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Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001****************************
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00002 What's New in Python 2.4
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003****************************
4
5:Author: A.M. Kuchling
6
7.. |release| replace:: 1.02
8
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00009.. $Id: whatsnew24.tex 54632 2007-03-31 11:59:54Z georg.brandl $
10.. Don't write extensive text for new sections; I'll do that.
11.. Feel free to add commented-out reminders of things that need
12.. to be covered. --amk
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000013
14This article explains the new features in Python 2.4.1, released on March 30,
152005.
16
17Python 2.4 is a medium-sized release. It doesn't introduce as many changes as
18the radical Python 2.2, but introduces more features than the conservative 2.3
19release. The most significant new language features are function decorators and
20generator expressions; most other changes are to the standard library.
21
22According to the CVS change logs, there were 481 patches applied and 502 bugs
23fixed between Python 2.3 and 2.4. Both figures are likely to be underestimates.
24
25This article doesn't attempt to provide a complete specification of every single
26new feature, but instead provides a brief introduction to each feature. For
27full details, you should refer to the documentation for Python 2.4, such as the
28Python Library Reference and the Python Reference Manual. Often you will be
29referred to the PEP for a particular new feature for explanations of the
30implementation and design rationale.
31
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000032.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000033
34
35PEP 218: Built-In Set Objects
36=============================
37
38Python 2.3 introduced the :mod:`sets` module. C implementations of set data
39types have now been added to the Python core as two new built-in types,
40:func:`set(iterable)` and :func:`frozenset(iterable)`. They provide high speed
41operations for membership testing, for eliminating duplicates from sequences,
42and for mathematical operations like unions, intersections, differences, and
43symmetric differences. ::
44
45 >>> a = set('abracadabra') # form a set from a string
46 >>> 'z' in a # fast membership testing
47 False
48 >>> a # unique letters in a
49 set(['a', 'r', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
50 >>> ''.join(a) # convert back into a string
51 'arbcd'
52
53 >>> b = set('alacazam') # form a second set
54 >>> a - b # letters in a but not in b
55 set(['r', 'd', 'b'])
56 >>> a | b # letters in either a or b
57 set(['a', 'c', 'r', 'd', 'b', 'm', 'z', 'l'])
58 >>> a & b # letters in both a and b
59 set(['a', 'c'])
60 >>> a ^ b # letters in a or b but not both
61 set(['r', 'd', 'b', 'm', 'z', 'l'])
62
63 >>> a.add('z') # add a new element
64 >>> a.update('wxy') # add multiple new elements
65 >>> a
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000066 set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'd', 'r', 'w', 'y', 'x', 'z'])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000067 >>> a.remove('x') # take one element out
68 >>> a
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000069 set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'd', 'r', 'w', 'y', 'z'])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000070
71The :func:`frozenset` type is an immutable version of :func:`set`. Since it is
72immutable and hashable, it may be used as a dictionary key or as a member of
73another set.
74
75The :mod:`sets` module remains in the standard library, and may be useful if you
76wish to subclass the :class:`Set` or :class:`ImmutableSet` classes. There are
77currently no plans to deprecate the module.
78
79
80.. seealso::
81
82 :pep:`218` - Adding a Built-In Set Object Type
83 Originally proposed by Greg Wilson and ultimately implemented by Raymond
84 Hettinger.
85
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000086.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000087
88
89PEP 237: Unifying Long Integers and Integers
90============================================
91
92The lengthy transition process for this PEP, begun in Python 2.2, takes another
93step forward in Python 2.4. In 2.3, certain integer operations that would
94behave differently after int/long unification triggered :exc:`FutureWarning`
95warnings and returned values limited to 32 or 64 bits (depending on your
96platform). In 2.4, these expressions no longer produce a warning and instead
97produce a different result that's usually a long integer.
98
99The problematic expressions are primarily left shifts and lengthy hexadecimal
100and octal constants. For example, ``2 << 32`` results in a warning in 2.3,
101evaluating to 0 on 32-bit platforms. In Python 2.4, this expression now returns
102the correct answer, 8589934592.
