blob: 9e6820391f37c9dcbc747661fadf5c8a25d29c87 [file] [log] [blame]
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001****************************
2 What's New In Python 3.3
3****************************
4
5:Author: Raymond Hettinger
6:Release: |release|
7:Date: |today|
8
Éric Araujob07b97f2011-10-05 01:03:34 +02009.. Rules for maintenance:
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +000010
11 * Anyone can add text to this document. Do not spend very much time
12 on the wording of your changes, because your text will probably
13 get rewritten to some degree.
14
15 * The maintainer will go through Misc/NEWS periodically and add
16 changes; it's therefore more important to add your changes to
17 Misc/NEWS than to this file.
18
19 * This is not a complete list of every single change; completeness
20 is the purpose of Misc/NEWS. Some changes I consider too small
21 or esoteric to include. If such a change is added to the text,
22 I'll just remove it. (This is another reason you shouldn't spend
23 too much time on writing your addition.)
24
25 * If you want to draw your new text to the attention of the
26 maintainer, add 'XXX' to the beginning of the paragraph or
27 section.
28
29 * It's OK to just add a fragmentary note about a change. For
30 example: "XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the
31 socket module." The maintainer will research the change and
32 write the necessary text.
33
34 * You can comment out your additions if you like, but it's not
35 necessary (especially when a final release is some months away).
36
37 * Credit the author of a patch or bugfix. Just the name is
38 sufficient; the e-mail address isn't necessary.
39
40 * It's helpful to add the bug/patch number as a comment:
41
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +000042 XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the socket
43 module.
Éric Araujob07b97f2011-10-05 01:03:34 +020044 (Contributed by P.Y. Developer in :issue:`12345`.)
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +000045
Éric Araujob07b97f2011-10-05 01:03:34 +020046 This saves the maintainer the effort of going through the Mercurial log
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +000047 when researching a change.
48
49This article explains the new features in Python 3.3, compared to 3.2.
50
Georg Brandl988049a2012-06-24 18:12:24 +020051.. note:: Beta users should be aware that this document is currently in
Nick Coghlanb47b5392012-05-26 01:31:25 +100052 draft form. It will be updated substantially as Python 3.3 moves towards
53 release, so it's worth checking back even after reading earlier versions.
54
55
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +020056Summary -- Release highlights
57=============================
Victor Stinner636130e2012-08-05 16:37:12 +020058
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +020059.. This section singles out the most important changes in Python 3.3.
60 Brevity is key.
Victor Stinner636130e2012-08-05 16:37:12 +020061
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +020062New syntax features:
Victor Stinner636130e2012-08-05 16:37:12 +020063
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +020064* New ``yield from`` expression for :ref:`generator delegation <pep-380>`.
65* The ``u'unicode'`` syntax is accepted again for :class:`str` objects.
Victor Stinner636130e2012-08-05 16:37:12 +020066
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +020067New library modules:
68
69* :mod:`faulthandler` (helps debugging low-level crashes)
70* :mod:`ipaddress` (high-level objects representing IP addresses and masks)
71* :mod:`lzma` (compress data using the XZ / LZMA algorithm)
72* :mod:`venv` (Python :ref:`virtual environments <pep-405>`, as in the
73 popular ``virtualenv`` package)
74
75New built-in features:
76
77* Reworked :ref:`I/O exception hierarchy <pep-3151>`.
78
79Implementation improvements:
80
81* Rewritten :ref:`import machinery <importlib>` based on :mod:`importlib`.
82* More compact :ref:`unicode strings <pep-393>`.
83* More compact :ref:`attribute dictionaries <pep-412>`.
84
85Security improvements:
86
87* Hash randomization is switched on by default.
88
89Please read on for a comprehensive list of user-facing changes.
90
91
92.. _pep-405:
Victor Stinner636130e2012-08-05 16:37:12 +020093
Éric Araujo859aad62012-06-24 00:07:41 -040094PEP 405: Virtual Environments
95=============================
Nick Coghlanb47b5392012-05-26 01:31:25 +100096
Antoine Pitroua5e57972012-08-21 01:08:17 +020097:pep:`405` - Python Virtual Environments
98 PEP written by Carl Meyer, implemented by Carl Meyer and Vinay Sajip.
Nick Coghlanb47b5392012-05-26 01:31:25 +100099
Antoine Pitroua5e57972012-08-21 01:08:17 +0200100Virtual environments help create separate Python setups while sharing a
101system-wide base install, for ease of maintenance. Virtual environments
102have their own set of private site packages (i.e. locally-installed
103libraries), and are optionally segregated from the system-wide site
104packages. Their concept and implementation are inspired by the popular
105``virtualenv`` third-party package, but benefit from tighter integration
106with the interpreter core.
Éric Araujo859aad62012-06-24 00:07:41 -0400107
Antoine Pitroua5e57972012-08-21 01:08:17 +0200108This PEP adds the :mod:`venv` module for programmatic access, and the
109:ref:`pyvenv <scripts-pyvenv>` script for command-line access and
110administration. The Python interpreter becomes aware of a ``pvenv.cfg``
111file whose existence signals the base of a virtual environment's directory
112tree.
Nick Coghlanb47b5392012-05-26 01:31:25 +1000113
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +0000114
Éric Araujo859aad62012-06-24 00:07:41 -0400115PEP 420: Namespace Packages
116===========================
117
118Native support for package directories that don't require ``__init__.py``
119marker files and can automatically span multiple path segments (inspired by
120various third party approaches to namespace packages, as described in
121:pep:`420`)
122
123
124.. _pep-3118-update:
Nick Coghlan98e20702012-03-06 21:50:13 +1000125
Stefan Krah9a2d99e2012-02-25 12:24:21 +0100126PEP 3118: New memoryview implementation and buffer protocol documentation
127=========================================================================
128
129:issue:`10181` - memoryview bug fixes and features.
130 Written by Stefan Krah.
131
132The new memoryview implementation comprehensively fixes all ownership and
133lifetime issues of dynamically allocated fields in the Py_buffer struct
134that led to multiple crash reports. Additionally, several functions that
135crashed or returned incorrect results for non-contiguous or multi-dimensional
136input have been fixed.
137
138The memoryview object now has a PEP-3118 compliant getbufferproc()
139that checks the consumer's request type. Many new features have been
140added, most of them work in full generality for non-contiguous arrays
141and arrays with suboffsets.
142
143The documentation has been updated, clearly spelling out responsibilities
144for both exporters and consumers. Buffer request flags are grouped into
145basic and compound flags. The memory layout of non-contiguous and
146multi-dimensional NumPy-style arrays is explained.
147
148Features
149--------
150
151* All native single character format specifiers in struct module syntax
152 (optionally prefixed with '@') are now supported.
153
154* With some restrictions, the cast() method allows changing of format and
155 shape of C-contiguous arrays.
156
157* Multi-dimensional list representations are supported for any array type.
158
159* Multi-dimensional comparisons are supported for any array type.
160
Stefan Krah9e31d362012-09-08 15:35:01 +0200161* One-dimensional memoryviews of hashable (read-only) types with formats B,
162 b or c are now hashable. (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`13411`)
Nick Coghlan98e20702012-03-06 21:50:13 +1000163
Stefan Krah9a2d99e2012-02-25 12:24:21 +0100164* Arbitrary slicing of any 1-D arrays type is supported. For example, it
165 is now possible to reverse a memoryview in O(1) by using a negative step.
166
167API changes
168-----------
169
170* The maximum number of dimensions is officially limited to 64.
171
172* The representation of empty shape, strides and suboffsets is now
173 an empty tuple instead of None.
174
175* Accessing a memoryview element with format 'B' (unsigned bytes)
176 now returns an integer (in accordance with the struct module syntax).
177 For returning a bytes object the view must be cast to 'c' first.
178
Nick Coghlan06e1ab02012-08-25 17:59:50 +1000179* memoryview comparisons now use the logical structure of the operands
180 and compare all array elements by value. All format strings in struct
181 module syntax are supported. Views with unrecognised format strings
182 are still permitted, but will always compare as unequal, regardless
183 of view contents.
184
Stefan Krah54c32032012-02-29 17:47:21 +0100185* For further changes see `Build and C API Changes`_ and `Porting C code`_ .
Stefan Krah9a2d99e2012-02-25 12:24:21 +0100186
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +0200187.. _pep-393:
188
Ezio Melotti48a2f8f2011-09-29 00:18:19 +0300189PEP 393: Flexible String Representation
190=======================================
191
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200192The Unicode string type is changed to support multiple internal
193representations, depending on the character with the largest Unicode ordinal
194(1, 2, or 4 bytes) in the represented string. This allows a space-efficient
195representation in common cases, but gives access to full UCS-4 on all
196systems. For compatibility with existing APIs, several representations may
197exist in parallel; over time, this compatibility should be phased out.
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300198
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200199On the Python side, there should be no downside to this change.
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300200
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200201On the C API side, PEP 393 is fully backward compatible. The legacy API
202should remain available at least five years. Applications using the legacy
203API will not fully benefit of the memory reduction, or - worse - may use
204a bit more memory, because Python may have to maintain two versions of each
205string (in the legacy format and in the new efficient storage).
206
Antoine Pitrou0599b5b2011-11-29 22:45:07 +0100207Functionality
208-------------
209
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200210Changes introduced by :pep:`393` are the following:
Ezio Melotti48a2f8f2011-09-29 00:18:19 +0300211
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300212* Python now always supports the full range of Unicode codepoints, including
213 non-BMP ones (i.e. from ``U+0000`` to ``U+10FFFF``). The distinction between
214 narrow and wide builds no longer exists and Python now behaves like a wide
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200215 build, even under Windows.
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300216
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200217* With the death of narrow builds, the problems specific to narrow builds have
218 also been fixed, for example:
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300219
220 * :func:`len` now always returns 1 for non-BMP characters,
221 so ``len('\U0010FFFF') == 1``;
222
223 * surrogate pairs are not recombined in string literals,
224 so ``'\uDBFF\uDFFF' != '\U0010FFFF'``;
225
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200226 * indexing or slicing non-BMP characters returns the expected value,
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300227 so ``'\U0010FFFF'[0]`` now returns ``'\U0010FFFF'`` and not ``'\uDBFF'``;
228
Antoine Pitroud136aec2011-11-17 01:48:06 +0100229 * all other functions in the standard library now correctly handle
Antoine Pitroufd9b4162011-10-24 00:14:43 +0200230 non-BMP codepoints.
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300231
Ezio Melotti48a2f8f2011-09-29 00:18:19 +0300232* The value of :data:`sys.maxunicode` is now always ``1114111`` (``0x10FFFF``
233 in hexadecimal). The :c:func:`PyUnicode_GetMax` function still returns
234 either ``0xFFFF`` or ``0x10FFFF`` for backward compatibility, and it should
235 not be used with the new Unicode API (see :issue:`13054`).
236
Ezio Melotti397546a2011-09-29 08:34:36 +0300237* The :file:`./configure` flag ``--with-wide-unicode`` has been removed.
Victor Stinner7d637ab2011-09-29 02:56:16 +0200238
Antoine Pitrou0599b5b2011-11-29 22:45:07 +0100239Performance and resource usage
240------------------------------
241
242The storage of Unicode strings now depends on the highest codepoint in the string:
243
244* pure ASCII and Latin1 strings (``U+0000-U+00FF``) use 1 byte per codepoint;
245
246* BMP strings (``U+0000-U+FFFF``) use 2 bytes per codepoint;
247
248* non-BMP strings (``U+10000-U+10FFFF``) use 4 bytes per codepoint.
249
Martin v. Löwisde157cc2012-03-06 08:42:17 +0100250The net effect is that for most applications, memory usage of string
251storage should decrease significantly - especially compared to former
252wide unicode builds - as, in many cases, strings will be pure ASCII
253even in international contexts (because many strings store non-human
254language data, such as XML fragments, HTTP headers, JSON-encoded data,
255etc.). We also hope that it will, for the same reasons, increase CPU
256cache efficiency on non-trivial applications. The memory usage of
257Python 3.3 is two to three times smaller than Python 3.2, and a little
258bit better than Python 2.7, on a Django benchmark (see the PEP for
259details).
Antoine Pitrou0599b5b2011-11-29 22:45:07 +0100260
Éric Araujob07b97f2011-10-05 01:03:34 +0200261
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +0200262.. _pep-3151:
263
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200264PEP 3151: Reworking the OS and IO exception hierarchy
265=====================================================
266
267:pep:`3151` - Reworking the OS and IO exception hierarchy
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200268 PEP written and implemented by Antoine Pitrou.
