001046exchange pointers into their internal representations. A
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001047memory-mapped file can be viewed as a buffer of characters, for
1048example, and this lets another module such as :mod:`re`
1049treat memory-mapped files as a string of characters to be searched.
1050
1051The primary users of the buffer protocol are numeric-processing
1052packages such as NumPy, which can expose the internal representation
1053of arrays so that callers can write data directly into an array instead
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001054of going through a slower API. This PEP updates the buffer protocol in light of experience
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001055from NumPy development, adding a number of new features
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001056such as indicating the shape of an array,
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001057locking memory .
1058
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001059The most important new C API function is
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001060``PyObject_GetBuffer(PyObject *obj, Py_buffer *view, int flags)``, which
1061takes an object and a set of flags, and fills in the
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001062``Py_buffer`` structure with information
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001063about the object's memory representation. Objects
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001064can use this operation to lock memory in place
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001065while an external caller could be modifying the contents,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001066so there's a corresponding
Martin v. Löwis423be952008-08-13 15:53:07 +00001067``PyBuffer_Release(Py_buffer *view)`` to
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001068indicate that the external caller is done.
1069
1070The **flags** argument to :cfunc:`PyObject_GetBuffer` specifies
1071constraints upon the memory returned. Some examples are:
1072
1073 * :const:`PyBUF_WRITABLE` indicates that the memory must be writable.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001074
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001075 * :const:`PyBUF_LOCK` requests a read-only or exclusive lock on the memory.
1076
1077 * :const:`PyBUF_C_CONTIGUOUS` and :const:`PyBUF_F_CONTIGUOUS`
1078 requests a C-contiguous (last dimension varies the fastest) or
1079 Fortran-contiguous (first dimension varies the fastest) layout.
1080
1081.. XXX this feature is not in 2.6 docs yet
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00001082
1083.. seealso::
1084
1085 :pep:`3118` - Revising the buffer protocol
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001086 PEP written by Travis Oliphant and Carl Banks; implemented by
1087 Travis Oliphant.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001088
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00001089
1090.. ======================================================================
1091
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001092.. _pep-3119:
1093
1094PEP 3119: Abstract Base Classes
1095=====================================================
1096
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001097Some object-oriented languages such as Java support interfaces: declarations
1098that a class has a given set of methods or supports a given access protocol.
1099Abstract Base Classes (or ABCs) are an equivalent feature for Python. The ABC
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001100support consists of an :mod:`abc` module containing a metaclass called
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001101:class:`ABCMeta`, special handling
1102of this metaclass by the :func:`isinstance` and :func:`issubclass` built-ins,
1103and a collection of basic ABCs that the Python developers think will be widely
1104useful.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001105
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001106Let's say you have a particular class and wish to know whether it supports
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001107dictionary-style access. The phrase "dictionary-style" is vague, however.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001108It probably means that accessing items with ``obj[1]`` works.
1109Does it imply that setting items with ``obj[2] = value`` works?
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001110Or that the object will have :meth:`keys`, :meth:`values`, and :meth:`items`
1111methods? What about the iterative variants such as :meth:`iterkeys`? :meth:`copy`
1112and :meth:`update`? Iterating over the object with :func:`iter`?
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001113
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001114Python 2.6 includes a number of different ABCs in the :mod:`collections`
1115module. :class:`Iterable` indicates that a class defines :meth:`__iter__`,
1116and :class:`Container` means the class supports ``x in y`` expressions
1117by defining a :meth:`__contains__` method. The basic dictionary interface of
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001118getting items, setting items, and
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001119:meth:`keys`, :meth:`values`, and :meth:`items`, is defined by the
1120:class:`MutableMapping` ABC.
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001121
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001122You can derive your own classes from a particular ABC
1123to indicate they support that ABC's interface::
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001124
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001125 import collections
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001126
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001127 class Storage(collections.MutableMapping):
1128 ...
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001129
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001130
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001131Alternatively, you could write the class without deriving from
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001132the desired ABC and instead register the class by
1133calling the ABC's :meth:`register` method::
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001134
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001135 import collections
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001136
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001137 class Storage:
1138 ...
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001139
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001140 collections.MutableMapping.register(Storage)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001141
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001142For classes that you write, deriving from the ABC is probably clearer.
1143The :meth:`register` method is useful when you've written a new
1144ABC that can describe an existing type or class, or if you want
1145to declare that some third-party class implements an ABC.
1146For example, if you defined a :class:`PrintableType` ABC,
Benjamin Petersond6313712008-07-31 16:23:04 +00001147it's legal to do::
Christian Heimesfaf2f632008-01-06 16:59:19 +00001148
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001149 # Register Python's types
1150 PrintableType.register(int)
1151 PrintableType.register(float)
1152 PrintableType.register(str)
1153
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001154Classes should obey the semantics specified by an ABC, but
1155Python can't check this; it's up to the class author to
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001156understand the ABC's requirements and to implement the code accordingly.
1157
1158To check whether an object supports a particular interface, you can
1159now write::
1160
1161 def func(d):
1162 if not isinstance(d, collections.MutableMapping):
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001163 raise ValueError("Mapping object expected, not %r" % d)
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001164
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001165(Don't feel that you must now begin writing lots of checks as in the
1166above example. Python has a strong tradition of duck-typing, where
1167explicit type-checking isn't done and code simply calls methods on
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001168an object, trusting that those methods will be there and raising an
1169exception if they aren't. Be judicious in checking for ABCs
1170and only do it where it helps.)
1171
1172You can write your own ABCs by using ``abc.ABCMeta`` as the
1173metaclass in a class definition::
1174
1175 from abc import ABCMeta
1176
1177 class Drawable():
1178 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001179
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001180 def draw(self, x, y, scale=1.0):
1181 pass
1182
1183 def draw_doubled(self, x, y):
1184 self.draw(x, y, scale=2.0)
1185
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001186
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001187 class Square(Drawable):
1188 def draw(self, x, y, scale):
1189 ...
1190
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001191
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001192In the :class:`Drawable` ABC above, the :meth:`draw_doubled` method
1193renders the object at twice its size and can be implemented in terms
1194of other methods described in :class:`Drawable`. Classes implementing
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001195this ABC therefore don't need to provide their own implementation
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001196of :meth:`draw_doubled`, though they can do so. An implementation
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001197of :meth:`draw` is necessary, though; the ABC can't provide
1198a useful generic implementation. You
1199can apply the ``@abstractmethod`` decorator to methods such as
1200:meth:`draw` that must be implemented; Python will
1201then raise an exception for classes that
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001202don't define the method::
1203
1204 class Drawable():
1205 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001206
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001207 @abstractmethod
1208 def draw(self, x, y, scale):
1209 pass
1210
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001211Note that the exception is only raised when you actually
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001212try to create an instance of a subclass without the method::
1213
1214 >>> s=Square()
1215 Traceback (most recent call last):
1216 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
1217 TypeError: Can't instantiate abstract class Square with abstract methods draw
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001218 >>>
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001219
1220Abstract data attributes can be declared using the ``@abstractproperty`` decorator::
1221
Christian Heimesfaf2f632008-01-06 16:59:19 +00001222 @abstractproperty
1223 def readonly(self):
1224 return self._x
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001225
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001226Subclasses must then define a :meth:`readonly` property
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001227
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001228.. seealso::
1229
1230 :pep:`3119` - Introducing Abstract Base Classes
1231 PEP written by Guido van Rossum and Talin.
Martin v. Löwis2a241ca2008-04-05 18:58:09 +00001232 Implemented by Guido van Rossum.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001233 Backported to 2.6 by Benjamin Aranguren, with Alex Martelli.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001234
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001235.. ======================================================================
1236
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001237.. _pep-3127:
1238
1239PEP 3127: Integer Literal Support and Syntax
1240=====================================================
1241
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001242Python 3.0 changes the syntax for octal (base-8) integer literals,
1243which are now prefixed by "0o" or "0O" instead of a leading zero, and
1244adds support for binary (base-2) integer literals, signalled by a "0b"
1245or "0B" prefix.
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001246
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001247Python 2.6 doesn't drop support for a leading 0 signalling
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001248an octal number, but it does add support for "0o" and "0b"::
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001249
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001250 >>> 0o21, 2*8 + 1
1251 (17, 17)
1252 >>> 0b101111
1253 47
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001254
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001255The :func:`oct` built-in still returns numbers
1256prefixed with a leading zero, and a new :func:`bin`
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001257built-in returns the binary representation for a number::
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001258
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001259 >>> oct(42)
1260 '052'
1261 >>> bin(173)
1262 '0b10101101'
1263
1264The :func:`int` and :func:`long` built-ins will now accept the "0o"
1265and "0b" prefixes when base-8 or base-2 are requested, or when the
1266**base** argument is zero (meaning the base used is determined from
1267the string):
1268
1269 >>> int ('0o52', 0)
1270 42
1271 >>> int('1101', 2)
1272 13
1273 >>> int('0b1101', 2)
1274 13
1275 >>> int('0b1101', 0)
1276 13
1277
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001278
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001279.. seealso::
1280
1281 :pep:`3127` - Integer Literal Support and Syntax
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001282 PEP written by Patrick Maupin; backported to 2.6 by
1283 Eric Smith.
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001284
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001285.. ======================================================================
1286
1287.. _pep-3129:
1288
1289PEP 3129: Class Decorators
1290=====================================================
1291
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001292Decorators have been extended from functions to classes. It's now legal to
1293write::
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001294
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001295 @foo
1296 @bar
1297 class A:
1298 pass
1299
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001300This is equivalent to::
1301
1302 class A:
1303 pass
1304
1305 A = foo(bar(A))
1306
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001307.. seealso::
1308
1309 :pep:`3129` - Class Decorators
1310 PEP written by Collin Winter.
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001311
1312.. ======================================================================
1313
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001314.. _pep-3141:
1315
1316PEP 3141: A Type Hierarchy for Numbers
1317=====================================================
1318
1319In Python 3.0, several abstract base classes for numeric types,
1320inspired by Scheme's numeric tower, are being added.
1321This change was backported to 2.6 as the :mod:`numbers` module.
1322
1323The most general ABC is :class:`Number`. It defines no operations at
1324all, and only exists to allow checking if an object is a number by
1325doing ``isinstance(obj, Number)``.
1326
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001327:class:`Complex` is a subclass of :class:`Number`. Complex numbers
1328can undergo the basic operations of addition, subtraction,
1329multiplication, division, and exponentiation, and you can retrieve the
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001330real and imaginary parts and obtain a number's conjugate. Python's built-in
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001331complex type is an implementation of :class:`Complex`.
1332
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001333:class:`Real` further derives from :class:`Complex`, and adds
1334operations that only work on real numbers: :func:`floor`, :func:`trunc`,
1335rounding, taking the remainder mod N, floor division,
1336and comparisons.
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001337
1338:class:`Rational` numbers derive from :class:`Real`, have
1339:attr:`numerator` and :attr:`denominator` properties, and can be
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001340converted to floats. Python 2.6 adds a simple rational-number class,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001341:class:`Fraction`, in the :mod:`fractions` module. (It's called
1342:class:`Fraction` instead of :class:`Rational` to avoid
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001343a name clash with :class:`numbers.Rational`.)
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001344
1345:class:`Integral` numbers derive from :class:`Rational`, and
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001346can be shifted left and right with ``<<`` and ``>>``,
1347combined using bitwise operations such as ``&`` and ``|``,
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001348and can be used as array indexes and slice boundaries.
1349
1350In Python 3.0, the PEP slightly redefines the existing built-ins
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001351:func:`round`, :func:`math.floor`, :func:`math.ceil`, and adds a new
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001352one, :func:`math.trunc`, that's been backported to Python 2.6.
1353:func:`math.trunc` rounds toward zero, returning the closest
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001354:class:`Integral` that's between the function's argument and zero.