103
104
105.. seealso::
106
107 :pep:`237` - Unifying Long Integers and Integers
108 Original PEP written by Moshe Zadka and GvR. The changes for 2.4 were
109 implemented by Kalle Svensson.
110
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000111.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000112
113
114PEP 289: Generator Expressions
115==============================
116
117The iterator feature introduced in Python 2.2 and the :mod:`itertools` module
118make it easier to write programs that loop through large data sets without
119having the entire data set in memory at one time. List comprehensions don't fit
120into this picture very well because they produce a Python list object containing
121all of the items. This unavoidably pulls all of the objects into memory, which
122can be a problem if your data set is very large. When trying to write a
123functionally-styled program, it would be natural to write something like::
124
125 links = [link for link in get_all_links() if not link.followed]
126 for link in links:
127 ...
128
129instead of ::
130
131 for link in get_all_links():
132 if link.followed:
133 continue
134 ...
135
136The first form is more concise and perhaps more readable, but if you're dealing
137with a large number of link objects you'd have to write the second form to avoid
138having all link objects in memory at the same time.
139
140Generator expressions work similarly to list comprehensions but don't
141materialize the entire list; instead they create a generator that will return
142elements one by one. The above example could be written as::
143
144 links = (link for link in get_all_links() if not link.followed)
145 for link in links:
146 ...
147
148Generator expressions always have to be written inside parentheses, as in the
149above example. The parentheses signalling a function call also count, so if you
150want to create an iterator that will be immediately passed to a function you
151could write::
152
153 print sum(obj.count for obj in list_all_objects())
154
155Generator expressions differ from list comprehensions in various small ways.
156Most notably, the loop variable (*obj* in the above example) is not accessible
157outside of the generator expression. List comprehensions leave the variable
158assigned to its last value; future versions of Python will change this, making
159list comprehensions match generator expressions in this respect.
160
161
162.. seealso::
163
164 :pep:`289` - Generator Expressions
165 Proposed by Raymond Hettinger and implemented by Jiwon Seo with early efforts
166 steered by Hye-Shik Chang.
167
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000168.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000169
170
171PEP 292: Simpler String Substitutions
172=====================================
173
174Some new classes in the standard library provide an alternative mechanism for
175substituting variables into strings; this style of substitution may be better
176for applications where untrained users need to edit templates.
177
178The usual way of substituting variables by name is the ``%`` operator::
179
180 >>> '%(page)i: %(title)s' % {'page':2, 'title': 'The Best of Times'}
181 '2: The Best of Times'
182
183When writing the template string, it can be easy to forget the ``i`` or ``s``
184after the closing parenthesis. This isn't a big problem if the template is in a
185Python module, because you run the code, get an "Unsupported format character"
186:exc:`ValueError`, and fix the problem. However, consider an application such
187as Mailman where template strings or translations are being edited by users who
188aren't aware of the Python language. The format string's syntax is complicated
189to explain to such users, and if they make a mistake, it's difficult to provide
190helpful feedback to them.
191
192PEP 292 adds a :class:`Template` class to the :mod:`string` module that uses
193``$`` to indicate a substitution::
194
195 >>> import string
196 >>> t = string.Template('$page: $title')
197 >>> t.substitute({'page':2, 'title': 'The Best of Times'})
198 '2: The Best of Times'
199
200If a key is missing from the dictionary, the :meth:`substitute` method will
201raise a :exc:`KeyError`. There's also a :meth:`safe_substitute` method that
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000202ignores missing keys::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000203
204 >>> t = string.Template('$page: $title')
205 >>> t.safe_substitute({'page':3})
206 '3: $title'
207
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000208
209.. seealso::
210
211 :pep:`292` - Simpler String Substitutions
212 Written and implemented by Barry Warsaw.
213
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000214.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000215
216
217PEP 318: Decorators for Functions and Methods
218=============================================
219
220Python 2.2 extended Python's object model by adding static methods and class
221methods, but it didn't extend Python's syntax to provide any new way of defining
222static or class methods. Instead, you had to write a :keyword:`def` statement
223in the usual way, and pass the resulting method to a :func:`staticmethod` or
224:func:`classmethod` function that would wrap up the function as a method of the
225new type. Your code would look like this::
226
227 class C:
228 def meth (cls):
229 ...
