blob: ea41f881e2e666ac8386d411a5574d4f4c563ed0 [file] [log] [blame]
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00001****************************
Raymond Hettingerf558ddd2009-06-28 21:37:08 +00002 What's New In Python 3.2
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00003****************************
4
5:Author: Raymond Hettinger
6:Release: |release|
7:Date: |today|
8
9.. $Id$
10 Rules for maintenance:
11
12 * Anyone can add text to this document. Do not spend very much time
13 on the wording of your changes, because your text will probably
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +000014 get rewritten.
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +000015
16 * The maintainer will go through Misc/NEWS periodically and add
17 changes; it's therefore more important to add your changes to
18 Misc/NEWS than to this file.
19
20 * This is not a complete list of every single change; completeness
21 is the purpose of Misc/NEWS. Some changes I consider too small
22 or esoteric to include. If such a change is added to the text,
23 I'll just remove it. (This is another reason you shouldn't spend
24 too much time on writing your addition.)
25
26 * If you want to draw your new text to the attention of the
27 maintainer, add 'XXX' to the beginning of the paragraph or
28 section.
29
30 * It's OK to just add a fragmentary note about a change. For
31 example: "XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the
32 socket module." The maintainer will research the change and
33 write the necessary text.
34
35 * You can comment out your additions if you like, but it's not
36 necessary (especially when a final release is some months away).
37
38 * Credit the author of a patch or bugfix. Just the name is
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +000039 sufficient; the e-mail address isn't necessary. It's helpful to
40 add the issue number:
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +000041
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +000042 XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the socket
43 module.
44
45 (Contributed by P.Y. Developer; :issue:`12345`.)
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +000046
47 This saves the maintainer the effort of going through the SVN log
48 when researching a change.
49
Raymond Hettingerffad35e2010-12-14 21:12:03 +000050This article explains the new features in Python 3.2 as compared to 3.1. It
51focuses on a few highlights and gives a few examples. For full details, see the
52:source:`Misc/NEWS <Misc/NEWS>` file.
Raymond Hettinger2c1ecc32010-12-07 09:55:02 +000053
Raymond Hettinger6778fa92010-12-21 20:09:55 +000054.. seealso::
55
56 :pep:`392` - Python 3.2 Release Schedule
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +000057
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +000058
Martin v. Löwis932e49e2010-12-04 13:49:32 +000059PEP 384: Defining a Stable ABI
Martin v. Löwis4d0d4712010-12-03 20:14:31 +000060==============================
61
62In the past, extension modules built for one Python version were often
63not usable with other Python versions. Particularly on Windows, every
64feature release of Python required rebuilding all extension modules that
65one wanted to use. This requirement was the result of the free access to
66Python interpreter internals that extension modules could use.
67
68With Python 3.2, an alternative approach becomes available: extension
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +000069modules which restrict themselves to a limited API (by defining
Martin v. Löwis4d0d4712010-12-03 20:14:31 +000070Py_LIMITED_API) cannot use many of the internals, but are constrained
71to a set of API functions that are promised to be stable for several
72releases. As a consequence, extension modules built for 3.2 in that
73mode will also work with 3.3, 3.4, and so on. Extension modules that
74make use of details of memory structures can still be built, but will
75need to be recompiled for every feature release.
76
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +000077.. seealso::
78
Georg Brandl65b2eb92010-12-05 11:42:38 +000079 :pep:`384` - Defining a Stable ABI
Raymond Hettinger2c1ecc32010-12-07 09:55:02 +000080 PEP written by Martin von Löwis.
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +000081
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +000082
Raymond Hettingera5a35542010-12-05 00:39:18 +000083PEP 389: Argparse Command Line Parsing Module
84=============================================
85
86A new module for command line parsing, :mod:`argparse`, was introduced to
87overcome the limitations of :mod:`optparse` which did not provide support for
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +000088positional arguments (not just options), subcommands, required options and other
Raymond Hettinger413abbc2010-12-05 07:06:47 +000089common patterns of specifying and validating options.
Raymond Hettingera5a35542010-12-05 00:39:18 +000090
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +000091This module has already has widespread success in the community as a
Raymond Hettingerb1ff4022010-12-08 11:19:45 +000092third-party module. Being more fully featured than its predecessor, the
93:mod:`argparse` module is now the preferred module for command-line processing.
94The older module is still being kept available because of the substantial amount
95of legacy code that depends on it.
Raymond Hettingera5a35542010-12-05 00:39:18 +000096
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +000097Here's an annotated example parser showing features like limiting results to a
98set of choices, specifying a *metavar* in the help screen, validating that one
Raymond Hettinger68f1e8d2010-12-07 09:24:30 +000099or more positional arguments is present, and making a required option::
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000100
101 import argparse
102 parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
103 description = 'Manage servers', # main description for help
104 epilog = 'Tested on Solaris and Linux') # displayed after help
105 parser.add_argument('action', # argument name
Raymond Hettinger92977092011-01-16 09:18:59 +0000106 choices = ['deploy', 'start', 'stop'], # three allowed values
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000107 help = 'action on each target') # help msg
108 parser.add_argument('targets',
109 metavar = 'HOSTNAME', # var name used in help msg
Raymond Hettinger92977092011-01-16 09:18:59 +0000110 nargs = '+', # require one or more targets
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000111 help = 'url for target machines') # help msg explanation
112 parser.add_argument('-u', '--user', # -u or --user option
Georg Brandl52a43b52011-01-16 09:11:45 +0000113 required = True, # make it a required argument
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000114 help = 'login as user')
115
116Example of calling the parser on a command string::
117
118 >>> cmd = 'deploy sneezy.example.com sleepy.example.com -u skycaptain'
119 >>> result = parser.parse_args(cmd.split())
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000120 >>> result.action
121 'deploy'
122 >>> result.targets
123 ['sneezy.example.com', 'sleepy.example.com']
124 >>> result.user
125 'skycaptain'
126
127Example of the parser's automatically generated help::
128
129 >>> parser.parse_args('-h'.split())
130
Raymond Hettinger3fcf0022010-12-08 01:13:53 +0000131 usage: manage_cloud.py [-h] -u USER
132 {deploy,start,stop} HOSTNAME [HOSTNAME ...]
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000133
134 Manage servers
135
136 positional arguments:
137 {deploy,start,stop} action on each target
138 HOSTNAME url for target machines
139
140 optional arguments:
141 -h, --help show this help message and exit
142 -u USER, --user USER login as user
143
144 Tested on Solaris and Linux
145
Raymond Hettingerb1ff4022010-12-08 11:19:45 +0000146An especially nice :mod:`argparse` feature is the ability to define subparsers,
147each with their own argument patterns and help displays::
148
149 import argparse
150 parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(prog='HELM')
151 subparsers = parser.add_subparsers()
152
153 parser_l = subparsers.add_parser('launch', help='Launch Control') # first subgroup
Raymond Hettingerbb9686f2010-12-16 00:53:05 +0000154 parser_l.add_argument('-m', '--missiles', action='store_true')
Raymond Hettingerb1ff4022010-12-08 11:19:45 +0000155 parser_l.add_argument('-t', '--torpedos', action='store_true')
156
Raymond Hettinger3094ed82010-12-18 09:41:32 +0000157 parser_m = subparsers.add_parser('move', help='Move Vessel', # second subgroup
158 aliases=('steer', 'turn')) # equivalent names
Raymond Hettingerb1ff4022010-12-08 11:19:45 +0000159 parser_m.add_argument('-c', '--course', type=int, required=True)
160 parser_m.add_argument('-s', '--speed', type=int, default=0)
161
162 $ ./helm.py --help # top level help (launch and move)
163 $ ./helm.py launch --help # help for launch options
164 $ ./helm.py launch --missiles # set missiles=True and torpedos=False
Raymond Hettinger3094ed82010-12-18 09:41:32 +0000165 $ ./helm.py steer --course 180 --speed 5 # set movement parameters
Raymond Hettingera5a35542010-12-05 00:39:18 +0000166
167.. seealso::
168
169 :pep:`389` - New Command Line Parsing Module
170 PEP written by Steven Bethard.
171
Raymond Hettingerbe9994e2011-01-19 08:44:33 +0000172 :ref:`upgrading-optparse-code` for details on the differences from :mod:`optparse`.
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +0000173
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +0000174
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000175PEP 391: Dictionary Based Configuration for Logging
176====================================================
Raymond Hettingeref2335c2010-09-05 08:35:38 +0000177
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000178The :mod:`logging` module provided two kinds of configuration, one style with
179function calls for each option or another style driven by an external file saved
180in a :mod:`ConfigParser` format. Those options did not provide the flexibility
Georg Brandl9e75cad2010-09-06 06:45:47 +0000181to create configurations from JSON or YAML files, nor did they support
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000182incremental configuration, which is needed for specifying logger options from a
183command line.
Raymond Hettingeref2335c2010-09-05 08:35:38 +0000184
185To support a more flexible style, the module now offers
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000186:func:`logging.config.dictConfig` for specifying logging configuration with
187plain Python dictionaries. The configuration options include formatters,
188handlers, filters, and loggers. Here's a working example of a configuration
189dictionary::
Raymond Hettingeref2335c2010-09-05 08:35:38 +0000190
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000191 {"version": 1,
192 "formatters": {"brief": {"format": "%(levelname)-8s: %(name)-15s: %(message)s"},
193 "full": {"format": "%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s"},
194 },
195 "handlers": {"console": {
196 "class": "logging.StreamHandler",
197 "formatter": "brief",
198 "level": "INFO",
199 "stream": "ext://sys.stdout"},
200 "console_priority": {
201 "class": "logging.StreamHandler",
202 "formatter": "full",
203 "level": "ERROR",
204 "stream": "ext://sys.stderr"},
205 },
206 "root": {"level": "DEBUG", "handlers": ["console", "console_priority"]}}
Raymond Hettingeref2335c2010-09-05 08:35:38 +0000207
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000208
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000209If that dictionary is stored in a file called :file:`conf.json`, it can be
210loaded and called with code like this::
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000211
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +0000212 >>> import json, logging.config
213 >>> with open('conf.json', 'rb') as f:
214 conf = json.load(f)
215 >>> logging.config.dictConfig(conf)
216 >>> logging.info("Transaction completed normally")
217 >>> logging.critical("Abnormal termination")
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000218
Raymond Hettingeref2335c2010-09-05 08:35:38 +0000219.. seealso::
220
221 :pep:`391` - Dictionary Based Configuration for Logging
222 PEP written by Vinay Sajip.
223
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +0000224
Georg Brandl97b20da2010-11-16 15:15:29 +0000225PEP 3148: The ``concurrent.futures`` module
226============================================
227
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +0000228Code for creating and managing concurrency is being collected in a new top-level
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000229namespace, *concurrent*. Its first member is a *futures* package which provides
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +0000230a uniform high-level interface for managing threads and processes.
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000231
232The design for :mod:`concurrent.futures` was inspired by
233*java.util.concurrent.package*. In that model, a running call and its result
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +0000234are represented by a :class:`~concurrent.futures.Future` object that abstracts
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000235features common to threads, processes, and remote procedure calls. That object
236supports status checks (running or done), timeouts, cancellations, adding
Raymond Hettinger24a09412010-12-08 06:50:02 +0000237callbacks, and access to results or exceptions.
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000238
239The primary offering of the new module is a pair of executor classes for
240launching and managing calls. The goal of the executors is to make it easier to
241use existing tools for making parallel calls. They save the effort needed to
242setup a pool of resources, launch the calls, create a results queue, add
243time-out handling, and limit the total number of threads, processes, or remote
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +0000244procedure calls.
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000245
246Ideally, each application should share a single executor across multiple
247components so that process and thread limits can be centrally managed. This
248solves the design challenge that arises when each component has its own
249competing strategy for resource management.
250
Raymond Hettingerb1055192010-12-08 06:42:41 +0000251Both classes share a common interface with three methods:
252:meth:`~concurrent.futures.Executor.submit` for scheduling a callable and
253returning a :class:`~concurrent.futures.Future` object;
254:meth:`~concurrent.futures.Executor.map` for scheduling many asynchronous calls
Raymond Hettinger83d80792010-12-08 06:48:33 +0000255at a time, and :meth:`~concurrent.futures.Executor.shutdown` for freeing
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +0000256resources. The class is a :term:`context manager` and can be used in a
Raymond Hettinger83d80792010-12-08 06:48:33 +0000257:keyword:`with` statement to assure that resources are automatically released
258when currently pending futures are done executing.
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000259
Raymond Hettingerb1055192010-12-08 06:42:41 +0000260A simple of example of :class:`~concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor` is a
Raymond Hettinger83d80792010-12-08 06:48:33 +0000261launch of four parallel threads for copying files::
Raymond Hettingerb1055192010-12-08 06:42:41 +0000262
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +0000263 import threading, shutil
264 with threading.ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=4) as e:
Raymond Hettingerb1055192010-12-08 06:42:41 +0000265 e.submit(shutil.copy, 'src1.txt', 'dest1.txt')
266 e.submit(shutil.copy, 'src2.txt', 'dest2.txt')
267 e.submit(shutil.copy, 'src3.txt', 'dest3.txt')
268 e.submit(shutil.copy, 'src3.txt', 'dest4.txt')
269
Raymond Hettinger6f04adc2010-12-04 22:56:25 +0000270.. seealso::
271
Raymond Hettingera5a35542010-12-05 00:39:18 +0000272 :pep:`3148` - Futures -- Execute Computations Asynchronously
Andrew M. Kuchling42877fe2010-12-15 02:37:01 +0000273 PEP written by Brian Quinlan.
Georg Brandl97b20da2010-11-16 15:15:29 +0000274
Raymond Hettinger83d80792010-12-08 06:48:33 +0000275 :ref:`Code for Threaded Parallel URL reads<threadpoolexecutor-example>`, an
276 example using threads to fetch multiple web pages in parallel.
277
278 :ref:`Code for computing prime numbers in
279 parallel<processpoolexecutor-example>`, an example demonstrating
280 :class:`~concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor`.
281
282
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000283PEP 3147: PYC Repository Directories
284=====================================
285
David Malcolm778645a2010-12-07 00:32:04 +0000286Python's scheme for caching bytecode in *.pyc* files did not work well in
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000287environments with multiple Python interpreters. If one interpreter encountered
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000288a cached file created by another interpreter, it would recompile the source and
289overwrite the cached file, thus losing the benefits of caching.
290
291The issue of "pyc fights" has become more pronounced as it has become
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000292commonplace for Linux distributions to ship with multiple versions of Python.
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000293These conflicts also arise with CPython alternatives such as Unladen Swallow.
294
295To solve this problem, Python's import machinery has been extended to use
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000296distinct filenames for each interpreter. Instead of Python 3.2 and Python 3.3 and
297Unladen Swallow each competing for a file called "mymodule.pyc", they will now
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000298look for "mymodule.cpython-32.pyc", "mymodule.cpython-33.pyc", and
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000299"mymodule.unladen10.pyc". And to prevent all of these new files from
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000300cluttering source directories, the *pyc* files are now collected in a
301"__pycache__" directory stored under the package directory.
302
303Aside from the filenames and target directories, the new scheme has a few
304aspects that are visible to the programmer:
305
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000306* Imported modules now have a :attr:`__cached__` attribute which stores the name
307 of the actual file that was imported:
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000308
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000309 >>> import collections
310 >>> collections.__cached__
311 'c:/py32/lib/__pycache__/collections.cpython-32.pyc'
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000312
313* The tag that is unique to each interpreter is accessible from the :mod:`imp`
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000314 module:
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000315
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000316 >>> import imp
317 >>> imp.get_tag()
318 'cpython-32'
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000319
320* Scripts that try to deduce source filename from the imported file now need to
321 be smarter. It is no longer sufficient to simply strip the "c" from a ".pyc"
322 filename. Instead, use the new functions in the :mod:`imp` module:
323
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000324 >>> imp.source_from_cache('c:/py32/lib/__pycache__/collections.cpython-32.pyc')
325 'c:/py32/lib/collections.py'
326 >>> imp.cache_from_source('c:/py32/lib/collections.py')
327 'c:/py32/lib/__pycache__/collections.cpython-32.pyc'
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000328
329* The :mod:`py_compile` and :mod:`compileall` modules have been updated to
Raymond Hettinger50307b62011-01-24 01:18:30 +0000330 reflect the new naming convention and target directory. The command-line
331 invocation of *compileall* has new command-line options include ``-i`` for
332 specifying a list of files and directories to compile, and ``-b`` which causes
333 bytecode files to be written to their legacy location rather than
334 *__pycache__*.