1355
1356.. seealso::
1357
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001358 :pep:`3141` - A Type Hierarchy for Numbers
1359 PEP written by Jeffrey Yasskin.
1360
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00001361 `Scheme's numerical tower <http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/manual/html_node/Numerical-Tower.html#Numerical-Tower>`__, from the Guile manual.
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001362
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00001363 `Scheme's number datatypes <http://schemers.org/Documents/Standards/R5RS/HTML/r5rs-Z-H-9.html#%_sec_6.2>`__ from the R5RS Scheme specification.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001364
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001365
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001366The :mod:`fractions` Module
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001367--------------------------------------------------
1368
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001369To fill out the hierarchy of numeric types, a rational-number class is
1370provided by the :mod:`fractions` module. Rational numbers store their
1371values as a numerator and denominator forming a fraction, and can
1372exactly represent numbers such as ``2/3`` that floating-point numbers
1373can only approximate.
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001374
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001375The :class:`Fraction` constructor takes two :class:`Integral` values
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001376that will be the numerator and denominator of the resulting fraction. ::
1377
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001378 >>> from fractions import Fraction
1379 >>> a = Fraction(2, 3)
1380 >>> b = Fraction(2, 5)
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001381 >>> float(a), float(b)
1382 (0.66666666666666663, 0.40000000000000002)
1383 >>> a+b
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001384 Fraction(16, 15)
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001385 >>> a/b
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001386 Fraction(5, 3)
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001387
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001388To help in converting floating-point numbers to rationals,
1389the float type now has a :meth:`as_integer_ratio()` method that returns
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001390the numerator and denominator for a fraction that evaluates to the same
1391floating-point value::
1392
1393 >>> (2.5) .as_integer_ratio()
1394 (5, 2)
1395 >>> (3.1415) .as_integer_ratio()
1396 (7074029114692207L, 2251799813685248L)
1397 >>> (1./3) .as_integer_ratio()
1398 (6004799503160661L, 18014398509481984L)
1399
1400Note that values that can only be approximated by floating-point
1401numbers, such as 1./3, are not simplified to the number being
1402approximated; the fraction attempts to match the floating-point value
1403**exactly**.
1404
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001405The :mod:`fractions` module is based upon an implementation by Sjoerd
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001406Mullender that was in Python's :file:`Demo/classes/` directory for a
1407long time. This implementation was significantly updated by Jeffrey
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001408Yasskin.
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001409
Christian Heimes90540002008-05-08 14:29:10 +00001410
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001411Other Language Changes
1412======================
1413
1414Here are all of the changes that Python 2.6 makes to the core Python language.
1415
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001416* The :func:`hasattr` function was catching and ignoring all errors,
1417 under the assumption that they meant a :meth:`__getattr__` method
1418 was failing somewhere and the return value of :func:`hasattr` would
1419 therefore be ``False``. This logic shouldn't be applied to
1420 :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` and :exc:`SystemExit`, however; Python 2.6
1421 will no longer discard such exceptions when :func:`hasattr`
1422 encounters them. (Fixed by Benjamin Peterson; :issue:`2196`.)
1423
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001424* When calling a function using the ``**`` syntax to provide keyword
1425 arguments, you are no longer required to use a Python dictionary;
1426 any mapping will now work::
1427
1428 >>> def f(**kw):
1429 ... print sorted(kw)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001430 ...
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001431 >>> ud=UserDict.UserDict()
1432 >>> ud['a'] = 1
1433 >>> ud['b'] = 'string'
1434 >>> f(**ud)
1435 ['a', 'b']
1436
Martin v. Löwis5680d0c2008-04-10 03:06:53 +00001437 (Contributed by Alexander Belopolsky; :issue:`1686487`.)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001438
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00001439* A new built-in, ``next(*iterator*, [*default*])`` returns the next item
1440 from the specified iterator. If the *default* argument is supplied,
1441 it will be returned if *iterator* has been exhausted; otherwise,
1442 the :exc:`StopIteration` exception will be raised. (:issue:`2719`)
1443
Georg Brandl3dbca812008-07-23 16:10:53 +00001444* Tuples now have :meth:`index` and :meth:`count` methods matching the
1445 list type's :meth:`index` and :meth:`count` methods::
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00001446
1447 >>> t = (0,1,2,3,4)
1448 >>> t.index(3)
1449 3
1450
Georg Brandl3dbca812008-07-23 16:10:53 +00001451 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger)
1452
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001453* The built-in types now have improved support for extended slicing syntax,
1454 where various combinations of ``(start, stop, step)`` are supplied.
1455 Previously, the support was partial and certain corner cases wouldn't work.
1456 (Implemented by Thomas Wouters.)
1457
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001458 .. Revision 57619
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001459
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001460* Properties now have three attributes, :attr:`getter`,
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001461 :attr:`setter` and :attr:`deleter`, that are useful shortcuts for
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001462 adding or modifying a getter, setter or deleter function to an
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001463 existing property. You would use them like this::
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001464
1465 class C(object):
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001466 @property
1467 def x(self):
1468 return self._x
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001469
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001470 @x.setter
1471 def x(self, value):
1472 self._x = value
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001473
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001474 @x.deleter
1475 def x(self):
1476 del self._x
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001477
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00001478 class D(C):
1479 @C.x.getter
1480 def x(self):
1481 return self._x * 2
1482
1483 @x.setter
1484 def x(self, value):
1485 self._x = value / 2
1486
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001487* Several methods of the built-in set types now accept multiple iterables:
1488 :meth:`intersection`,
1489 :meth:`intersection_update`,
1490 :meth:`union`, :meth:`update`,
1491 :meth:`difference` and :meth:`difference_update`.
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001492
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001493 ::
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001494
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001495 >>> s=set('1234567890')
1496 >>> s.intersection('abc123', 'cdf246') # Intersection between all inputs
1497 set(['2'])
1498 >>> s.difference('246', '789')
1499 set(['1', '0', '3', '5'])
1500
1501 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1502
1503* A numerical nicety: when creating a complex number from two floats
1504 on systems that support signed zeros (-0 and +0), the
1505 :func:`complex` constructor will now preserve the sign
1506 of the zero. (Fixed by Mark T. Dickinson; :issue:`1507`)
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001507
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00001508* More floating-point features were also added. The :func:`float` function
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001509 will now turn the string ``nan`` into an
1510 IEEE 754 Not A Number value, and ``+inf`` and ``-inf`` into
1511 positive or negative infinity. This works on any platform with
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001512 IEEE 754 semantics. (Contributed by Christian Heimes; :issue:`1635`.)
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00001513
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001514 Other functions in the :mod:`math` module, :func:`isinf` and
1515 :func:`isnan`, return true if their floating-point argument is
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001516 infinite or Not A Number. (:issue:`1640`)
Christian Heimesc3f30c42008-02-22 16:37:40 +00001517
Georg Brandl734e2682008-08-12 08:18:18 +00001518 Conversion functions were added to convert floating-point numbers
1519 into hexadecimal strings. (:issue:`3008`) These functions lets you
1520 convert floats to and from a string representation without
1521 introducing rounding errors from the conversion between decimal and
1522 binary. Floats have a :meth:`hex` method that returns a string
1523 representation, and the ``float.fromhex()`` method converts a string
1524 back into a number::
1525
1526 >>> a = 3.75
1527 >>> a.hex()
1528 '0x1.e000000000000p+1'
1529 >>> float.fromhex('0x1.e000000000000p+1')
1530 3.75
1531 >>> b=1./3
1532 >>> b.hex()
1533 '0x1.5555555555555p-2'
Mark Dickinson65fe25e2008-07-16 11:30:51 +00001534
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001535* The :mod:`math` module has a number of new functions, and the existing
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001536 functions have been improved to give more consistent behaviour
1537 across platforms, especially with respect to handling of
1538 floating-point exceptions and IEEE 754 special values.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001539 The new functions are:
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001540
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001541 * :func:`~math.isinf` and :func:`~math.isnan` determine whether a given float
1542 is a (positive or negative) infinity or a NaN (Not a Number), respectively.
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001543
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001544 * :func:`~math.copysign` copies the sign bit of an IEEE 754 number,
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001545 returning the absolute value of *x* combined with the sign bit of
1546 *y*. For example, ``math.copysign(1, -0.0)`` returns -1.0.
1547 (Contributed by Christian Heimes.)
1548
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001549 * :func:`~math.factorial` computes the factorial of a number.
1550 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`2138`.)
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001551
Mark Dickinsonaa7633a2008-08-01 08:16:13 +00001552 * :func:`~math.fsum` adds up the stream of numbers from an iterable,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001553 and is careful to avoid loss of precision by calculating partial sums.
Georg Brandl3dbca812008-07-23 16:10:53 +00001554 (Contributed by Jean Brouwers, Raymond Hettinger, and Mark Dickinson;
1555 :issue:`2819`.)
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001556
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001557 * The inverse hyperbolic functions :func:`~math.acosh`, :func:`~math.asinh`
1558 and :func:`~math.atanh`.
1559
1560 * The function :func:`~math.log1p`, returning the natural logarithm of *1+x*
1561 (base *e*).
1562
1563 There's also a new :func:`trunc` built-in function as a result of the
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001564 backport of `PEP 3141's type hierarchy for numbers <#pep-3141>`__.
1565
1566 The existing math functions have been modified to follow the
1567 recommendations of the C99 standard with respect to special values
1568 whenever possible. For example, ``sqrt(-1.)`` should now give a
1569 :exc:`ValueError` across (nearly) all platforms, while
1570 ``sqrt(float('NaN'))`` should return a NaN on all IEEE 754
1571 platforms. Where Annex 'F' of the C99 standard recommends signaling
1572 'divide-by-zero' or 'invalid', Python will raise :exc:`ValueError`.
1573 Where Annex 'F' of the C99 standard recommends signaling 'overflow',
1574 Python will raise :exc:`OverflowError`. (See :issue:`711019`,
1575 :issue:`1640`.)
1576
1577 (Contributed by Christian Heimes and Mark Dickinson.)
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001578
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001579* Changes to the :class:`Exception` interface
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001580 as dictated by :pep:`352` continue to be made. For 2.6,
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001581 the :attr:`message` attribute is being deprecated in favor of the
1582 :attr:`args` attribute.
1583
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001584* The :exc:`GeneratorExit` exception now subclasses
1585 :exc:`BaseException` instead of :exc:`Exception`. This means
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001586 that an exception handler that does ``except Exception:``
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001587 will not inadvertently catch :exc:`GeneratorExit`.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001588 (Contributed by Chad Austin; :issue:`1537`.)
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00001589
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001590* Generator objects now have a :attr:`gi_code` attribute that refers to
1591 the original code object backing the generator.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001592 (Contributed by Collin Winter; :issue:`1473257`.)
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00001593
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001594* The :func:`compile` built-in function now accepts keyword arguments
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001595 as well as positional parameters. (Contributed by Thomas Wouters;
1596 :issue:`1444529`.)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001597
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001598* The :func:`complex` constructor now accepts strings containing
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00001599 parenthesized complex numbers, letting ``complex(repr(cmplx))``
1600 will now round-trip values. For example, ``complex('(3+4j)')``
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001601 now returns the value (3+4j). (:issue:`1491866`)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00001602
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001603* The string :meth:`translate` method now accepts ``None`` as the
1604 translation table parameter, which is treated as the identity
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00001605 transformation. This makes it easier to carry out operations
Georg Brandl3dbca812008-07-23 16:10:53 +00001606 that only delete characters. (Contributed by Bengt Richter and
1607 implemented by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`1193128`.)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00001608
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001609* The built-in :func:`dir` function now checks for a :meth:`__dir__`
1610 method on the objects it receives. This method must return a list
1611 of strings containing the names of valid attributes for the object,
1612 and lets the object control the value that :func:`dir` produces.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001613 Objects that have :meth:`__getattr__` or :meth:`__getattribute__`
Christian Heimescbf3b5c2007-12-03 21:02:03 +00001614 methods can use this to advertise pseudo-attributes they will honor.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001615 (:issue:`1591665`)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00001616
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001617* Instance method objects have new attributes for the object and function
1618 comprising the method; the new synonym for :attr:`im_self` is
1619 :attr:`__self__`, and :attr:`im_func` is also available as :attr:`__func__`.