230
231 meth = classmethod(meth) # Rebind name to wrapped-up class method
232
233If the method was very long, it would be easy to miss or forget the
234:func:`classmethod` invocation after the function body.
235
236The intention was always to add some syntax to make such definitions more
237readable, but at the time of 2.2's release a good syntax was not obvious. Today
238a good syntax *still* isn't obvious but users are asking for easier access to
239the feature; a new syntactic feature has been added to meet this need.
240
241The new feature is called "function decorators". The name comes from the idea
242that :func:`classmethod`, :func:`staticmethod`, and friends are storing
243additional information on a function object; they're *decorating* functions with
244more details.
245
246The notation borrows from Java and uses the ``'@'`` character as an indicator.
247Using the new syntax, the example above would be written::
248
249 class C:
250
251 @classmethod
252 def meth (cls):
253 ...
254
255
256The ``@classmethod`` is shorthand for the ``meth=classmethod(meth)`` assignment.
257More generally, if you have the following::
258
259 @A
260 @B
261 @C
262 def f ():
263 ...
264
265It's equivalent to the following pre-decorator code::
266
267 def f(): ...
268 f = A(B(C(f)))
269
270Decorators must come on the line before a function definition, one decorator per
271line, and can't be on the same line as the def statement, meaning that ``@A def
272f(): ...`` is illegal. You can only decorate function definitions, either at
273the module level or inside a class; you can't decorate class definitions.
274
275A decorator is just a function that takes the function to be decorated as an
276argument and returns either the same function or some new object. The return
277value of the decorator need not be callable (though it typically is), unless
278further decorators will be applied to the result. It's easy to write your own
279decorators. The following simple example just sets an attribute on the function
280object::
281
282 >>> def deco(func):
283 ... func.attr = 'decorated'
284 ... return func
285 ...
286 >>> @deco
287 ... def f(): pass
288 ...
289 >>> f
290 <function f at 0x402ef0d4>
291 >>> f.attr
292 'decorated'
293 >>>
294
295As a slightly more realistic example, the following decorator checks that the
296supplied argument is an integer::
297
298 def require_int (func):
299 def wrapper (arg):
300 assert isinstance(arg, int)
301 return func(arg)
302
303 return wrapper
304
305 @require_int
306 def p1 (arg):
307 print arg
308
309 @require_int
310 def p2(arg):
311 print arg*2
312
313An example in :pep:`318` contains a fancier version of this idea that lets you
314both specify the required type and check the returned type.
315
316Decorator functions can take arguments. If arguments are supplied, your
317decorator function is called with only those arguments and must return a new
318decorator function; this function must take a single function and return a
319function, as previously described. In other words, ``@A @B @C(args)`` becomes::
320
321 def f(): ...
322 _deco = C(args)
323 f = A(B(_deco(f)))
324
325Getting this right can be slightly brain-bending, but it's not too difficult.
326
327A small related change makes the :attr:`func_name` attribute of functions
328writable. This attribute is used to display function names in tracebacks, so
329decorators should change the name of any new function that's constructed and
330returned.
331
332
333.. seealso::
334
335 :pep:`318` - Decorators for Functions, Methods and Classes
336 Written by Kevin D. Smith, Jim Jewett, and Skip Montanaro. Several people
337 wrote patches implementing function decorators, but the one that was actually
338 checked in was patch #979728, written by Mark Russell.