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000335
Raymond Hettinger1dcc84e2011-01-17 21:55:40 +0000336* The :mod:`importlib.abc` module has been updated with new :term:`abstract base
Raymond Hettinger66352d22011-01-17 22:33:11 +0000337 classes <abstract base class>` for the loading bytecode files. The obsolete
338 ABCs, :class:`~importlib.abc.PyLoader` and
Raymond Hettinger1dcc84e2011-01-17 21:55:40 +0000339 :class:`~importlib.abc.PyPycLoader`, have been deprecated (instructions on how
Raymond Hettinger66352d22011-01-17 22:33:11 +0000340 to stay Python 3.1 compatible are included with the documentation).
Brett Cannon83a682d2011-01-16 21:02:09 +0000341
Raymond Hettingerf95b1992010-09-04 23:53:24 +0000342.. seealso::
343
344 :pep:`3147` - PYC Repository Directories
345 PEP written by Barry Warsaw.
346
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000347
Georg Brandl3ad46752010-12-05 07:59:29 +0000348PEP 3149: ABI Version Tagged .so Files
349======================================
Georg Brandlf11c6c42010-09-03 22:20:58 +0000350
Raymond Hettingerebea6fa2010-09-05 00:27:25 +0000351The PYC repository directory allows multiple bytecode cache files to be
352co-located. This PEP implements a similar mechanism for shared object files by
353giving them a common directory and distinct names for each version.
Georg Brandlf11c6c42010-09-03 22:20:58 +0000354
Raymond Hettingerebea6fa2010-09-05 00:27:25 +0000355The common directory is "pyshared" and the file names are made distinct by
356identifying the Python implementation (such as CPython, PyPy, Jython, etc.), the
357major and minor version numbers, and optional build flags (such as "d" for
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000358debug, "m" for pymalloc, "u" for wide-unicode). For an arbitrary package "foo",
Raymond Hettingerebea6fa2010-09-05 00:27:25 +0000359you may see these files when the distribution package is installed::
360
361 /usr/share/pyshared/foo.cpython-32m.so
362 /usr/share/pyshared/foo.cpython-33md.so
363
364In Python itself, the tags are accessible from functions in the :mod:`sysconfig`
365module::
366
367 >>> import sysconfig
368 >>> sysconfig.get_config_var('SOABI') # find the version tag
369 'cpython-32mu'
370 >>> sysconfig.get_config_var('SO') # find the full filename extension
371 'cpython-32mu.so'
372
373.. seealso::
374
375 :pep:`3149` - ABI Version Tagged .so Files
376 PEP written by Barry Warsaw.
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +0000377
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +0000378
Raymond Hettinger3df46212011-01-06 02:01:26 +0000379PEP 3333: Python Web Server Gateway Interface v1.0.1
380=====================================================
381
382This informational PEP clarifies how bytes/text issues are to be handled by the
383WGSI protocol. The challenge is that string handling in Python 3 is most
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000384conveniently handled with the :class:`str` type even though the HTTP protocol
Raymond Hettinger3df46212011-01-06 02:01:26 +0000385is itself bytes oriented.
386
387The PEP differentiates so-called *native strings* that are used for
388request/response headers and metadata versus *byte strings* which are used for
389the bodies of requests and responses.
390
391The *native strings* are always of type :class:`str` but are restricted to code
Georg Brandl52a43b52011-01-16 09:11:45 +0000392points between *U+0000* through *U+00FF* which are translatable to bytes using
Raymond Hettinger32e8fea2011-01-07 21:04:30 +0000393*Latin-1* encoding. These strings are used for the keys and values in the
394environ dictionary and for response headers and statuses in the
395:func:`start_response` function. They must follow :rfc:`2616` with respect to
Raymond Hettinger3df46212011-01-06 02:01:26 +0000396encoding. That is, they must either be *ISO-8859-1* characters or use
397:rfc:`2047` MIME encoding.
398
Raymond Hettinger32e8fea2011-01-07 21:04:30 +0000399For developers porting WSGI applications from Python 2, here are the salient
400points:
401
402* If the app already used strings for headers in Python 2, no change is needed.
403
404* If instead, the app encoded output headers or decoded input headers, then the
405 headers will need to be re-encoded to Latin-1. For example, an output header
406 encoded in utf-8 was using ``h.encode('utf-8')`` now needs to convert from
407 bytes to native strings using ``h.encode('utf-8').decode('latin-1')``.
408
409* Values yielded by an application or sent using the :meth:`write` method
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +0000410 must be byte strings. The :func:`start_response` function and environ
411 must use native strings. The two cannot be mixed.
Raymond Hettinger32e8fea2011-01-07 21:04:30 +0000412
413For server implementers writing CGI-to-WSGI pathways or other CGI-style
414protocols, the users must to be able access the environment using native strings
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +0000415even though the underlying platform may have a different convention. To bridge
Raymond Hettinger32e8fea2011-01-07 21:04:30 +0000416this gap, the :mod:`wsgiref` module has a new function,
417:func:`wsgiref.handlers.read_environ` for transcoding CGI variables from
418:attr:`os.environ` into native strings and returning a new dictionary.
Raymond Hettinger3df46212011-01-06 02:01:26 +0000419
420.. seealso::
421
422 :pep:`3333` - Python Web Server Gateway Interface v1.0.1
423 PEP written by Phillip Eby.
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +0000424
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +0000425
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +0000426Other Language Changes
427======================
428
429Some smaller changes made to the core Python language are:
430
Raymond Hettingere5e1a982010-12-05 08:35:21 +0000431* String formatting for :func:`format` and :meth:`str.format` gained new
432 capabilities for the format character **#**. Previously, for integers in
433 binary, octal, or hexadecimal, it caused the output to be prefixed with '0b',
434 '0o', or '0x' respectively. Now it can also handle floats, complex, and
435 Decimal, causing the output to always have a decimal point even when no digits
436 follow it.
Raymond Hettingere5e728b2010-12-05 06:35:16 +0000437
438 >>> format(20, '#o')
439 '0o24'
440 >>> format(12.34, '#5.0f')
441 ' 12.'
442
443 (Suggested by Mark Dickinson and implemented by Eric Smith in :issue:`7094`.)
Raymond Hettinger43b5a852010-12-05 04:04:21 +0000444
Eric Smith598b5132011-01-28 20:23:25 +0000445.. XXX * :meth:`str.format_map` was added, allowing an arbitrary mapping object
446 to be passed in to :meth:`str.format`. `somestring.format_map(mapping)`
447 is similar to `somestring.format(**mapping)`, except that in the latter
448 case `mapping` is convert to a `dict` and in the former case `mapping`
449 is used without modification. For example, to use a `defaultdict` with
450 formatting::
451
452 >>> from collections import defaultdict
453 >>> mapping = defaultdict(lambda: 'Europe', name='Guido')
454 >>> '{name} was born in {country}'.format_map(mapping)
455 'Guido was born in Europe'
456
457 This is similar to %-formatting with a single mapping argument::
458
459 >>> '%(name)s was born in %(country)s' % mapping
460 'Guido was born in Europe'
461
462 (Suggested by Raymond Hettinger and implemented by Eric Smith in
463 :issue:`6081`.)
464
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +0000465* The interpreter can now be started with a quiet option, ``-q``, to suppress
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000466 the copyright and version information from being displayed in the interactive
467 mode. The option can be introspected using the :attr:`sys.flags` attribute::
Raymond Hettinger7d967712011-01-05 20:24:08 +0000468
469 $ python -q
470 >>> sys.flags
471 sys.flags(debug=0, division_warning=0, inspect=0, interactive=0,
472 optimize=0, dont_write_bytecode=0, no_user_site=0, no_site=0,
473 ignore_environment=0, verbose=0, bytes_warning=0, quiet=1)
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +0000474
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +0000475 (Contributed by Marcin Wojdyr in :issue:`1772833`).
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +0000476
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +0000477* The :func:`hasattr` function works by calling :func:`getattr` and detecting
478 whether an exception is raised. This technique allows it to detect methods
479 created dynamically by :meth:`__getattr__` or :meth:`__getattribute__` which
Raymond Hettinger90a4b312011-01-06 02:08:30 +0000480 would otherwise be absent from the class dictionary. Formerly, *hasattr*
481 would catch any exception, possibly masking genuine errors. Now, *hasattr*
482 has been tightened to only catch :exc:`AttributeError` and let other
Raymond Hettinger03ca1a92011-01-20 04:12:37 +0000483 exceptions pass through::
484
485 >>> class A:
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +0000486 @property
487 def f(self):
488 return 1 // 0
Raymond Hettinger03ca1a92011-01-20 04:12:37 +0000489
490 >>> a = A()
491 >>> hasattr(a, 'f')
492 Traceback (most recent call last):
493 ...
494 ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +0000495
Raymond Hettingera55ffbc2010-12-15 18:31:57 +0000496 (Discovered by Yury Selivanov and fixed by Benjamin Peterson; :issue:`9666`.)
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +0000497
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000498* The :func:`str` of a float or complex number is now the same as its
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +0000499 :func:`repr`. Previously, the :func:`str` form was shorter but that just
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000500 caused confusion and is no longer needed now that the shortest possible
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000501 :func:`repr` is displayed by default:
Raymond Hettingerbb734c62010-09-05 05:56:44 +0000502
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +0000503 >>> repr(math.pi)
504 '3.141592653589793'
505 >>> str(math.pi)
506 '3.141592653589793'
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +0000507
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000508 (Proposed and implemented by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`9337`.)
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +0000509
Raymond Hettinger21ec4bc2010-12-10 01:09:01 +0000510* :class:`memoryview` objects now have a :meth:`~memoryview.release()` method
511 and they also now support the context manager protocol. This allows timely
512 release of any resources that were acquired when requesting a buffer from the
513 original object.
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +0000514
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000515 >>> with memoryview(b'abcdefgh') as v:
Raymond Hettingerf1dae312011-01-21 03:00:00 +0000516 print(v.tolist())
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000517 [97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104]
518
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +0000519 (Added by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`9757`.)
520
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcba117ef2010-09-10 21:39:53 +0000521* Previously it was illegal to delete a name from the local namespace if it
522 occurs as a free variable in a nested block::
523
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +0000524 def outer(x):
525 def inner():
526 return x
527 inner()
528 del x
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcba117ef2010-09-10 21:39:53 +0000529
530 This is now allowed. Remember that the target of an :keyword:`except` clause
531 is cleared, so this code which used to work with Python 2.6, raised a
532 :exc:`SyntaxError` with Python 3.1 and now works again::
533
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +0000534 def f():
535 def print_error():
536 print(e)
537 try:
538 something
539 except Exception as e:
540 print_error()
541 # implicit "del e" here
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcba117ef2010-09-10 21:39:53 +0000542
543 (See :issue:`4617`.)
544
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +0000545* The internal :c:type:`structsequence` tool now creates subclasses of tuple.
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +0000546 This means that C structures like those returned by :func:`os.stat`,
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +0000547 :func:`time.gmtime`, and :attr:`sys.version_info` now work like a
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000548 :term:`named tuple` and now work with functions and methods that
Raymond Hettinger93c8cad2011-01-18 00:30:24 +0000549 expect a tuple as an argument. This is a big step forward in making the C
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +0000550 structures as flexible as their pure Python counterparts:
551
552 >>> isinstance(sys.version_info, tuple)
553 True
554 >>> 'Version %d.%d.%d %s(%d)' % sys.version_info
555 'Version 3.2.0 final(0)'
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +0000556
557 (Suggested by Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis and implemented
558 by Benjamin Peterson in :issue:`8413`.)
559
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +0000560* Warnings are now easier to control using the :envvar:`PYTHONWARNINGS`
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +0000561 environment variable as an alternative to using ``-W`` at the command line::
562
563 $ export PYTHONWARNINGS='ignore::RuntimeWarning::,once::UnicodeWarning::'
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +0000564
565 (Suggested by Barry Warsaw and implemented by Philip Jenvey in :issue:`7301`.)
566
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000567* A new warning category, :exc:`ResourceWarning`, has been added. It is
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +0000568 emitted when potential issues with resource consumption or cleanup
Raymond Hettinger93c8cad2011-01-18 00:30:24 +0000569 are detected. It is silenced by default in normal release builds but
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +0000570 can be enabled through the means provided by the :mod:`warnings`
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000571 module, or on the command line.
572
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000573 A :exc:`ResourceWarning` is issued at interpreter shutdown if the
Raymond Hettingerd0d59b12011-01-24 05:07:13 +0000574 :data:`gc.garbage` list isn't empty, and if :attr:`gc.DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE` is
575 set, all uncollectable objects are printed. This is meant to make the
576 programmer aware that their code contains object finalization issues.
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000577
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000578 A :exc:`ResourceWarning` is also issued when a :term:`file object` is destroyed
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000579 without having been explicitly closed. While the deallocator for such
580 object ensures it closes the underlying operating system resource
581 (usually, a file descriptor), the delay in deallocating the object could
582 produce various issues, especially under Windows. Here is an example
583 of enabling the warning from the command line::
584
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000585 $ python -q -Wdefault
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000586 >>> f = open("foo", "wb")
587 >>> del f
588 __main__:1: ResourceWarning: unclosed file <_io.BufferedWriter name='foo'>
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000589
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000590 (Added by Antoine Pitrou and Georg Brandl in :issue:`10093` and :issue:`477863`.)
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +0000591
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +0000592* :class:`range` objects now support *index* and *count* methods. This is part
593 of an effort to make more objects fully implement the
594 :class:`collections.Sequence` :term:`abstract base class`. As a result, the
595 language will have a more uniform API. In addition, :class:`range` objects
Raymond Hettingerb9656292011-01-16 18:22:06 +0000596 now support slicing and negative indices, even with values larger than
597 :attr:`sys.maxsize`. This makes *range* more interoperable with lists::
Raymond Hettinger2ffa6712010-12-08 10:18:21 +0000598
599 >>> range(0, 100, 2).count(10)
600 1
601 >>> range(0, 100, 2).index(10)
602 5
603 >>> range(0, 100, 2)[5]
604 10
605 >>> range(0, 100, 2)[0:5]
606 range(0, 10, 2)
Raymond Hettingerdadf93c2010-12-05 02:56:21 +0000607
Raymond Hettingerb9656292011-01-16 18:22:06 +0000608 (Contributed by Daniel Stutzbach in :issue:`9213`, by Alexander Belopolsky
609 in :issue:`2690`, and by Nick Coghlan in :issue:`10889`.)
Nick Coghlan37ee8502010-12-03 14:26:13 +0000610
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000611* The :func:`callable` builtin function from Py2.x was resurrected. It provides
Raymond Hettingerb87ba262010-12-06 04:31:40 +0000612 a concise, readable alternative to using an :term:`abstract base class` in an
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000613 expression like ``isinstance(x, collections.Callable)``:
614
615 >>> callable(max)
616 True
617 >>> callable(20)
618 False
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +0000619
620 (See :issue:`10518`.)
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcba117ef2010-09-10 21:39:53 +0000621
Raymond Hettinger93c8cad2011-01-18 00:30:24 +0000622* Python's import mechanism can now load modules installed in directories with
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +0000623 non-ASCII characters in the path name:
624
625 >>> import møøse.bites
Raymond Hettinger070ec702010-12-10 17:45:13 +0000626
627 (Required extensive work by Victor Stinner in :issue:`9425`.)
628
629
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +0000630New, Improved, and Deprecated Modules
631=====================================
632
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +0000633Python's standard library has undergone significant maintenance efforts and
634quality improvements.
Raymond Hettingere434b3b2010-12-15 19:20:01 +0000635
636The biggest news for Python 3.2 is that the :mod:`email` package and
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +0000637:mod:`nntplib` modules now work correctly with the bytes/text model in Python 3.
Raymond Hettingere434b3b2010-12-15 19:20:01 +0000638For the first time, there is correct handling of inputs with mixed encodings.
639
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000640Throughout the standard library, there has been more careful attention to
641encodings and text versus bytes issues. In particular, interactions with the
642operating system are now better able to pass non-ASCII data using the Windows
Raymond Hettingerba5512f2011-01-18 08:28:01 +0000643MBCS encoding, locale-aware encodings, or UTF-8.
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000644
Raymond Hettingere434b3b2010-12-15 19:20:01 +0000645Another significant win is the addition of substantially better support for
646*SSL* connections and security certificates.
647
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +0000648In addition, more classes now implement a :term:`context manager` to support
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +0000649convenient and reliable resource clean-up using a :keyword:`with` statement.