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200269
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200270The hierarchy of exceptions raised by operating system errors is now both
271simplified and finer-grained.
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200272
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200273You don't have to worry anymore about choosing the appropriate exception
274type between :exc:`OSError`, :exc:`IOError`, :exc:`EnvironmentError`,
275:exc:`WindowsError`, :exc:`mmap.error`, :exc:`socket.error` or
276:exc:`select.error`. All these exception types are now only one:
277:exc:`OSError`. The other names are kept as aliases for compatibility
278reasons.
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200279
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200280Also, it is now easier to catch a specific error condition. Instead of
281inspecting the ``errno`` attribute (or ``args[0]``) for a particular
282constant from the :mod:`errno` module, you can catch the adequate
283:exc:`OSError` subclass. The available subclasses are the following:
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200284
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200285* :exc:`BlockingIOError`
286* :exc:`ChildProcessError`
287* :exc:`ConnectionError`
288* :exc:`FileExistsError`
289* :exc:`FileNotFoundError`
290* :exc:`InterruptedError`
291* :exc:`IsADirectoryError`
292* :exc:`NotADirectoryError`
293* :exc:`PermissionError`
294* :exc:`ProcessLookupError`
295* :exc:`TimeoutError`
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200296
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200297And the :exc:`ConnectionError` itself has finer-grained subclasses:
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200298
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200299* :exc:`BrokenPipeError`
300* :exc:`ConnectionAbortedError`
301* :exc:`ConnectionRefusedError`
302* :exc:`ConnectionResetError`
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200303
304Thanks to the new exceptions, common usages of the :mod:`errno` can now be
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200305avoided. For example, the following code written for Python 3.2::
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200306
307 from errno import ENOENT, EACCES, EPERM
308
309 try:
310 with open("document.txt") as f:
311 content = f.read()
312 except IOError as err:
313 if err.errno == ENOENT:
314 print("document.txt file is missing")
315 elif err.errno in (EACCES, EPERM):
316 print("You are not allowed to read document.txt")
317 else:
318 raise
319
Antoine Pitrou01fd26c2011-10-24 00:07:02 +0200320can now be written without the :mod:`errno` import and without manual
321inspection of exception attributes::
Victor Stinnera1bf2982011-10-12 20:35:02 +0200322
323 try:
324 with open("document.txt") as f:
325 content = f.read()
326 except FileNotFoundError:
327 print("document.txt file is missing")
328 except PermissionError:
329 print("You are not allowed to read document.txt")
330
331
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +0200332.. _pep-380:
333
Nick Coghlan1f7ce622012-01-13 21:43:40 +1000334PEP 380: Syntax for Delegating to a Subgenerator
335================================================
336
Nick Coghlanab7bf212012-02-26 17:49:52 +1000337:pep:`380` - Syntax for Delegating to a Subgenerator
338 PEP written by Greg Ewing.
339
Nick Coghlan1f7ce622012-01-13 21:43:40 +1000340PEP 380 adds the ``yield from`` expression, allowing a generator to delegate
341part of its operations to another generator. This allows a section of code
342containing 'yield' to be factored out and placed in another generator.
343Additionally, the subgenerator is allowed to return with a value, and the
344value is made available to the delegating generator.
Nick Coghlanb9b281b2012-03-06 22:31:12 +1000345
Nick Coghlan1f7ce622012-01-13 21:43:40 +1000346While designed primarily for use in delegating to a subgenerator, the ``yield
347from`` expression actually allows delegation to arbitrary subiterators.
348
Nick Coghlanb9b281b2012-03-06 22:31:12 +1000349For simple iterators, ``yield from iterable`` is essentially just a shortened
350form of ``for item in iterable: yield item``::
351
352 >>> def g(x):
353 ... yield from range(x, 0, -1)
354 ... yield from range(x)
355 ...
356 >>> list(g(5))
357 [5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
358
359However, unlike an ordinary loop, ``yield from`` allows subgenerators to
360receive sent and thrown values directly from the calling scope, and
361return a final value to the outer generator::
362
363 >>> def accumulate(start=0):
364 ... tally = start
365 ... while 1:
366 ... next = yield
367 ... if next is None:
368 ... return tally
369 ... tally += next
370 ...
371 >>> def gather_tallies(tallies, start=0):
372 ... while 1:
373 ... tally = yield from accumulate()
374 ... tallies.append(tally)
375 ...
376 >>> tallies = []
377 >>> acc = gather_tallies(tallies)
378 >>> next(acc) # Ensure the accumulator is ready to accept values
379 >>> for i in range(10):
380 ... acc.send(i)
381 ...
382 >>> acc.send(None) # Finish the first tally
383 >>> for i in range(5):
384 ... acc.send(i)
385 ...
386 >>> acc.send(None) # Finish the second tally
387 >>> tallies
388 [45, 10]
389
390The main principle driving this change is to allow even generators that are
391designed to be used with the ``send`` and ``throw`` methods to be split into
392multiple subgenerators as easily as a single large function can be split into
393multiple subfunctions.
394
Nick Coghlan1f7ce622012-01-13 21:43:40 +1000395(Implementation by Greg Ewing, integrated into 3.3 by Renaud Blanch, Ryan
396Kelly and Nick Coghlan, documentation by Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek and
397Nick Coghlan)
398
399
Nick Coghlanab7bf212012-02-26 17:49:52 +1000400PEP 409: Suppressing exception context
401======================================
402
403:pep:`409` - Suppressing exception context
404 PEP written by Ethan Furman, implemented by Ethan Furman and Nick Coghlan.
405
406PEP 409 introduces new syntax that allows the display of the chained
407exception context to be disabled. This allows cleaner error messages in
408applications that convert between exception types::
409
410 >>> class D:
411 ... def __init__(self, extra):
412 ... self._extra_attributes = extra
413 ... def __getattr__(self, attr):
414 ... try:
415 ... return self._extra_attributes[attr]
416 ... except KeyError:
417 ... raise AttributeError(attr) from None
418 ...
419 >>> D({}).x
420 Traceback (most recent call last):
421 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
422 File "<stdin>", line 8, in __getattr__
423 AttributeError: x
424
425Without the ``from None`` suffix to suppress the cause, the original
426exception would be displayed by default::
427
428 >>> class C:
429 ... def __init__(self, extra):
430 ... self._extra_attributes = extra
431 ... def __getattr__(self, attr):
432 ... try:
433 ... return self._extra_attributes[attr]
434 ... except KeyError:
435 ... raise AttributeError(attr)
436 ...
437 >>> C({}).x
438 Traceback (most recent call last):
439 File "<stdin>", line 6, in __getattr__
440 KeyError: 'x'
441
442 During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
443
444 Traceback (most recent call last):
445 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
446 File "<stdin>", line 8, in __getattr__
447 AttributeError: x
448
449No debugging capability is lost, as the original exception context remains
450available if needed (for example, if an intervening library has incorrectly
451suppressed valuable underlying details)::
452
453 >>> try:
454 ... D({}).x
455 ... except AttributeError as exc:
456 ... print(repr(exc.__context__))
457 ...
458 KeyError('x',)
459
460
Nick Coghlan98e20702012-03-06 21:50:13 +1000461PEP 414: Explicit Unicode literals
462======================================
463
464:pep:`414` - Explicit Unicode literals
465 PEP written by Armin Ronacher.
466
467To ease the transition from Python 2 for Unicode aware Python applications
468that make heavy use of Unicode literals, Python 3.3 once again supports the
469"``u``" prefix for string literals. This prefix has no semantic significance
470in Python 3, it is provided solely to reduce the number of purely mechanical
471changes in migrating to Python 3, making it easier for developers to focus on
472the more significant semantic changes (such as the stricter default
473separation of binary and text data).
474
475
Antoine Pitrou6bbd76b2011-11-25 19:10:05 +0100476PEP 3155: Qualified name for classes and functions
477==================================================
478
479:pep:`3155` - Qualified name for classes and functions
480 PEP written and implemented by Antoine Pitrou.
481
482Functions and class objects have a new ``__qualname__`` attribute representing
483the "path" from the module top-level to their definition. For global functions
484and classes, this is the same as ``__name__``. For other functions and classes,
485it provides better information about where they were actually defined, and
486how they might be accessible from the global scope.
487
488Example with (non-bound) methods::
Nick Coghlan2dfe6b02012-01-14 14:19:49 +1000489
Antoine Pitrou6bbd76b2011-11-25 19:10:05 +0100490 >>> class C:
491 ... def meth(self):
492 ... pass
493 >>> C.meth.__name__
494 'meth'
495 >>> C.meth.__qualname__
496 'C.meth'
497
498Example with nested classes::
499
500 >>> class C:
501 ... class D:
502 ... def meth(self):
503 ... pass
504 ...
505 >>> C.D.__name__
506 'D'
507 >>> C.D.__qualname__
508 'C.D'
509 >>> C.D.meth.__name__
510 'meth'
511 >>> C.D.meth.__qualname__
512 'C.D.meth'
513
514Example with nested functions::
515
516 >>> def outer():
517 ... def inner():
518 ... pass
519 ... return inner
520 ...
521 >>> outer().__name__
522 'inner'
523 >>> outer().__qualname__
524 'outer.<locals>.inner'
525
Antoine Pitroue7ede062011-11-25 19:11:26 +0100526The string representation of those objects is also changed to include the
Antoine Pitrou6bbd76b2011-11-25 19:10:05 +0100527new, more precise information::
528
529 >>> str(C.D)
530 "<class '__main__.C.D'>"
531 >>> str(C.D.meth)
532 '<function C.D.meth at 0x7f46b9fe31e0>'
533
534
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +0200535.. _pep-412:
536
Antoine Pitroud94adb72012-07-07 17:33:42 +0200537PEP 412: Key-Sharing Dictionary
538===============================
539
540:pep:`412` - Key-Sharing Dictionary
541 PEP written and implemented by Mark Shannon.
542
543Dictionaries used for the storage of objects' attributes are now able to
544share part of their internal storage between each other (namely, the part
545which stores the keys and their respective hashes). This reduces the memory
546consumption of programs creating many instances of non-builtin types.
547
548
Andrew Svetlovac23c9e2012-08-13 21:27:56 +0300549PEP 362: Function Signature Object
550==================================
551
552:pep:`362`: - Function Signature Object
553 PEP written by Brett Cannon, Yury Selivanov, Larry Hastings, Jiwon Seo.
554 Implemented by Yury Selivanov.
555
556A new function :func:`inspect.signature` makes introspection of python
557callables easy and straightforward. A broad range of callables is supported:
558python functions, decorated or not, classes, and :func:`functools.partial`
559objects. New classes :class:`inspect.Signature`, :class:`inspect.Parameter`
560and :class:`inspect.BoundArguments` hold information about the call signatures,
561such as, annotations, default values, parameters kinds, and bound arguments,
562which considerably simplifies writing decorators and any code that validates
563or amends calling signatures or arguments.
564
565
Antoine Pitrouc907de92012-08-21 00:53:06 +0200566.. _importlib:
567
Brett Cannonc2043482012-04-29 20:59:41 -0400568Using importlib as the Implementation of Import
569===============================================
570:issue:`2377` - Replace __import__ w/ importlib.__import__
571:issue:`13959` - Re-implement parts of :mod:`imp` in pure Python
572:issue:`14605` - Make import machinery explicit
573:issue:`14646` - Require loaders set __loader__ and __package__
574
575(Written by Brett Cannon)
576
577The :func:`__import__` function is now powered by :func:`importlib.__import__`.
578This work leads to the completion of "phase 2" of :pep:`302`. There are
579multiple benefits to this change. First, it has allowed for more of the
580machinery powering import to be exposed instead of being implicit and hidden
581within the C code. It also provides a single implementation for all Python VMs
582supporting Python 3.3 to use, helping to end any VM-specific deviations in
583import semantics. And finally it eases the maintenance of import, allowing for
584future growth to occur.
585
586For the common user, this change should result in no visible change in
587semantics. Any possible changes required in one's code to handle this change
588should read the `Porting Python code`_ section of this document to see what
589needs to be changed, but it will only affect those that currently manipulate
590import or try calling it programmatically.