1620 The old names are still supported in Python 2.6; they're gone in 3.0.
1621
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001622* An obscure change: when you use the the :func:`locals` function inside a
1623 :keyword:`class` statement, the resulting dictionary no longer returns free
1624 variables. (Free variables, in this case, are variables referred to in the
1625 :keyword:`class` statement that aren't attributes of the class.)
1626
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001627.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001628
1629
1630Optimizations
1631-------------
1632
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00001633* The :mod:`warnings` module has been rewritten in C. This makes
1634 it possible to invoke warnings from the parser, and may also
1635 make the interpreter's startup faster.
1636 (Contributed by Neal Norwitz and Brett Cannon; :issue:`1631171`.)
1637
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001638* Type objects now have a cache of methods that can reduce
1639 the amount of work required to find the correct method implementation
1640 for a particular class; once cached, the interpreter doesn't need to
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001641 traverse base classes to figure out the right method to call.
1642 The cache is cleared if a base class or the class itself is modified,
1643 so the cache should remain correct even in the face of Python's dynamic
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001644 nature.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001645 (Original optimization implemented by Armin Rigo, updated for
1646 Python 2.6 by Kevin Jacobs; :issue:`1700288`.)
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001647
Georg Brandl734e2682008-08-12 08:18:18 +00001648* Function calls that use keyword arguments
1649 are significantly faster thanks to a patch that does a quick pointer
1650 comparison, usually saving the time of a full string comparison.
1651 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger, after an initial implementation by
1652 Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`1819`.)
1653
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00001654* All of the functions in the :mod:`struct` module have been rewritten in
1655 C, thanks to work at the Need For Speed sprint.
1656 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1657
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001658* Internally, a bit is now set in type objects to indicate some of the standard
1659 built-in types. This speeds up checking if an object is a subclass of one of
1660 these types. (Contributed by Neal Norwitz.)
1661
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00001662* Unicode strings now use faster code for detecting
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001663 whitespace and line breaks; this speeds up the :meth:`split` method
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001664 by about 25% and :meth:`splitlines` by 35%.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001665 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou.) Memory usage is reduced
1666 by using pymalloc for the Unicode string's data.
1667
1668* The ``with`` statement now stores the :meth:`__exit__` method on the stack,
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00001669 producing a small speedup. (Implemented by Jeffrey Yasskin.)
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00001670
1671* To reduce memory usage, the garbage collector will now clear internal
1672 free lists when garbage-collecting the highest generation of objects.
1673 This may return memory to the OS sooner.
1674
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001675The net result of the 2.6 optimizations is that Python 2.6 runs the pystone
1676benchmark around XX% faster than Python 2.5.
1677
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001678.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001679
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001680.. _new-26-interpreter:
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001681
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001682Interpreter Changes
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001683-------------------------------
1684
1685Two command-line options have been reserved for use by other Python
1686implementations. The :option:`-J` switch has been reserved for use by
1687Jython for Jython-specific options, such as ones that are passed to
1688the underlying JVM. :option:`-X` has been reserved for options
1689specific to a particular implementation of Python such as CPython,
1690Jython, or IronPython. If either option is used with Python 2.6, the
1691interpreter will report that the option isn't currently used.
1692
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001693It's now possible to prevent Python from writing :file:`.pyc` or
1694:file:`.pyo` files on importing a module by supplying the :option:`-B`
1695switch to the Python interpreter, or by setting the
1696:envvar:`PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE` environment variable before running
1697the interpreter. This setting is available to Python programs as the
1698``sys.dont_write_bytecode`` variable, and can be changed by Python
1699code to modify the interpreter's behaviour. (Contributed by Neal
1700Norwitz and Georg Brandl.)
1701
1702The encoding used for standard input, output, and standard error can
1703be specified by setting the :envvar:`PYTHONIOENCODING` environment
1704variable before running the interpreter. The value should be a string
1705in the form ``**encoding**`` or ``**encoding**:**errorhandler**``.
1706The **encoding** part specifies the encoding's name, e.g. ``utf-8`` or
1707``latin-1``; the optional **errorhandler** part specifies
1708what to do with characters that can't be handled by the encoding,
1709and should be one of "error", "ignore", or "replace". (Contributed
1710by Martin von Loewis.)
1711
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001712.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001713
1714New, Improved, and Deprecated Modules
1715=====================================
1716
1717As usual, Python's standard library received a number of enhancements and bug
1718fixes. Here's a partial list of the most notable changes, sorted alphabetically
1719by module name. Consult the :file:`Misc/NEWS` file in the source tree for a more
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001720complete list of changes, or look through the Subversion logs for all the
1721details.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001722
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001723* (3.0-warning mode) Python 3.0 will feature a reorganized standard
1724 library; many outdated modules are being dropped.
1725 Python 2.6 running in 3.0-warning mode will warn about these modules
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001726 when they are imported.
Benjamin Petersona37cfc62008-05-26 13:48:34 +00001727
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001728 The list of deprecated modules is:
Benjamin Petersona37cfc62008-05-26 13:48:34 +00001729 :mod:`audiodev`,
1730 :mod:`bgenlocations`,
1731 :mod:`buildtools`,
1732 :mod:`bundlebuilder`,
1733 :mod:`Canvas`,
1734 :mod:`compiler`,
1735 :mod:`dircache`,
1736 :mod:`dl`,
1737 :mod:`fpformat`,
1738 :mod:`gensuitemodule`,
1739 :mod:`ihooks`,
1740 :mod:`imageop`,
1741 :mod:`imgfile`,
1742 :mod:`linuxaudiodev`,
1743 :mod:`mhlib`,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001744 :mod:`mimetools`,
Benjamin Petersona37cfc62008-05-26 13:48:34 +00001745 :mod:`multifile`,
1746 :mod:`new`,
1747 :mod:`popen2`,
1748 :mod:`pure`,
1749 :mod:`statvfs`,
1750 :mod:`sunaudiodev`,
1751 :mod:`test.testall`,
1752 :mod:`toaiff`.
1753
1754 Various MacOS modules have been removed:
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001755 :mod:`_builtinSuites`,
1756 :mod:`aepack`,
1757 :mod:`aetools`,
1758 :mod:`aetypes`,
1759 :mod:`applesingle`,
1760 :mod:`appletrawmain`,
1761 :mod:`appletrunner`,
1762 :mod:`argvemulator`,
1763 :mod:`Audio_mac`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001764 :mod:`autoGIL`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001765 :mod:`Carbon`,
1766 :mod:`cfmfile`,
1767 :mod:`CodeWarrior`,
1768 :mod:`ColorPicker`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001769 :mod:`EasyDialogs`,
1770 :mod:`Explorer`,
1771 :mod:`Finder`,
1772 :mod:`FrameWork`,
1773 :mod:`findertools`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001774 :mod:`ic`,
1775 :mod:`icglue`,
1776 :mod:`icopen`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001777 :mod:`macerrors`,
1778 :mod:`MacOS`,
1779 :mod:`macostools`,
1780 :mod:`macresource`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001781 :mod:`MiniAEFrame`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001782 :mod:`Nav`,
1783 :mod:`Netscape`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001784 :mod:`OSATerminology`,
1785 :mod:`pimp`,
1786 :mod:`PixMapWrapper`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001787 :mod:`StdSuites`,
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001788 :mod:`SystemEvents`,
1789 :mod:`Terminal`,
Benjamin Petersona37cfc62008-05-26 13:48:34 +00001790 :mod:`terminalcommand`.
Alexandre Vassalottie9f305f2008-05-16 04:39:54 +00001791
Benjamin Petersona37cfc62008-05-26 13:48:34 +00001792 A number of old IRIX-specific modules were deprecated:
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00001793 :mod:`al` and :mod:`AL`,
Benjamin Petersona37cfc62008-05-26 13:48:34 +00001794 :mod:`cd`,
1795 :mod:`cddb`,
1796 :mod:`cdplayer`,
1797 :mod:`CL` and :mod:`cl`,
1798 :mod:`DEVICE`,
1799 :mod:`ERRNO`,
1800 :mod:`FILE`,
1801 :mod:`FL` and :mod:`fl`,
1802 :mod:`flp`,
1803 :mod:`fm`,
1804 :mod:`GET`,
1805 :mod:`GLWS`,
1806 :mod:`GL` and :mod:`gl`,
1807 :mod:`IN`,
1808 :mod:`IOCTL`,
1809 :mod:`jpeg`,
1810 :mod:`panelparser`,
1811 :mod:`readcd`,
1812 :mod:`SV` and :mod:`sv`,
1813 :mod:`torgb`,
1814 :mod:`videoreader`,
1815 :mod:`WAIT`.
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +00001816
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001817* The :mod:`asyncore` and :mod:`asynchat` modules are
1818 being actively maintained again, and a number of patches and bugfixes
1819 were applied. (Maintained by Josiah Carlson; see :issue:`1736190` for
1820 one patch.)
1821
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001822* The :mod:`bsddb.dbshelve` module now uses the highest pickling protocol
1823 available, instead of restricting itself to protocol 1.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001824 (Contributed by W. Barnes; :issue:`1551443`.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001825
Georg Brandl86b2fb92008-07-16 03:43:04 +00001826* The :mod:`cgi` module will now read variables from the query string of an
1827 HTTP POST request. This makes it possible to use form actions with
1828 URLs such as "/cgi-bin/add.py?category=1". (Contributed by
1829 Alexandre Fiori and Nubis; :issue:`1817`.)
1830
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001831* The :mod:`cmath` module underwent an extensive set of revisions,
1832 thanks to Mark Dickinson and Christian Heimes, that added some new
1833 features and greatly improved the accuracy of the computations.
1834
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001835 Five new functions were added:
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001836
1837 * :func:`polar` converts a complex number to polar form, returning
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001838 the modulus and argument of that complex number.
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001839
1840 * :func:`rect` does the opposite, turning a (modulus, argument) pair
1841 back into the corresponding complex number.
1842
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001843 * :func:`phase` returns the phase or argument of a complex number.
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001844
1845 * :func:`isnan` returns True if either
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001846 the real or imaginary part of its argument is a NaN.
Christian Heimesa342c012008-04-20 21:01:16 +00001847
1848 * :func:`isinf` returns True if either the real or imaginary part of
1849 its argument is infinite.
1850
1851 The revisions also improved the numerical soundness of the
1852 :mod:`cmath` module. For all functions, the real and imaginary
1853 parts of the results are accurate to within a few units of least
1854 precision (ulps) whenever possible. See :issue:`1381` for the
1855 details. The branch cuts for :func:`asinh`, :func:`atanh`: and
1856 :func:`atan` have also been corrected.
1857
1858 The tests for the module have been greatly expanded; nearly 2000 new
1859 test cases exercise the algebraic functions.
1860
1861 On IEEE 754 platforms, the :mod:`cmath` module now handles IEEE 754
1862 special values and floating-point exceptions in a manner consistent
1863 with Annex 'G' of the C99 standard.
1864
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001865* A new data type in the :mod:`collections` module: :class:`namedtuple(typename,
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001866 fieldnames)` is a factory function that creates subclasses of the standard tuple
1867 whose fields are accessible by name as well as index. For example::
1868
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001869 >>> var_type = collections.namedtuple('variable',
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001870 ... 'id name type size')
1871 # Names are separated by spaces or commas.
1872 # 'id, name, type, size' would also work.