Raymond Hettingere434b3b2010-12-15 19:20:01 +0000650
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +0000651email
652-----
653
654The usability of the :mod:`email` package in Python 3 has been mostly fixed by
655the extensive efforts of R. David Murray. The problem was that emails are
656typically read and stored in the form of :class:`bytes` rather than :class:`str`
657text, and they may contain multiple encodings within a single email. So, the
658email package had to be extended to parse and generate email messages in bytes
659format.
660
661* New functions :func:`~email.message_from_bytes` and
662 :func:`~email.message_from_binary_file`, and new classes
663 :class:`~email.parser.BytesFeedParser` and :class:`~email.parser.BytesParser`
664 allow binary message data to be parsed into model objects.
665
666* Given bytes input to the model, :meth:`~email.message.Message.get_payload`
667 will by default decode a message body that has a
668 :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding` of *8bit* using the charset
669 specified in the MIME headers and return the resulting string.
670
671* Given bytes input to the model, :class:`~email.generator.Generator` will
672 convert message bodies that have a :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding` of
673 *8bit* to instead have a *7bit* :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding`.
Raymond Hettingerc08ea612011-01-08 10:32:31 +0000674
Raymond Hettingercf8a3822011-01-11 21:20:20 +0000675 Headers with unencoded non-ASCII bytes are deemed to be :rfc:`2047`\ -encoded
676 using the *unknown-8bit* character set.
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +0000677
678* A new class :class:`~email.generator.BytesGenerator` produces bytes as output,
679 preserving any unchanged non-ASCII data that was present in the input used to
680 build the model, including message bodies with a
681 :mailheader:`Content-Transfer-Encoding` of *8bit*.
682
683* The :mod:`smtplib` :class:`~smtplib.SMTP` class now accepts a byte string
684 for the *msg* argument to the :meth:`~smtplib.SMTP.sendmail` method,
685 and a new method, :meth:`~smtplib.SMTP.send_message` accepts a
686 :class:`~email.message.Message` object and can optionally obtain the
687 *from_addr* and *to_addrs* addresses directly from the object.
688
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +0000689(Proposed and implemented by R. David Murray, :issue:`4661` and :issue:`10321`.)
690
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000691elementtree
692-----------
693
Georg Brandl5d53fdd2010-12-18 11:58:12 +0000694The :mod:`xml.etree.ElementTree` package and its :mod:`xml.etree.cElementTree`
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000695counterpart have been updated to version 1.3.
696
697Several new and useful functions and methods have been added:
698
699* :func:`xml.etree.ElementTree.fromstringlist` which builds an XML document
700 from a sequence of fragments
701* :func:`xml.etree.ElementTree.register_namespace` for registering a global
702 namespace prefix
703* :func:`xml.etree.ElementTree.tostringlist` for string representation
704 including all sublists
705* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.Element.extend` for appending a sequence of zero
706 or more elements
707* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.Element.iterfind` searches an element and
708 subelements
709* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.Element.itertext` creates a text iterator over
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000710 an element and its subelements
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000711* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.TreeBuilder.end` closes the current element
712* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.TreeBuilder.doctype` handles a doctype
713 declaration
714
715Two methods have been deprecated:
716
717* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.getchildren` use ``list(elem)`` instead.
718* :meth:`xml.etree.ElementTree.getiterator` use ``Element.iter`` instead.
719
720For details of the update, see `Introducing ElementTree
721<http://effbot.org/zone/elementtree-13-intro.htm>`_ on Fredrik Lundh's website.
722
Antoine Pitrou12de8ac2010-12-16 13:33:56 +0000723(Contributed by Florent Xicluna and Fredrik Lundh, :issue:`6472`.)
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +0000724
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +0000725functools
726---------
727
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +0000728* The :mod:`functools` module includes a new decorator for caching function
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000729 calls. :func:`functools.lru_cache` can save repeated queries to an external
730 resource whenever the results are expected to be the same.
Raymond Hettingeraed05eb2010-08-02 01:43:41 +0000731
Raymond Hettinger86f96132010-08-06 23:23:49 +0000732 For example, adding a caching decorator to a database query function can save
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +0000733 database accesses for popular searches:
Raymond Hettingeraed05eb2010-08-02 01:43:41 +0000734
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +0000735 >>> import functools
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +0000736 >>> @functools.lru_cache(maxsize=300)
737 >>> def get_phone_number(name):
738 c = conn.cursor()
739 c.execute('SELECT phonenumber FROM phonelist WHERE name=?', (name,))
740 return c.fetchone()[0]
Raymond Hettingeraed05eb2010-08-02 01:43:41 +0000741
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000742 >>> for name in user_requests:
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +0000743 get_phone_number(name) # cached lookup
Raymond Hettinger7496b412010-11-30 19:15:45 +0000744
745 To help with choosing an effective cache size, the wrapped function is
746 instrumented for tracking cache statistics:
747
Raymond Hettinger5e20bab2010-11-30 07:13:04 +0000748 >>> get_phone_number.cache_info()
Raymond Hettinger7496b412010-11-30 19:15:45 +0000749 CacheInfo(hits=4805, misses=980, maxsize=300, currsize=300)
Raymond Hettingeraed05eb2010-08-02 01:43:41 +0000750
Raymond Hettingerf3098282010-08-15 03:30:45 +0000751 If the phonelist table gets updated, the outdated contents of the cache can be
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000752 cleared with:
Raymond Hettingerf3098282010-08-15 03:30:45 +0000753
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +0000754 >>> get_phone_number.cache_clear()
Raymond Hettingerf3098282010-08-15 03:30:45 +0000755
Raymond Hettinger6e353942010-12-04 23:42:12 +0000756 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger and incorporating design ideas from
Raymond Hettingerb87ba262010-12-06 04:31:40 +0000757 Jim Baker, Miki Tebeka, and Nick Coghlan.)
Raymond Hettingeraed05eb2010-08-02 01:43:41 +0000758
Antoine Pitrou7d49bc92010-09-15 15:13:17 +0000759* The :func:`functools.wraps` decorator now adds a :attr:`__wrapped__` attribute
760 pointing to the original callable function. This allows wrapped functions to
761 be introspected. It also copies :attr:`__annotations__` if defined. And now
762 it also gracefully skips over missing attributes such as :attr:`__doc__` which
Raymond Hettinger5eb63902010-12-09 23:43:34 +0000763 might not be defined for the wrapped callable.
Antoine Pitrou7d49bc92010-09-15 15:13:17 +0000764
Raymond Hettinger7a168d92011-01-21 04:59:00 +0000765 In the above example, the cache can be removed by recovering the original
766 function:
767
768 >>> get_phone_number = get_phone_number.__wrapped__ # uncached function
769
Antoine Pitrou7d49bc92010-09-15 15:13:17 +0000770 (By Nick Coghlan and Terrence Cole; :issue:`9567`, :issue:`3445`, and
771 :issue:`8814`.)
772
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000773* To help write classes with rich comparison methods, a new decorator
774 :func:`functools.total_ordering` will use a existing equality and inequality
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000775 methods to fill in the remaining methods.
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000776
777 For example, supplying *__eq__* and *__lt__* will enable
778 :func:`~functools.total_ordering` to fill-in *__le__*, *__gt__* and *__ge__*::
779
780 @total_ordering
781 class Student:
782 def __eq__(self, other):
783 return ((self.lastname.lower(), self.firstname.lower()) ==
784 (other.lastname.lower(), other.firstname.lower()))
785 def __lt__(self, other):
786 return ((self.lastname.lower(), self.firstname.lower()) <
787 (other.lastname.lower(), other.firstname.lower()))
788
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +0000789 With the *total_ordering* decorator, the remaining comparison methods
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000790 are filled in automatically.
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000791
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +0000792 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
Raymond Hettingerf35a34c2010-12-22 09:11:54 +0000793
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +0000794* To aid in porting programs from Python 2, the :func:`functools.cmp_to_key`
Raymond Hettingerbb9686f2010-12-16 00:53:05 +0000795 function converts an old-style comparison function to
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000796 modern :term:`key function`:
797
798 >>> # locale-aware sort order
799 >>> sorted(iterable, key=cmp_to_key(locale.strcoll))
800
801 For sorting examples and a brief sorting tutorial, see the `Sorting HowTo
802 <http://wiki.python.org/moin/HowTo/Sorting/>`_ tutorial.
803
804 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
805
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +0000806itertools
807---------
808
Raymond Hettinger673ccf22010-12-07 09:37:11 +0000809* The :mod:`itertools` module has a new :func:`~itertools.accumulate` function
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +0000810 modeled on APL's *scan* operator and Numpy's *accumulate* function:
Raymond Hettinger6e353942010-12-04 23:42:12 +0000811
812 >>> list(accumulate(8, 2, 50))
813 [8, 10, 60]
814
815 >>> prob_dist = [0.1, 0.4, 0.2, 0.3]
816 >>> list(accumulate(prob_dist)) # cumulative probability distribution
817 [0.1, 0.5, 0.7, 1.0]
818
819 For an example using :func:`~itertools.accumulate`, see the :ref:`examples for
820 the random module <random-examples>`.
821
822 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger and incorporating design suggestions
823 from Mark Dickinson.)
824
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +0000825collections
826-----------
827
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000828* The :class:`collections.Counter` class now has two forms of in-place
829 subtraction, the existing *-=* operator for `saturating subtraction
830 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturation_arithmetic>`_ and the new
831 :meth:`~collections.Counter.subtract` method for regular subtraction. The
832 former is suitable for `multisets <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiset>`_
Raymond Hettingerffad35e2010-12-14 21:12:03 +0000833 which only have positive counts, and the latter is more suitable for use cases
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000834 that allow negative counts:
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000835
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000836 >>> tally = Counter(dogs=5, cat=3)
837 >>> tally -= Counter(dogs=2, cats=8) # saturating subtraction
838 >>> tally
839 Counter({'dogs': 3})
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000840
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000841 >>> tally = Counter(dogs=5, cats=3)
842 >>> tally.subtract(dogs=2, cats=8) # regular subtraction
843 >>> tally
844 Counter({'dogs': 3, 'cats': -5})
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000845
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000846 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000847
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +0000848* The :class:`collections.OrderedDict` class has a new method
849 :meth:`~collections.OrderedDict.move_to_end` which takes an existing key and
Raymond Hettinger23ab1012011-01-18 20:25:04 +0000850 moves it to either the first or last position in the ordered sequence.
851
852 The default is to move an item to the last position. This is equivalent of
853 renewing an entry with ``od[k] = od.pop(k)``.
854
855 A fast move-to-end operation is useful for resequencing entries. For example,
Raymond Hettinger00db6aa2011-01-20 09:47:04 +0000856 an ordered dictionary can be used to track order of access by aging entries
857 from the oldest to the most recently accessed.
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +0000858
859 >>> d = OrderedDict.fromkeys(['a', 'b', 'X', 'd', 'e'])
860 >>> list(d)
861 ['a', 'b', 'X', 'd', 'e']
Raymond Hettinger23ab1012011-01-18 20:25:04 +0000862 >>> d.move_to_end('X')
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +0000863 >>> list(d)
864 ['a', 'b', 'd', 'e', 'X']
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +0000865
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000866 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
867
Raymond Hettinger7ec790d2011-01-18 00:19:30 +0000868* The :class:`collections.deque` class grew two new methods
869 :meth:`~collections.deque.count` and :meth:`~collections.deque.reverse` that
870 make them more substitutable for :class:`list` objects:
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +0000871
872 >>> d = deque('simsalabim')
873 >>> d.count('s')
874 2
875 >>> d.reverse()
876 >>> d
877 deque(['m', 'i', 'b', 'a', 'l', 'a', 's', 'm', 'i', 's'])
878
879 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
880
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000881threading
882---------
883
884The :mod:`threading` module has a new :class:`~threading.Barrier`
885synchronization class for making multiple threads wait until all of them have
886reached a common barrier point. Barriers are useful for making sure that a task
887with multiple preconditions does not run until all of the predecessor tasks are
888complete.
889
890Barriers can work with an arbitrary number of threads. This is a generalization
891of a `Rendezvous <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchronous_rendezvous>`_ which
892is defined for only two threads.
893
Raymond Hettinger15b47c52011-01-17 21:05:07 +0000894Implemented as a two-phase cyclic barrier, :class:`~threading.Barrier` objects
895are suitable for use in loops. The separate *filling* and *draining* phases
Raymond Hettingere0f1f322011-01-18 21:14:27 +0000896assure that all threads get released (drained) before any one of them can loop
897back and re-enter the barrier. The barrier fully resets after each cycle.
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000898
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000899Example of using barriers::
900
901 def get_votes(site):
902 ballots = conduct_election(site)
903 all_polls_closed.wait() # do not count until all polls are closed
Raymond Hettinger97673652011-01-11 21:13:26 +0000904 totals = summarize(ballots)
905 publish(site, totals)
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000906
907 all_polls_closed = Barrier(len(sites))
Raymond Hettinger3a8ae5f2011-01-11 20:51:45 +0000908 for site in sites:
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000909 Thread(target=get_votes, args=(site,)).start()
910
911In this example, the barrier enforces a rule that votes cannot be counted at any
912polling site until all polls are closed. Notice how a solution with a barrier
913is similar to one with :meth:`threading.Thread.join`, but the threads stay alive
914and continue to do work (summarizing ballots) after the barrier point is
915crossed.
916
Raymond Hettinger2c3865b2011-01-18 22:58:33 +0000917If any of the predecessor tasks can hang or be delayed, a barrier can be created
918with an optional *timeout* parameter. Then if the timeout period elapses before
919all the predecessor tasks reach the barrier point, all waiting threads are
920released and a :exc:`~threading.BrokenBarrierError` exception is raised::
921
922 def get_votes(site):
923 ballots = conduct_election(site)
924 try:
925 all_polls_closed.wait(timeout = midnight - time.now())
David Malcolm49348642011-01-18 23:45:53 +0000926 except BrokenBarrierError:
Raymond Hettinger2c3865b2011-01-18 22:58:33 +0000927 lockbox = seal_ballots(ballots)
928 queue.put(lockbox)
929 else:
930 totals = summarize(ballots)
931 publish(site, totals)
932
933In this example, the barrier enforces a more robust rule. If some election
934sites do not finish before midnight, the barrier times-out and the ballots are
935sealed and deposited in a queue for later handling.
936
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000937See `Barrier Synchronization Patterns
Raymond Hettinger3a8ae5f2011-01-11 20:51:45 +0000938<http://parlab.eecs.berkeley.edu/wiki/_media/patterns/paraplop_g1_3.pdf>`_ for
939more examples of how barriers can be used in parallel computing. Also, there is
940a simple but thorough explanation of barriers in `The Little Book of Semaphores
941<http://greenteapress.com/semaphores/downey08semaphores.pdf>`_, *section 3.6*.
Raymond Hettinger5cee47f2011-01-11 19:59:46 +0000942
Raymond Hettinger3a8ae5f2011-01-11 20:51:45 +0000943(Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson with an API review by Jeffrey Yasskin in
944:issue:`8777`.)
Raymond Hettinger6655d112011-01-11 08:49:10 +0000945
Raymond Hettinger97673652011-01-11 21:13:26 +0000946datetime and time
947-----------------
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +0000948
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000949* The :mod:`datetime` module has a new type :class:`~datetime.timezone` that
950 implements the :class:`~datetime.tzinfo` interface by returning a fixed UTC
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +0000951 offset and timezone name. This makes it easier to create timezone-aware
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +0000952 datetime objects::
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000953
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +0000954 >>> import datetime
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000955
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +0000956 >>> datetime.now(timezone.utc)
957 datetime.datetime(2010, 12, 8, 21, 4, 2, 923754, tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)
958
959 >>> datetime.strptime("01/01/2000 12:00 +0000", "%m/%d/%Y %H:%M %z")
960 datetime.datetime(2000, 1, 1, 12, 0, tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000961
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +0000962* Also, :class:`~datetime.timedelta` objects can now be multiplied by
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000963 :class:`float` and divided by :class:`float` and :class:`int` objects.
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +0000964 And :class:`~datetime.timedelta` objects can now divide one another.
Raymond Hettinger792c0762010-12-09 16:41:54 +0000965
Raymond Hettingerca904be2011-01-18 00:02:40 +0000966* The :meth:`datetime.date.strftime` method is no longer restricted to years
967 after 1900. The new supported year range is from 1000 to 9999 inclusive.