591
592New APIs
593--------
594One of the large benefits of this work is the exposure of what goes into
595making the import statement work. That means the various importers that were
596once implicit are now fully exposed as part of the :mod:`importlib` package.
597
Brett Cannon077ef452012-08-02 17:50:06 -0400598The abstract base classes defined in :mod:`importlib.abc` have been expanded
599to properly delineate between :term:`meta path finders <meta path finder>`
600and :term:`path entry finders <path entry finder>` by introducing
601:class:`importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder` and
602:class:`importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder`, respectively. The old ABC of
603:class:`importlib.abc.Finder` is now only provided for backwards-compatibility
604and does not enforce any method requirements.
605
606In terms of finders, :class:`importlib.machinery.FileFinder` exposes the
Brett Cannonc2043482012-04-29 20:59:41 -0400607mechanism used to search for source and bytecode files of a module. Previously
608this class was an implicit member of :attr:`sys.path_hooks`.
609
610For loaders, the new abstract base class :class:`importlib.abc.FileLoader` helps
611write a loader that uses the file system as the storage mechanism for a module's
612code. The loader for source files
613(:class:`importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader`), sourceless bytecode files
614(:class:`importlib.machinery.SourcelessFileLoader`), and extension modules
615(:class:`importlib.machinery.ExtensionFileLoader`) are now available for
616direct use.
617
618:exc:`ImportError` now has ``name`` and ``path`` attributes which are set when
619there is relevant data to provide. The message for failed imports will also
620provide the full name of the module now instead of just the tail end of the
621module's name.
622
623The :func:`importlib.invalidate_caches` function will now call the method with
624the same name on all finders cached in :attr:`sys.path_importer_cache` to help
625clean up any stored state as necessary.
626
627Visible Changes
628---------------
629[For potential required changes to code, see the `Porting Python code`_
630section]
631
632Beyond the expanse of what :mod:`importlib` now exposes, there are other
633visible changes to import. The biggest is that :attr:`sys.meta_path` and
Brett Cannon077ef452012-08-02 17:50:06 -0400634:attr:`sys.path_hooks` now store all of the meta path finders and path entry
635hooks used by import. Previously the finders were implicit and hidden within
636the C code of import instead of being directly exposed. This means that one can
637now easily remove or change the order of the various finders to fit one's needs.
Brett Cannonc2043482012-04-29 20:59:41 -0400638
639Another change is that all modules have a ``__loader__`` attribute, storing the
640loader used to create the module. :pep:`302` has been updated to make this
641attribute mandatory for loaders to implement, so in the future once 3rd-party
642loaders have been updated people will be able to rely on the existence of the
643attribute. Until such time, though, import is setting the module post-load.
644
645Loaders are also now expected to set the ``__package__`` attribute from
646:pep:`366`. Once again, import itself is already setting this on all loaders
647from :mod:`importlib` and import itself is setting the attribute post-load.
648
649``None`` is now inserted into :attr:`sys.path_importer_cache` when no finder
650can be found on :attr:`sys.path_hooks`. Since :class:`imp.NullImporter` is not
651directly exposed on :attr:`sys.path_hooks` it could no longer be relied upon to
652always be available to use as a value representing no finder found.
653
654All other changes relate to semantic changes which should be taken into
655consideration when updating code for Python 3.3, and thus should be read about
656in the `Porting Python code`_ section of this document.
657
658
R David Murray0fa2edd2012-05-25 17:59:56 -0400659New Email Package Features
660==========================
661
R David Murraycb448cf2012-05-25 22:25:56 -0400662Policy Framework
663----------------
664
R David Murray0fa2edd2012-05-25 17:59:56 -0400665The email package now has a :mod:`~email.policy` framework. A
666:class:`~email.policy.Policy` is an object with several methods and properties
667that control how the email package behaves. The primary policy for Python 3.3
668is the :class:`~email.policy.Compat32` policy, which provides backward
669compatibility with the email package in Python 3.2. A ``policy`` can be
670specified when an email message is parsed by a :mod:`~email.parser`, or when a
671:class:`~email.message.Message` object is created, or when an email is
672serialized using a :mod:`~email.generator`. Unless overridden, a policy passed
673to a ``parser`` is inherited by all the ``Message`` object and sub-objects
674created by the ``parser``. By default a ``generator`` will use the policy of
675the ``Message`` object it is serializing. The default policy is
676:data:`~email.policy.compat32`.
677
678The minimum set of controls implemented by all ``policy`` objects are:
679
680 =============== =======================================================
681 max_line_length The maximum length, excluding the linesep character(s),
682 individual lines may have when a ``Message`` is
683 serialized. Defaults to 78.
684
685 linesep The character used to separate individual lines when a
686 ``Message`` is serialized. Defaults to ``\n``.
687
688 cte_type ``7bit`` or ``8bit``. ``8bit`` applies only to a
689 ``Bytes`` ``generator``, and means that non-ASCII may
690 be used where allowed by the protocol (or where it
691 exists in the original input).
692
693 raise_on_defect Causes a ``parser`` to raise error when defects are
694 encountered instead of adding them to the ``Message``
695 object's ``defects`` list.
696 =============== =======================================================
697
698A new policy instance, with new settings, is created using the
699:meth:`~email.policy.Policy.clone` method of policy objects. ``clone`` takes
700any of the above controls as keyword arguments. Any control not specified in
701the call retains its default value. Thus you can create a policy that uses
702``\r\n`` linesep characters like this::
703
Georg Brandl3539afd2012-05-30 22:03:20 +0200704 mypolicy = compat32.clone(linesep='\r\n')
R David Murray0fa2edd2012-05-25 17:59:56 -0400705
706Policies can be used to make the generation of messages in the format needed by
707your application simpler. Instead of having to remember to specify
708``linesep='\r\n'`` in all the places you call a ``generator``, you can specify
709it once, when you set the policy used by the ``parser`` or the ``Message``,
710whichever your program uses to create ``Message`` objects. On the other hand,
711if you need to generate messages in multiple forms, you can still specify the
712parameters in the appropriate ``generator`` call. Or you can have custom
713policy instances for your different cases, and pass those in when you create
714the ``generator``.
715
716
R David Murraycb448cf2012-05-25 22:25:56 -0400717Provisional Policy with New Header API
718--------------------------------------
719
720While the policy framework is worthwhile all by itself, the main motivation for
721introducing it is to allow the creation of new policies that implement new
722features for the email package in a way that maintains backward compatibility
723for those who do not use the new policies. Because the new policies introduce a
724new API, we are releasing them in Python 3.3 as a :term:`provisional policy
725<provisional package>`. Backwards incompatible changes (up to and including
726removal of the code) may occur if deemed necessary by the core developers.
727
728The new policies are instances of :class:`~email.policy.EmailPolicy`,
729and add the following additional controls:
730
731 =============== =======================================================
732 refold_source Controls whether or not headers parsed by a
733 :mod:`~email.parser` are refolded by the
734 :mod:`~email.generator`. It can be ``none``, ``long``,
735 or ``all``. The default is ``long``, which means that
736 source headers with a line longer than
737 ``max_line_length`` get refolded. ``none`` means no
738 line get refolded, and ``all`` means that all lines
739 get refolded.
740
741 header_factory A callable that take a ``name`` and ``value`` and
742 produces a custom header object.
743 =============== =======================================================
744
745The ``header_factory`` is the key to the new features provided by the new
746policies. When one of the new policies is used, any header retrieved from
747a ``Message`` object is an object produced by the ``header_factory``, and any
748time you set a header on a ``Message`` it becomes an object produced by
749``header_factory``. All such header objects have a ``name`` attribute equal
750to the header name. Address and Date headers have additional attributes
751that give you access to the parsed data of the header. This means you can now
752do things like this::
753
754 >>> m = Message(policy=SMTP)
755 >>> m['To'] = 'Éric <foo@example.com>'
756 >>> m['to']
757 'Éric <foo@example.com>'
758 >>> m['to'].addresses
759 (Address(display_name='Éric', username='foo', domain='example.com'),)
760 >>> m['to'].addresses[0].username
761 'foo'
762 >>> m['to'].addresses[0].display_name
763 'Éric'
764 >>> m['Date'] = email.utils.localtime()
765 >>> m['Date'].datetime
766 datetime.datetime(2012, 5, 25, 21, 39, 24, 465484, tzinfo=datetime.timezone(datetime.timedelta(-1, 72000), 'EDT'))
767 >>> m['Date']
768 'Fri, 25 May 2012 21:44:27 -0400'
769 >>> print(m)
770 To: =?utf-8?q?=C3=89ric?= <foo@example.com>
771 Date: Fri, 25 May 2012 21:44:27 -0400
772
773You will note that the unicode display name is automatically encoded as
774``utf-8`` when the message is serialized, but that when the header is accessed
775directly, you get the unicode version. This eliminates any need to deal with
776the :mod:`email.header` :meth:`~email.header.decode_header` or
777:meth:`~email.header.make_header` functions.
778
779You can also create addresses from parts::
780
781 >>> m['cc'] = [Group('pals', [Address('Bob', 'bob', 'example.com'),
782 ... Address('Sally', 'sally', 'example.com')]),
783 ... Address('Bonzo', addr_spec='bonz@laugh.com')]
784 >>> print(m)
785 To: =?utf-8?q?=C3=89ric?= <foo@example.com>
786 Date: Fri, 25 May 2012 21:44:27 -0400
787 cc: pals: Bob <bob@example.com>, Sally <sally@example.com>;, Bonzo <bonz@laugh.com>
788
789Decoding to unicode is done automatically::
790
791 >>> m2 = message_from_string(str(m))
792 >>> m2['to']
793 'Éric <foo@example.com>'
794
795When you parse a message, you can use the ``addresses`` and ``groups``
796attributes of the header objects to access the groups and individual
797addresses::
798
799 >>> m2['cc'].addresses
800 (Address(display_name='Bob', username='bob', domain='example.com'), Address(display_name='Sally', username='sally', domain='example.com'), Address(display_name='Bonzo', username='bonz', domain='laugh.com'))
801 >>> m2['cc'].groups
802 (Group(display_name='pals', addresses=(Address(display_name='Bob', username='bob', domain='example.com'), Address(display_name='Sally', username='sally', domain='example.com')), Group(display_name=None, addresses=(Address(display_name='Bonzo', username='bonz', domain='laugh.com'),))
803
804In summary, if you use one of the new policies, header manipulation works the
805way it ought to: your application works with unicode strings, and the email
806package transparently encodes and decodes the unicode to and from the RFC
807standard Content Transfer Encodings.
808
809
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +0000810Other Language Changes
811======================
812
813Some smaller changes made to the core Python language are:
814
Antoine Pitrou7b578b32011-11-29 22:47:11 +0100815* Added support for Unicode name aliases and named sequences.
816 Both :func:`unicodedata.lookup()` and ``'\N{...}'`` now resolve name aliases,
817 and :func:`unicodedata.lookup()` resolves named sequences too.
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +0000818
Antoine Pitrou7b578b32011-11-29 22:47:11 +0100819 (Contributed by Ezio Melotti in :issue:`12753`)
Ezio Melotti931b8aa2011-10-21 21:57:36 +0300820
Antoine Pitrou7b578b32011-11-29 22:47:11 +0100821* Equality comparisons on :func:`range` objects now return a result reflecting
822 the equality of the underlying sequences generated by those range objects.
Ezio Melotti931b8aa2011-10-21 21:57:36 +0300823
Sandro Tosicd899122012-01-22 12:16:04 +0100824 (:issue:`13201`)
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +0000825
Antoine Pitrou7b578b32011-11-29 22:47:11 +0100826* The ``count()``, ``find()``, ``rfind()``, ``index()`` and ``rindex()``
827 methods of :class:`bytes` and :class:`bytearray` objects now accept an
828 integer between 0 and 255 as their first argument.
Mark Dickinson36645682011-10-23 19:53:01 +0100829
Petri Lehtinen6c3f1dd2012-06-26 10:23:07 +0300830 (Contributed by Petri Lehtinen in :issue:`12170`)
Mark Dickinson36645682011-10-23 19:53:01 +0100831
Eli Bendersky7add4ea2012-03-17 15:14:35 +0200832* New methods have been added to :class:`list` and :class:`bytearray`:
833 ``copy()`` and ``clear()``.
834
835 (:issue:`10516`)
Petri Lehtinen61ea8a02011-11-24 22:00:46 +0200836
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +0200837* Raw bytes literals can now be written ``rb"..."`` as well as ``br"..."``.