339
340 http://www.python.org/moin/PythonDecoratorLibrary
341 This Wiki page contains several examples of decorators.
342
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000343.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000344
345
346PEP 322: Reverse Iteration
347==========================
348
349A new built-in function, :func:`reversed(seq)`, takes a sequence and returns an
350iterator that loops over the elements of the sequence in reverse order. ::
351
352 >>> for i in reversed(xrange(1,4)):
353 ... print i
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000354 ...
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000355 3
356 2
357 1
358
359Compared to extended slicing, such as ``range(1,4)[::-1]``, :func:`reversed` is
360easier to read, runs faster, and uses substantially less memory.
361
362Note that :func:`reversed` only accepts sequences, not arbitrary iterators. If
363you want to reverse an iterator, first convert it to a list with :func:`list`.
364::
365
366 >>> input = open('/etc/passwd', 'r')
367 >>> for line in reversed(list(input)):
368 ... print line
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000369 ...
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000370 root:*:0:0:System Administrator:/var/root:/bin/tcsh
371 ...
372
373
374.. seealso::
375
376 :pep:`322` - Reverse Iteration
377 Written and implemented by Raymond Hettinger.
378
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000379.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000380
381
382PEP 324: New subprocess Module
383==============================
384
385The standard library provides a number of ways to execute a subprocess, offering
386different features and different levels of complexity.
387:func:`os.system(command)` is easy to use, but slow (it runs a shell process
388which executes the command) and dangerous (you have to be careful about escaping
389the shell's metacharacters). The :mod:`popen2` module offers classes that can
390capture standard output and standard error from the subprocess, but the naming
391is confusing. The :mod:`subprocess` module cleans this up, providing a unified
392interface that offers all the features you might need.
393
394Instead of :mod:`popen2`'s collection of classes, :mod:`subprocess` contains a
395single class called :class:`Popen` whose constructor supports a number of
396different keyword arguments. ::
397
398 class Popen(args, bufsize=0, executable=None,
399 stdin=None, stdout=None, stderr=None,
400 preexec_fn=None, close_fds=False, shell=False,
401 cwd=None, env=None, universal_newlines=False,
402 startupinfo=None, creationflags=0):
403
404*args* is commonly a sequence of strings that will be the arguments to the
405program executed as the subprocess. (If the *shell* argument is true, *args*
406can be a string which will then be passed on to the shell for interpretation,
407just as :func:`os.system` does.)
408
409*stdin*, *stdout*, and *stderr* specify what the subprocess's input, output, and
410error streams will be. You can provide a file object or a file descriptor, or
411you can use the constant ``subprocess.PIPE`` to create a pipe between the
412subprocess and the parent.
413
414The constructor has a number of handy options:
415
416* *close_fds* requests that all file descriptors be closed before running the
417 subprocess.
418
419* *cwd* specifies the working directory in which the subprocess will be executed
420 (defaulting to whatever the parent's working directory is).
421
422* *env* is a dictionary specifying environment variables.
423
424* *preexec_fn* is a function that gets called before the child is started.
425
426* *universal_newlines* opens the child's input and output using Python's
427 universal newline feature.
428
429Once you've created the :class:`Popen` instance, you can call its :meth:`wait`
430method to pause until the subprocess has exited, :meth:`poll` to check if it's
431exited without pausing, or :meth:`communicate(data)` to send the string *data*
432to the subprocess's standard input. :meth:`communicate(data)` then reads any
433data that the subprocess has sent to its standard output or standard error,
434returning a tuple ``(stdout_data, stderr_data)``.
435
436:func:`call` is a shortcut that passes its arguments along to the :class:`Popen`
437constructor, waits for the command to complete, and returns the status code of
438the subprocess. It can serve as a safer analog to :func:`os.system`::
439
440 sts = subprocess.call(['dpkg', '-i', '/tmp/new-package.deb'])
441 if sts == 0:
442 # Success
443 ...
444 else:
445 # dpkg returned an error
446 ...