Alexander Belopolsky72572312010-12-08 21:21:56 +0000968
Raymond Hettingerf1dae312011-01-21 03:00:00 +0000969* Whenever a two-digit year is used in a time tuple, the interpretation has been
970 governed by :attr:`time.accept2dyear`. The default is *True* which means that
971 for a two-digit year, the century is guessed according to the POSIX rules
972 governing the ``%y`` strptime format.
Alexander Belopolsky9ee94de2011-01-20 19:51:31 +0000973
Raymond Hettingerf1dae312011-01-21 03:00:00 +0000974 Starting with Py3.2, use of the century guessing heuristic will emit a
975 :exc:`DeprecationWarning`. Instead, it is recommended that
976 :attr:`time.accept2dyear` be set to *False* so that large date ranges
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +0000977 can be used without guesswork::
Raymond Hettingerf1dae312011-01-21 03:00:00 +0000978
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +0000979 >>> import time, warnings
980 >>> warnings.resetwarnings() # remove the default warning filters
981
982 >>> time.accept2dyear = True # guess whether 11 means 11 or 2011
983 >>> time.asctime((11, 1, 1, 12, 34, 56, 4, 1, 0))
984 Warning (from warnings module):
985 ...
986 DeprecationWarning: Century info guessed for a 2-digit year.
987 'Fri Jan 1 12:34:56 2011'
988
989 >>> time.accept2dyear = False # use the full range of allowable dates
990 >>> time.asctime((11, 1, 1, 12, 34, 56, 4, 1, 0))
991 'Fri Jan 1 12:34:56 11'
Raymond Hettingerf1dae312011-01-21 03:00:00 +0000992
993 Several functions now have significantly expanded date ranges. When
994 :attr:`time.accept2dyear` is false, the :func:`time.asctime` function will
995 accept any year that fits in a C int, while the :func:`time.mktime` and
996 :func:`time.strftime` functions will accept the full range supported by the
997 corresponding operating system functions.
Alexander Belopolskybd96b062011-01-10 21:55:34 +0000998
Raymond Hettinger97673652011-01-11 21:13:26 +0000999(Contributed by Alexander Belopolsky and Victor Stinner.)
Alexander Belopolskybd96b062011-01-10 21:55:34 +00001000
Raymond Hettingera4cfb422011-01-25 02:35:58 +00001001math
1002----
1003
Raymond Hettinger902f3202011-01-25 08:01:01 +00001004The :mod:`math` module has been updated with six new functions inspired by the
Raymond Hettingera4cfb422011-01-25 02:35:58 +00001005C99 standard.
1006
1007The :func:`~math.isfinite` function provides a reliable and fast way to detect
1008special values. It returns *True* for regular numbers and *False* for *Nan* or
1009*Infinity*:
1010
1011>>> [isfinite(x) for x in (123, 4.56, float('Nan'), float('Inf'))]
1012[True, True, False, False]
1013
1014The :func:`~math.expm1` function computes ``e**x-1`` for small values of *x*
1015without incuring the loss of precision that usually accompanies the subtraction
1016of nearly equal quantities:
1017
1018>>> expm1(0.013671875) # more accurate way to compute e**x-1 for a small x
10190.013765762467652909
1020
Raymond Hettingerf9b8a192011-01-25 05:53:27 +00001021The :func:`~math.erf` function computes a probability integral or `Gaussian
Raymond Hettinger2f707c92011-01-25 06:58:01 +00001022error function <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error_function>`_. The
1023complementary error function, :func:`~math.erfc`, is ``1 - erf(x)``:
Raymond Hettingera4cfb422011-01-25 02:35:58 +00001024
1025>>> erf(1.0/sqrt(2.0)) # portion of normal distribution within 1 standard deviation
10260.682689492137086
Raymond Hettinger2f707c92011-01-25 06:58:01 +00001027>>> erfc(1.0/sqrt(2.0)) # portion of normal distribution outside 1 standard deviation
10280.31731050786291404
1029>>> erf(1.0/sqrt(2.0)) + erfc(1.0/sqrt(2.0))
10301.0
Raymond Hettingera4cfb422011-01-25 02:35:58 +00001031
Raymond Hettinger2c639062011-01-25 02:38:59 +00001032The :func:`~math.gamma` function is a continuous extension of the factorial
1033function. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_function for details. Because
1034the function is related to factorials, it grows large even for small values of
1035*x*, so there is also a :func:`~math.lgamma` function for computing the natural
1036logarithm of the gamma function:
Raymond Hettingera4cfb422011-01-25 02:35:58 +00001037
1038>>> gamma(7.0) # six factorial
1039720.0
1040>>> lgamma(801.0) # log(800 factorial)
10414551.950730698041
1042
1043(Contributed by Mark Dickinson.)
1044
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001045abc
1046---
Antoine Pitrou7d49bc92010-09-15 15:13:17 +00001047
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001048The :mod:`abc` module now supports :func:`~abc.abstractclassmethod` and
1049:func:`~abc.abstractstaticmethod`.
Raymond Hettingera5a35542010-12-05 00:39:18 +00001050
Raymond Hettinger7ec790d2011-01-18 00:19:30 +00001051These tools make it possible to define an :term:`abstract base class` that
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001052requires a particular :func:`classmethod` or :func:`staticmethod` to be
Raymond Hettinger7ec790d2011-01-18 00:19:30 +00001053implemented::
1054
1055 class Temperature(metaclass=ABCMeta):
1056 @abc.abstractclassmethod
Raymond Hettingera80ab102011-01-24 18:19:01 +00001057 def from_fahrenheit(self, t):
Raymond Hettinger7ec790d2011-01-18 00:19:30 +00001058 ...
1059 @abc.abstractclassmethod
Raymond Hettingera80ab102011-01-24 18:19:01 +00001060 def from_celsius(self, t):
Raymond Hettinger7ec790d2011-01-18 00:19:30 +00001061 ...
Antoine Pitrou7d49bc92010-09-15 15:13:17 +00001062
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001063(Patch submitted by Daniel Urban; :issue:`5867`.)
Raymond Hettingerbcbd6962010-09-05 08:46:36 +00001064
Raymond Hettingerf4f0e6c2011-01-24 22:14:42 +00001065io
1066--
1067
1068The :class:`io.BytesIO` has a new method, :meth:`~io.BytesIO.getbuffer`, which
1069provides functionality similar to :func:`memoryview`. It creates an editable
1070view of the data without making a copy. The buffer's random access and support
1071for slice notation are well-suited to in-place editing::
1072
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001073 >>> REC_LEN, LOC_START, LOC_LEN = 34, 7, 11
Raymond Hettingerf4f0e6c2011-01-24 22:14:42 +00001074
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001075 >>> def change_location(buffer, record_number, location):
1076 start = record_number * REC_LEN + LOC_START
1077 buffer[start: start+LOC_LEN] = location
Raymond Hettingerf4f0e6c2011-01-24 22:14:42 +00001078
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001079 >>> import io
Raymond Hettingerf4f0e6c2011-01-24 22:14:42 +00001080
1081 >>> byte_stream = io.BytesIO(
1082 b'G3805 storeroom Main chassis '
1083 b'X7899 shipping Reserve cog '
1084 b'L6988 receiving Primary sprocket'
1085 )
1086 >>> buffer = byte_stream.getbuffer()
1087 >>> change_location(buffer, 1, b'warehouse ')
1088 >>> change_location(buffer, 0, b'showroom ')
1089 >>> print(byte_stream.getvalue())
1090 b'G3805 showroom Main chassis ' ->
1091 b'X7899 warehouse Reserve cog ' ->
1092 b'L6988 receiving Primary sprocket'
1093
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001094(Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`5506`.)
1095
Raymond Hettinger98b140c2011-01-23 21:05:46 +00001096reprlib
1097-------
1098
1099When writing a :meth:`__repr__` method for a custom container, it is easy to
1100forget to handle the case where a member refers back to the container itself.
1101Python's builtin objects such as :class:`list` and :class:`set` handle
1102self-reference by displaying "..." in the recursive part of the representation
1103string.
1104
1105To help write such :meth:`__repr__` methods, the :mod:`reprlib` module has a new
Raymond Hettingercbc903b2011-01-23 21:13:27 +00001106decorator, :func:`~reprlib.recursive_repr`, for detecting recursive calls to
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001107:meth:`__repr__` and substituting a placeholder string instead::
Raymond Hettinger98b140c2011-01-23 21:05:46 +00001108
1109 >>> class MyList(list):
1110 @recursive_repr()
1111 def __repr__(self):
1112 return '<' + '|'.join(map(repr, self)) + '>'
1113
1114 >>> m = MyList('abc')
1115 >>> m.append(m)
1116 >>> m.append('x')
1117 >>> print(m)
1118 <'a'|'b'|'c'|...|'x'>
1119
Raymond Hettingercbc903b2011-01-23 21:13:27 +00001120(Contributed by Raymond Hettinger in :issue:`9826` and :issue:`9840`.)
Raymond Hettinger98b140c2011-01-23 21:05:46 +00001121
Raymond Hettinger50307b62011-01-24 01:18:30 +00001122csv
1123---
1124
1125The :mod:`csv` module now supports a new dialect, :class:`~csv.unix_dialect`,
1126which applies quoting for all fields and a traditional Unix style with ``'\n'`` as
1127the line terminator. The registered dialect name is ``unix``.
1128
1129The :class:`csv.DictWriter` has a new method,
1130:meth:`~csv.DictWriter.writeheader` for writing-out an initial row to document
1131the field names::
1132
1133 >>> import csv, sys
1134 >>> w = csv.DictWriter(sys.stdout, ['name', 'dept'], dialect='unix')
1135 >>> w.writeheader()
1136 "name","dept"
1137 >>> w.writerows([
1138 {'name': 'tom', 'dept': 'accounting'},
1139 {'name': 'susan', 'dept': 'Salesl'}])
1140 "tom","accounting"
1141 "susan","sales"
1142
1143(New dialect suggested by Jay Talbot in :issue:`5975`, and the new method
1144suggested by Ed Abraham in :issue:`1537721`.)
1145
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001146contextlib
1147----------
1148
1149There is a new and slightly mind-blowing tool
1150:class:`~contextlib.ContextDecorator` that is helpful for creating a
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001151:term:`context manager` that does double duty as a function decorator.
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001152
1153As a convenience, this new functionality is used by
1154:func:`~contextlib.contextmanager` so that no extra effort is needed to support
1155both roles.
1156
1157The basic idea is that both context managers and function decorators can be used
1158for pre-action and post-action wrappers. Context managers wrap a group of
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00001159statements using a :keyword:`with` statement, and function decorators wrap a
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001160group of statements enclosed in a function. So, occasionally there is a need to
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001161write a pre-action or post-action wrapper that can be used in either role.
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001162
1163For example, it is sometimes useful to wrap functions or groups of statements
1164with a logger that can track the time of entry and time of exit. Rather than
1165writing both a function decorator and a context manager for the task, the
1166:func:`~contextlib.contextmanager` provides both capabilities in a single
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001167definition::
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001168
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001169 from contextlib import contextmanager
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001170 import logging
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001171
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001172 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO)
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001173
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001174 @contextmanager
1175 def track_entry_and_exit(name):
1176 logging.info('Entering: {}'.format(name))
1177 yield
1178 logging.info('Exiting: {}'.format(name))
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001179
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001180Formerly, this would have only been usable as a context manager::
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001181
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001182 with track_entry_and_exit('widget loader'):
1183 print('Some time consuming activity goes here')
1184 load_widget()
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001185
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001186Now, it can be used as a decorator as well::
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001187
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001188 @track_entry_and_exit('widget loader')
1189 def activity():
1190 print('Some time consuming activity goes here')
1191 load_widget()
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001192
1193Trying to fulfill two roles at once places some limitations on the technique.
1194Context managers normally have the flexibility to return an argument usable by
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00001195a :keyword:`with` statement, but there is no parallel for function decorators.
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001196
Raymond Hettinger9743e4f2010-12-16 02:24:12 +00001197In the above example, there is not a clean way for the *track_entry_and_exit*
Raymond Hettinger388af4b2011-01-06 20:55:29 +00001198context manager to return a logging instance for use in the body of enclosed
1199statements.
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00001200
1201(Contributed by Michael Foord in :issue:`9110`.)
1202
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001203decimal and fractions
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001204---------------------
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001205
1206Mark Dickinson crafted an elegant and efficient scheme for assuring that
1207different numeric datatypes will have the same hash value whenever their actual
1208values are equal (:issue:`8188`)::
1209
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001210 assert hash(Fraction(3, 2)) == hash(1.5) == \
1211 hash(Decimal("1.5")) == hash(complex(1.5, 0))
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001212
Raymond Hettingere7dfe742011-01-24 09:17:24 +00001213Some of the hashing details are exposed through a new attribute,
1214:attr:`sys.hash_info`, which describes the bit width of the hash value, the
1215prime modulus, the hash values for *infinity* and *nan*, and the multiplier
1216used for the imaginary part of a number:
1217
1218>>> sys.hash_info
1219sys.hash_info(width=64, modulus=2305843009213693951, inf=314159, nan=0, imag=1000003)
1220
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001221An early decision to limit the inter-operability of various numeric types has
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +00001222been relaxed. It is still unsupported (and ill-advised) to have implicit
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001223mixing in arithmetic expressions such as ``Decimal('1.1') + float('1.1')``
1224because the latter loses information in the process of constructing the binary
1225float. However, since existing floating point value can be converted losslessly
1226to either a decimal or rational representation, it makes sense to add them to
1227the constructor and to support mixed-type comparisons.
1228
Raymond Hettingerbb9686f2010-12-16 00:53:05 +00001229* The :class:`decimal.Decimal` constructor now accepts :class:`float` objects
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001230 directly so there in no longer a need to use the :meth:`~decimal.Decimal.from_float`
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001231 method (:issue:`8257`).
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001232
1233* Mixed type comparisons are now fully supported so that
1234 :class:`~decimal.Decimal` objects can be directly compared with :class:`float`
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001235 and :class:`fractions.Fraction` (:issue:`2531` and :issue:`8188`).
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001236
1237Similar changes were made to :class:`fractions.Fraction` so that the
1238:meth:`~fractions.Fraction.from_float()` and :meth:`~fractions.Fraction.from_decimal`
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001239methods are no longer needed (:issue:`8294`):
1240
1241>>> Decimal(1.1)
1242Decimal('1.100000000000000088817841970012523233890533447265625')
1243>>> Fraction(1.1)
1244Fraction(2476979795053773, 2251799813685248)
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001245
1246Another useful change for the :mod:`decimal` module is that the
1247:attr:`Context.clamp` attribute is now public. This is useful in creating
1248contexts that correspond to the decimal interchange formats specified in IEEE
1249754 (see :issue:`8540`).
1250
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001251(Contributed by Mark Dickinson and Raymond Hettinger.)
Raymond Hettinger07a605b2010-12-15 22:35:03 +00001252
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001253ftp
1254---
Raymond Hettingerbcbd6962010-09-05 08:46:36 +00001255
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001256The :class:`ftplib.FTP` class now supports the context manager protocol to
1257unconditionally consume :exc:`socket.error` exceptions and to close the FTP
1258connection when done::
Giampaolo Rodolàbd576b72010-05-10 14:53:29 +00001259
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001260 >>> from ftplib import FTP
1261 >>> with FTP("ftp1.at.proftpd.org") as ftp:
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001262 ftp.login()
1263 ftp.dir()
1264
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001265 '230 Anonymous login ok, restrictions apply.'
1266 dr-xr-xr-x 9 ftp ftp 154 May 6 10:43 .
1267 dr-xr-xr-x 9 ftp ftp 154 May 6 10:43 ..
1268 dr-xr-xr-x 5 ftp ftp 4096 May 6 10:43 CentOS
1269 dr-xr-xr-x 3 ftp ftp 18 Jul 10 2008 Fedora
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00001270
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001271Other file-like objects such as :class:`mmap.mmap` and :func:`fileinput.input`
1272also grew auto-closing context managers::
1273
1274 with fileinput.input(files=('log1.txt', 'log2.txt')) as f:
1275 for line in f:
1276 process(line)
1277
1278(Contributed by Tarek Ziadé and Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`4972`, and
1279by Georg Brandl in :issue:`8046` and :issue:`1286`.)
Antoine Pitrou696e0352010-08-08 22:18:46 +00001280
Antoine Pitroubcba4342011-01-16 18:29:34 +00001281The :class:`~ftplib.FTP_TLS` class now accepts a *context* parameter, which is a
1282:class:`ssl.SSLContext` object allowing bundling SSL configuration options,
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001283certificates and private keys into a single (potentially long-lived) structure.