838 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`13748`.)
839
840* :meth:`dict.setdefault` now does only one lookup for the given key, making
841 it atomic when used with built-in types.
842 (Contributed by Filip Gruszczyński in :issue:`13521`.)
843
844
Benjamin Petersone50d6ab2012-04-03 00:52:18 -0400845.. XXX mention new error messages for passing wrong number of arguments to functions
846
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +0200847
Antoine Pitrou79341e72012-05-17 21:13:45 +0200848A Finer-Grained Import Lock
849===========================
850
851Previous versions of CPython have always relied on a global import lock.
852This led to unexpected annoyances, such as deadlocks when importing a module
853would trigger code execution in a different thread as a side-effect.
854Clumsy workarounds were sometimes employed, such as the
855:c:func:`PyImport_ImportModuleNoBlock` C API function.
856
857In Python 3.3, importing a module takes a per-module lock. This correctly
858serializes importation of a given module from multiple threads (preventing
859the exposure of incompletely initialized modules), while eliminating the
860aforementioned annoyances.
861
862(contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`9260`.)
863
864
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +0200865Builtin functions and types
866===========================
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +0200867
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +0200868* :func:`open` gets a new *opener* parameter: the underlying file descriptor
869 for the file object is then obtained by calling *opener* with (*file*,
870 *flags*). It can be used to use custom flags like :data:`os.O_CLOEXEC` for
871 example. The ``'x'`` mode was added: open for exclusive creation, failing if
872 the file already exists.
873* :func:`print`: added the *flush* keyword argument. If the *flush* keyword
874 argument is true, the stream is forcibly flushed.
875* :func:`hash`: hash randomization is enabled by default, see
876 :meth:`object.__hash__` and :envvar:`PYTHONHASHSEED`.
877* The :class:`str` type gets a new :meth:`~str.casefold` method: return a
878 casefolded copy of the string, casefolded strings may be used for caseless
879 matching. For example, ``'ß'.casefold()`` returns ``'ss'``.
Nick Coghlan273069c2012-08-20 17:14:07 +1000880* The sequence documentation has been substantially rewritten to better
881 explain the binary/text sequence distinction and to provide specific
882 documentation sections for the individual builtin sequence types
883 (:issue:`4966`)
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +0200884
Victor Stinner636130e2012-08-05 16:37:12 +0200885New Modules
886===========
887
888faulthandler
889------------
890
891This new debug module contains functions to dump Python tracebacks explicitly,
892on a fault (a crash like a segmentation fault), after a timeout, or on a user
893signal. Call :func:`faulthandler.enable` to install fault handlers for the
894:const:`SIGSEGV`, :const:`SIGFPE`, :const:`SIGABRT`, :const:`SIGBUS`, and
895:const:`SIGILL` signals. You can also enable them at startup by setting the
896:envvar:`PYTHONFAULTHANDLER` environment variable or by using :option:`-X`
897``faulthandler`` command line option.
898
899Example of a segmentation fault on Linux: ::
900
901 $ python -q -X faulthandler
902 >>> import ctypes
903 >>> ctypes.string_at(0)
904 Fatal Python error: Segmentation fault
905
906 Current thread 0x00007fb899f39700:
907 File "/home/python/cpython/Lib/ctypes/__init__.py", line 486 in string_at
908 File "<stdin>", line 1 in <module>
909 Segmentation fault
910
911
912ipaddress
913---------
914
915The new :mod:`ipaddress` module provides tools for creating and manipulating
916objects representing IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, networks and interfaces (i.e.
917an IP address associated with a specific IP subnet).
918
919(Contributed by Google and Peter Moody in :pep:`3144`)
920
921lzma
922----
923
924The newly-added :mod:`lzma` module provides data compression and decompression
925using the LZMA algorithm, including support for the ``.xz`` and ``.lzma``
926file formats.
927
928(Contributed by Nadeem Vawda and Per Øyvind Karlsen in :issue:`6715`)
929
930
931Improved Modules
932================
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +0000933
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +0100934abc
935---
936
937Improved support for abstract base classes containing descriptors composed with
938abstract methods. The recommended approach to declaring abstract descriptors is
939now to provide :attr:`__isabstractmethod__` as a dynamically updated
940property. The built-in descriptors have been updated accordingly.
941
942 * :class:`abc.abstractproperty` has been deprecated, use :class:`property`
943 with :func:`abc.abstractmethod` instead.
944 * :class:`abc.abstractclassmethod` has been deprecated, use
945 :class:`classmethod` with :func:`abc.abstractmethod` instead.
946 * :class:`abc.abstractstaticmethod` has been deprecated, use
947 :class:`staticmethod` with :func:`abc.abstractmethod` instead.
948
949(Contributed by Darren Dale in :issue:`11610`)
950
Meador Ingec5dbb3d2011-09-20 21:48:16 -0500951array
952-----
953
954The :mod:`array` module supports the :c:type:`long long` type using ``q`` and
955``Q`` type codes.
956
957(Contributed by Oren Tirosh and Hirokazu Yamamoto in :issue:`1172711`)
958
959
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +0200960base64, binascii
961----------------
962
963ASCII-only Unicode strings are now accepted by the decoding functions of the
964modern interface. For example, ``base64.b64decode('YWJj')`` returns ``b'abc'``.
965
966
Nadeem Vawdad7e5c6e2012-02-12 01:34:18 +0200967bz2
968---
969
970The :mod:`bz2` module has been rewritten from scratch. In the process, several
971new features have been added:
972
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +0200973* New :func:`bz2.open` function: open a bzip2-compressed file in binary or
974 text mode.
975
Nadeem Vawdad7e5c6e2012-02-12 01:34:18 +0200976* :class:`bz2.BZ2File` can now read from and write to arbitrary file-like
977 objects, by means of its constructor's *fileobj* argument.
978
979 (Contributed by Nadeem Vawda in :issue:`5863`)
980
981* :class:`bz2.BZ2File` and :func:`bz2.decompress` can now decompress
982 multi-stream inputs (such as those produced by the :program:`pbzip2` tool).
983 :class:`bz2.BZ2File` can now also be used to create this type of file, using
984 the ``'a'`` (append) mode.
985
986 (Contributed by Nir Aides in :issue:`1625`)
987
988* :class:`bz2.BZ2File` now implements all of the :class:`io.BufferedIOBase` API,
989 except for the :meth:`detach` and :meth:`truncate` methods.
990
991
Victor Stinner2cded9c2011-07-08 01:45:13 +0200992codecs
993------
994
Antoine Pitrou4f863432012-02-12 02:12:47 +0100995The :mod:`~encodings.mbcs` codec has been rewritten to handle correctly
Georg Brandlff962c52012-02-04 08:55:56 +0100996``replace`` and ``ignore`` error handlers on all Windows versions. The
997:mod:`~encodings.mbcs` codec now supports all error handlers, instead of only
998``replace`` to encode and ``ignore`` to decode.
Victor Stinner3a50e702011-10-18 21:21:00 +0200999
Georg Brandlff962c52012-02-04 08:55:56 +01001000A new Windows-only codec has been added: ``cp65001`` (:issue:`13216`). It is the
1001Windows code page 65001 (Windows UTF-8, ``CP_UTF8``). For example, it is used
1002by ``sys.stdout`` if the console output code page is set to cp65001 (e.g., using
1003``chcp 65001`` command).
Victor Stinner2f3ca9f2011-10-27 01:38:56 +02001004
Georg Brandlff962c52012-02-04 08:55:56 +01001005Multibyte CJK decoders now resynchronize faster. They only ignore the first
Georg Brandl6c0929b2011-07-09 11:43:33 +02001006byte of an invalid byte sequence. For example, ``b'\xff\n'.decode('gb2312',
1007'replace')`` now returns a ``\n`` after the replacement character.
Victor Stinner2cded9c2011-07-08 01:45:13 +02001008
Georg Brandl6c0929b2011-07-09 11:43:33 +02001009(:issue:`12016`)
Victor Stinner2cded9c2011-07-08 01:45:13 +02001010
Georg Brandlff962c52012-02-04 08:55:56 +01001011Incremental CJK codec encoders are no longer reset at each call to their
1012encode() methods. For example::
Victor Stinner2cded9c2011-07-08 01:45:13 +02001013
1014 $ ./python -q
1015 >>> import codecs
1016 >>> encoder = codecs.getincrementalencoder('hz')('strict')
1017 >>> b''.join(encoder.encode(x) for x in '\u52ff\u65bd\u65bc\u4eba\u3002 Bye.')
1018 b'~{NpJ)l6HK!#~} Bye.'
1019
Georg Brandl6c0929b2011-07-09 11:43:33 +02001020This example gives ``b'~{Np~}~{J)~}~{l6~}~{HK~}~{!#~} Bye.'`` with older Python
Victor Stinner2cded9c2011-07-08 01:45:13 +02001021versions.
1022
Georg Brandl6c0929b2011-07-09 11:43:33 +02001023(:issue:`12100`)
Victor Stinner2cded9c2011-07-08 01:45:13 +02001024
Victor Stinner9f4b1e92011-11-10 20:56:30 +01001025The ``unicode_internal`` codec has been deprecated.
1026
Éric Araujo4f61a2d2012-04-04 23:01:01 -04001027
1028collections
1029-----------
1030
1031Addition of a new :class:`~collections.ChainMap` class to allow treating a
1032number of mappings as a single unit.
1033
1034(Written by Raymond Hettinger for :issue:`11089`, made public in
1035:issue:`11297`)
1036
1037The abstract base classes have been moved in a new :mod:`collections.abc`
1038module, to better differentiate between the abstract and the concrete
1039collections classes. Aliases for ABCs are still present in the
1040:mod:`collections` module to preserve existing imports.
1041
1042(:issue:`11085`)
1043
1044.. XXX addition of __slots__ to ABCs not recorded here: internal detail
1045
1046
Nick Coghlan3267a302012-05-21 22:54:43 +10001047contextlib
1048----------
1049
1050:class:`~collections.ExitStack` now provides a solid foundation for
1051programmatic manipulation of context managers and similar cleanup
1052functionality. Unlike the previous ``contextlib.nested`` API (which was
1053deprecated and removed), the new API is designed to work correctly
1054regardless of whether context managers acquire their resources in
Nick Coghlan161ea6a2012-05-22 23:04:42 +10001055their ``__init__`` method (for example, file objects) or in their
Nick Coghlan3267a302012-05-21 22:54:43 +10001056``__enter__`` method (for example, synchronisation objects from the
1057:mod:`threading` module).
1058
1059(:issue:`13585`)
1060
1061
Éric Araujo84b8ed82011-08-29 21:42:47 +02001062crypt
1063-----
1064
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001065Addition of salt and modular crypt format (hashing method) and the :func:`~crypt.mksalt`
Victor Stinnerc78fb332011-09-21 03:35:44 +02001066function to the :mod:`crypt` module.
Éric Araujo84b8ed82011-08-29 21:42:47 +02001067
1068(:issue:`10924`)
1069
Victor Stinnera7878b72011-07-14 23:07:44 +02001070curses
1071------
1072
Victor Stinner0fdfceb2011-11-25 22:10:02 +01001073 * If the :mod:`curses` module is linked to the ncursesw library, use Unicode
1074 functions when Unicode strings or characters are passed (e.g.
1075 :c:func:`waddwstr`), and bytes functions otherwise (e.g. :c:func:`waddstr`).
1076 * Use the locale encoding instead of ``utf-8`` to encode Unicode strings.
1077 * :class:`curses.window` has a new :attr:`curses.window.encoding` attribute.
Victor Stinnerc78fb332011-09-21 03:35:44 +02001078 * The :class:`curses.window` class has a new :meth:`~curses.window.get_wch`
1079 method to get a wide character
1080 * The :mod:`curses` module has a new :meth:`~curses.unget_wch` function to
1081 push a wide character so the next :meth:`~curses.window.get_wch` will return
1082 it
Victor Stinnera7878b72011-07-14 23:07:44 +02001083
Victor Stinnerc78fb332011-09-21 03:35:44 +02001084(Contributed by Iñigo Serna in :issue:`6755`)
Victor Stinnera7878b72011-07-14 23:07:44 +02001085
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001086datetime
1087--------
1088
1089 * Equality comparisons between naive and aware :class:`~datetime.datetime`
1090 instances don't raise :exc:`TypeError`.