447
448The command is invoked without use of the shell. If you really do want to use
449the shell, you can add ``shell=True`` as a keyword argument and provide a string
450instead of a sequence::
451
452 sts = subprocess.call('dpkg -i /tmp/new-package.deb', shell=True)
453
454The PEP takes various examples of shell and Python code and shows how they'd be
455translated into Python code that uses :mod:`subprocess`. Reading this section
456of the PEP is highly recommended.
457
458
459.. seealso::
460
461 :pep:`324` - subprocess - New process module
462 Written and implemented by Peter Ă…strand, with assistance from Fredrik Lundh and
463 others.
464
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000465.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000466
467
468PEP 327: Decimal Data Type
469==========================
470
471Python has always supported floating-point (FP) numbers, based on the underlying
472C :ctype:`double` type, as a data type. However, while most programming
473languages provide a floating-point type, many people (even programmers) are
474unaware that floating-point numbers don't represent certain decimal fractions
475accurately. The new :class:`Decimal` type can represent these fractions
476accurately, up to a user-specified precision limit.
477
478
479Why is Decimal needed?
480----------------------
481
482The limitations arise from the representation used for floating-point numbers.
483FP numbers are made up of three components:
484
485* The sign, which is positive or negative.
486
487* The mantissa, which is a single-digit binary number followed by a fractional
488 part. For example, ``1.01`` in base-2 notation is ``1 + 0/2 + 1/4``, or 1.25 in
489 decimal notation.
490
491* The exponent, which tells where the decimal point is located in the number
492 represented.
493
494For example, the number 1.25 has positive sign, a mantissa value of 1.01 (in
495binary), and an exponent of 0 (the decimal point doesn't need to be shifted).
496The number 5 has the same sign and mantissa, but the exponent is 2 because the
497mantissa is multiplied by 4 (2 to the power of the exponent 2); 1.25 \* 4 equals
4985.
499
500Modern systems usually provide floating-point support that conforms to a
501standard called IEEE 754. C's :ctype:`double` type is usually implemented as a
50264-bit IEEE 754 number, which uses 52 bits of space for the mantissa. This
503means that numbers can only be specified to 52 bits of precision. If you're
504trying to represent numbers whose expansion repeats endlessly, the expansion is
505cut off after 52 bits. Unfortunately, most software needs to produce output in
506base 10, and common fractions in base 10 are often repeating decimals in binary.
507For example, 1.1 decimal is binary ``1.0001100110011 ...``; .1 = 1/16 + 1/32 +
5081/256 plus an infinite number of additional terms. IEEE 754 has to chop off
509that infinitely repeated decimal after 52 digits, so the representation is
510slightly inaccurate.
511
512Sometimes you can see this inaccuracy when the number is printed::
513
514 >>> 1.1
515 1.1000000000000001
516
517The inaccuracy isn't always visible when you print the number because the FP-to-
518decimal-string conversion is provided by the C library, and most C libraries try
519to produce sensible output. Even if it's not displayed, however, the inaccuracy
520is still there and subsequent operations can magnify the error.
521
522For many applications this doesn't matter. If I'm plotting points and
523displaying them on my monitor, the difference between 1.1 and 1.1000000000000001
524is too small to be visible. Reports often limit output to a certain number of
525decimal places, and if you round the number to two or three or even eight
526decimal places, the error is never apparent. However, for applications where it
527does matter, it's a lot of work to implement your own custom arithmetic
528routines.
529
530Hence, the :class:`Decimal` type was created.
531
532
533The :class:`Decimal` type
534-------------------------
535
536A new module, :mod:`decimal`, was added to Python's standard library. It
537contains two classes, :class:`Decimal` and :class:`Context`. :class:`Decimal`
538instances represent numbers, and :class:`Context` instances are used to wrap up
539various settings such as the precision and default rounding mode.