Christian Heimes0449f632007-12-15 01:27:15 +00001873 >>> var_type._fields
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001874 ('id', 'name', 'type', 'size')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001875
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001876 >>> var = var_type(1, 'frequency', 'int', 4)
1877 >>> print var[0], var.id # Equivalent
1878 1 1
1879 >>> print var[2], var.type # Equivalent
1880 int int
Christian Heimes0449f632007-12-15 01:27:15 +00001881 >>> var._asdict()
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001882 {'size': 4, 'type': 'int', 'id': 1, 'name': 'frequency'}
Christian Heimesa156e092008-02-16 07:38:31 +00001883 >>> v2 = var._replace(name='amplitude')
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001884 >>> v2
1885 variable(id=1, name='amplitude', type='int', size=4)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001886
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001887 Where the new :class:`namedtuple` type proved suitable, the standard
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001888 library has been modified to return them. For example,
1889 the :meth:`Decimal.as_tuple` method now returns a named tuple with
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001890 :attr:`sign`, :attr:`digits`, and :attr:`exponent` fields.
1891
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001892 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1893
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001894* Another change to the :mod:`collections` module is that the
Christian Heimes895627f2007-12-08 17:28:33 +00001895 :class:`deque` type now supports an optional *maxlen* parameter;
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001896 if supplied, the deque's size will be restricted to no more
Christian Heimes895627f2007-12-08 17:28:33 +00001897 than *maxlen* items. Adding more items to a full deque causes
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001898 old items to be discarded.
1899
1900 ::
1901
1902 >>> from collections import deque
1903 >>> dq=deque(maxlen=3)
1904 >>> dq
1905 deque([], maxlen=3)
1906 >>> dq.append(1) ; dq.append(2) ; dq.append(3)
1907 >>> dq
1908 deque([1, 2, 3], maxlen=3)
1909 >>> dq.append(4)
1910 >>> dq
1911 deque([2, 3, 4], maxlen=3)
1912
1913 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1914
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001915* A new method in the :mod:`curses` module: for a window, :meth:`chgat` changes
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001916 the display characters for a certain number of characters on a single line.
Christian Heimesfdab48e2008-01-20 09:06:41 +00001917 (Contributed by Fabian Kreutz.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001918 ::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001919
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001920 # Boldface text starting at y=0,x=21
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001921 # and affecting the rest of the line.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001922 stdscr.chgat(0,21, curses.A_BOLD)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001923
Christian Heimesfdab48e2008-01-20 09:06:41 +00001924 The :class:`Textbox` class in the :mod:`curses.textpad` module
1925 now supports editing in insert mode as well as overwrite mode.
1926 Insert mode is enabled by supplying a true value for the *insert_mode*
1927 parameter when creating the :class:`Textbox` instance.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001928
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001929* The :mod:`datetime` module's :meth:`strftime` methods now support a
1930 ``%f`` format code that expands to the number of microseconds in the
1931 object, zero-padded on
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001932 the left to six places. (Contributed by Skip Montanaro; :issue:`1158`.)
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001933
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001934* The :mod:`decimal` module was updated to version 1.66 of
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001935 `the General Decimal Specification <http://www2.hursley.ibm.com/decimal/decarith.html>`__. New features
1936 include some methods for some basic mathematical functions such as
1937 :meth:`exp` and :meth:`log10`::
1938
1939 >>> Decimal(1).exp()
1940 Decimal("2.718281828459045235360287471")
1941 >>> Decimal("2.7182818").ln()
1942 Decimal("0.9999999895305022877376682436")
1943 >>> Decimal(1000).log10()
1944 Decimal("3")
1945
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001946 The :meth:`as_tuple` method of :class:`Decimal` objects now returns a
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001947 named tuple with :attr:`sign`, :attr:`digits`, and :attr:`exponent` fields.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001948
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001949 (Implemented by Facundo Batista and Mark Dickinson. Named tuple
1950 support added by Raymond Hettinger.)
1951
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001952* The :mod:`difflib` module's :class:`SequenceMatcher` class
1953 now returns named tuples representing matches.
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00001954 In addition to behaving like tuples, the returned values
1955 also have :attr:`a`, :attr:`b`, and :attr:`size` attributes.
1956 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001957
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00001958* An optional ``timeout`` parameter was added to the
1959 :class:`ftplib.FTP` class constructor as well as the :meth:`connect`
1960 method, specifying a timeout measured in seconds. (Added by Facundo
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001961 Batista.) Also, the :class:`FTP` class's
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00001962 :meth:`storbinary` and :meth:`storlines`
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001963 now take an optional *callback* parameter that will be called with
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00001964 each block of data after the data has been sent.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001965 (Contributed by Phil Schwartz; :issue:`1221598`.)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00001966
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001967* The :func:`reduce` built-in function is also available in the
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001968 :mod:`functools` module. In Python 3.0, the built-in is dropped and it's
1969 only available from :mod:`functools`; currently there are no plans
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001970 to drop the built-in in the 2.x series. (Patched by
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001971 Christian Heimes; :issue:`1739906`.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001972
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00001973* When possible, the :mod:`getpass` module will now use
1974 :file:`/dev/tty` (when available) to print
1975 a prompting message and read the password, falling back to using
1976 standard error and standard input. If the password may be echoed to
1977 the terminal, a warning is printed before the prompt is displayed.
1978 (Contributed by Gregory P. Smith.)
1979
1980* The :func:`glob.glob` function can now return Unicode filenames if
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00001981 a Unicode path was used and Unicode filenames are matched within the
1982 directory. (:issue:`1001604`)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001983
1984* The :mod:`gopherlib` module has been removed.
1985
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001986* A new function in the :mod:`heapq` module: ``merge(iter1, iter2, ...)``
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001987 takes any number of iterables that return data *in sorted
1988 order*, and returns a new iterator that returns the contents of all
1989 the iterators, also in sorted order. For example::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001990
1991 heapq.merge([1, 3, 5, 9], [2, 8, 16]) ->
1992 [1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 9, 16]
1993
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001994 Another new function, ``heappushpop(heap, item)``,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00001995 pushes *item* onto *heap*, then pops off and returns the smallest item.
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00001996 This is more efficient than making a call to :func:`heappush` and then
1997 :func:`heappop`.
1998
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00001999 :mod:`heapq` is now implemented to only use less-than comparison,
2000 instead of the less-than-or-equal comparison it previously used.
2001 This makes :mod:`heapq`'s usage of a type match that of the
2002 :meth:`list.sort` method.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002003 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
2004
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002005* An optional ``timeout`` parameter was added to the
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002006 :class:`httplib.HTTPConnection` and :class:`HTTPSConnection`
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002007 class constructors, specifying a timeout measured in seconds.
2008 (Added by Facundo Batista.)
2009
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002010* Most of the :mod:`inspect` module's functions, such as
2011 :func:`getmoduleinfo` and :func:`getargs`, now return named tuples.
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002012 In addition to behaving like tuples, the elements of the return value
2013 can also be accessed as attributes.
2014 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
2015
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002016 Some new functions in the module include
2017 :func:`isgenerator`, :func:`isgeneratorfunction`,
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002018 and :func:`isabstract`.
2019
2020* The :mod:`itertools` module gained several new functions.
2021
2022 ``izip_longest(iter1, iter2, ...[, fillvalue])`` makes tuples from
2023 each of the elements; if some of the iterables are shorter than
2024 others, the missing values are set to *fillvalue*. For example::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002025
2026 itertools.izip_longest([1,2,3], [1,2,3,4,5]) ->
2027 [(1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (None, 4), (None, 5)]
2028
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002029 ``product(iter1, iter2, ..., [repeat=N])`` returns the Cartesian product
2030 of the supplied iterables, a set of tuples containing
2031 every possible combination of the elements returned from each iterable. ::
2032
2033 itertools.product([1,2,3], [4,5,6]) ->
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002034 [(1, 4), (1, 5), (1, 6),
2035 (2, 4), (2, 5), (2, 6),
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002036 (3, 4), (3, 5), (3, 6)]
2037
2038 The optional *repeat* keyword argument is used for taking the
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002039 product of an iterable or a set of iterables with themselves,
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002040 repeated *N* times. With a single iterable argument, *N*-tuples
2041 are returned::
2042
2043 itertools.product([1,2], repeat=3)) ->
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002044 [(1, 1, 1), (1, 1, 2), (1, 2, 1), (1, 2, 2),
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002045 (2, 1, 1), (2, 1, 2), (2, 2, 1), (2, 2, 2)]
2046
2047 With two iterables, *2N*-tuples are returned. ::
2048
2049 itertools(product([1,2], [3,4], repeat=2) ->
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002050 [(1, 3, 1, 3), (1, 3, 1, 4), (1, 3, 2, 3), (1, 3, 2, 4),
2051 (1, 4, 1, 3), (1, 4, 1, 4), (1, 4, 2, 3), (1, 4, 2, 4),
2052 (2, 3, 1, 3), (2, 3, 1, 4), (2, 3, 2, 3), (2, 3, 2, 4),
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002053 (2, 4, 1, 3), (2, 4, 1, 4), (2, 4, 2, 3), (2, 4, 2, 4)]
2054
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00002055 ``combinations(iterable, r)`` returns sub-sequences of length *r* from
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002056 the elements of *iterable*. ::
2057
2058 itertools.combinations('123', 2) ->
2059 [('1', '2'), ('1', '3'), ('2', '3')]
2060
2061 itertools.combinations('123', 3) ->
2062 [('1', '2', '3')]
2063
2064 itertools.combinations('1234', 3) ->
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002065 [('1', '2', '3'), ('1', '2', '4'), ('1', '3', '4'),
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002066 ('2', '3', '4')]
2067
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002068 ``permutations(iter[, r])`` returns all the permutations of length *r* of
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002069 the iterable's elements. If *r* is not specified, it will default to the
Christian Heimes5d8da202008-05-06 13:58:24 +00002070 number of elements produced by the iterable. ::
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002071
2072 itertools.permutations([1,2,3,4], 2) ->
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002073 [(1, 2), (1, 3), (1, 4),
2074 (2, 1), (2, 3), (2, 4),
2075 (3, 1), (3, 2), (3, 4),
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002076 (4, 1), (4, 2), (4, 3)]
2077
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002078 ``itertools.chain(*iterables)`` is an existing function in
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002079 :mod:`itertools` that gained a new constructor in Python 2.6.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002080 ``itertools.chain.from_iterable(iterable)`` takes a single
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002081 iterable that should return other iterables. :func:`chain` will
2082 then return all the elements of the first iterable, then
2083 all the elements of the second, and so on. ::
2084
2085 chain.from_iterable([[1,2,3], [4,5,6]]) ->
2086 [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002087
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002088 (All contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002089
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002090* The :mod:`logging` module's :class:`FileHandler` class
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002091 and its subclasses :class:`WatchedFileHandler`, :class:`RotatingFileHandler`,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002092 and :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler` now
2093 have an optional *delay* parameter to its constructor. If *delay*
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002094 is true, opening of the log file is deferred until the first
2095 :meth:`emit` call is made. (Contributed by Vinay Sajip.)
2096
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002097 :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler` also has a *utc* constructor
2098 parameter. If the argument is true, UTC time will be used
2099 in determining when midnight occurs and in generating filenames;
2100 otherwise local time will be used.
2101
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002102* The :mod:`macfs` module has been removed. This in turn required the
2103 :func:`macostools.touched` function to be removed because it depended on the
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002104 :mod:`macfs` module. (:issue:`1490190`)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002105
Georg Brandlfceab5a2008-01-19 20:08:23 +00002106* :class:`mmap` objects now have a :meth:`rfind` method that finds
2107 a substring, beginning at the end of the string and searching
2108 backwards. The :meth:`find` method
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002109 also gained an *end* parameter containing the index at which to stop
Georg Brandlfceab5a2008-01-19 20:08:23 +00002110 the forward search.
2111 (Contributed by John Lenton.)