1091 * New :meth:`datetime.datetime.timestamp` method: Return POSIX timestamp
1092 corresponding to the :class:`~datetime.datetime` instance.
1093 * The :meth:`datetime.datetime.strftime` method supports formatting years
1094 older than 1000.
Alexander Belopolsky35d600c2012-08-22 23:14:29 -04001095 * XXX The :meth:`datetime.datetime.astimezone` method can now be
1096 called without arguments to convert datetime instance to the system
1097 timezone.
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001098
Stefan Krah1919b7e2012-03-21 18:25:23 +01001099decimal
1100-------
1101
1102:issue:`7652` - integrate fast native decimal arithmetic.
1103 C-module and libmpdec written by Stefan Krah.
1104
1105The new C version of the decimal module integrates the high speed libmpdec
Stefan Krahbf803082012-04-01 13:07:24 +02001106library for arbitrary precision correctly-rounded decimal floating point
1107arithmetic. libmpdec conforms to IBM's General Decimal Arithmetic Specification.
Stefan Krah1919b7e2012-03-21 18:25:23 +01001108
Stefan Krah0c0914e2012-04-09 20:31:15 +02001109Performance gains range from 10x for database applications to 100x for
Stefan Krahbf803082012-04-01 13:07:24 +02001110numerically intensive applications. These numbers are expected gains
1111for standard precisions used in decimal floating point arithmetic. Since
1112the precision is user configurable, the exact figures may vary. For example,
1113in integer bignum arithmetic the differences can be significantly higher.
1114
1115The following table is meant as an illustration. Benchmarks are available
Georg Brandl204e7892012-04-01 13:10:58 +02001116at http://www.bytereef.org/mpdecimal/quickstart.html.
Stefan Krah1919b7e2012-03-21 18:25:23 +01001117
1118 +---------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
1119 | | decimal.py | _decimal | speedup |
1120 +=========+=============+==============+=============+
Stefan Kraha3f4a162012-09-01 14:27:51 +02001121 | pi | 42.02s | 0.345s | 120x |
Stefan Krah1919b7e2012-03-21 18:25:23 +01001122 +---------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
1123 | telco | 172.19s | 5.68s | 30x |
1124 +---------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
1125 | psycopg | 3.57s | 0.29s | 12x |
1126 +---------+-------------+--------------+-------------+
1127
1128Features
1129~~~~~~~~
1130
1131* The :exc:`~decimal.FloatOperation` signal optionally enables stricter
1132 semantics for mixing floats and Decimals.
1133
1134* If Python is compiled without threads, the C version automatically
1135 disables the expensive thread local context machinery. In this case,
1136 the variable :data:`~decimal.HAVE_THREADS` is set to False.
1137
1138API changes
1139~~~~~~~~~~~
1140
1141* The C module has the following context limits, depending on the machine
1142 architecture:
1143
1144 +-------------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
1145 | | 32-bit | 64-bit |
1146 +===================+=====================+==============================+
1147 | :const:`MAX_PREC` | :const:`425000000` | :const:`999999999999999999` |
1148 +-------------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
1149 | :const:`MAX_EMAX` | :const:`425000000` | :const:`999999999999999999` |
1150 +-------------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
1151 | :const:`MIN_EMIN` | :const:`-425000000` | :const:`-999999999999999999` |
1152 +-------------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
1153
1154* In the context templates (:class:`~decimal.DefaultContext`,
1155 :class:`~decimal.BasicContext` and :class:`~decimal.ExtendedContext`)
1156 the magnitude of :attr:`~decimal.Context.Emax` and
1157 :attr:`~decimal.Context.Emin` has changed to :const:`999999`.
1158
1159* The :class:`~decimal.Decimal` constructor in decimal.py does not observe
1160 the context limits and converts values with arbitrary exponents or precision
1161 exactly. Since the C version has internal limits, the following scheme is
1162 used: If possible, values are converted exactly, otherwise
1163 :exc:`~decimal.InvalidOperation` is raised and the result is NaN. In the
1164 latter case it is always possible to use :meth:`~decimal.Context.create_decimal`
1165 in order to obtain a rounded or inexact value.
1166
1167
1168* The power function in decimal.py is always correctly-rounded. In the
1169 C version, it is defined in terms of the correctly-rounded
1170 :meth:`~decimal.Decimal.exp` and :meth:`~decimal.Decimal.ln` functions,
1171 but the final result is only "almost always correctly rounded".
1172
1173
1174* In the C version, the context dictionary containing the signals is a
1175 :class:`~collections.abc.MutableMapping`. For speed reasons,
1176 :attr:`~decimal.Context.flags` and :attr:`~decimal.Context.traps` always
1177 refer to the same :class:`~collections.abc.MutableMapping` that the context
1178 was initialized with. If a new signal dictionary is assigned,
1179 :attr:`~decimal.Context.flags` and :attr:`~decimal.Context.traps`
1180 are updated with the new values, but they do not reference the RHS
1181 dictionary.
1182
1183
1184* Pickling a :class:`~decimal.Context` produces a different output in order
1185 to have a common interchange format for the Python and C versions.
1186
1187
1188* The order of arguments in the :class:`~decimal.Context` constructor has been
1189 changed to match the order displayed by :func:`repr`.
1190
1191
Stefan Krahaf3f3a72012-08-30 12:33:55 +02001192* The ``watchexp`` parameter in the :meth:`~decimal.Decimal.quantize` method
1193 is deprecated.
1194
1195
Victor Stinner811db3b2011-09-21 03:20:03 +02001196ftplib
1197------
1198
1199The :class:`~ftplib.FTP_TLS` class now provides a new
1200:func:`~ftplib.FTP_TLS.ccc` function to revert control channel back to
Florent Xicluna6d57d212011-10-23 22:23:57 +02001201plaintext. This can be useful to take advantage of firewalls that know how to
Victor Stinner811db3b2011-09-21 03:20:03 +02001202handle NAT with non-secure FTP without opening fixed ports.
1203
1204(Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`12139`)
1205
1206
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001207gc
1208--
1209
1210It is now possible to register callbacks invoked by the garbage collector
Georg Brandla81b4812012-08-11 08:43:59 +02001211before and after collection using the new :data:`~gc.callbacks` list.
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001212
1213
Christian Heimes31940372012-06-26 10:16:55 +02001214hmac
1215----
1216
1217A new :func:`~hmac.compare_digest` function has been added to prevent
1218side channel attacks on digests through timing analysis.
1219
1220(Contributed by Nick Coghlan and Christian Heimes in issue:`15061`)
1221
1222
Antoine Pitrou5a8bc6f2011-11-17 02:20:48 +01001223imaplib
1224-------
1225
1226The :class:`~imaplib.IMAP4_SSL` constructor now accepts an SSLContext
1227parameter to control parameters of the secure channel.
1228
1229(Contributed by Sijin Joseph in :issue:`8808`)
1230
1231
Nick Coghlan2f92e542012-06-23 19:39:55 +10001232inspect
1233-------
1234
1235A new :func:`~inspect.getclosurevars` function has been added. This function
1236reports the current binding of all names referenced from the function body and
1237where those names were resolved, making it easier to verify correct internal
1238state when testing code that relies on stateful closures.
1239
1240(Contributed by Meador Inge and Nick Coghlan in :issue:`13062`)
1241
Nick Coghlan04e2e3f2012-06-23 19:52:05 +10001242A new :func:`~inspect.getgeneratorlocals` function has been added. This
1243function reports the current binding of local variables in the generator's
1244stack frame, making it easier to verify correct internal state when testing
1245generators.
1246
1247(Contributed by Meador Inge in :issue:`15153`)
1248
Charles-François Natalidc3044c2012-01-09 22:40:02 +01001249io
1250--
1251
Charles-François Natalid612de12012-01-14 11:51:00 +01001252The :func:`~io.open` function has a new ``'x'`` mode that can be used to
1253exclusively create a new file, and raise a :exc:`FileExistsError` if the file
1254already exists. It is based on the C11 'x' mode to fopen().
Charles-François Natalidc3044c2012-01-09 22:40:02 +01001255
1256(Contributed by David Townshend in :issue:`12760`)
1257
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001258The constructor of the :class:`~io.TextIOWrapper` class has a new
1259*write_through* optional argument. If *write_through* is ``True``, calls to
1260:meth:`~io.TextIOWrapper.write` are guaranteed not to be buffered: any data
1261written on the :class:`~io.TextIOWrapper` object is immediately handled to its
1262underlying binary buffer.
1263
Charles-François Natalidc3044c2012-01-09 22:40:02 +01001264
Victor Stinnerfa0e3d52011-05-09 01:01:09 +02001265math
1266----
1267
1268The :mod:`math` module has a new function:
1269
1270 * :func:`~math.log2`: return the base-2 logarithm of *x*
1271 (Written by Mark Dickinson in :issue:`11888`).
1272
1273
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001274multiprocessing
1275---------------
1276
1277The new :func:`multiprocessing.connection.wait` function allows to poll
1278multiple objects (such as connections, sockets and pipes) with a timeout.
1279(Contributed by Richard Oudkerk in :issue:`12328`.)
1280
1281:class:`multiprocessing.Connection` objects can now be transferred over
1282multiprocessing connections.
1283(Contributed by Richard Oudkerk in :issue:`4892`.)
1284
1285
Victor Stinnerfa0e3d52011-05-09 01:01:09 +02001286nntplib
1287-------
1288
1289The :class:`nntplib.NNTP` class now supports the context manager protocol to
1290unconditionally consume :exc:`socket.error` exceptions and to close the NNTP
1291connection when done::
1292
1293 >>> from nntplib import NNTP
Ezio Melotti3c14b4e2011-07-13 11:44:44 +03001294 >>> with NNTP('news.gmane.org') as n:
Victor Stinnerfa0e3d52011-05-09 01:01:09 +02001295 ... n.group('gmane.comp.python.committers')
1296 ...
Ezio Melotti04f648c2011-07-26 09:37:46 +03001297 ('211 1755 1 1755 gmane.comp.python.committers', 1755, 1, 1755, 'gmane.comp.python.committers')
Victor Stinnerfa0e3d52011-05-09 01:01:09 +02001298 >>>
1299
1300(Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`9795`)
1301
1302
Giampaolo Rodolàc9c2c8b2011-02-25 14:39:16 +00001303os
1304--
1305
Charles-François Natalia003af12011-06-01 20:30:52 +02001306* The :mod:`os` module has a new :func:`~os.pipe2` function that makes it
1307 possible to create a pipe with :data:`~os.O_CLOEXEC` or
1308 :data:`~os.O_NONBLOCK` flags set atomically. This is especially useful to
1309 avoid race conditions in multi-threaded programs.
1310
Giampaolo Rodolà18e8bcb2011-02-25 20:57:54 +00001311* The :mod:`os` module has a new :func:`~os.sendfile` function which provides
1312 an efficent "zero-copy" way for copying data from one file (or socket)
1313 descriptor to another. The phrase "zero-copy" refers to the fact that all of
1314 the copying of data between the two descriptors is done entirely by the
1315 kernel, with no copying of data into userspace buffers. :func:`~os.sendfile`
1316 can be used to efficiently copy data from a file on disk to a network socket,
1317 e.g. for downloading a file.
Giampaolo Rodolàc9c2c8b2011-02-25 14:39:16 +00001318
Giampaolo Rodolà18e8bcb2011-02-25 20:57:54 +00001319 (Patch submitted by Ross Lagerwall and Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`10882`.)
1320
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001321* To avoid race conditions like symlink attacks and issues with temporary
1322 files and directories, it is more reliable (and also faster) to manipulate
1323 file descriptors instead of file names. Python 3.3 enhances existing functions
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001324 and introduces new functions to work on file descriptors (:issue:`4761`,
1325 :issue:`10755`).
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001326
1327 - The :mod:`os` module has a new :func:`~os.fwalk` function similar to
1328 :func:`~os.walk` except that it also yields file descriptors referring to the
1329 directories visited. This is especially useful to avoid symlink races.
1330
1331 - The following functions get new optional *dir_fd* (:ref:`paths relative to
1332 directory descriptors <dir_fd>`) and/or *follow_symlinks* (:ref:`not
1333 following symlinks <follow_symlinks>`):
1334 :func:`~os.access`, :func:`~os.chflags`, :func:`~os.chmod`, :func:`~os.chown`,
1335 :func:`~os.link`, :func:`~os.lstat`, :func:`~os.mkdir`, :func:`~os.mkfifo`,
1336 :func:`~os.mknod`, :func:`~os.open`, :func:`~os.readlink`, :func:`~os.remove`,
1337 :func:`~os.rename`, :func:`~os.replace`, :func:`~os.rmdir`, :func:`~os.stat`,
1338 :func:`~os.symlink`, :func:`~os.unlink`, :func:`~os.utime`.