Antoine Pitroubcba4342011-01-16 18:29:34 +00001284
1285(Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà; :issue:`8806`.)
1286
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001287popen
1288-----
1289
1290The :func:`os.popen` and :func:`subprocess.Popen` functions now support
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00001291:keyword:`with` statements for auto-closing of the file descriptors.
Georg Brandl3ad46752010-12-05 07:59:29 +00001292
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001293(Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`7461`.)
1294
Raymond Hettingerda4a05d2011-01-25 07:46:07 +00001295select
1296------
1297
1298The :mod:`select` module now exposes a new, constant attribute,
Antoine Pitroucfad97b2011-01-25 17:24:57 +00001299:attr:`~select.PIPE_BUF`, which gives the minimum number of bytes which are
1300guaranteed not to block when :func:`select.select` says a pipe is ready
1301for writing.
Raymond Hettingerda4a05d2011-01-25 07:46:07 +00001302
1303>>> import select
1304>>> select.PIPE_BUF
1305512
1306
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001307(Available on Unix systems. Patch by Sébastien Sablé in :issue:`85554`)
Raymond Hettingerda4a05d2011-01-25 07:46:07 +00001308
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001309gzip and zipfile
1310----------------
Antoine Pitroucd889af2010-10-06 21:13:56 +00001311
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001312:class:`gzip.GzipFile` now implements the :class:`io.BufferedIOBase`
1313:term:`abstract base class` (except for ``truncate()``). It also has a
1314:meth:`~gzip.GzipFile.peek` method and supports unseekable as well as
1315zero-padded file objects.
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001316
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001317The :mod:`gzip` module also gains the :func:`~gzip.compress` and
1318:func:`~gzip.decompress` functions for easier in-memory compression and
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +00001319decompression. Keep in mind that text needs to be encoded as :class:`bytes`
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001320before compressing and decompressing:
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001321
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001322>>> s = 'Three shall be the number thou shalt count, '
1323>>> s += 'and the number of the counting shall be three'
1324>>> b = s.encode() # convert to utf-8
1325>>> len(b)
132689
1327>>> c = gzip.compress(b)
1328>>> len(c)
132977
1330>>> gzip.decompress(c).decode()[:42] # decompress and convert to text
1331'Three shall be the number thou shalt count,'
Antoine Pitroucd889af2010-10-06 21:13:56 +00001332
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001333(Contributed by Anand B. Pillai in :issue:`3488`; and by Antoine Pitrou, Nir
1334Aides and Brian Curtin in :issue:`9962`, :issue:`1675951`, :issue:`7471` and
1335:issue:`2846`.)
1336
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001337Also, the :class:`zipfile.ZipExtFile` class was reworked internally to represent
1338files stored inside an archive. The new implementation is significantly faster
1339and can be wrapped in a :class:`io.BufferedReader` object for more speedups. It
1340also solves an issue where interleaved calls to *read* and *readline* gave the
1341wrong results.
1342
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +00001343(Patch submitted by Nir Aides in :issue:`7610`.)
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001344
Raymond Hettinger7626ef92011-01-27 05:48:56 +00001345tarfile
1346-------
1347
1348The :class:`~tarfile.TarFile` class can now be used as a content manager. In
1349addition, its :meth:`~tarfile.TarFile.add` method has a new option, *filter*,
1350that controls which files are added to the archive and allows the file metadata
1351to be edited.
1352
1353The new *filter* option replaces the older, less flexible *exclude* parameter
1354which is now deprecated. If specified, the optional *filter* parameter needs to
1355be a :term:`keyword argument`. The user-supplied filter function accepts a
1356:class:`~tarfile.TarInfo` object and returns an updated
1357:class:`~tarfile.TarInfo` object, or if it wants the file to be excluded, the
1358function can return *None*::
1359
1360 >>> import tarfile, glob
1361
1362 >>> def myfilter(tarinfo):
1363 if tarinfo.isfile(): # only save real files
1364 tarinfo.uname = 'monty' # redact the user name
1365 return tarinfo
1366
Raymond Hettingere6f0abf2011-01-27 07:34:45 +00001367 >>> with tarfile.open(name='myarchive.tar.gz', mode='w:gz') as tf:
Raymond Hettinger7626ef92011-01-27 05:48:56 +00001368 for filename in glob.glob('*.txt'):
1369 tf.add(filename, filter=myfilter)
1370 tf.list()
1371 -rw-r--r-- monty/501 902 2011-01-26 17:59:11 annotations.txt
1372 -rw-r--r-- monty/501 123 2011-01-26 17:59:11 general_questions.txt
1373 -rw-r--r-- monty/501 3514 2011-01-26 17:59:11 prion.txt
1374 -rw-r--r-- monty/501 124 2011-01-26 17:59:11 py_todo.txt
1375 -rw-r--r-- monty/501 1399 2011-01-26 17:59:11 semaphore_notes.txt
1376
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001377(Proposed by Tarek Ziadé and implemented by Lars Gustäbel in :issue:`6856`.)
1378
Raymond Hettingerd0d59b12011-01-24 05:07:13 +00001379hashlib
1380-------
1381
1382The :mod:`hashlib` module has two new constant attributes listing the hashing
1383algorithms guaranteed to be present in all implementations and those available
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001384on the current implementation::
Raymond Hettingerd0d59b12011-01-24 05:07:13 +00001385
1386 >>> import hashlib
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001387
Raymond Hettingerd0d59b12011-01-24 05:07:13 +00001388 >>> hashlib.algorithms_guaranteed
1389 {'sha1', 'sha224', 'sha384', 'sha256', 'sha512', 'md5'}
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001390
Raymond Hettingerd0d59b12011-01-24 05:07:13 +00001391 >>> hashlib.algorithms_available
1392 {'md2', 'SHA256', 'SHA512', 'dsaWithSHA', 'mdc2', 'SHA224', 'MD4', 'sha256',
1393 'sha512', 'ripemd160', 'SHA1', 'MDC2', 'SHA', 'SHA384', 'MD2',
1394 'ecdsa-with-SHA1','md4', 'md5', 'sha1', 'DSA-SHA', 'sha224',
1395 'dsaEncryption', 'DSA', 'RIPEMD160', 'sha', 'MD5', 'sha384'}
1396
1397(Suggested by Carl Chenet in :issue:`7418`.)
1398
Raymond Hettinger50307b62011-01-24 01:18:30 +00001399ast
1400---
1401
1402The :mod:`ast` module has a wonderful a general-purpose tool for safely
1403evaluating strings containing Python expressions using the Python literal
1404syntax. The :func:`ast.literal_eval` function serves as a secure alternative to
1405the builtin :func:`eval` function which is easily abused. Python 3.2 adds
1406:class:`bytes` and :class:`set` literals to the list of supported types:
1407strings, bytes, numbers, tuples, lists, dicts, sets, booleans, and None.
1408
1409::
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001410
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001411 >>> from ast import literal_request
Raymond Hettinger50307b62011-01-24 01:18:30 +00001412
1413 >>> request = "{'req': 3, 'func': 'pow', 'args': (2, 0.5)}"
1414 >>> literal_eval(request)
1415 {'args': (2, 0.5), 'req': 3, 'func': 'pow'}
1416
1417 >>> request = "os.system('do something harmful')"
1418 >>> literal_eval(request)
1419 Traceback (most recent call last):
1420 ...
1421 ValueError: malformed node or string: <_ast.Call object at 0x101739a10>
1422
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001423(Implemented by Georg Brandl.)
1424
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00001425os
1426--
1427
1428Different operating systems use various encodings for filenames and environment
1429variables. The :mod:`os` module provides two new functions,
1430:func:`~os.fsencode` and :func:`~os.fsdecode`, for encoding and decoding
1431filenames:
1432
Raymond Hettinger2e042d32011-01-21 09:18:19 +00001433>>> filename = 'Sehenswürdigkeiten'
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00001434>>> os.fsencode(filename)
Raymond Hettinger2e042d32011-01-21 09:18:19 +00001435b'Sehensw\xc3\xbcrdigkeiten'
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00001436
1437Some operating systems allow direct access to the unencoded bytes in the
1438environment. If so, the :attr:`os.supports_bytes_environ` constant will be
1439true.
1440
1441For direct access to unencoded environment variables (if available),
1442use the new :func:`os.getenvb` function or use :data:`os.environb`
1443which is a bytes version of :data:`os.environ`.
1444
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001445(Contributed by Victor Stinner.)
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00001446
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001447shutil
1448------
1449
1450The :func:`shutil.copytree` function has two new options:
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001451
Antoine Pitrou121a0552011-01-16 18:16:52 +00001452* *ignore_dangling_symlinks*: when ``symlinks=False`` so that the function
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00001453 copies a file pointed to by a symlink, not the symlink itself. This option
1454 will silence the error raised if the file doesn't exist.
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001455
Antoine Pitrou121a0552011-01-16 18:16:52 +00001456* *copy_function*: is a callable that will be used to copy files.
1457 :func:`shutil.copy2` is used by default.
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001458
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001459(Contributed by Tarek Ziadé.)
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001460
Raymond Hettinger0929b1f2011-01-23 11:29:08 +00001461In addition, the :mod:`shutil` module now supports :ref:`archiving operations
1462<archiving-operations>` for zipfiles, uncompressed tarfiles, gzipped tarfiles,
1463and bzipped tarfiles. And there are functions for registering additional
1464archiving file formats (such as xz compressed tarfiles or custom formats).
1465
1466The principal functions are :func:`~shutil.make_archive` and
1467:func:`~shutil.unpack_archive`. By default, both operate on the current
1468directory (which can be set by :func:`os.chdir`) and on any sub-directories.
1469The archive filename needs to specified with a full pathname. The archiving
1470step is non-destructive (the original files are left unchanged).
1471
1472::
1473
1474 >>> import shutil, pprint
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001475
Raymond Hettinger0929b1f2011-01-23 11:29:08 +00001476 >>> os.chdir('mydata') # change to the source directory
1477 >>> f = make_archive('/var/backup/mydata', 'zip') # archive the current directory
1478 >>> f # show the name of archive
1479 '/var/backup/mydata.zip'
1480 >>> os.chdir('tmp') # change to an unpacking
1481 >>> shutil.unpack_archive('/var/backup/mydata.zip') # recover the data
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001482
Raymond Hettinger0929b1f2011-01-23 11:29:08 +00001483 >>> pprint.pprint(shutil.get_archive_formats()) # display known formats
1484 [('bztar', "bzip2'ed tar-file"),
1485 ('gztar', "gzip'ed tar-file"),
1486 ('tar', 'uncompressed tar file'),
1487 ('zip', 'ZIP file')]
Raymond Hettingere3b8f7c2011-01-26 19:36:13 +00001488
Raymond Hettinger0929b1f2011-01-23 11:29:08 +00001489 >>> shutil.register_archive_format( # register a new archive format
1490 name = 'xz',
1491 function = 'xz.compress',
1492 extra_args = [('level', 8)],
1493 description = 'xz compression'
1494 )
1495
1496(Contributed by Tarek Ziadé.)
1497
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001498sqlite3
1499-------
Antoine Pitroue43f9d02010-08-08 23:24:50 +00001500
Raymond Hettinger6046e222010-12-16 00:21:08 +00001501The :mod:`sqlite3` module was updated to version 2.6.0. It has two new capabilities.
Antoine Pitroue43f9d02010-08-08 23:24:50 +00001502
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +00001503* The :attr:`sqlite3.Connection.in_transit` attribute is true if there is an
1504 active transaction for uncommitted changes.
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001505
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +00001506* The :meth:`sqlite3.Connection.enable_load_extension` and
1507 :meth:`sqlite3.Connection.load_extension` methods allows you to load SQLite
1508 extensions from ".so" files. One well-known extension is the fulltext-search
1509 extension distributed with SQLite.
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001510
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001511(Contributed by R. David Murray and Shashwat Anand; :issue:`8845`.)
1512
Raymond Hettingera3b7a142011-01-24 05:26:00 +00001513html
1514----
1515
1516A new :mod:`html` module was introduced with only a single function,
1517:func:`~html.escape`, which is used for escaping reserved characters from HTML
1518markup:
1519
1520>>> import html
1521>>> html.escape('x > 2 && x < 7')
1522'x &gt; 2 &amp;&amp; x &lt; 7'
1523
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001524socket
1525------
1526
1527The :mod:`socket` module has two new improvements.
1528
1529* Socket objects now have a :meth:`~socket.socket.detach()` method which puts
1530 the socket into closed state without actually closing the underlying file
1531 descriptor. The latter can then be reused for other purposes.
1532 (Added by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`8524`.)
1533
1534* :func:`socket.create_connection` now supports the context manager protocol
1535 to unconditionally consume :exc:`socket.error` exceptions and to close the
1536 socket when done.
1537 (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà; :issue:`9794`.)
1538
1539ssl
1540---
Antoine Pitroud67075e2010-07-31 22:48:02 +00001541
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001542The :mod:`ssl` module added a number of features to satisfy common requirements
1543for secure (encrypted, authenticated) internet connections:
Antoine Pitrou33da1d62011-01-16 18:16:09 +00001544
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001545* A new class, :class:`~ssl.SSLContext`, serves as a container for persistent
1546 SSL data, such as protocol settings, certificates, private keys, and various
1547 other options. It includes a :meth:`~ssl.SSLContext.wrap_socket` for creating
1548 an SSL socket from an SSL context.
Antoine Pitrou4f2a0a82010-07-31 18:08:33 +00001549
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001550* A new function, :func:`ssl.match_hostname`, supports server identity
1551 verification for higher-level protocols by implementing the rules of HTTPS
1552 (from :rfc:`2818`) which are also suitable for other protocols.
Antoine Pitrou0ee4c9f2010-10-08 16:46:17 +00001553
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001554* The :func:`ssl.wrap_socket` constructor function now takes a *ciphers*
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001555 argument. The *ciphers* string lists the allowed encryption algorithms using
1556 the format described in the `OpenSSL documentation
1557 <http://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER_LIST_FORMAT>`__.
Antoine Pitrou4f2a0a82010-07-31 18:08:33 +00001558
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001559* When linked against recent versions of OpenSSL, the :mod:`ssl` module now
1560 supports the Server Name Indication extension to the TLS protocol, allowing
1561 multiple "virtual hosts" using different certificates on a single IP port.
1562 This extension is only supported in client mode, and is activated by passing
1563 the *server_hostname* argument to :meth:`ssl.SSLContext.wrap_socket`.
Antoine Pitrou7d15a722010-11-05 22:13:55 +00001564
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001565* Various options have been added to the :mod:`ssl` module, such as
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001566 :data:`~ssl.OP_NO_SSLv2` which disables the insecure and obsolete SSLv2
1567 protocol.
Antoine Pitrou4f2a0a82010-07-31 18:08:33 +00001568
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001569* The extension now loads all the OpenSSL ciphers and digest algorithms. If
1570 some SSL certificates cannot be verified, they are reported as an "unknown
1571 algorithm" error.
Antoine Pitrou4f2a0a82010-07-31 18:08:33 +00001572
Raymond Hettinger4854d142011-01-17 21:29:58 +00001573* The version of OpenSSL being used is now accessible using the module
1574 attributes :data:`ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION` (a string),
1575 :data:`ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_INFO` (a 5-tuple), and
1576 :data:`ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER` (an integer).
1577
1578(Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`8850`, :issue:`1589`, :issue:`8322`,
1579:issue:`5639`, :issue:`4870`, :issue:`8484`, and :issue:`8321`.)
Antoine Pitrou4f2a0a82010-07-31 18:08:33 +00001580
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001581nntp
1582----
Raymond Hettinger070ec702010-12-10 17:45:13 +00001583
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001584The :mod:`nntplib` module has a revamped implementation with better bytes and
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001585text semantics as well as more practical APIs. These improvements break
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001586compatibility with the nntplib version in Python 3.1, which was partly
1587dysfunctional in itself.
Raymond Hettinger070ec702010-12-10 17:45:13 +00001588
Antoine Pitrou33da1d62011-01-16 18:16:09 +00001589Support for secure connections through both implicit (using
1590:class:`nntplib.NNTP_SSL`) and explicit (using :meth:`nntplib.NNTP.starttls`)
1591TLS has also been added.
1592
1593(Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`9360` and Andrew Vant in :issue:`1926`.)
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001594
1595certificates
1596------------
1597
1598:class:`http.client.HTTPSConnection`, :class:`urllib.request.HTTPSHandler`
1599and :func:`urllib.request.urlopen` now take optional arguments to allow for
1600server certificate checking against a set of Certificate Authorities,
1601as recommended in public uses of HTTPS.