2112
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002113* The :mod:`operator` module gained a
2114 :func:`methodcaller` function that takes a name and an optional
2115 set of arguments, returning a callable that will call
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002116 the named function on any arguments passed to it. For example::
2117
2118 >>> # Equivalent to lambda s: s.replace('old', 'new')
2119 >>> replacer = operator.methodcaller('replace', 'old', 'new')
2120 >>> replacer('old wine in old bottles')
2121 'new wine in new bottles'
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002122
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002123 (Contributed by Georg Brandl, after a suggestion by Gregory Petrosyan.)
2124
2125 The :func:`attrgetter` function now accepts dotted names and performs
2126 the corresponding attribute lookups::
2127
2128 >>> inst_name = operator.attrgetter('__class__.__name__')
2129 >>> inst_name('')
2130 'str'
2131 >>> inst_name(help)
2132 '_Helper'
2133
2134 (Contributed by Georg Brandl, after a suggestion by Barry Warsaw.)
2135
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002136* New functions in the :mod:`os` module include
2137 ``fchmod(fd, mode)``, ``fchown(fd, uid, gid)``,
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002138 and ``lchmod(path, mode)``, on operating systems that support these
2139 functions. :func:`fchmod` and :func:`fchown` let you change the mode
2140 and ownership of an opened file, and :func:`lchmod` changes the mode
2141 of a symlink.
2142
2143 (Contributed by Georg Brandl and Christian Heimes.)
2144
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002145* The :func:`os.walk` function now has a ``followlinks`` parameter. If
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002146 set to True, it will follow symlinks pointing to directories and
2147 visit the directory's contents. For backward compatibility, the
2148 parameter's default value is false. Note that the function can fall
2149 into an infinite recursion if there's a symlink that points to a
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002150 parent directory. (:issue:`1273829`)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002151
2152* The ``os.environ`` object's :meth:`clear` method will now unset the
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002153 environment variables using :func:`os.unsetenv` in addition to clearing
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002154 the object's keys. (Contributed by Martin Horcicka; :issue:`1181`.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002155
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002156* In the :mod:`os.path` module, the :func:`splitext` function
2157 has been changed to not split on leading period characters.
2158 This produces better results when operating on Unix's dot-files.
2159 For example, ``os.path.splitext('.ipython')``
2160 now returns ``('.ipython', '')`` instead of ``('', '.ipython')``.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002161 (:issue:`115886`)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002162
2163 A new function, :func:`relpath(path, start)` returns a relative path
2164 from the ``start`` path, if it's supplied, or from the current
2165 working directory to the destination ``path``. (Contributed by
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002166 Richard Barran; :issue:`1339796`.)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002167
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002168 On Windows, :func:`os.path.expandvars` will now expand environment variables
2169 in the form "%var%", and "~user" will be expanded into the
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002170 user's home directory path. (Contributed by Josiah Carlson;
2171 :issue:`957650`.)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002172
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002173* The Python debugger provided by the :mod:`pdb` module
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002174 gained a new command: "run" restarts the Python program being debugged,
2175 and can optionally take new command-line arguments for the program.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002176 (Contributed by Rocky Bernstein; :issue:`1393667`.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002177
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002178 The :func:`post_mortem` function, used to enter debugging of a
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002179 traceback, will now use the traceback returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002180 if no traceback is supplied. (Contributed by Facundo Batista;
2181 :issue:`1106316`.)
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002182
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002183* The :mod:`pickletools` module now has an :func:`optimize` function
2184 that takes a string containing a pickle and removes some unused
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002185 opcodes, returning a shorter pickle that contains the same data structure.
2186 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
2187
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002188* A :func:`get_data` function was added to the :mod:`pkgutil`
2189 module that returns the contents of resource files included
2190 with an installed Python package. For example::
2191
2192 >>> import pkgutil
2193 >>> pkgutil.get_data('test', 'exception_hierarchy.txt')
2194 'BaseException
2195 +-- SystemExit
2196 +-- KeyboardInterrupt
2197 +-- GeneratorExit
2198 +-- Exception
2199 +-- StopIteration
2200 +-- StandardError
2201 ...'
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002202 >>>
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002203
2204 (Contributed by Paul Moore; :issue:`2439`.)
2205
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002206* New functions in the :mod:`posix` module: :func:`chflags` and :func:`lchflags`
2207 are wrappers for the corresponding system calls (where they're available).
2208 Constants for the flag values are defined in the :mod:`stat` module; some
2209 possible values include :const:`UF_IMMUTABLE` to signal the file may not be
2210 changed and :const:`UF_APPEND` to indicate that data can only be appended to the
2211 file. (Contributed by M. Levinson.)
2212
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002213 ``os.closerange(*low*, *high*)`` efficiently closes all file descriptors
2214 from *low* to *high*, ignoring any errors and not including *high* itself.
2215 This function is now used by the :mod:`subprocess` module to make starting
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002216 processes faster. (Contributed by Georg Brandl; :issue:`1663329`.)
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002217
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +00002218* The :mod:`pyexpat` module's :class:`Parser` objects now allow setting
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002219 their :attr:`buffer_size` attribute to change the size of the buffer
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +00002220 used to hold character data.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002221 (Contributed by Achim Gaedke; :issue:`1137`.)
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +00002222
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002223* The :mod:`Queue` module now provides queue classes that retrieve entries
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002224 in different orders. The :class:`PriorityQueue` class stores
2225 queued items in a heap and retrieves them in priority order,
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002226 and :class:`LifoQueue` retrieves the most recently added entries first,
2227 meaning that it behaves like a stack.
2228 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
2229
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002230* The :mod:`random` module's :class:`Random` objects can
2231 now be pickled on a 32-bit system and unpickled on a 64-bit
2232 system, and vice versa. Unfortunately, this change also means
2233 that Python 2.6's :class:`Random` objects can't be unpickled correctly
2234 on earlier versions of Python.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002235 (Contributed by Shawn Ligocki; :issue:`1727780`.)
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002236
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00002237 The new ``triangular(low, high, mode)`` function returns random
2238 numbers following a triangular distribution. The returned values
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002239 are between *low* and *high*, not including *high* itself, and
2240 with *mode* as the mode, the most frequently occurring value
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00002241 in the distribution. (Contributed by Wladmir van der Laan and
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002242 Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`1681432`.)
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00002243
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002244* Long regular expression searches carried out by the :mod:`re`
2245 module will now check for signals being delivered, so especially
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002246 time-consuming searches can now be interrupted.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002247 (Contributed by Josh Hoyt and Ralf Schmitt; :issue:`846388`.)
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002248
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002249* The :mod:`rgbimg` module has been removed.
2250
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002251* The :mod:`rlcompleter` module's :meth:`Completer.complete()` method
2252 will now ignore exceptions triggered while evaluating a name.
2253 (Fixed by Lorenz Quack; :issue:`2250`.)
2254
2255* The :mod:`sched` module's :class:`scheduler` instances now
2256 have a read-only :attr:`queue` attribute that returns the
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002257 contents of the scheduler's queue, represented as a list of
2258 named tuples with the fields ``(time, priority, action, argument)``.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002259 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`1861`.)
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002260
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00002261* The :mod:`select` module now has wrapper functions
2262 for the Linux :cfunc:`epoll` and BSD :cfunc:`kqueue` system calls.
2263 Also, a :meth:`modify` method was added to the existing :class:`poll`
2264 objects; ``pollobj.modify(fd, eventmask)`` takes a file descriptor
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002265 or file object and an event mask,
2266
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002267 (Contributed by Christian Heimes; :issue:`1657`.)
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002268
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002269* The :mod:`sets` module has been deprecated; it's better to
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002270 use the built-in :class:`set` and :class:`frozenset` types.
2271
Georg Brandl86b2fb92008-07-16 03:43:04 +00002272* The :func:`shutil.copytree` function now has an optional **ignore** argument
2273 that takes a callable object. This callable will receive each directory path
2274 and a list of the directory's contents, and returns a list of names that
2275 will be ignored, not copied.
2276
2277 The :mod:`shutil` module also provides an :func:`ignore_patterns`
2278 function for use with this new parameter.
2279 :func:`ignore_patterns` takes an arbitrary number of glob-style patterns
2280 and will ignore any files and directories that match this pattern.
2281 The following example copies a directory tree, but skip both SVN's internal
2282 :file:`.svn` directories and Emacs backup
2283 files, which have names ending with '~'::
2284
2285 shutil.copytree('Doc/library', '/tmp/library',
2286 ignore=shutil.ignore_patterns('*~', '.svn'))
2287
2288 (Contributed by Tarek Ziadé; :issue:`2663`.)
2289
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002290* Integrating signal handling with GUI handling event loops
Christian Heimes5fb7c2a2007-12-24 08:52:31 +00002291 like those used by Tkinter or GTk+ has long been a problem; most
Christian Heimesc3f30c42008-02-22 16:37:40 +00002292 software ends up polling, waking up every fraction of a second.
Christian Heimes5fb7c2a2007-12-24 08:52:31 +00002293 The :mod:`signal` module can now make this more efficient.
2294 Calling ``signal.set_wakeup_fd(fd)`` sets a file descriptor
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002295 to be used; when a signal is received, a byte is written to that
Christian Heimes5fb7c2a2007-12-24 08:52:31 +00002296 file descriptor. There's also a C-level function,
2297 :cfunc:`PySignal_SetWakeupFd`, for setting the descriptor.
2298
2299 Event loops will use this by opening a pipe to create two descriptors,
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00002300 one for reading and one for writing. The writable descriptor
Christian Heimes5fb7c2a2007-12-24 08:52:31 +00002301 will be passed to :func:`set_wakeup_fd`, and the readable descriptor
2302 will be added to the list of descriptors monitored by the event loop via
2303 :cfunc:`select` or :cfunc:`poll`.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002304 On receiving a signal, a byte will be written and the main event loop
Christian Heimes5fb7c2a2007-12-24 08:52:31 +00002305 will be woken up, without the need to poll.
2306
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002307 (Contributed by Adam Olsen; :issue:`1583`.)
Christian Heimes5fb7c2a2007-12-24 08:52:31 +00002308
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002309 The :func:`siginterrupt` function is now available from Python code,
2310 and allows changing whether signals can interrupt system calls or not.
2311 (Contributed by Ralf Schmitt.)
2312
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00002313 The :func:`setitimer` and :func:`getitimer` functions have also been
2314 added on systems that support these system calls. :func:`setitimer`
2315 allows setting interval timers that will cause a signal to be
2316 delivered to the process after a specified time, measured in
2317 wall-clock time, consumed process time, or combined process+system
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002318 time. (Contributed by Guilherme Polo; :issue:`2240`.)
Neal Norwitzf5c7c2e2008-04-05 04:47:45 +00002319
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002320* The :mod:`smtplib` module now supports SMTP over SSL thanks to the
2321 addition of the :class:`SMTP_SSL` class. This class supports an
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002322 interface identical to the existing :class:`SMTP` class. Both
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002323 class constructors also have an optional ``timeout`` parameter
2324 that specifies a timeout for the initial connection attempt, measured in
2325 seconds.
2326
2327 An implementation of the LMTP protocol (:rfc:`2033`) was also added to
2328 the module. LMTP is used in place of SMTP when transferring e-mail
2329 between agents that don't manage a mail queue.
2330
2331 (SMTP over SSL contributed by Monty Taylor; timeout parameter
2332 added by Facundo Batista; LMTP implemented by Leif
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002333 Hedstrom; :issue:`957003`.)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002334
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002335* In the :mod:`smtplib` module, SMTP.starttls() now complies with :rfc:`3207`
2336 and forgets any knowledge obtained from the server not obtained from
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002337 the TLS negotiation itself. (Patch contributed by Bill Fenner;
2338 :issue:`829951`.)