1339
1340 - The following functions now support a file descriptor for their path argument:
1341 :func:`~os.chdir`, :func:`~os.chmod`, :func:`~os.chown`,
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001342 :func:`~os.execve`, :func:`~os.listdir`, :func:`~os.pathconf`, :func:`~os.path.exists`,
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001343 :func:`~os.stat`, :func:`~os.statvfs`, :func:`~os.utime`.
1344
Giampaolo Rodolà18e8bcb2011-02-25 20:57:54 +00001345* The :mod:`os` module has two new functions: :func:`~os.getpriority` and
1346 :func:`~os.setpriority`. They can be used to get or set process
1347 niceness/priority in a fashion similar to :func:`os.nice` but extended to all
1348 processes instead of just the current one.
1349
1350 (Patch submitted by Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`10784`.)
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001351
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001352* The new :func:`os.replace` function allows cross-platform renaming of a
1353 file with overwriting the destination. With :func:`os.rename`, an existing
1354 destination file is overwritten under POSIX, but raises an error under
1355 Windows.
1356 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`8828`.)
1357
1358* The new :func:`os.get_terminal_size` function queries the size of the
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001359 terminal attached to a file descriptor. See also
1360 :func:`shutil.get_terminal_size`.
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001361 (Contributed by Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek in :issue:`13609`.)
1362
Georg Brandldba3b5c2012-06-26 09:36:14 +02001363.. XXX sort out this mess after beta1
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001364
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001365* New functions to support Linux extended attributes (:issue:`12720`):
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001366 :func:`~os.getxattr`, :func:`~os.listxattr`, :func:`~os.removexattr`,
1367 :func:`~os.setxattr`.
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001368
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001369* New interface to the scheduler. These functions
1370 control how a process is allocated CPU time by the operating system. New
1371 functions:
1372 :func:`~os.sched_get_priority_max`, :func:`~os.sched_get_priority_min`,
1373 :func:`~os.sched_getaffinity`, :func:`~os.sched_getparam`,
1374 :func:`~os.sched_getscheduler`, :func:`~os.sched_rr_get_interval`,
1375 :func:`~os.sched_setaffinity`, :func:`~os.sched_setparam`,
1376 :func:`~os.sched_setscheduler`, :func:`~os.sched_yield`,
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001377
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001378* New functions to control the file system:
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001379
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001380 * :func:`~os.posix_fadvise`: Announces an intention to access data in a
1381 specific pattern thus allowing the kernel to make optimizations.
1382 * :func:`~os.posix_fallocate`: Ensures that enough disk space is allocated
1383 for a file.
1384 * :func:`~os.sync`: Force write of everything to disk.
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001385
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001386* Add some extra posix functions to the os module:
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001387
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001388 * :func:`~os.lockf`: Apply, test or remove a POSIX lock on an open file descriptor.
1389 * :func:`~os.pread`: Read from a file descriptor at an offset, the file
1390 offset remains unchanged.
1391 * :func:`~os.pwrite`: Write to a file descriptor from an offset, leaving
1392 the file offset unchanged.
1393 * :func:`~os.readv`: Read from a file descriptor into a number of writable buffers.
1394 * :func:`~os.truncate`: Truncate the file corresponding to *path*, so that
1395 it is at most *length* bytes in size.
1396 * :func:`~os.waitid`: Wait for the completion of one or more child processes.
1397 * :func:`~os.writev`: Write the contents of *buffers* to a file descriptor,
1398 where *buffers* is an arbitrary sequence of buffers.
1399 * :func:`~os.getgrouplist` (:issue:`9344`): Return list of group ids that
1400 specified user belongs to.
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001401
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001402* :func:`~os.times` and :func:`~os.uname`: Return type changed from a tuple to
1403 a tuple-like object with named attributes.
Victor Stinnere5064372011-10-14 00:08:29 +02001404
Giampaolo Rodolà424298a2011-03-03 18:34:06 +00001405
Georg Brandl4c7c3c52012-03-10 22:36:48 +01001406pdb
1407---
1408
1409* Tab-completion is now available not only for command names, but also their
1410 arguments. For example, for the ``break`` command, function and file names
1411 are completed. (Contributed by Georg Brandl in :issue:`14210`)
1412
1413
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001414pickle
1415------
1416
1417:class:`pickle.Pickler` objects now have an optional
1418:attr:`~pickle.Pickler.dispatch_table` attribute allowing to set per-pickler
1419reduction functions.
1420(Contributed by Richard Oudkerk in :issue:`14166`.)
1421
1422
Victor Stinner383c3fc2011-05-25 01:35:05 +02001423pydoc
1424-----
1425
Victor Stinner6daa33c2011-05-25 01:41:22 +02001426The Tk GUI and the :func:`~pydoc.serve` function have been removed from the
1427:mod:`pydoc` module: ``pydoc -g`` and :func:`~pydoc.serve` have been deprecated
1428in Python 3.2.
Victor Stinner383c3fc2011-05-25 01:35:05 +02001429
1430
Antoine Pitrouad09b5d2012-06-24 22:41:33 +02001431re
1432--
1433
1434:class:`str` regular expressions now support ``\u`` and ``\U`` escapes.
1435
1436(Contributed by Serhiy Storchaka in :issue:`3665`.)
1437
1438
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001439sched
1440-----
Victor Stinner754851f2011-04-19 23:58:51 +02001441
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001442* :meth:`~sched.scheduler.run` now accepts a *blocking* parameter which when
1443 set to False makes the method execute the scheduled events due to expire
1444 soonest (if any) and then return immediately.
1445 This is useful in case you want to use the :class:`~sched.scheduler` in
1446 non-blocking applications. (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`13449`)
Victor Stinner754851f2011-04-19 23:58:51 +02001447
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001448* :class:`~sched.scheduler` class can now be safely used in multi-threaded
1449 environments. (Contributed by Josiah Carlson and Giampaolo Rodolà in
1450 :issue:`8684`)
1451
1452* *timefunc* and *delayfunct* parameters of :class:`~sched.scheduler` class
1453 constructor are now optional and defaults to :func:`time.time` and
1454 :func:`time.sleep` respectively. (Contributed by Chris Clark in
1455 :issue:`13245`)
1456
1457* :meth:`~sched.scheduler.enter` and :meth:`~sched.scheduler.enterabs`
1458 *argument* parameter is now optional. (Contributed by Chris Clark in
1459 :issue:`13245`)
1460
1461* :meth:`~sched.scheduler.enter` and :meth:`~sched.scheduler.enterabs`
1462 now accept a *kwargs* parameter. (Contributed by Chris Clark in
1463 :issue:`13245`)
1464
1465
1466shutil
1467------
1468
1469* The :mod:`shutil` module has these new fuctions:
1470
1471 * :func:`~shutil.disk_usage`: provides total, used and free disk space
1472 statistics. (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`12442`)
1473 * :func:`~shutil.chown`: allows one to change user and/or group of the given
1474 path also specifying the user/group names and not only their numeric
1475 ids. (Contributed by Sandro Tosi in :issue:`12191`)
Victor Stinnera9293352011-04-30 15:21:58 +02001476
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001477* The new :func:`shutil.get_terminal_size` function returns the size of the
1478 terminal window the interpreter is attached to.
1479 (Contributed by Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek in :issue:`13609`.)
1480
1481* Several functions now take an optional ``symlinks`` argument: when that
1482 parameter is true, symlinks aren't dereferenced and the operation instead
1483 acts on the symlink itself (or creates one, if relevant).
1484 (Contributed by Hynek Schlawack in :issue:`12715`.)
1485
Nick Coghlan5b0eca12012-06-24 16:43:06 +10001486* :func:`~shutil.rmtree` is now resistant to symlink attacks on platforms
1487 which support the new ``dir_fd`` parameter in :func:`os.open` and
Georg Brandldba3b5c2012-06-26 09:36:14 +02001488 :func:`os.unlink`. (Contributed by Martin von Löwis and Hynek Schlawack
Nick Coghlan5b0eca12012-06-24 16:43:06 +10001489 in :issue:`4489`.)
1490
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001491
Victor Stinnerfa0e3d52011-05-09 01:01:09 +02001492
Victor Stinnera9293352011-04-30 15:21:58 +02001493signal
1494------
1495
Victor Stinnerfa0e3d52011-05-09 01:01:09 +02001496* The :mod:`signal` module has new functions:
Victor Stinnera9293352011-04-30 15:21:58 +02001497
Victor Stinnerb3e72192011-05-08 01:46:11 +02001498 * :func:`~signal.pthread_sigmask`: fetch and/or change the signal mask of the
1499 calling thread (Contributed by Jean-Paul Calderone in :issue:`8407`) ;
1500 * :func:`~signal.pthread_kill`: send a signal to a thread ;
1501 * :func:`~signal.sigpending`: examine pending functions ;
1502 * :func:`~signal.sigwait`: wait a signal.
Ross Lagerwallbc808222011-06-25 12:13:40 +02001503 * :func:`~signal.sigwaitinfo`: wait for a signal, returning detailed
1504 information about it.
1505 * :func:`~signal.sigtimedwait`: like :func:`~signal.sigwaitinfo` but with a
1506 timeout.
Victor Stinnera9293352011-04-30 15:21:58 +02001507
Victor Stinnerd49b1f12011-05-08 02:03:15 +02001508* The signal handler writes the signal number as a single byte instead of
1509 a nul byte into the wakeup file descriptor. So it is possible to wait more
1510 than one signal and know which signals were raised.
1511
Victor Stinner388196e2011-05-10 17:13:00 +02001512* :func:`signal.signal` and :func:`signal.siginterrupt` raise an OSError,
1513 instead of a RuntimeError: OSError has an errno attribute.
1514
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001515smtplib
1516-------
1517
1518The :class:`~smtplib.SMTP_SSL` constructor and the :meth:`~smtplib.SMTP.starttls`
1519method now accept an SSLContext parameter to control parameters of the secure
1520channel.
1521
1522(Contributed by Kasun Herath in :issue:`8809`)
1523
1524
Nick Coghlan96fe56a2011-08-22 11:55:57 +10001525socket
1526------
1527
Charles-François Natali47413c12011-10-06 19:47:44 +02001528* The :class:`~socket.socket` class now exposes additional methods to process
1529 ancillary data when supported by the underlying platform:
Nick Coghlan96fe56a2011-08-22 11:55:57 +10001530
Charles-François Natali47413c12011-10-06 19:47:44 +02001531 * :func:`~socket.socket.sendmsg`
1532 * :func:`~socket.socket.recvmsg`
1533 * :func:`~socket.socket.recvmsg_into`
Nick Coghlan96fe56a2011-08-22 11:55:57 +10001534
Charles-François Natali47413c12011-10-06 19:47:44 +02001535 (Contributed by David Watson in :issue:`6560`, based on an earlier patch by
1536 Heiko Wundram)
1537
1538* The :class:`~socket.socket` class now supports the PF_CAN protocol family
1539 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socketcan), on Linux
1540 (http://lwn.net/Articles/253425).
1541
1542 (Contributed by Matthias Fuchs, updated by Tiago Gonçalves in :issue:`10141`)
1543
Charles-François Natali10b8cf42011-11-10 19:21:37 +01001544* The :class:`~socket.socket` class now supports the PF_RDS protocol family
1545 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliable_Datagram_Sockets and
1546 http://oss.oracle.com/projects/rds/).
Victor Stinner754851f2011-04-19 23:58:51 +02001547
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001548
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +02001549ssl
1550---
1551
Antoine Pitrou2c0a9672011-11-17 02:09:13 +01001552* The :mod:`ssl` module has two new random generation functions:
Victor Stinner99c8b162011-05-24 12:05:19 +02001553
1554 * :func:`~ssl.RAND_bytes`: generate cryptographically strong
1555 pseudo-random bytes.
1556 * :func:`~ssl.RAND_pseudo_bytes`: generate pseudo-random bytes.
1557
Antoine Pitrou2c0a9672011-11-17 02:09:13 +01001558 (Contributed by Victor Stinner in :issue:`12049`)
1559
1560* The :mod:`ssl` module now exposes a finer-grained exception hierarchy
1561 in order to make it easier to inspect the various kinds of errors.