1602
1603(Added by Antoine Pitrou, :issue:`9003`.)
1604
Antoine Pitrou2e8ec222011-01-16 18:41:36 +00001605imaplib
1606-------
1607
1608Support for explicit TLS on standard IMAP4 connections has been added through
1609the new :mod:`imaplib.IMAP4.starttls` method.
1610
1611(Contributed by Lorenzo M. Catucci and Antoine Pitrou, :issue:`4471`.)
1612
Raymond Hettinger399bf7b2011-01-24 10:11:12 +00001613.. XXX sys._xoptions http://bugs.python.org/issue10089
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001614.. XXX perhaps add issue numbers back to datetime
Raymond Hettinger8d09cb22011-01-27 06:10:18 +00001615.. XXX Mac OS fixes and remaining issues
1616.. XXX Mailbox fixes and remaining issues
1617.. XXX HTTP client now using latin-1
Raymond Hettinger399bf7b2011-01-24 10:11:12 +00001618
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001619unittest
1620--------
Antoine Pitrouafb078d2010-11-05 22:18:28 +00001621
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001622The unittest module has a number of improvements supporting test discovery for
1623packages, easier experimentation at the interactive prompt, new testcase
1624methods, improved diagnostic messages for test failures, and better method
1625names.
1626
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001627* The command-line call ``python -m unittest`` can now accept file paths
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001628 instead of module names for running specific tests (:issue:`10620`). The new
1629 test discovery can find tests within packages, locating any test importable
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00001630 from the top-level directory. The top-level directory can be specified with
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001631 the `-t` option, a pattern for matching files with ``-p``, and a directory to
1632 start discovery with ``-s``::
1633
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001634 $ python -m unittest discover -s my_proj_dir -p _test.py
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001635
1636 (Contributed by Michael Foord.)
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00001637
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001638* Experimentation at the interactive prompt is now easier because the
1639 :class:`unittest.case.TestCase` class can now be instantiated without
1640 arguments:
1641
1642 >>> TestCase().assertEqual(pow(2, 3), 8)
1643
1644 (Contributed by Michael Foord.)
1645
Raymond Hettingerdc2f9b52010-12-05 07:02:45 +00001646* The :mod:`unittest` module has two new methods,
1647 :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertWarns` and
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001648 :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertWarnsRegex` to verify that a given warning type
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001649 is triggered by the code under test::
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00001650
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001651 with self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning):
1652 legacy_function('XYZ')
Ezio Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001653
Antoine Pitroueec6dbf2011-01-16 18:21:12 +00001654 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou, :issue:`9754`.)
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001655
Raymond Hettinger21ec4bc2010-12-10 01:09:01 +00001656 Another new method, :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertCountEqual` is used to
Raymond Hettingerffad35e2010-12-14 21:12:03 +00001657 compare two iterables to determine if their element counts are equal (whether
1658 the same elements are present with the same number of occurrences regardless
1659 of order)::
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001660
1661 def test_anagram(self):
1662 self.assertCountEqual('algorithm', 'logarithm')
1663
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001664 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1665
1666* A principal feature of the unittest module is an effort to produce meaningful
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001667 diagnostics when a test fails. When possible, the failure is recorded along
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001668 with a diff of the output. This is especially helpful for analyzing log files
1669 of failed test runs. However, since diffs can sometime be voluminous, there is
1670 a new :attr:`~unittest.TestCase.maxDiff` attribute which sets maximum length of
1671 diffs.
1672
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001673* In addition, the method names in the module have undergone a number of clean-ups.
1674
1675 For example, :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertRegex` is the new name for
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001676 :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertRegexpMatches` which was misnamed because the
Raymond Hettinger21ec4bc2010-12-10 01:09:01 +00001677 test uses :func:`re.search`, not :func:`re.match`. Other methods using
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001678 regular expressions are now named using short form "Regex" in preference to
1679 "Regexp" -- this matches the names used in other unittest implementations,
Raymond Hettinger21ec4bc2010-12-10 01:09:01 +00001680 matches Python's old name for the :mod:`re` module, and it has unambiguous
1681 camel-casing.
Raymond Hettingerdc2f9b52010-12-05 07:02:45 +00001682
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001683 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger and implemented by Ezio Melotti.)
1684
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001685* To improve consistency, some long-standing method aliases are being
Raymond Hettingerdc2f9b52010-12-05 07:02:45 +00001686 deprecated in favor of the preferred names:
1687
Raymond Hettingerc1dfa2e2011-01-19 04:24:57 +00001688 =============================== ==============================
1689 Old Name Preferred Name
1690 =============================== ==============================
1691 :meth:`assert_` :meth:`.assertTrue`
1692 :meth:`assertEquals` :meth:`.assertEqual`
1693 :meth:`assertNotEquals` :meth:`.assertNotEqual`
1694 :meth:`assertAlmostEquals` :meth:`.assertAlmostEqual`
1695 :meth:`assertNotAlmostEquals` :meth:`.assertNotAlmostEqual`
1696 =============================== ==============================
Raymond Hettingerdc2f9b52010-12-05 07:02:45 +00001697
1698 Likewise, the ``TestCase.fail*`` methods deprecated in Python 3.1 are expected
Raymond Hettingerc1dfa2e2011-01-19 04:24:57 +00001699 to be removed in Python 3.3. Also see the :ref:`deprecated-aliases` section in
Raymond Hettingerdc2f9b52010-12-05 07:02:45 +00001700 the :mod:`unittest` documentation.
Ezio Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001701
1702 (Contributed by Ezio Melotti; :issue:`9424`.)
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00001703
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001704* The :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertDictContainsSubset` method was deprecated
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +00001705 because it was misimplemented with the arguments in the wrong order. This
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00001706 created hard-to-debug optical illusions where tests like
1707 ``TestCase().assertDictContainsSubset({'a':1, 'b':2}, {'a':1})`` would fail.
1708
1709 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1710
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001711random
1712------
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +00001713
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +00001714The integer methods in the :mod:`random` module now do a better job of producing
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +00001715uniform distributions. Previously, they computed selections with
1716``int(n*random())`` which had a slight bias whenever *n* was not a power of two.
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00001717Now, multiple selections are made from a range up to the next power of two and a
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +00001718selection is kept only when it falls within the range ``0 <= x < n``. The
1719functions and methods affected are :func:`~random.randrange`,
1720:func:`~random.randint`, :func:`~random.choice`, :func:`~random.shuffle` and
1721:func:`~random.sample`.
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001722
1723(Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`9025`.)
1724
1725poplib
1726------
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +00001727
Giampaolo Rodolà42382fe2010-08-17 16:09:53 +00001728* :class:`~poplib.POP3_SSL` class now accepts a *context* parameter, which is a
1729 :class:`ssl.SSLContext` object allowing bundling SSL configuration options,
1730 certificates and private keys into a single (potentially long-lived)
1731 structure.
1732
1733 (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà; :issue:`8807`.)
1734
Giampaolo Rodolà977c7072010-10-04 21:08:36 +00001735* :class:`asyncore.dispatcher` now provides a
1736 :meth:`~asyncore.dispatcher.handle_accepted()` method
1737 returning a `(sock, addr)` pair which is called when a connection has actually
1738 been established with a new remote endpoint. This is supposed to be used as a
1739 replacement for old :meth:`~asyncore.dispatcher.handle_accept()` and avoids
1740 the user to call :meth:`~asyncore.dispatcher.accept()` directly.
1741
1742 (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà; :issue:`6706`.)
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00001743
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001744tempfile
1745--------
Raymond Hettingera0266332010-12-07 08:52:41 +00001746
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001747The :mod:`tempfile` module has a new context manager,
1748:class:`~tempfile.TemporaryDirectory` which provides easy deterministic
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001749cleanup of temporary directories::
Nick Coghlan543af752010-10-24 11:23:25 +00001750
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001751 with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as tmpdirname:
1752 print('created temporary dir:', tmpdirname)
Nick Coghlan543af752010-10-24 11:23:25 +00001753
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001754(Contributed by Neil Schemenauer and Nick Coghlan; :issue:`5178`.)
Nick Coghlane0f04652010-11-21 03:44:04 +00001755
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001756inspect
1757-------
1758
Raymond Hettinger0358a172010-12-15 19:00:38 +00001759* The :mod:`inspect` module has a new function
1760 :func:`~inspect.getgeneratorstate` to easily identify the current state of a
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +00001761 generator-iterator::
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001762
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +00001763 >>> from inspect import getgeneratorstate
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001764 >>> def gen():
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +00001765 yield 'demo'
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001766 >>> g = gen()
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +00001767 >>> getgeneratorstate(g)
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001768 'GEN_CREATED'
1769 >>> next(g)
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +00001770 'demo'
1771 >>> getgeneratorstate(g)
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001772 'GEN_SUSPENDED'
Raymond Hettingera275c982011-01-20 04:03:19 +00001773 >>> next(g, None)
1774 >>> getgeneratorstate(g)
1775 'GEN_CLOSED'
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001776
1777 (Contributed by Rodolpho Eckhardt and Nick Coghlan, :issue:`10220`.)
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001778
Raymond Hettingera55ffbc2010-12-15 18:31:57 +00001779* To support lookups without the possibility of activating a dynamic attribute,
1780 the :mod:`inspect` module has a new function, :func:`~inspect.getattr_static`.
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +00001781 Unlike :func:`hasattr`, this is a true read-only search, guaranteed not to
Raymond Hettinger4bea9782011-01-19 04:14:34 +00001782 change state while it is searching::
1783
1784 >>> class A:
1785 @property
1786 def f(self):
1787 print('Running')
1788 return 10
1789
1790 >>> a = A()
1791 >>> getattr(a, 'f')
1792 Running
1793 10
1794 >>> inspect.getattr_static(a, 'f')
1795 <property object at 0x1022bd788>
1796
1797 (Contributed by Michael Foord.)
Nick Coghlane0f04652010-11-21 03:44:04 +00001798
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001799pydoc
1800-----
Nick Coghlan7bb30b72010-12-03 09:29:11 +00001801
Raymond Hettinger89c1cd12011-01-19 04:43:45 +00001802The :mod:`pydoc` module now provides a much-improved Web server interface, as
1803well as a new command-line option ``-b`` to automatically open a browser window
1804to display that server::
1805
1806 $ pydoc3.2 -b
Nick Coghlan7bb30b72010-12-03 09:29:11 +00001807
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001808(Contributed by Ron Adam; :issue:`2001`.)
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001809
Raymond Hettingeracff5952011-01-24 01:51:49 +00001810dis
1811---
1812
1813The :mod:`dis` module gained two new functions for inspecting code,
1814:func:`~dis.code_info` and :func:`~dis.show_code`. Both provide detailed code
1815object information for the supplied function, method, source code string or code
1816object. The former returns a string and the latter prints it::
1817
1818 >>> import dis, random
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001819 >>> dis.show_code(random.choice)
Raymond Hettingeracff5952011-01-24 01:51:49 +00001820 Name: choice
1821 Filename: /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.2/lib/python3.2/random.py
1822 Argument count: 2
1823 Kw-only arguments: 0
1824 Number of locals: 3
1825 Stack size: 11
1826 Flags: OPTIMIZED, NEWLOCALS, NOFREE
1827 Constants:
1828 0: 'Choose a random element from a non-empty sequence.'
1829 1: 'Cannot choose from an empty sequence'
1830 Names:
1831 0: _randbelow
1832 1: len
1833 2: ValueError
1834 3: IndexError
1835 Variable names:
1836 0: self
1837 1: seq
1838 2: i
1839
1840(Contributed by Nick Coghlan in :issue:`9147`.)
1841
1842dbm
1843---
1844
1845All database modules now support :meth:`get` and :meth:`setdefault` are now
1846available in all database modules
1847
1848(Suggested by Ray Allen in :issue:`9523`.)
1849
1850ctypes
1851------
1852
1853A new type, :class:`ctypes.c_ssize_t` represents the C :c:type:`ssize_t` datatype.
1854
Raymond Hettingerda4a05d2011-01-25 07:46:07 +00001855site
1856----
1857
1858The :mod:`site` module has three new functions useful for reporting on the
1859details of a given Python installation.
1860
1861* :func:`~site.getsitepackages` lists all global site-packages directories.
1862
1863* :func:`~site.getuserbase` reports on the user's base directory where data can
1864 be stored.
1865
1866* :func:`~site.getusersitepackages` reveals the user-specific site-packages
1867 directory path.
1868
1869::
1870
Raymond Hettinger14eb4c32011-01-26 01:13:26 +00001871 >>> import site
Raymond Hettingerda4a05d2011-01-25 07:46:07 +00001872 >>> site.getsitepackages()
1873 ['/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.2/lib/python3.2/site-packages',
1874 '/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.2/lib/site-python',
1875 '/Library/Python/3.2/site-packages']
1876 >>> site.getuserbase()
1877 '/Users/raymondhettinger/Library/Python/3.2'
1878 >>> site.getusersitepackages()
1879 '/Users/raymondhettinger/Library/Python/3.2/lib/python/site-packages'
1880
1881Conveniently, some of site's functionality is accessible directly from the
1882command-line::
1883
1884 $ python -m site --user-base
1885 /Users/raymondhettinger/.local
1886 $ python -m site --user-site
1887 /Users/raymondhettinger/.local/lib/python3.2/site-packages
1888
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001889(Contributed by Tarek Ziadé.)
1890
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001891sysconfig
1892---------
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001893
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001894The new :mod:`sysconfig` module makes it straightforward to discover
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001895installation paths and configuration variables which vary across platforms and
1896installations.
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001897
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001898The module offers access simple access functions for platform and version
1899information:
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001900
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001901* :func:`~sysconfig.get_platform` returning values like *linux-i586* or
1902 *macosx-10.6-ppc*.
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001903* :func:`~sysconfig.get_python_version` returns a Python version string
1904 such as "3.2".
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001905
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001906It also provides access to the paths and variables corresponding to one of
1907seven named schemes used by :mod:`distutils`. Those include *posix_prefix*,
1908*posix_home*, *posix_user*, *nt*, *nt_user*, *os2*, *os2_home*:
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001909
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001910* :func:`~sysconfig.get_paths` makes a dictionary containing installation paths
1911 for the current installation scheme.
1912* :func:`~sysconfig.get_config_vars` returns a dictionary of platform specific
1913 variables.
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001914
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001915There is also a convenient command-line interface::
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001916
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001917 C:\Python32>python -m sysconfig
1918 Platform: "win32"
1919 Python version: "3.2"
1920 Current installation scheme: "nt"
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001921
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001922 Paths:
1923 data = "C:\Python32"
Łukasz Langa79a06ed2010-12-17 22:05:46 +00001924 include = "C:\Python32\Include"
1925 platinclude = "C:\Python32\Include"
1926 platlib = "C:\Python32\Lib\site-packages"
1927 platstdlib = "C:\Python32\Lib"
1928 purelib = "C:\Python32\Lib\site-packages"
1929 scripts = "C:\Python32\Scripts"
1930 stdlib = "C:\Python32\Lib"
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001931
1932 Variables:
1933 BINDIR = "C:\Python32"
Łukasz Langa79a06ed2010-12-17 22:05:46 +00001934 BINLIBDEST = "C:\Python32\Lib"
1935 EXE = ".exe"
1936 INCLUDEPY = "C:\Python32\Include"
1937 LIBDEST = "C:\Python32\Lib"
1938 SO = ".pyd"
1939 VERSION = "32"
1940 abiflags = ""
1941 base = "C:\Python32"
1942 exec_prefix = "C:\Python32"
1943 platbase = "C:\Python32"
1944 prefix = "C:\Python32"
1945 projectbase = "C:\Python32"
1946 py_version = "3.2"
1947 py_version_nodot = "32"
1948 py_version_short = "3.2"
1949 srcdir = "C:\Python32"
1950 userbase = "C:\Documents and Settings\Raymond\Application Data\Python"
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001951
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00001952(Moved out of Distutils by Tarek Ziadé.)
1953
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00001954pdb
1955---
1956
1957The :mod:`pdb` debugger module gained a number of usability improvements:
Raymond Hettingerb5d79332010-12-07 02:04:56 +00001958
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +00001959* :file:`pdb.py` now has a ``-c`` option that executes commands as given in a
1960 :file:`.pdbrc` script file.
1961* A :file:`.pdbrc` script file can contain ``continue`` and ``next`` commands
1962 that continue debugging.
1963* The :class:`Pdb` class constructor now accepts a *nosigint* argument.
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +00001964* New commands: ``l(list)``, ``ll(long list)`` and ``source`` for
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +00001965 listing source code.