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002339
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002340* The :mod:`socket` module now supports TIPC (http://tipc.sf.net),
2341 a high-performance non-IP-based protocol designed for use in clustered
2342 environments. TIPC addresses are 4- or 5-tuples.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002343 (Contributed by Alberto Bertogli; :issue:`1646`.)
Georg Brandlfceab5a2008-01-19 20:08:23 +00002344
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002345 A new function, :func:`create_connection`, takes an address
2346 and connects to it using an optional timeout value, returning
Neal Norwitz32dde222008-04-15 06:43:13 +00002347 the connected socket object.
2348
Georg Brandlfceab5a2008-01-19 20:08:23 +00002349* The base classes in the :mod:`SocketServer` module now support
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002350 calling a :meth:`handle_timeout` method after a span of inactivity
2351 specified by the server's :attr:`timeout` attribute. (Contributed
2352 by Michael Pomraning.) The :meth:`serve_forever` method
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002353 now takes an optional poll interval measured in seconds,
2354 controlling how often the server will check for a shutdown request.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002355 (Contributed by Pedro Werneck and Jeffrey Yasskin;
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002356 :issue:`742598`, :issue:`1193577`.)
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002357
2358* The :mod:`struct` module now supports the C99 :ctype:`_Bool` type,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002359 using the format character ``'?'``.
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002360 (Contributed by David Remahl.)
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002361
2362* The :class:`Popen` objects provided by the :mod:`subprocess` module
2363 now have :meth:`terminate`, :meth:`kill`, and :meth:`send_signal` methods.
2364 On Windows, :meth:`send_signal` only supports the :const:`SIGTERM`
2365 signal, and all these methods are aliases for the Win32 API function
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002366 :cfunc:`TerminateProcess`.
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002367 (Contributed by Christian Heimes.)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002368
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002369* A new variable in the :mod:`sys` module,
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002370 :attr:`float_info`, is an object
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002371 containing information about the platform's floating-point support
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002372 derived from the :file:`float.h` file. Attributes of this object
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002373 include
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002374 :attr:`mant_dig` (number of digits in the mantissa), :attr:`epsilon`
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002375 (smallest difference between 1.0 and the next largest value
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002376 representable), and several others. (Contributed by Christian Heimes;
2377 :issue:`1534`.)
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002378
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002379 Another new variable, :attr:`dont_write_bytecode`, controls whether Python
2380 writes any :file:`.pyc` or :file:`.pyo` files on importing a module.
2381 If this variable is true, the compiled files are not written. The
2382 variable is initially set on start-up by supplying the :option:`-B`
2383 switch to the Python interpreter, or by setting the
2384 :envvar:`PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE` environment variable before
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002385 running the interpreter. Python code can subsequently
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002386 change the value of this variable to control whether bytecode files
2387 are written or not.
2388 (Contributed by Neal Norwitz and Georg Brandl.)
2389
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002390 Information about the command-line arguments supplied to the Python
2391 interpreter is available by reading attributes of a named
2392 tuple available as ``sys.flags``. For example, the :attr:`verbose`
2393 attribute is true if Python
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002394 was executed in verbose mode, :attr:`debug` is true in debugging mode, etc.
2395 These attributes are all read-only.
2396 (Contributed by Christian Heimes.)
2397
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002398 A new function, :func:`getsizeof`, takes a Python object and returns
2399 the amount of memory used by the object, measured in bytes. Built-in
2400 objects return correct results; third-party extensions may not,
2401 but can define a :meth:`__sizeof__` method to return the
2402 object's size.
2403 (Contributed by Robert Schuppenies; :issue:`2898`.)
2404
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002405 It's now possible to determine the current profiler and tracer functions
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002406 by calling :func:`sys.getprofile` and :func:`sys.gettrace`.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002407 (Contributed by Georg Brandl; :issue:`1648`.)
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002408
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002409* The :mod:`tarfile` module now supports POSIX.1-2001 (pax) and
2410 POSIX.1-1988 (ustar) format tarfiles, in addition to the GNU tar
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002411 format that was already supported. The default format
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002412 is GNU tar; specify the ``format`` parameter to open a file
2413 using a different format::
2414
2415 tar = tarfile.open("output.tar", "w", format=tarfile.PAX_FORMAT)
2416
2417 The new ``errors`` parameter lets you specify an error handling
2418 scheme for character conversions: the three standard ways Python can
2419 handle errors ``'strict'``, ``'ignore'``, ``'replace'`` , or the
2420 special value ``'utf-8'``, which replaces bad characters with their
2421 UTF-8 representation. Character conversions occur because the PAX
2422 format supports Unicode filenames, defaulting to UTF-8 encoding.
2423
2424 The :meth:`TarFile.add` method now accepts a ``exclude`` argument that's
2425 a function that can be used to exclude certain filenames from
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002426 an archive.
2427 The function must take a filename and return true if the file
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002428 should be excluded or false if it should be archived.
2429 The function is applied to both the name initially passed to :meth:`add`
2430 and to the names of files in recursively-added directories.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002431
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002432 (All changes contributed by Lars Gustäbel).
2433
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002434* An optional ``timeout`` parameter was added to the
2435 :class:`telnetlib.Telnet` class constructor, specifying a timeout
2436 measured in seconds. (Added by Facundo Batista.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002437
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002438* The :class:`tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile` class usually deletes
2439 the temporary file it created when the file is closed. This
2440 behaviour can now be changed by passing ``delete=False`` to the
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002441 constructor. (Contributed by Damien Miller; :issue:`1537850`.)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002442
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002443 A new class, :class:`SpooledTemporaryFile`, behaves like
2444 a temporary file but stores its data in memory until a maximum size is
2445 exceeded. On reaching that limit, the contents will be written to
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002446 an on-disk temporary file. (Contributed by Dustin J. Mitchell.)
2447
2448 The :class:`NamedTemporaryFile` and :class:`SpooledTemporaryFile` classes
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002449 both work as context managers, so you can write
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002450 ``with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile() as tmp: ...``.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002451 (Contributed by Alexander Belopolsky; :issue:`2021`.)
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002452
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002453* The :mod:`test.test_support` module now contains a
2454 :func:`EnvironmentVarGuard`
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002455 context manager that supports temporarily changing environment variables and
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002456 automatically restores them to their old values.
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002457
2458 Another context manager, :class:`TransientResource`, can surround calls
2459 to resources that may or may not be available; it will catch and
2460 ignore a specified list of exceptions. For example,
2461 a network test may ignore certain failures when connecting to an
2462 external web site::
2463
2464 with test_support.TransientResource(IOError, errno=errno.ETIMEDOUT):
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002465 f = urllib.urlopen('https://sf.net')
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002466 ...
2467
2468 (Contributed by Brett Cannon.)
2469
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002470* The :mod:`textwrap` module can now preserve existing whitespace
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002471 at the beginnings and ends of the newly-created lines
2472 by specifying ``drop_whitespace=False``
2473 as an argument::
2474
2475 >>> S = """This sentence has a bunch of extra whitespace."""
2476 >>> print textwrap.fill(S, width=15)
2477 This sentence
2478 has a bunch
2479 of extra
2480 whitespace.
2481 >>> print textwrap.fill(S, drop_whitespace=False, width=15)
2482 This sentence
2483 has a bunch
2484 of extra
2485 whitespace.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002486 >>>
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002487
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002488 (Contributed by Dwayne Bailey; :issue:`1581073`.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002489
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002490* The :mod:`threading` module's :class:`Thread` objects
2491 gained a :meth:`getIdent` method that returns the thread's
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002492 identifier, a nonzero integer. (Contributed by Gregory P. Smith;
2493 :issue:`2871`.)
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002494
2495* The :mod:`timeit` module now accepts callables as well as strings
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002496 for the statement being timed and for the setup code.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002497 Two convenience functions were added for creating
2498 :class:`Timer` instances:
2499 ``repeat(stmt, setup, time, repeat, number)`` and
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002500 ``timeit(stmt, setup, time, number)`` create an instance and call
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002501 the corresponding method. (Contributed by Erik Demaine;
2502 :issue:`1533909`.)
Thomas Wouters89d996e2007-09-08 17:39:28 +00002503
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002504* The :mod:`Tkinter` module now accepts lists and tuples for options,
2505 separating the elements by spaces before passing the resulting value to
2506 Tcl/Tk.
2507 (Contributed by Guilherme Polo; :issue:`2906`.)
2508
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002509* The :mod:`turtle` module for turtle graphics was greatly enhanced by
2510 Gregor Lingl. New features in the module include:
2511
2512 * Better animation of turtle movement and rotation.
2513 * Control over turtle movement using the new delay(),
2514 tracer(), and speed() methods.
2515 * The ability to set new shapes for the turtle, and to
2516 define a new coordinate system.
2517 * Turtles now have an undo() method that can roll back actions.
2518 * Simple support for reacting to input events such as mouse and keyboard
2519 activity, making it possible to write simple games.
2520 * A :file:`turtle.cfg` file can be used to customize the starting appearance
2521 of the turtle's screen.
2522 * The module's docstrings can be replaced by new docstrings that have been
2523 translated into another language.
2524
2525 (:issue:`1513695`)
2526
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002527* An optional ``timeout`` parameter was added to the
2528 :func:`urllib.urlopen` function and the
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002529 :class:`urllib.ftpwrapper` class constructor, as well as the
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002530 :func:`urllib2.urlopen` function. The parameter specifies a timeout
2531 measured in seconds. For example::
2532
2533 >>> u = urllib2.urlopen("http://slow.example.com", timeout=3)
2534 Traceback (most recent call last):
2535 ...
2536 urllib2.URLError: <urlopen error timed out>
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002537 >>>
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002538
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002539 (Added by Facundo Batista.)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +00002540
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002541* The :mod:`warnings` module's :func:`formatwarning` and :func:`showwarning`
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +00002542 gained an optional *line* argument that can be used to supply the
2543 line of source code. (Added as part of :issue:`1631171`, which re-implemented
2544 part of the :mod:`warnings` module in C code.)
2545
2546* The XML-RPC :class:`SimpleXMLRPCServer` and :class:`DocXMLRPCServer`
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002547 classes can now be prevented from immediately opening and binding to
2548 their socket by passing True as the ``bind_and_activate``
2549 constructor parameter. This can be used to modify the instance's
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002550 :attr:`allow_reuse_address` attribute before calling the
2551 :meth:`server_bind` and :meth:`server_activate` methods to
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002552 open the socket and begin listening for connections.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002553 (Contributed by Peter Parente; :issue:`1599845`.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002554
2555 :class:`SimpleXMLRPCServer` also has a :attr:`_send_traceback_header`
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002556 attribute; if true, the exception and formatted traceback are returned
2557 as HTTP headers "X-Exception" and "X-Traceback". This feature is
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002558 for debugging purposes only and should not be used on production servers
2559 because the tracebacks could possibly reveal passwords or other sensitive
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002560 information. (Contributed by Alan McIntyre as part of his
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002561 project for Google's Summer of Code 2007.)
2562
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002563* The :mod:`xmlrpclib` module no longer automatically converts
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002564 :class:`datetime.date` and :class:`datetime.time` to the
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002565 :class:`xmlrpclib.DateTime` type; the conversion semantics were
2566 not necessarily correct for all applications. Code using
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002567 :mod:`xmlrpclib` should convert :class:`date` and :class:`time`
2568 instances. (:issue:`1330538`) The code can also handle
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002569 dates before 1900 (contributed by Ralf Schmitt; :issue:`2014`)
2570 and 64-bit integers represented by using ``<i8>`` in XML-RPC responses
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002571 (contributed by Riku Lindblad; :issue:`2985`).
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002572
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002573* The :mod:`zipfile` module's :class:`ZipFile` class now has
2574 :meth:`extract` and :meth:`extractall` methods that will unpack
2575 a single file or all the files in the archive to the current directory, or
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002576 to a specified directory::
2577
2578 z = zipfile.ZipFile('python-251.zip')
2579
2580 # Unpack a single file, writing it relative to the /tmp directory.