1562
1563 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`11183`)
1564
1565* :meth:`~ssl.SSLContext.load_cert_chain` now accepts a *password* argument
1566 to be used if the private key is encrypted.
1567
1568 (Contributed by Adam Simpkins in :issue:`12803`)
1569
Antoine Pitrou73fc8142011-12-23 20:58:36 +01001570* Diffie-Hellman key exchange, both regular and Elliptic Curve-based, is
1571 now supported through the :meth:`~ssl.SSLContext.load_dh_params` and
1572 :meth:`~ssl.SSLContext.set_ecdh_curve` methods.
1573
1574 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`13626` and :issue:`13627`)
1575
Antoine Pitrou2c0a9672011-11-17 02:09:13 +01001576* SSL sockets have a new :meth:`~ssl.SSLSocket.get_channel_binding` method
1577 allowing the implementation of certain authentication mechanisms such as
1578 SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS.
1579
1580 (Contributed by Jacek Konieczny in :issue:`12551`)
1581
Antoine Pitrou73fc8142011-12-23 20:58:36 +01001582* You can query the SSL compression algorithm used by an SSL socket, thanks
1583 to its new :meth:`~ssl.SSLSocket.compression` method.
1584
1585 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`13634`)
1586
Antoine Pitrou9a864472012-05-04 23:15:47 +02001587* Support has been added for the Next Procotol Negotiation extension using
1588 the :meth:`ssl.SSLContext.set_npn_protocols` method.
1589
1590 (Contributed by Colin Marc in :issue:`14204`)
1591
Antoine Pitrouad09b5d2012-06-24 22:41:33 +02001592* SSL errors can now be introspected more easily thanks to
1593 :attr:`~ssl.SSLError.library` and :attr:`~ssl.SSLError.reason` attributes.
1594
1595 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou in :issue:`14837`)
1596
Giampaolo Rodola'ffa1d0b2012-05-15 15:30:25 +02001597stat
1598----
1599
1600- The undocumented tarfile.filemode function has been moved to
1601 :func:`stat.filemode`. It can be used to convert a file's mode to a string of
1602 the form '-rwxrwxrwx'.
1603
1604 (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodolà in :issue:`14807`)
Antoine Pitrou73fc8142011-12-23 20:58:36 +01001605
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001606sys
1607---
Giampaolo Rodola'210e7ca2011-07-01 13:55:36 +02001608
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001609* The :mod:`sys` module has a new :data:`~sys.thread_info` :term:`struct
1610 sequence` holding informations about the thread implementation.
Giampaolo Rodola'210e7ca2011-07-01 13:55:36 +02001611
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001612 (:issue:`11223`)
Giampaolo Rodola'096dcb12011-06-27 11:17:51 +02001613
Nick Coghlan4fae8cd2012-06-11 23:07:51 +10001614textwrap
1615--------
1616
1617* The :mod:`textwrap` module has a new :func:`~textwrap.indent` that makes
1618 it straightforward to add a common prefix to selected lines in a block
1619 of text.
1620
1621 (:issue:`13857`)
Antoine Pitrou5a8bc6f2011-11-17 02:20:48 +01001622
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001623time
1624----
Antoine Pitrou5a8bc6f2011-11-17 02:20:48 +01001625
Victor Stinnerec895392012-04-29 02:41:27 +02001626The :pep:`418` added new functions to the :mod:`time` module:
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001627
Victor Stinnerec895392012-04-29 02:41:27 +02001628* :func:`~time.get_clock_info`: Get information on a clock.
1629* :func:`~time.monotonic`: Monotonic clock (cannot go backward), not affected
1630 by system clock updates.
1631* :func:`~time.perf_counter`: Performance counter with the highest available
1632 resolution to measure a short duration.
1633* :func:`~time.process_time`: Sum of the system and user CPU time of the
1634 current process.
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001635
Victor Stinnerec895392012-04-29 02:41:27 +02001636Other new functions:
1637
1638* :func:`~time.clock_getres`, :func:`~time.clock_gettime` and
1639 :func:`~time.clock_settime` functions with ``CLOCK_xxx`` constants.
1640 (Contributed by Victor Stinner in :issue:`10278`)
Victor Stinnerf4c54ff2012-02-08 01:48:34 +01001641
Antoine Pitrou5a8bc6f2011-11-17 02:20:48 +01001642
Victor Stinner0db176f2012-04-16 00:16:30 +02001643types
1644-----
1645
1646Add a new :class:`types.MappingProxyType` class: Read-only proxy of a mapping.
1647(:issue:`14386`)
1648
1649
Nick Coghlan7fc570a2012-05-20 02:34:13 +10001650The new functions `types.new_class` and `types.prepare_class` provide support
1651for PEP 3115 compliant dynamic type creation. (:issue:`14588`)
1652
1653
Senthil Kumarande49d642011-10-16 23:54:44 +08001654urllib
1655------
1656
1657The :class:`~urllib.request.Request` class, now accepts a *method* argument
1658used by :meth:`~urllib.request.Request.get_method` to determine what HTTP method
Senthil Kumarana41c9422011-10-20 02:37:08 +08001659should be used. For example, this will send a ``'HEAD'`` request::
Senthil Kumarande49d642011-10-16 23:54:44 +08001660
1661 >>> urlopen(Request('http://www.python.org', method='HEAD'))
1662
1663(:issue:`1673007`)
Giampaolo Rodola'096dcb12011-06-27 11:17:51 +02001664
Giampaolo Rodola'be55d992011-11-22 13:33:34 +01001665
Éric Araujo4f61a2d2012-04-04 23:01:01 -04001666webbrowser
1667----------
1668
1669The :mod:`webbrowser` module supports more browsers: Google Chrome (named
1670:program:`chrome`, :program:`chromium`, :program:`chrome-browser` or
1671:program:`chromium-browser` depending on the version and operating system) as
1672well as the the generic launchers :program:`xdg-open` from the FreeDesktop.org
1673project and :program:`gvfs-open` which is the default URI handler for GNOME 3.
1674
1675(:issue:`13620` and :issue:`14493`)
1676
1677
Eli Benderskyefcaba02012-08-09 08:20:20 +03001678xml.etree.ElementTree
1679---------------------
1680
1681The :mod:`xml.etree.ElementTree` module now imports its C accelerator by
1682default; there is no longer a need to explicitly import
1683:mod:`xml.etree.cElementTree` (this module stays for backwards compatibility,
1684but is now deprecated). In addition, the ``iter`` family of methods of
1685:class:`~xml.etree.ElementTree.Element` has been optimized (rewritten in C).
1686The module's documentation has also been greatly improved with added examples
1687and a more detailed reference.
1688
1689
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001690Optimizations
1691=============
1692
1693Major performance enhancements have been added:
1694
Éric Araujo4f61a2d2012-04-04 23:01:01 -04001695* Thanks to :pep:`393`, some operations on Unicode strings have been optimized:
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001696
1697 * the memory footprint is divided by 2 to 4 depending on the text
Victor Stinnera996f1e2011-11-21 13:14:43 +01001698 * encode an ASCII string to UTF-8 doesn't need to encode characters anymore,
1699 the UTF-8 representation is shared with the ASCII representation
Victor Stinner6099a032011-12-18 14:22:26 +01001700 * the UTF-8 encoder has been optimized
1701 * repeating a single ASCII letter and getting a substring of a ASCII strings
1702 is 4 times faster
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001703
Antoine Pitrou5d7e1d32012-06-24 22:38:23 +02001704* UTF-8 is now 2x to 4x faster. UTF-16 encoding is now up to 10x faster.
Antoine Pitrou5cec9d22012-05-17 17:37:02 +02001705
Antoine Pitrouc9092962012-06-15 22:22:18 +02001706 (contributed by Serhiy Storchaka, :issue:`14624`, :issue:`14738` and
1707 :issue:`15026`.)
Antoine Pitrou5cec9d22012-05-17 17:37:02 +02001708
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001709
1710Build and C API Changes
1711=======================
1712
1713Changes to Python's build process and to the C API include:
1714
Stefan Krah95b1ba62012-02-29 17:27:21 +01001715* New :pep:`3118` related function:
1716
1717 * :c:func:`PyMemoryView_FromMemory`
1718
Éric Araujo4f61a2d2012-04-04 23:01:01 -04001719* :pep:`393` added new Unicode types, macros and functions:
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001720
Victor Stinnera996f1e2011-11-21 13:14:43 +01001721 * High-level API:
1722
1723 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_CopyCharacters`
1724 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_FindChar`
1725 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_GetLength`, :c:macro:`PyUnicode_GET_LENGTH`
1726 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_New`
1727 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_Substring`
1728 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_ReadChar`, :c:func:`PyUnicode_WriteChar`
1729
1730 * Low-level API:
1731
1732 * :c:type:`Py_UCS1`, :c:type:`Py_UCS2`, :c:type:`Py_UCS4` types
1733 * :c:type:`PyASCIIObject` and :c:type:`PyCompactUnicodeObject` structures
1734 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_READY`
1735 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_FromKindAndData`
1736 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUCS4`, :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUCS4Copy`
1737 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_DATA`, :c:macro:`PyUnicode_1BYTE_DATA`,
1738 :c:macro:`PyUnicode_2BYTE_DATA`, :c:macro:`PyUnicode_4BYTE_DATA`
1739 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_KIND` with :c:type:`PyUnicode_Kind` enum:
1740 :c:data:`PyUnicode_WCHAR_KIND`, :c:data:`PyUnicode_1BYTE_KIND`,
1741 :c:data:`PyUnicode_2BYTE_KIND`, :c:data:`PyUnicode_4BYTE_KIND`
1742 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_READ`, :c:macro:`PyUnicode_READ_CHAR`, :c:macro:`PyUnicode_WRITE`
1743 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_MAX_CHAR_VALUE`
1744
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001745
1746
Victor Stinnerd1be8782011-12-09 00:10:41 +01001747Deprecated
1748==========
1749
Georg Brandl0cd25c92011-04-29 13:45:54 +02001750Unsupported Operating Systems
Victor Stinnerd1be8782011-12-09 00:10:41 +01001751-----------------------------
Victor Stinnerb90db4c2011-04-26 22:48:24 +02001752
Brian Curtin49a40cd2011-05-02 22:30:06 -05001753OS/2 and VMS are no longer supported due to the lack of a maintainer.
1754
1755Windows 2000 and Windows platforms which set ``COMSPEC`` to ``command.com``
1756are no longer supported due to maintenance burden.
Victor Stinnerb90db4c2011-04-26 22:48:24 +02001757
1758
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001759Deprecated Python modules, functions and methods
Victor Stinnerd1be8782011-12-09 00:10:41 +01001760------------------------------------------------
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001761
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001762* The ``unicode_internal`` codec has been deprecated because of the
Sandro Tosicd899122012-01-22 12:16:04 +01001763 :pep:`393`, use UTF-8, UTF-16 (``utf-16-le`` or ``utf-16-be``), or UTF-32
1764 (``utf-32-le`` or ``utf-32-be``)
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001765* :meth:`ftplib.FTP.nlst` and :meth:`ftplib.FTP.dir`: use
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001766 :meth:`ftplib.FTP.mlsd`
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001767* :func:`platform.popen`: use the :mod:`subprocess` module. Check especially
1768 the :ref:`subprocess-replacements` section.
1769* :issue:`13374`: The Windows bytes API has been deprecated in the :mod:`os`
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001770 module. Use Unicode filenames, instead of bytes filenames, to not depend on
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001771 the ANSI code page anymore and to support any filename.
Florent Xiclunaa72a98f2012-02-13 11:03:30 +01001772* :issue:`13988`: The :mod:`xml.etree.cElementTree` module is deprecated. The
1773 accelerator is used automatically whenever available.
Victor Stinner47620a62012-04-29 02:52:39 +02001774* The behaviour of :func:`time.clock` depends on the platform: use the new
1775 :func:`time.perf_counter` or :func:`time.process_time` function instead,
1776 depending on your requirements, to have a well defined behaviour.
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001777* The :func:`os.stat_float_times` function is deprecated.
Victor Stinner8f17c1c2012-08-05 16:31:32 +02001778* :mod:`abc` module:
1779
1780 * :class:`abc.abstractproperty` has been deprecated, use :class:`property`
1781 with :func:`abc.abstractmethod` instead.