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001966* New commands: ``display`` and ``undisplay`` for showing or hiding
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +00001967 the value of an expression if it has changed.
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001968* New command: ``interact`` for starting an interactive interpreter containing
Raymond Hettinger99db3fd2010-12-15 19:33:49 +00001969 the global and local names found in the current scope.
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00001970* Breakpoints can be cleared by breakpoint number.
Raymond Hettingerb5d79332010-12-07 02:04:56 +00001971
Georg Brandl101234b2010-12-18 11:53:25 +00001972(Contributed by Georg Brandl, Antonio Cuni and Ilya Sandler.)
1973
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00001974configparser
1975------------
Raymond Hettinger3f9734c2010-12-07 01:47:52 +00001976
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00001977The :mod:`configparser` module was modified to improve usability and
1978predictability of the default parser and its supported INI syntax. The old
1979:class:`ConfigParser` class was removed in favor of :class:`SafeConfigParser`
Raymond Hettinger04129742010-12-18 10:57:50 +00001980which has in turn been renamed to :class:`~configparser.ConfigParser`. Support
1981for inline comments is now turned off by default and section or option
1982duplicates are not allowed in a single configuration source.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00001983
1984Config parsers gained a new API based on the mapping protocol::
1985
Raymond Hettinger02dd70b2011-01-17 23:39:39 +00001986 >>> parser = ConfigParser()
1987 >>> parser.read_string("""
1988 [DEFAULT]
1989 location = upper left
1990 visible = yes
1991 editable = no
1992 color = blue
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00001993
Raymond Hettinger02dd70b2011-01-17 23:39:39 +00001994 [main]
1995 title = Main Menu
1996 color = green
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00001997
Raymond Hettinger02dd70b2011-01-17 23:39:39 +00001998 [options]
1999 title = Options
2000 """)
2001 >>> parser['main']['color']
2002 'green'
2003 >>> parser['main']['editable']
2004 'no'
2005 >>> section = parser['options']
2006 >>> section['title']
2007 'Options'
2008 >>> section['title'] = 'Options (editable: %(editable)s)'
2009 >>> section['title']
2010 'Options (editable: no)'
2011
2012The new API is implemented on top of the classical API, so custom parser
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002013subclasses should be able to use it without modifications.
2014
2015The INI file structure accepted by config parsers can now be customized. Users
Raymond Hettinger04129742010-12-18 10:57:50 +00002016can specify alternative option/value delimiters and comment prefixes, change the
Raymond Hettinger02dd70b2011-01-17 23:39:39 +00002017name of the *DEFAULT* section or switch the interpolation syntax.
2018
Raymond Hettingerba5512f2011-01-18 08:28:01 +00002019There is support for pluggable interpolation including an additional interpolation
Raymond Hettinger02dd70b2011-01-17 23:39:39 +00002020handler :class:`~configparser.ExtendedInterpolation`::
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002021
2022 >>> parser = ConfigParser(interpolation=ExtendedInterpolation())
2023 >>> parser.read_dict({'buildout': {'directory': '/home/ambv/zope9'},
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00002024 'custom': {'prefix': '/usr/local'}})
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002025 >>> parser.read_string("""
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00002026 [buildout]
2027 parts =
2028 zope9
2029 instance
2030 find-links =
2031 ${buildout:directory}/downloads/dist
2032
2033 [zope9]
2034 recipe = plone.recipe.zope9install
2035 location = /opt/zope
2036
2037 [instance]
2038 recipe = plone.recipe.zope9instance
2039 zope9-location = ${zope9:location}
2040 zope-conf = ${custom:prefix}/etc/zope.conf
2041 """)
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002042 >>> parser['buildout']['find-links']
2043 '\n/home/ambv/zope9/downloads/dist'
2044 >>> parser['instance']['zope-conf']
2045 '/usr/local/etc/zope.conf'
2046 >>> instance = parser['instance']
2047 >>> instance['zope-conf']
2048 '/usr/local/etc/zope.conf'
2049 >>> instance['zope9-location']
2050 '/opt/zope'
2051
2052A number of smaller features were also introduced, like support for specifying
Raymond Hettinger04129742010-12-18 10:57:50 +00002053encoding in read operations, specifying fallback values for get-functions, or
2054reading directly from dictionaries and strings.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002055
2056(All changes contributed by Łukasz Langa.)
2057
Raymond Hettinger9a236b02011-01-24 09:01:27 +00002058urllib.parse
2059------------
2060
2061A number of usability improvements were made for the :mod:`urllib.parse` module.
2062
2063The :func:`~urllib.parse.urlparse` function now supports `IPv6
2064<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv6>`_ addresses as described in :rfc:`2732`:
2065
2066 >>> import urllib.parse
2067 >>> urllib.parse.urlparse('http://[dead:beef:cafe:5417:affe:8FA3:deaf:feed]/foo/')
2068 ParseResult(scheme='http',
2069 netloc='[dead:beef:cafe:5417:affe:8FA3:deaf:feed]',
2070 path='/foo/',
2071 params='',
2072 query='',
2073 fragment='')
2074
2075The :func:`~urllib.parse.urldefrag` function now returns a :term:`named tuple`::
2076
2077 >>> r = urllib.parse.urldefrag('http://python.org/about/#target')
2078 >>> r
2079 DefragResult(url='http://python.org/about/', fragment='target')
2080 >>> r[0]
2081 'http://python.org/about/
2082 >>> r.fragment
2083 'target'
2084
2085And, the :func:`~urllib.parse.urlencode` function is now much more flexible,
2086accepting either a string or bytes type for the *query* argument. If it is a
2087string, then the *safe*, *encoding*, and *error* parameters are sent to
2088:func:`~urllib.parse.quote_plus` for encoding::
2089
2090 >>> urllib.parse.urlencode([
2091 ('type', 'telenovela'),
2092 ('name', '¿Dónde Está Elisa?')],
2093 encoding='latin-1')
2094 'type=telenovela&name=%BFD%F3nde+Est%E1+Elisa%3F'
2095
Georg Brandl009a6bd2011-01-24 19:59:08 +00002096As detailed in :ref:`parsing-ascii-encoded-bytes`, all the :mod:`urllib.parse`
Raymond Hettinger9a236b02011-01-24 09:01:27 +00002097functions now accept ASCII-encoded byte strings as input, so long as they are
2098not mixed with regular strings. If ASCII-encoded byte strings are given as
2099parameters, the return types will also be an ASCII-encoded byte strings:
2100
2101 >>> urllib.parse.urlparse(b'http://www.python.org:80/about/')
2102 ParseResultBytes(scheme=b'http', netloc=b'www.python.org:80',
2103 path=b'/about/', params=b'', query=b'', fragment=b'')
2104
2105(Work by Nick Coghlan, Dan Mahn, and Senthil Kumaran in :issue:`2987`,
2106:issue:`5468`, and :issue:`9873`.)
2107
Raymond Hettinger2f707c92011-01-25 06:58:01 +00002108turtledemo
2109----------
2110
2111The demonstration code for the :mod:`turtle` module was moved from the *Demo*
2112directory to main library. It includes over a dozen sample scripts with
2113lively displays. Being on :attr:`sys.path`, it can now be run directly
2114from the command-line::
2115
2116 $ python -m turtledemo
2117
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00002118(Moved from the Demo directory by Alexander Belopolsky in :issue:`10199`.)
Raymond Hettinger3df46212011-01-06 02:01:26 +00002119
Antoine Pitroud42bc512009-11-10 23:18:31 +00002120Multi-threading
2121===============
2122
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002123* The mechanism for serializing execution of concurrently running Python threads
Raymond Hettingerba5512f2011-01-18 08:28:01 +00002124 (generally known as the :term:`GIL` or :term:`Global Interpreter Lock`) has
2125 been rewritten. Among the objectives were more predictable switching
2126 intervals and reduced overhead due to lock contention and the number of
2127 ensuing system calls. The notion of a "check interval" to allow thread
2128 switches has been abandoned and replaced by an absolute duration expressed in
2129 seconds. This parameter is tunable through :func:`sys.setswitchinterval()`.
2130 It currently defaults to 5 milliseconds.
Antoine Pitroud42bc512009-11-10 23:18:31 +00002131
2132 Additional details about the implementation can be read from a `python-dev
2133 mailing-list message
2134 <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2009-October/093321.html>`_
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002135 (however, "priority requests" as exposed in this message have not been kept
2136 for inclusion).
Antoine Pitroud42bc512009-11-10 23:18:31 +00002137
Georg Brandl5e73a812010-04-22 07:02:51 +00002138 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou.)
Antoine Pitroud42bc512009-11-10 23:18:31 +00002139
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002140* Regular and recursive locks now accept an optional *timeout* argument to their
Raymond Hettingerba5512f2011-01-18 08:28:01 +00002141 :meth:`~threading.Lock.acquire` method. (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou;
2142 :issue:`7316`.)
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002143
Raymond Hettingerbba537b2010-12-15 18:20:19 +00002144* Similarly, :meth:`threading.Semaphore.acquire` also gained a *timeout*
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002145 argument. (Contributed by Torsten Landschoff; :issue:`850728`.)
Antoine Pitroue95a9ff2010-05-04 23:31:41 +00002146
Antoine Pitrou810023d2010-12-15 22:59:16 +00002147* Regular and recursive lock acquisitions can now be interrupted by signals on
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00002148 platforms using Pthreads. This means that Python programs that deadlock while
Antoine Pitrou810023d2010-12-15 22:59:16 +00002149 acquiring locks can be successfully killed by repeatedly sending SIGINT to the
Georg Brandleebb2522010-12-18 12:01:15 +00002150 process (by pressing :kbd:`Ctrl+C` in most shells).
Antoine Pitrou810023d2010-12-15 22:59:16 +00002151 (Contributed by Reid Kleckner; :issue:`8844`.)
2152
Antoine Pitroud42bc512009-11-10 23:18:31 +00002153
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +00002154Optimizations
2155=============
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002156
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +00002157A number of small performance enhancements have been added:
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002158
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00002159* Python's peephole optimizer now recognizes patterns such ``x in {1, 2, 3}`` as
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +00002160 being a test for membership in a set of constants. The optimizer recasts the
2161 :class:`set` as a :class:`frozenset` and stores the pre-built constant.
2162
2163 Now that the speed penalty is gone, it is practical to start writing
2164 membership tests using set-notation. This style is both semantically clear
2165 and operationally fast::
2166
2167 extension = name.rpartition('.')[2]
2168 if extension in {'xml', 'html', 'xhtml', 'css'}:
2169 handle(name)
2170
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00002171 (Patch and additional tests contributed by Dave Malcolm; :issue:`6690`).
Raymond Hettinger92ba2862010-09-06 01:16:46 +00002172
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00002173* Serializing and unserializing data using the :mod:`pickle` module is now
Raymond Hettingerdadf93c2010-12-05 02:56:21 +00002174 several times faster.
2175
2176 (Contributed by Alexandre Vassalotti, Antoine Pitrou
Antoine Pitrouff150f22010-10-22 21:41:05 +00002177 and the Unladen Swallow team in :issue:`9410` and :issue:`3873`.)
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00002178
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +00002179* The `Timsort algorithm <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timsort>`_ used in
Raymond Hettingerffad35e2010-12-14 21:12:03 +00002180 :meth:`list.sort` and :func:`sorted` now runs faster and uses less memory
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +00002181 when called with a :term:`key function`. Previously, every element of
2182 a list was wrapped with a temporary object that remembered the key value
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002183 associated with each element. Now, two arrays of keys and values are
Raymond Hettingerc136b042011-01-18 07:15:39 +00002184 sorted in parallel. This saves the memory consumed by the sort wrappers,
2185 and it saves time lost to delegating comparisons.
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +00002186
Raymond Hettingereb70b902011-01-10 21:26:49 +00002187 (Patch by Daniel Stutzbach in :issue:`9915`.)
Raymond Hettingerc269ae82010-12-05 01:01:52 +00002188
Raymond Hettingerdadf93c2010-12-05 02:56:21 +00002189* JSON decoding performance is improved and memory consumption is reduced
Raymond Hettinger413abbc2010-12-05 07:06:47 +00002190 whenever the same string is repeated for multiple keys. Also, JSON encoding
Raymond Hettingerdadf93c2010-12-05 02:56:21 +00002191 now uses the C speedups when the ``sort_keys`` argument is true.
2192
2193 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`7451` and by Raymond Hettinger and
2194 Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`10314`.)
2195
Raymond Hettinger21ec4bc2010-12-10 01:09:01 +00002196* Recursive locks (created with the :func:`threading.RLock` API) now benefit
2197 from a C implementation which makes them as fast as regular locks, and between
2198 10x and 15x faster than their previous pure Python implementation.
2199
2200 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`3001`.)
2201
Raymond Hettingerdadf93c2010-12-05 02:56:21 +00002202* The fast-search algorithm in stringlib is now used by the :meth:`split`,
2203 :meth:`rsplit`, :meth:`splitlines` and :meth:`replace` methods on
2204 :class:`bytes`, :class:`bytearray` and :class:`str` objects. Likewise, the
2205 algorithm is also used by :meth:`rfind`, :meth:`rindex`, :meth:`rsplit` and
2206 :meth:`rpartition`.
2207
2208 (Patch by Florent Xicluna in :issue:`7622` and :issue:`7462`.)
2209
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002210
2211* String to integer conversions now work two "digits" at a time, reducing the
2212 number of division and modulo operations.
2213
2214 (:issue:`6713` by Gawain Bolton, Mark Dickinson, and Victor Stinner.)
2215
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +00002216There were several other minor optimizations. Set differencing now runs faster
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002217when one operand is much larger than the other (patch by Andress Bennetts in
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +00002218:issue:`8685`). The :meth:`array.repeat` method has a faster implementation
2219(:issue:`1569291` by Alexander Belopolsky). The :class:`BaseHTTPRequestHandler`
2220has more efficient buffering (:issue:`3709` by Andrew Schaaf). The
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002221multi-argument form of :func:`operator.attrgetter` function now runs slightly
Raymond Hettingerd8fae4e2010-12-05 05:39:54 +00002222faster (:issue:`10160` by Christos Georgiou). And :class:`ConfigParser` loads
2223multi-line arguments a bit faster (:issue:`7113` by Łukasz Langa).
2224
Antoine Pitroud3052002010-09-15 15:09:40 +00002225
Victor Stinner47ce9652010-10-29 00:57:35 +00002226Unicode
2227=======
Victor Stinner94908bb2010-08-18 21:23:25 +00002228
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002229Python has been updated to `Unicode 6.0.0
2230<http://unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.0.0/>`_. The update to the standard adds
2231over 2,000 new characters including `emoji <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emoji>`_
2232symbols which are important for mobile phones.
Alexander Belopolsky507e3f82010-12-02 00:05:57 +00002233
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002234In addition, the updated standard has altered the character properties for two
2235Kannada characters (U+0CF1, U+0CF2) and one New Tai Lue numeric character
2236(U+19DA), making the former eligible for use in identifiers while disqualifying
2237the latter. For more information, see `Unicode Character Database Changes
2238<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.0.0/#Database_Changes>`_.
Alexander Belopolsky507e3f82010-12-02 00:05:57 +00002239
Alexander Belopolsky507e3f82010-12-02 00:05:57 +00002240
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002241Codecs
2242======
Raymond Hettingerc74d5182010-12-02 01:38:25 +00002243
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002244Support was added for *cp720* Arabic DOS encoding (:issue:`1616979`).
Alexander Belopolsky84cc0622010-12-08 21:38:46 +00002245
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002246MBCS encoding no longer ignores the error handler argument. In the default
2247strict mode, it raises an :exc:`UnicodeDecodeError` when it encounters an
2248undecodable byte sequence and an :exc:`UnicodeEncodeError` for an unencodable
2249character.
Alexander Belopolsky507e3f82010-12-02 00:05:57 +00002250
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002251The MBCS codec supports ``'strict'`` and ``'ignore'`` error handlers for
2252decoding, and ``'strict'`` and ``'replace'`` for encoding.
Victor Stinnere8d51452010-08-19 01:05:19 +00002253
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002254To emulate Python3.1 MBCS encoding, select the ``'ignore'`` handler for decoding
2255and the ``'replace'`` handler for encoding.
Victor Stinner47ce9652010-10-29 00:57:35 +00002256
Raymond Hettinger2e042d32011-01-21 09:18:19 +00002257On Mac OS X, Python decodes command line arguments with ``'utf-8'`` rather than
Raymond Hettinger2270d582011-01-20 09:04:39 +00002258the locale encoding.