2581 z.extract('Python/sysmodule.c', '/tmp')
2582
2583 # Unpack all the files in the archive.
2584 z.extractall()
2585
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002586 (Contributed by Alan McIntyre; :issue:`467924`.)
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002587
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002588 The :meth:`open`, :meth:`read` and :meth:`extract` methods can now
2589 take either a filename or a :class:`ZipInfo` object. This is useful when an
2590 archive accidentally contains a duplicated filename.
2591 (Contributed by Graham Horler; :issue:`1775025`.)
Alexandre Vassalotti6461e102008-05-15 22:09:29 +00002592
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002593 Finally, :mod:`zipfile` now supports using Unicode filenames
2594 for archived files. (Contributed by Alexey Borzenkov; :issue:`1734346`.)
2595
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00002596.. ======================================================================
2597.. whole new modules get described in subsections here
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002598
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002599The :mod:`ast` module
2600----------------------
2601
2602The :mod:`ast` module provides an Abstract Syntax Tree representation
2603of Python code. For Python 2.6, Armin Ronacher contributed a set of
2604helper functions that perform various common tasks. These will be useful
2605for HTML templating packages, code analyzers, and similar tools that
2606process Python code.
2607
2608The :func:`parse` function takes an expression and returns an AST.
2609The :func:`dump` function outputs a representation of a tree, suitable
2610for debugging::
2611
2612 import ast
2613
2614 t = ast.parse("""
2615 d = {}
2616 for i in 'abcdefghijklm':
2617 d[i + i] = ord(i) - ord('a') + 1
2618 print d
2619 """)
2620 print ast.dump(t)
2621
2622This outputs::
2623
2624 Module(body=[Assign(targets=[Name(id='d', ctx=Store())],
2625 value=Dict(keys=[], values=[])), For(target=Name(id='i',
2626 ctx=Store()), iter=Str(s='abcdefghijklm'),
2627 body=[Assign(targets=[Subscript(value=Name(id='d', ctx=Load()),
2628 slice=Index(value=BinOp(left=Name(id='i', ctx=Load()), op=Add(),
2629 right=Name(id='i', ctx=Load()))), ctx=Store())],
2630 value=BinOp(left=BinOp(left=Call(func=Name(id='ord', ctx=Load()),
2631 args=[Name(id='i', ctx=Load())], keywords=[], starargs=None,
2632 kwargs=None), op=Sub(), right=Call(func=Name(id='ord',
2633 ctx=Load()), args=[Str(s='a')], keywords=[], starargs=None,
2634 kwargs=None)), op=Add(), right=Num(n=1)))], orelse=[]),
2635 Print(dest=None, values=[Name(id='d', ctx=Load())], nl=True)])
2636
2637The :func:`literal_eval` method takes a string or an AST
2638representing a literal expression, one that contains a Python
2639expression containing only strings, numbers, dictionaries, etc. but no
2640statements or function calls, and returns the resulting value. If you
2641need to unserialize an expression but need to worry about security
2642and can't risk using an :func:`eval` call, :func:`literal_eval` will
2643handle it safely::
2644
2645 >>> literal = '("a", "b", {2:4, 3:8, 1:2})'
2646 >>> print ast.literal_eval(literal)
2647 ('a', 'b', {1: 2, 2: 4, 3: 8})
2648 >>> print ast.literal_eval('"a" + "b"')
2649 Traceback (most recent call last):
2650 ...
2651 ValueError: malformed string
2652
Georg Brandl86b2fb92008-07-16 03:43:04 +00002653The module also includes :class:`NodeVisitor` and
2654:class:`NodeTransformer` classes for traversing and modifying an AST,
2655and functions for common transformations such as changing line
2656numbers.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002657
2658.. ======================================================================
2659
2660The :mod:`future_builtins` module
2661--------------------------------------
2662
2663Python 3.0 makes various changes to the repertoire of built-in
2664functions, and most of the changes can't be introduced in the Python
26652.x series because they would break compatibility.
2666The :mod:`future_builtins` module provides versions
2667of these built-in functions that can be imported when writing
26683.0-compatible code.
2669
2670The functions in this module currently include:
2671
2672* ``ascii(**obj**)``: equivalent to :func:`repr`. In Python 3.0,
2673 :func:`repr` will return a Unicode string, while :func:`ascii` will
2674 return a pure ASCII bytestring.
2675
2676* ``filter(**predicate**, **iterable**)``,
2677 ``map(**func**, **iterable1**, ...)``: the 3.0 versions
2678 return iterators, differing from the 2.x built-ins that return lists.
2679
2680* ``hex(**value**)``, ``oct(**value**)``: instead of calling the
2681 :meth:`__hex__` or :meth:`__oct__` methods, these versions will
2682 call the :meth:`__index__` method and convert the result to hexadecimal
2683 or octal.
2684
2685.. ======================================================================
2686
Christian Heimes90540002008-05-08 14:29:10 +00002687The :mod:`json` module
2688----------------------
2689
2690The new :mod:`json` module supports the encoding and decoding of Python types in
2691JSON (Javascript Object Notation). JSON is a lightweight interchange format
2692often used in web applications. For more information about JSON, see
2693http://www.json.org.
2694
2695:mod:`json` comes with support for decoding and encoding most builtin Python
2696types. The following example encodes and decodes a dictionary::
2697
2698 >>> import json
2699 >>> data = {"spam" : "foo", "parrot" : 42}
2700 >>> in_json = json.dumps(data) # Encode the data
2701 >>> in_json
2702 '{"parrot": 42, "spam": "foo"}'
2703 >>> json.loads(in_json) # Decode into a Python object
2704 {"spam" : "foo", "parrot" : 42}
2705
2706It is also possible to write your own decoders and encoders to support more
2707types. Pretty-printing of the JSON strings is also supported.
2708
2709:mod:`json` (originally called simplejson) was written by Bob Ippolito.
2710
2711
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002712.. ======================================================================
2713
2714plistlib: A Property-List Parser
2715--------------------------------------------------
2716
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002717A commonly-used format on MacOS X is the ``.plist`` format,
2718which stores basic data types (numbers, strings, lists,
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002719and dictionaries) and serializes them into an XML-based format.
2720(It's a lot like the XML-RPC serialization of data types.)
2721
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002722Despite being primarily used on MacOS X, the format
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002723has nothing Mac-specific about it and the Python implementation works
2724on any platform that Python supports, so the :mod:`plistlib` module
2725has been promoted to the standard library.
2726
2727Using the module is simple::
2728
2729 import sys
2730 import plistlib
2731 import datetime
2732
2733 # Create data structure
2734 data_struct = dict(lastAccessed=datetime.datetime.now(),
2735 version=1,
2736 categories=('Personal', 'Shared', 'Private'))
2737
2738 # Create string containing XML.
2739 plist_str = plistlib.writePlistToString(data_struct)
2740 new_struct = plistlib.readPlistFromString(plist_str)
2741 print data_struct
2742 print new_struct
2743
2744 # Write data structure to a file and read it back.
2745 plistlib.writePlist(data_struct, '/tmp/customizations.plist')
2746 new_struct = plistlib.readPlist('/tmp/customizations.plist')
2747
2748 # read/writePlist accepts file-like objects as well as paths.
2749 plistlib.writePlist(data_struct, sys.stdout)
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002750
2751.. ======================================================================
2752
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +00002753ctypes Enhancements
2754--------------------------------------------------
2755
2756Thomas Heller continued to maintain and enhance the
2757:mod:`ctypes` module.
2758
2759:mod:`ctypes` now supports a :class:`c_bool` datatype
2760that represents the C99 ``bool`` type. (Contributed by David Remahl;
2761:issue:`1649190`.)
2762
2763The :mod:`ctypes` string, buffer and array types have improved
2764support for extended slicing syntax,
2765where various combinations of ``(start, stop, step)`` are supplied.
2766(Implemented by Thomas Wouters.)
2767
2768.. Revision 57769
2769
2770A new calling convention tells :mod:`ctypes` to clear the ``errno`` or
2771Win32 LastError variables at the outset of each wrapped call.
2772(Implemented by Thomas Heller; :issue:`1798`.)
2773
2774For the Unix ``errno`` variable: when creating a wrapped function,
2775you can supply ``use_errno=True`` as a keyword parameter
2776to the :func:`DLL` function
2777and then call the module-level methods :meth:`set_errno`
2778and :meth:`get_errno` to set and retrieve the error value.
2779
2780The Win32 LastError variable is supported similarly by
2781the :func:`DLL`, :func:`OleDLL`, and :func:`WinDLL` functions.
2782You supply ``use_last_error=True`` as a keyword parameter
2783and then call the module-level methods :meth:`set_last_error`
2784and :meth:`get_last_error`.
2785
2786The :func:`byref` function, used to retrieve a pointer to a ctypes
2787instance, now has an optional **offset** parameter that is a byte
2788count that will be added to the returned pointer.
2789
2790.. ======================================================================
2791
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002792Improved SSL Support
2793--------------------------------------------------
2794
2795Bill Janssen made extensive improvements to Python 2.6's support for
2796the Secure Sockets Layer by adding a new module, :mod:`ssl`, on top of
2797the `OpenSSL <http://www.openssl.org/>`__ library. This new module
2798provides more control over the protocol negotiated, the X.509
2799certificates used, and has better support for writing SSL servers (as
2800opposed to clients) in Python. The existing SSL support in the
2801:mod:`socket` module hasn't been removed and continues to work,
2802though it will be removed in Python 3.0.
2803
2804To use the new module, first you must create a TCP connection in the
2805usual way and then pass it to the :func:`ssl.wrap_socket` function.
2806It's possible to specify whether a certificate is required, and to
2807obtain certificate info by calling the :meth:`getpeercert` method.
2808
2809.. seealso::
2810
2811 The documentation for the :mod:`ssl` module.
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002812
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00002813.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002814
2815
2816Build and C API Changes
2817=======================
2818
2819Changes to Python's build process and to the C API include:
2820
Guido van Rossum0d3fb8a2007-11-26 23:23:18 +00002821* Python 2.6 can be built with Microsoft Visual Studio 2008.
2822 See the :file:`PCbuild9` directory for the build files.
2823 (Implemented by Christian Heimes.)
2824
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002825* On MacOS X, Python 2.6 can be compiled as a 4-way universal build.
2826 The :program:`configure` script
2827 can take a :option:`--with-universal-archs=[32-bit|64-bit|all]`
2828 switch, controlling whether the binaries are built for 32-bit
2829 architectures (x86, PowerPC), 64-bit (x86-64 and PPC-64), or both.
2830 (Contributed by Ronald Oussoren.)
2831
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00002832* Python now can only be compiled with C89 compilers (after 19
2833 years!). This means that the Python source tree can now drop its
2834 own implementations of :cfunc:`memmove` and :cfunc:`strerror`, which
2835 are in the C89 standard library.
2836
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002837* The BerkeleyDB module now has a C API object, available as
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002838 ``bsddb.db.api``. This object can be used by other C extensions
2839 that wish to use the :mod:`bsddb` module for their own purposes.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002840 (Contributed by Duncan Grisby; :issue:`1551895`.)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002841
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002842* The new buffer interface, previously described in
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002843 `the PEP 3118 section <#pep-3118-revised-buffer-protocol>`__,
Martin v. Löwis423be952008-08-13 15:53:07 +00002844 adds :cfunc:`PyObject_GetBuffer` and :cfunc:`PyBuffer_Release`,
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002845 as well as a few other functions.