1782 * :class:`abc.abstractclassmethod` has been deprecated, use
1783 :class:`classmethod` with :func:`abc.abstractmethod` instead.
1784 * :class:`abc.abstractstaticmethod` has been deprecated, use
1785 :class:`staticmethod` with :func:`abc.abstractmethod` instead.
1786
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001787
1788
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001789Deprecated functions and types of the C API
Victor Stinnerd1be8782011-12-09 00:10:41 +01001790-------------------------------------------
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001791
Éric Araujo4f61a2d2012-04-04 23:01:01 -04001792The :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` has been deprecated by :pep:`393` and will be
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001793removed in Python 4. All functions using this type are deprecated:
1794
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001795Unicode functions and methods using :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` and
1796:c:type:`Py_UNICODE*` types:
1797
1798 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_FromUnicode`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_FromWideChar` or
1799 :c:func:`PyUnicode_FromKindAndData`
1800 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_AS_UNICODE`, :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUnicode`,
1801 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUnicodeAndSize`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsWideCharString`
1802 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_AS_DATA`: use :c:macro:`PyUnicode_DATA` with
1803 :c:macro:`PyUnicode_READ` and :c:macro:`PyUnicode_WRITE`
1804 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_GET_SIZE`, :c:func:`PyUnicode_GetSize`: use
1805 :c:macro:`PyUnicode_GET_LENGTH` or :c:func:`PyUnicode_GetLength`
1806 * :c:macro:`PyUnicode_GET_DATA_SIZE`: use
1807 ``PyUnicode_GET_LENGTH(str) * PyUnicode_KIND(str)`` (only work on ready
1808 strings)
Victor Stinnerbf6e5602011-12-12 01:53:47 +01001809 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUnicodeCopy`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUCS4Copy` or
1810 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsWideCharString`
Victor Stinnerab595942011-12-17 04:59:06 +01001811 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_GetMax`
1812
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001813
Victor Stinnera996f1e2011-11-21 13:14:43 +01001814Functions and macros manipulating Py_UNICODE* strings:
1815
1816 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strlen`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_GetLength` or
1817 :c:macro:`PyUnicode_GET_LENGTH`
1818 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strcat`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_CopyCharacters` or
1819 :c:func:`PyUnicode_FromFormat`
1820 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strcpy`, :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strncpy`,
1821 :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_COPY`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_CopyCharacters` or
1822 :c:func:`PyUnicode_Substring`
1823 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strcmp`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_Compare`
1824 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strncmp`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_Tailmatch`
1825 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strchr`, :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_strrchr`: use
1826 :c:func:`PyUnicode_FindChar`
Victor Stinner606e19d2012-01-04 03:59:16 +01001827 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_FILL`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_Fill`
Victor Stinnerab595942011-12-17 04:59:06 +01001828 * :c:macro:`Py_UNICODE_MATCH`
Victor Stinnera996f1e2011-11-21 13:14:43 +01001829
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001830Encoders:
1831
1832 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_Encode`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsEncodedObject`
1833 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeUTF7`
Victor Stinnera996f1e2011-11-21 13:14:43 +01001834 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUTF8` or
1835 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUTF8String`
Victor Stinner46606ce2011-11-20 18:27:55 +01001836 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeUTF32`
1837 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeUTF16`
1838 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeUnicodeEscape:` use
1839 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsUnicodeEscapeString`
1840 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeRawUnicodeEscape:` use
1841 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsRawUnicodeEscapeString`
1842 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeLatin1`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsLatin1String`
1843 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeASCII`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsASCIIString`
1844 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeCharmap`
1845 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_TranslateCharmap`
1846 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeMBCS`: use :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsMBCSString` or
1847 :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeCodePage` (with ``CP_ACP`` code_page)
1848 * :c:func:`PyUnicode_EncodeDecimal`,
1849 :c:func:`PyUnicode_TransformDecimalToASCII`
1850
1851
Stefan Krah029780b2012-08-24 20:14:12 +02001852Deprecated features
1853-------------------
1854
1855The :mod:`array` module's ``'u'`` format code is now deprecated and will be
1856removed in Python 4 together with the rest of the (:c:type:`Py_UNICODE`) API.
1857
1858
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001859Porting to Python 3.3
1860=====================
1861
1862This section lists previously described changes and other bugfixes
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +02001863that may require changes to your code.
1864
Barry Warsawc1e721b2012-07-30 16:24:12 -04001865.. _portingpythoncode:
1866
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +02001867Porting Python code
1868-------------------
Giampaolo Rodolà3108f982011-02-24 20:59:48 +00001869
Victor Stinnerfa0d6282012-08-05 15:56:51 +02001870* Hash randomization is enabled by default. Set the :envvar:`PYTHONHASHSEED`
1871 environment variable to ``0`` to disable hash randomization. See also the
1872 :meth:`object.__hash__` method.
Georg Brandld6c43402012-03-07 08:55:52 +01001873
Victor Stinner19bd0692011-11-16 00:18:57 +01001874* :issue:`12326`: On Linux, sys.platform doesn't contain the major version
Victor Stinnerff3d9392011-08-20 23:39:26 +02001875 anymore. It is now always 'linux', instead of 'linux2' or 'linux3' depending
1876 on the Linux version used to build Python. Replace sys.platform == 'linux2'
1877 with sys.platform.startswith('linux'), or directly sys.platform == 'linux' if
1878 you don't need to support older Python versions.
Éric Araujoc09fca62011-03-23 02:06:24 +01001879
Victor Stinnerecc6e662012-03-14 00:39:29 +01001880* :issue:`13847`, :issue:`14180`: :mod:`time` and :mod:`datetime`:
1881 :exc:`OverflowError` is now raised instead of :exc:`ValueError` if a
1882 timestamp is out of range. :exc:`OSError` is now raised if C functions
1883 :c:func:`gmtime` or :c:func:`localtime` failed.
1884
Brett Cannonc2043482012-04-29 20:59:41 -04001885* The default finders used by import now utilize a cache of what is contained
1886 within a specific directory. If you create a Python source file or sourceless
1887 bytecode file, make sure to call :func:`importlib.invalidate_caches` to clear
1888 out the cache for the finders to notice the new file.
1889
1890* :exc:`ImportError` now uses the full name of the module that was attemped to
1891 be imported. Doctests that check ImportErrors' message will need to be
1892 updated to use the full name of the module instead of just the tail of the
1893 name.
1894
1895* The **index** argument to :func:`__import__` now defaults to 0 instead of -1
1896 and no longer support negative values. It was an oversight when :pep:`328` was
1897 implemented that the default value remained -1. If you need to continue to
1898 perform a relative import followed by an absolute import, then perform the
1899 relative import using an index of 1, followed by another import using an
1900 index of 0. It is preferred, though, that you use
1901 :func:`importlib.import_module` rather than call :func:`__import__` directly.
1902
1903* :func:`__import__` no longer allows one to use an index value other than 0
1904 for top-level modules. E.g. ``__import__('sys', level=1)`` is now an error.
1905
1906* Because :attr:`sys.meta_path` and :attr:`sys.path_hooks` now have finders on
1907 them by default, you will most likely want to use :meth:`list.insert` instead
1908 of :meth:`list.append` to add to those lists.
1909
1910* Because ``None`` is now inserted into :attr:`sys.path_importer_cache`, if you
1911 are clearing out entries in the dictionary of paths that do not have a
1912 finder, you will need to remove keys paired with values of ``None`` **and**
Brett Cannon903c27c2012-07-09 14:15:32 -04001913 :class:`imp.NullImporter` to be backwards-compatible. This will lead to extra
Brett Cannonc2043482012-04-29 20:59:41 -04001914 overhead on older versions of Python that re-insert ``None`` into
1915 :attr:`sys.path_importer_cache` where it repesents the use of implicit
1916 finders, but semantically it should not change anything.
1917
1918* :meth:`importlib.abc.SourceLoader.path_mtime` is now deprecated in favour of
1919 :meth:`importlib.abc.SourceLoader.path_stats` as bytecode files now store
1920 both the modification time and size of the source file the bytecode file was
1921 compiled from.
1922
Brett Cannon077ef452012-08-02 17:50:06 -04001923* :class:`importlib.abc.Finder` no longer specifies a `find_module()` abstract
1924 method that must be implemented. If you were relying on subclasses to
1925 implement that method, make sure to check for the method's existence first.
1926 You will probably want to check for `find_loader()` first, though, in the
1927 case of working with :term:`path entry finders <path entry finder>`.
1928
Nick Coghlan60610002012-07-15 22:39:39 +10001929* :mod:`pkgutil` has been converted to use :mod:`importlib` internally. This
1930 eliminates many edge cases where the old behaviour of the PEP 302 import
1931 emulation failed to match the behaviour of the real import system. The
1932 import emulation itself is still present, but is now deprecated. The
1933 :func:`pkgutil.iter_importers` and :func:`pkgutil.walk_packages` functions
1934 special case the standard import hooks so they are still supported even
1935 though they do not provide the non-standard ``iter_modules()`` method.
Brett Cannon903c27c2012-07-09 14:15:32 -04001936
Brett Cannonc2043482012-04-29 20:59:41 -04001937
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +02001938Porting C code
1939--------------
1940
Stefan Krah54c32032012-02-29 17:47:21 +01001941* In the course of changes to the buffer API the undocumented
1942 :c:member:`~Py_buffer.smalltable` member of the
1943 :c:type:`Py_buffer` structure has been removed and the
1944 layout of the :c:type:`PyMemoryViewObject` has changed.
1945
1946 All extensions relying on the relevant parts in ``memoryobject.h``
1947 or ``object.h`` must be rebuilt.
1948
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +02001949* Due to :ref:`PEP 393 <pep-393>`, the :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` type and all
1950 functions using this type are deprecated (but will stay available for
1951 at least five years). If you were using low-level Unicode APIs to
1952 construct and access unicode objects and you want to benefit of the
Éric Araujo4f61a2d2012-04-04 23:01:01 -04001953 memory footprint reduction provided by PEP 393, you have to convert
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +02001954 your code to the new :doc:`Unicode API <../c-api/unicode>`.
1955
1956 However, if you only have been using high-level functions such as
1957 :c:func:`PyUnicode_Concat()`, :c:func:`PyUnicode_Join` or
1958 :c:func:`PyUnicode_FromFormat()`, your code will automatically take
1959 advantage of the new unicode representations.
1960
Brett Cannon77b2abd2012-07-09 16:09:00 -04001961* :c:func:`PyImport_GetMagicNumber` now returns -1 upon failure.
1962
Brett Cannon522267e2012-08-10 18:55:08 -04001963* As a negative value for the **level** argument to :func:`__import__` is no
1964 longer valid, the same now holds for :c:func:`PyImport_ImportModuleLevel`.
1965 This also means that the value of **level** used by
1966 :c:func:`PyImport_ImportModuleEx` is now 0 instead of -1.
1967
Brett Cannon77b2abd2012-07-09 16:09:00 -04001968
Antoine Pitrouc229e6e2012-02-20 19:41:11 +01001969Building C extensions
1970---------------------
1971
1972* The range of possible file names for C extensions has been narrowed.
1973 Very rarely used spellings have been suppressed: under POSIX, files
1974 named ``xxxmodule.so``, ``xxxmodule.abi3.so`` and
1975 ``xxxmodule.cpython-*.so`` are no longer recognized as implementing
1976 the ``xxx`` module. If you had been generating such files, you have
1977 to switch to the other spellings (i.e., remove the ``module`` string
1978 from the file names).
1979
1980 (implemented in :issue:`14040`.)
1981
1982
Antoine Pitrou037ffbf2011-10-24 00:25:41 +02001983Other issues
1984------------
1985
Éric Araujoc09fca62011-03-23 02:06:24 +01001986.. Issue #11591: When :program:`python` was started with :option:`-S`,
1987 ``import site`` will not add site-specific paths to the module search
1988 paths. In previous versions, it did. See changeset for doc changes in
1989 various files. Contributed by Carl Meyer with editions by Éric Araujo.
Éric Araujobe3bd572011-03-26 01:55:15 +01001990
Éric Araujobfc97292011-11-14 18:18:15 +01001991.. Issue #10998: the -Q command-line flag and related artifacts have been
Éric Araujobe3bd572011-03-26 01:55:15 +01001992 removed. Code checking sys.flags.division_warning will need updating.
1993 Contributed by Éric Araujo.