Victor Stinner47ce9652010-10-29 00:57:35 +00002259
Raymond Hettinger00db6aa2011-01-20 09:47:04 +00002260By default, :mod:`tarfile` uses ``'utf-8'`` encoding on Windows (instead of
2261``'mbcs'``) and the ``'surrogateescape'`` error handler on all operating
2262systems.
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002263
Victor Stinner94908bb2010-08-18 21:23:25 +00002264
Raymond Hettinger1fa76822010-12-06 23:31:36 +00002265Documentation
2266=============
2267
2268The documentation continues to be improved.
2269
2270A table of quick links has been added to the top of lengthy sections such as
2271:ref:`built-in-funcs`. In the case of :mod:`itertools`, the links are
2272accompanied by tables of cheatsheet-style summaries to provide an overview and
2273memory jog without having to read all of the docs.
2274
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +00002275In some cases, the pure Python source code can be a helpful adjunct to the
2276documentation, so now many modules now feature quick links to the latest version
2277of the source code. For example, the :mod:`functools` module documentation has
2278a quick link at the top labeled: **Source code** :source:`Lib/functools.py`.
Raymond Hettinger712d2b42011-01-27 06:46:54 +00002279(Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
Raymond Hettinger1fa76822010-12-06 23:31:36 +00002280
2281The docs now contain more examples and recipes. In particular, :mod:`re` module
2282has an extensive section, :ref:`re-examples`. Likewise, the :mod:`itertools`
2283module continues to be updated with new :ref:`itertools-recipes`.
2284
Raymond Hettinger677e10a2010-12-07 06:45:30 +00002285The :mod:`datetime` module now has an auxiliary implementation in pure Python.
2286No functionality was changed. This just provides an easier-to-read
2287alternate implementation. (Contributed by Alexander Belopolsky.)
2288
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002289The unmaintained :file:`Demo` directory has been removed. Some demos were
2290integrated into the documentation, some were moved to the :file:`Tools/demo`
2291directory, and others were removed altogether. (Contributed by Georg Brandl.)
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00002292
Raymond Hettinger1fa76822010-12-06 23:31:36 +00002293
2294IDLE
2295====
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002296
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002297* The format menu now has an option to clean source files by stripping
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00002298 trailing whitespace.
2299
2300 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`5150`.)
2301
2302* IDLE on Mac OS X now works with both Carbon AquaTk and Cocoa AquaTk.
2303
2304 (Contributed by Kevin Walzer, Ned Deily, and Ronald Oussoren; :issue:`6075`.)
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002305
Raymond Hettinger00db6aa2011-01-20 09:47:04 +00002306Code Repository
2307===============
2308
2309In addition to the existing Subversion code repository at http://svn.python.org
2310there is now a `Mercurial <http://mercurial.selenic.com/>`_ repository at
2311http://hg.python.org/ .
2312
2313After the 3.2 release, there are plans to switch to Mercurial as the primary
2314repository. This distributed version control system should make it easier for
2315members of the community to create and share external changesets. See
2316:pep:`385` for details.
2317
2318To learn to use the new version control system, see the `tutorial by Joel
Raymond Hettinger2f707c92011-01-25 06:58:01 +00002319Spolsky <http://hginit.com>`_ or the `Guide to Mercurial Workflows
Raymond Hettinger00db6aa2011-01-20 09:47:04 +00002320<http://mercurial.selenic.com/guide/>`_.
2321
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002322
2323Build and C API Changes
2324=======================
2325
2326Changes to Python's build process and to the C API include:
2327
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00002328* The *idle*, *pydoc* and *2to3* scripts are now installed with a
2329 version-specific suffix on ``make altinstall`` (:issue:`10679`).
2330
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002331* The C functions that access the Unicode Database now accept and return
2332 characters from the full Unicode range, even on narrow unicode builds
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +00002333 (Py_UNICODE_TOLOWER, Py_UNICODE_ISDECIMAL, and others). A visible difference
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002334 in Python is that :func:`unicodedata.numeric` now returns the correct value
2335 for large code points, and :func:`repr` may consider more characters as
2336 printable.
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002337
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +00002338 (Reported by Bupjoe Lee and fixed by Amaury Forgeot D'Arc; :issue:`5127`.)
2339
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002340* Computed gotos are now enabled by default on supported compilers (which are
Raymond Hettingerdb9044e2010-09-06 01:29:23 +00002341 detected by the configure script). They can still be disabled selectively by
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002342 specifying ``--without-computed-gotos``.
Raymond Hettinger1784ff02010-09-05 01:00:19 +00002343
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002344 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`9203`.)
2345
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcfeb73072010-09-12 22:42:57 +00002346* The option ``--with-wctype-functions`` was removed. The built-in unicode
2347 database is now used for all functions.
2348
2349 (Contributed by Amaury Forgeot D'Arc; :issue:`9210`.)
2350
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002351* Hash values are now values of a new type, :c:type:`Py_hash_t`, which is
2352 defined to be the same size as a pointer. Previously they were of type long,
2353 which on some 64-bit operating systems is still only 32 bits long. As a
2354 result of this fix, :class:`set` and :class:`dict` can now hold more than
2355 ``2**32`` entries on builds with 64-bit pointers (previously, they could grow
2356 to that size but their performance degraded catastrophically).
Skip Montanaro961aaf52010-10-17 22:22:24 +00002357
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002358 (Suggested by Raymond Hettinger and implemented by Benjamin Peterson;
2359 :issue:`9778`.)
2360
2361* A new macro :c:macro:`Py_VA_COPY` copies the state of the variable argument
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002362 list. It is equivalent to C99 *va_copy* but available on all Python platforms
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002363 (:issue:`2443`).
2364
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002365* A new C API function :c:func:`PySys_SetArgvEx` allows an embedded interpreter
2366 to set :attr:`sys.argv` without also modifying :attr:`sys.path`
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002367 (:issue:`5753`).
2368
2369* :c:macro:`PyEval_CallObject` is now only available in macro form. The
2370 function declaration, which was kept for backwards compatibility reasons, is
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002371 now removed -- the macro was introduced in 1997 (:issue:`8276`).
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002372
2373* The is a new function :c:func:`PyLong_AsLongLongAndOverflow` which
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002374 is analogous to :c:func:`PyLong_AsLongAndOverflow`. They both serve to
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002375 convert Python :class:`int` into a native fixed-width type while providing
2376 detection of cases where the conversion won't fit (:issue:`7767`).
2377
2378* The :c:func:`PyUnicode_CompareWithASCIIString` now returns *not equal*
Raymond Hettingerba5512f2011-01-18 08:28:01 +00002379 if the Python string is *NUL* terminated.
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002380
2381* There is a new function :c:func:`PyErr_NewExceptionWithDoc` that is
2382 like :c:func:`PyErr_NewException` but allows a docstring to be specified.
2383 This lets C exceptions have the same self-documenting capabilities as
2384 their pure Python counterparts (:issue:`7033`).
2385
2386* When compiled with the ``--with-valgrind`` option, the pymalloc
2387 allocator will be automatically disabled when running under Valgrind. This
2388 gives improved memory leak detection when running under Valgrind, while taking
2389 advantage of pymalloc at other times (:issue:`2422`).
2390
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002391* Removed the ``O?`` format from the *PyArg_Parse* functions. The format is no
Raymond Hettinger480ed782010-12-15 22:07:15 +00002392 longer used and it had never been documented (:issue:`8837`).
2393
2394There were a number of other small changes to the C-API. See the
2395:file:`Misc/NEWS` file for a complete list.
Skip Montanaro961aaf52010-10-17 22:22:24 +00002396
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002397
Raymond Hettingerf558ddd2009-06-28 21:37:08 +00002398Porting to Python 3.2
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002399=====================
2400
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002401This section lists previously described changes and other bugfixes that may
2402require changes to your code:
Raymond Hettinger6e6565b2009-06-28 20:56:11 +00002403
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002404* The :mod:`configparser` module has a number of clean-ups. The major change is
2405 to replace the old :class:`ConfigParser` class with long-standing preferred
2406 alternative :class:`SafeConfigParser`. In addition there are a number of
Raymond Hettingerc8a16862011-01-18 09:01:34 +00002407 smaller incompatibilities:
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002408
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002409 * The interpolation syntax is now validated on
2410 :meth:`~configparser.ConfigParser.get` and
2411 :meth:`~configparser.ConfigParser.set` operations. In the default
2412 interpolation scheme, only two tokens with percent signs are valid: ``%(name)s``
2413 and ``%%``, the latter being an escaped percent sign.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002414
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002415 * The :meth:`~configparser.ConfigParser.set` and
2416 :meth:`~configparser.ConfigParser.add_section` methods now verify that
2417 values are actual strings. Formerly, unsupported types could be introduced
2418 unintentionally.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002419
Raymond Hettinger2b8861f2010-12-18 11:20:52 +00002420 * Duplicate sections or options from a single source now raise either
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002421 :exc:`~configparser.DuplicateSectionError` or
2422 :exc:`~configparser.DuplicateOptionError`. Formerly, duplicates would
2423 silently overwrite a previous entry.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002424
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002425 * Inline comments are now disabled by default so now the **;** character
2426 can be safely used in values.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002427
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002428 * Comments now can be indented. Consequently, for **;** or **#** to appear at
2429 the start of a line in multiline values, it has to be interpolated. This
Raymond Hettinger2b8861f2010-12-18 11:20:52 +00002430 keeps comment prefix characters in values from being mistaken as comments.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002431
Raymond Hettingerd73be672010-12-18 10:48:26 +00002432 * ``""`` is now a valid value and is no longer automatically converted to an
2433 empty string. For empty strings, use ``"option ="`` in a line.
Łukasz Langa2b38b6c2010-12-17 21:57:32 +00002434
Antoine Pitroucd889af2010-10-06 21:13:56 +00002435* The :mod:`nntplib` module was reworked extensively, meaning that its APIs
2436 are often incompatible with the 3.1 APIs.
2437
Raymond Hettinger1fa76822010-12-06 23:31:36 +00002438* :class:`bytearray` objects can no longer be used as filenames; instead,
2439 they should be converted to :class:`bytes`.
Victor Stinnerdcb24032010-04-22 12:08:36 +00002440
Raymond Hettinger399bf7b2011-01-24 10:11:12 +00002441* The :meth:`array.tostring` and :meth:`array.fromstring` have been renamed to
Raymond Hettinger50307b62011-01-24 01:18:30 +00002442 :meth:`array.tobytes` and :meth:`array.frombytes` for clarity. The old names
2443 have been deprecated. (See :issue:`8990`.)
2444
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +00002445* ``PyArg_Parse*()`` functions:
Victor Stinner3dcb5ac2010-06-08 22:54:19 +00002446
Victor Stinner25e8ec42010-06-25 00:02:38 +00002447 * "t#" format has been removed: use "s#" or "s*" instead
2448 * "w" and "w#" formats has been removed: use "w*" instead
2449
Georg Brandl60203b42010-10-06 10:11:56 +00002450* The :c:type:`PyCObject` type, deprecated in 3.1, has been removed. To wrap
2451 opaque C pointers in Python objects, the :c:type:`PyCapsule` API should be used
Éric Araujo4234ad42010-09-05 17:32:25 +00002452 instead; the new type has a well-defined interface for passing typing safety
Georg Brandlda0a2112010-09-05 11:28:33 +00002453 information and a less complicated signature for calling a destructor.
Victor Stinner0cbec572010-09-12 20:32:57 +00002454
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +00002455* The :func:`sys.setfilesystemencoding` function was removed because
2456 it had a flawed design.
Raymond Hettinger3fcf0022010-12-08 01:13:53 +00002457
Raymond Hettingere0a96002010-12-15 17:54:13 +00002458* The :func:`random.seed` function and method now salt string seeds with an
2459 sha512 hash function. To access the previous version of *seed* in order to
2460 reproduce Python 3.1 sequences, set the *version* argument to *1*,
2461 ``random.seed(s, version=1)``.
Raymond Hettinger21ec4bc2010-12-10 01:09:01 +00002462
Raymond Hettinger522cc0a2010-12-10 01:19:15 +00002463* The previously deprecated :func:`string.maketrans` function has been removed
Raymond Hettinger51e21072011-01-10 23:38:15 +00002464 in favor of the static methods :meth:`bytes.maketrans` and
Raymond Hettinger522cc0a2010-12-10 01:19:15 +00002465 :meth:`bytearray.maketrans`. This change solves the confusion around which
2466 types were supported by the :mod:`string` module. Now, :class:`str`,
2467 :class:`bytes`, and :class:`bytearray` each have their own **maketrans** and
2468 **translate** methods with intermediate translation tables of the appropriate
2469 type.
2470
2471 (Contributed by Georg Brandl; :issue:`5675`.)
2472
2473* The previously deprecated :func:`contextlib.nested` function has been removed
2474 in favor of a plain :keyword:`with` statement which can accept multiple
2475 context managers. The latter technique is faster (because it is built-in),
2476 and it does a better job finalizing multiple context managers when one of them
2477 raises an exception::
2478
Raymond Hettinger6f0d59b2011-01-17 23:10:55 +00002479 with open('mylog.txt') as infile, open('a.out', 'w') as outfile:
2480 for line in infile:
2481 if '<critical>' in line:
2482 outfile.write(line)
Raymond Hettinger522cc0a2010-12-10 01:19:15 +00002483
2484 (Contributed by Georg Brandl and Mattias Brändström;
2485 `appspot issue 53094 <http://codereview.appspot.com/53094>`_.)
Victor Stinnerda9ec992010-12-28 13:26:42 +00002486
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00002487* :func:`struct.pack` now only allows bytes for the ``s`` string pack code.
2488 Formerly, it would accept text arguments and implicitly encode them to bytes
2489 using UTF-8. This was problematic because it made assumptions about the
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002490 correct encoding and because a variable-length encoding can fail when writing
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00002491 to fixed length segment of a structure.
Victor Stinnerda9ec992010-12-28 13:26:42 +00002492
Raymond Hettinger2169ee22011-01-05 22:27:49 +00002493 Code such as ``struct.pack('<6sHHBBB', 'GIF87a', x, y)`` should be rewritten
2494 with to use bytes instead of text, ``struct.pack('<6sHHBBB', b'GIF87a', x, y)``.
2495
Raymond Hettingerde2e6182011-01-10 05:40:57 +00002496 (Discovered by David Beazley and fixed by Victor Stinner; :issue:`10783`.)
Raymond Hettingere40808a2011-01-05 23:00:00 +00002497
2498* The :class:`xml.etree.ElementTree` class now raises an
2499 :exc:`xml.etree.ElementTree.ParseError` when a parse fails. Previously it
2500 raised a :exc:`xml.parsers.expat.ExpatError`.
2501
2502* The new, longer :func:`str` value on floats may break doctests which rely on
2503 the old output format.
Antoine Pitroubcba4342011-01-16 18:29:34 +00002504
2505* In :class:`subprocess.Popen`, the default value for *close_fds* is now
2506 ``True`` under Unix; under Windows, it is ``True`` if the three standard
2507 streams are set to ``None``, ``False`` otherwise. Previously, *close_fds*
2508 was always ``False`` by default, which produced difficult to solve bugs
2509 or race conditions when open file descriptors would leak into the child
2510 process.
2511
Antoine Pitrouf7fb7622011-01-16 18:34:09 +00002512* Support for legacy HTTP 0.9 has been removed from :mod:`urllib.request`
2513 and :mod:`http.client`. Such support is still present on the server side
2514 (in :mod:`http.server`).
2515
2516 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou, :issue:`10711`.)
2517
Antoine Pitrou2e8ec222011-01-16 18:41:36 +00002518* SSL sockets in timeout mode now raise :exc:`socket.timeout` when a timeout
2519 occurs, rather than a generic :exc:`~ssl.SSLError`.
2520
2521 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou, :issue:`10272`.)
Antoine Pitrouebeb9032011-01-16 18:45:17 +00002522
2523* The misleading functions :c:func:`PyEval_AcquireLock()` and
2524 :c:func:`PyEval_ReleaseLock()` have been officially deprecated. The
2525 thread-state aware APIs (such as :c:func:`PyEval_SaveThread()`
2526 and :c:func:`PyEval_RestoreThread()`) should be used instead.
Raymond Hettinger50307b62011-01-24 01:18:30 +00002527
2528* Due to security risks, :func:`asyncore.handle_accept` has been deprecated, and
2529 a new functions, :func:`asyncore.handle_accepted` was added to replace it.
2530
2531 (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodola in :issue:`6706`.)