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00002846
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002847* Python's use of the C stdio library is now thread-safe, or at least
2848 as thread-safe as the underlying library is. A long-standing potential
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002849 bug occurred if one thread closed a file object while another thread
2850 was reading from or writing to the object. In 2.6 file objects
2851 have a reference count, manipulated by the
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002852 :cfunc:`PyFile_IncUseCount` and :cfunc:`PyFile_DecUseCount`
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002853 functions. File objects can't be closed unless the reference count
2854 is zero. :cfunc:`PyFile_IncUseCount` should be called while the GIL
2855 is still held, before carrying out an I/O operation using the
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002856 ``FILE *`` pointer, and :cfunc:`PyFile_DecUseCount` should be called
2857 immediately after the GIL is re-acquired.
2858 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou and Gregory P. Smith.)
2859
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002860* Importing modules simultaneously in two different threads no longer
2861 deadlocks; it will now raise an :exc:`ImportError`. A new API
2862 function, :cfunc:`PyImport_ImportModuleNoBlock`, will look for a
2863 module in ``sys.modules`` first, then try to import it after
2864 acquiring an import lock. If the import lock is held by another
2865 thread, the :exc:`ImportError` is raised.
2866 (Contributed by Christian Heimes.)
2867
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002868* Several functions return information about the platform's
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002869 floating-point support. :cfunc:`PyFloat_GetMax` returns
2870 the maximum representable floating point value,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002871 and :cfunc:`PyFloat_GetMin` returns the minimum
2872 positive value. :cfunc:`PyFloat_GetInfo` returns a dictionary
Christian Heimes90aa7642007-12-19 02:45:37 +00002873 containing more information from the :file:`float.h` file, such as
2874 ``"mant_dig"`` (number of digits in the mantissa), ``"epsilon"``
2875 (smallest difference between 1.0 and the next largest value
2876 representable), and several others.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002877 (Contributed by Christian Heimes; :issue:`1534`.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002878
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002879* C functions and methods that use
2880 :cfunc:`PyComplex_AsCComplex` will now accept arguments that
2881 have a :meth:`__complex__` method. In particular, the functions in the
2882 :mod:`cmath` module will now accept objects with this method.
2883 This is a backport of a Python 3.0 change.
2884 (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`1675423`.)
2885
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002886* Python's C API now includes two functions for case-insensitive string
Christian Heimesc3f30c42008-02-22 16:37:40 +00002887 comparisons, ``PyOS_stricmp(char*, char*)``
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002888 and ``PyOS_strnicmp(char*, char*, Py_ssize_t)``.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002889 (Contributed by Christian Heimes; :issue:`1635`.)
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002890
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002891* Many C extensions define their own little macro for adding
2892 integers and strings to the module's dictionary in the
2893 ``init*`` function. Python 2.6 finally defines standard macros
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002894 for adding values to a module, :cmacro:`PyModule_AddStringMacro`
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002895 and :cmacro:`PyModule_AddIntMacro()`. (Contributed by
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002896 Christian Heimes.)
2897
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002898* Some macros were renamed in both 3.0 and 2.6 to make it clearer that
2899 they are macros,
Christian Heimes3f419af2008-01-04 03:08:33 +00002900 not functions. :cmacro:`Py_Size()` became :cmacro:`Py_SIZE()`,
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002901 :cmacro:`Py_Type()` became :cmacro:`Py_TYPE()`, and
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002902 :cmacro:`Py_Refcnt()` became :cmacro:`Py_REFCNT()`.
Christian Heimesdd15f6c2008-03-16 00:07:10 +00002903 The mixed-case macros are still available
2904 in Python 2.6 for backward compatibility.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002905 (:issue:`1629`)
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002906
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002907* Distutils now places C extensions it builds in a
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002908 different directory when running on a debug version of Python.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002909 (Contributed by Collin Winter; :issue:`1530959`.)
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002910
Christian Heimes78644762008-03-04 23:39:23 +00002911* Several basic data types, such as integers and strings, maintain
2912 internal free lists of objects that can be re-used. The data
2913 structures for these free lists now follow a naming convention: the
2914 variable is always named ``free_list``, the counter is always named
2915 ``numfree``, and a macro :cmacro:`Py<typename>_MAXFREELIST` is
2916 always defined.
Christian Heimesaf98da12008-01-27 15:18:18 +00002917
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002918* A new Makefile target, "make check", prepares the Python source tree
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002919 for making a patch: it fixes trailing whitespace in all modified
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002920 ``.py`` files, checks whether the documentation has been changed,
2921 and reports whether the :file:`Misc/ACKS` and :file:`Misc/NEWS` files
2922 have been updated.
2923 (Contributed by Brett Cannon.)
2924
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002925 Another new target, "make profile-opt", compiles a Python binary
2926 using GCC's profile-guided optimization. It compiles Python with
2927 profiling enabled, runs the test suite to obtain a set of profiling
2928 results, and then compiles using these results for optimization.
2929 (Contributed by Gregory P. Smith.)
2930
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00002931.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002932
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002933Port-Specific Changes: Windows
2934-----------------------------------
2935
Christian Heimes81ee3ef2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00002936* The support for Windows 95, 98, ME and NT4 has been dropped.
2937 Python 2.6 requires at least Windows 2000 SP4.
2938
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002939* The :mod:`msvcrt` module now supports
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002940 both the normal and wide char variants of the console I/O
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002941 API. The :func:`getwch` function reads a keypress and returns a Unicode
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00002942 value, as does the :func:`getwche` function. The :func:`putwch` function
2943 takes a Unicode character and writes it to the console.
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002944 (Contributed by Christian Heimes.)
2945
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002946* :func:`os.path.expandvars` will now expand environment variables
2947 in the form "%var%", and "~user" will be expanded into the
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002948 user's home directory path. (Contributed by Josiah Carlson.)
2949
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002950* The :mod:`socket` module's socket objects now have an
2951 :meth:`ioctl` method that provides a limited interface to the
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002952 :cfunc:`WSAIoctl` system interface.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002953
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002954* The :mod:`_winreg` module now has a function,
2955 :func:`ExpandEnvironmentStrings`,
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002956 that expands environment variable references such as ``%NAME%``
2957 in an input string. The handle objects provided by this
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002958 module now support the context protocol, so they can be used
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002959 in :keyword:`with` statements. (Contributed by Christian Heimes.)
2960
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002961 :mod:`_winreg` also has better support for x64 systems,
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002962 exposing the :func:`DisableReflectionKey`, :func:`EnableReflectionKey`,
2963 and :func:`QueryReflectionKey` functions, which enable and disable
2964 registry reflection for 32-bit processes running on 64-bit systems.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00002965 (:issue:`1753245`)
Christian Heimes5e696852008-04-09 08:37:03 +00002966
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00002967* The :mod:`msilib` module's :class:`Record` object
2968 gained :meth:`GetInteger` and :meth:`GetString` methods that
2969 return field values as an integer or a string.
2970 (Contributed by Floris Bruynooghe; :issue:`2125`.)
2971
2972* The new default compiler on Windows is Visual Studio 2008 (VS 9.0). The
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +00002973 build directories for Visual Studio 2003 (VS7.1) and 2005 (VS8.0)
2974 were moved into the PC/ directory. The new PCbuild directory supports
2975 cross compilation for X64, debug builds and Profile Guided Optimization
2976 (PGO). PGO builds are roughly 10% faster than normal builds.
2977 (Contributed by Christian Heimes with help from Amaury Forgeot d'Arc and
2978 Martin von Loewis.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002979
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00002980.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002981
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002982Port-Specific Changes: MacOS X
2983-----------------------------------
2984
2985* When compiling a framework build of Python, you can now specify the
2986 framework name to be used by providing the
2987 :option:`--with-framework-name=` option to the
2988 :program:`configure` script.
2989
2990.. ======================================================================
2991
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002992
2993.. _section-other:
2994
2995Other Changes and Fixes
2996=======================
2997
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00002998As usual, there were a bunch of other improvements and bugfixes
2999scattered throughout the source tree. A search through the change
3000logs finds there were XXX patches applied and YYY bugs fixed between
3001Python 2.5 and 2.6. Both figures are likely to be underestimates.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003002
3003Some of the more notable changes are:
3004
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003005* It's now possible to prevent Python from writing any :file:`.pyc`
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00003006 or :file:`.pyo` files by either supplying the :option:`-B` switch
3007 or setting the :envvar:`PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE` environment variable
3008 to any non-empty string when running the Python interpreter. These
3009 are also used to set the :data:`sys.dont_write_bytecode` attribute;
3010 Python code can change this variable to control whether bytecode
3011 files are subsequently written.
3012 (Contributed by Neal Norwitz and Georg Brandl.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003013
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00003014.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003015
3016
3017Porting to Python 2.6
3018=====================
3019
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00003020This section lists previously described changes and other bugfixes
3021that may require changes to your code:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003022
Christian Heimesfaf2f632008-01-06 16:59:19 +00003023* The :meth:`__init__` method of :class:`collections.deque`
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00003024 now clears any existing contents of the deque
3025 before adding elements from the iterable. This change makes the
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003026 behavior match that of ``list.__init__()``.
Christian Heimesa34706f2008-01-04 03:06:10 +00003027
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003028* The :class:`Decimal` constructor now accepts leading and trailing
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00003029 whitespace when passed a string. Previously it would raise an
3030 :exc:`InvalidOperation` exception. On the other hand, the
3031 :meth:`create_decimal` method of :class:`Context` objects now
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003032 explicitly disallows extra whitespace, raising a
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00003033 :exc:`ConversionSyntax` exception.
3034
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003035* Due to an implementation accident, if you passed a file path to
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00003036 the built-in :func:`__import__` function, it would actually import
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003037 the specified file. This was never intended to work, however, and
3038 the implementation now explicitly checks for this case and raises
Guido van Rossum7736b5b2008-01-15 21:44:53 +00003039 an :exc:`ImportError`.
3040
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00003041* C API: the :cfunc:`PyImport_Import` and :cfunc:`PyImport_ImportModule`
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003042 functions now default to absolute imports, not relative imports.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00003043 This will affect C extensions that import other modules.
3044
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00003045* The :mod:`socket` module exception :exc:`socket.error` now inherits
3046 from :exc:`IOError`. Previously it wasn't a subclass of
3047 :exc:`StandardError` but now it is, through :exc:`IOError`.
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00003048 (Implemented by Gregory P. Smith; :issue:`1706815`.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003049
Christian Heimes05e8be12008-02-23 18:30:17 +00003050* The :mod:`xmlrpclib` module no longer automatically converts
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003051 :class:`datetime.date` and :class:`datetime.time` to the
Christian Heimes05e8be12008-02-23 18:30:17 +00003052 :class:`xmlrpclib.DateTime` type; the conversion semantics were
3053 not necessarily correct for all applications. Code using
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003054 :mod:`xmlrpclib` should convert :class:`date` and :class:`time`
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00003055 instances. (:issue:`1330538`)
Christian Heimes05e8be12008-02-23 18:30:17 +00003056
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003057* (3.0-warning mode) The :class:`Exception` class now warns
3058 when accessed using slicing or index access; having
Christian Heimesf6cd9672008-03-26 13:45:42 +00003059 :class:`Exception` behave like a tuple is being phased out.
3060
3061* (3.0-warning mode) inequality comparisons between two dictionaries
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00003062 or two objects that don't implement comparison methods are reported
3063 as warnings. ``dict1 == dict2`` still works, but ``dict1 < dict2``
3064 is being phased out.
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003065
Christian Heimes02781dc2008-03-21 01:11:52 +00003066 Comparisons between cells, which are an implementation detail of Python's
3067 scoping rules, also cause warnings because such comparisons are forbidden
3068 entirely in 3.0.
3069
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00003070.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003071
3072
3073.. _acks:
3074
3075Acknowledgements
3076================
3077
3078The author would like to thank the following people for offering suggestions,
Benjamin Petersonf9c98b42008-07-02 16:19:28 +00003079corrections and assistance with various drafts of this article:
Christian Heimes33fe8092008-04-13 13:53:33 +00003080Georg Brandl, Jim Jewett.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003081