540
541:class:`Decimal` instances are immutable, like regular Python integers and FP
542numbers; once it's been created, you can't change the value an instance
543represents. :class:`Decimal` instances can be created from integers or
544strings::
545
546 >>> import decimal
547 >>> decimal.Decimal(1972)
548 Decimal("1972")
549 >>> decimal.Decimal("1.1")
550 Decimal("1.1")
551
552You can also provide tuples containing the sign, the mantissa represented as a
553tuple of decimal digits, and the exponent::
554
555 >>> decimal.Decimal((1, (1, 4, 7, 5), -2))
556 Decimal("-14.75")
557
558Cautionary note: the sign bit is a Boolean value, so 0 is positive and 1 is
559negative.
560
561Converting from floating-point numbers poses a bit of a problem: should the FP
562number representing 1.1 turn into the decimal number for exactly 1.1, or for 1.1
563plus whatever inaccuracies are introduced? The decision was to dodge the issue
564and leave such a conversion out of the API. Instead, you should convert the
565floating-point number into a string using the desired precision and pass the
566string to the :class:`Decimal` constructor::
567
568 >>> f = 1.1
569 >>> decimal.Decimal(str(f))
570 Decimal("1.1")
571 >>> decimal.Decimal('%.12f' % f)
572 Decimal("1.100000000000")
573
574Once you have :class:`Decimal` instances, you can perform the usual mathematical
575operations on them. One limitation: exponentiation requires an integer
576exponent::
577
578 >>> a = decimal.Decimal('35.72')
579 >>> b = decimal.Decimal('1.73')
580 >>> a+b
581 Decimal("37.45")
582 >>> a-b
583 Decimal("33.99")
584 >>> a*b
585 Decimal("61.7956")
586 >>> a/b
587 Decimal("20.64739884393063583815028902")
588 >>> a ** 2
589 Decimal("1275.9184")
590 >>> a**b
591 Traceback (most recent call last):
592 ...
593 decimal.InvalidOperation: x ** (non-integer)
594
595You can combine :class:`Decimal` instances with integers, but not with floating-
596point numbers::
597
598 >>> a + 4
599 Decimal("39.72")
600 >>> a + 4.5
601 Traceback (most recent call last):
602 ...
603 TypeError: You can interact Decimal only with int, long or Decimal data types.
604 >>>
605
606:class:`Decimal` numbers can be used with the :mod:`math` and :mod:`cmath`
607modules, but note that they'll be immediately converted to floating-point
608numbers before the operation is performed, resulting in a possible loss of
609precision and accuracy. You'll also get back a regular floating-point number
610and not a :class:`Decimal`. ::
611
612 >>> import math, cmath
613 >>> d = decimal.Decimal('123456789012.345')
614 >>> math.sqrt(d)
615 351364.18288201344
616 >>> cmath.sqrt(-d)
617 351364.18288201344j
618
619:class:`Decimal` instances have a :meth:`sqrt` method that returns a
620:class:`Decimal`, but if you need other things such as trigonometric functions
621you'll have to implement them. ::
622
623 >>> d.sqrt()
624 Decimal("351364.1828820134592177245001")
625
626
627The :class:`Context` type
628-------------------------
629
630Instances of the :class:`Context` class encapsulate several settings for
631decimal operations:
632
633* :attr:`prec` is the precision, the number of decimal places.
634
635* :attr:`rounding` specifies the rounding mode. The :mod:`decimal` module has
636 constants for the various possibilities: :const:`ROUND_DOWN`,
637 :const:`ROUND_CEILING`, :const:`ROUND_HALF_EVEN`, and various others.
638
639* :attr:`traps` is a dictionary specifying what happens on encountering certain
640 error conditions: either an exception is raised or a value is returned. Some
641 examples of error conditions are division by zero, loss of precision, and
642 overflow.
643
644There's a thread-local default context available by calling :func:`getcontext`;
645you can change the properties of this context to alter the default precision,
646rounding, or trap handling. The following example shows the effect of changing
647the precision of the default context::
648
649 >>> decimal.getcontext().prec
650 28
651 >>> decimal.Decimal(1) / decimal.Decimal(7)
652 Decimal("0.1428571428571428571428571429")
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000653 >>> decimal.getcontext().prec = 9
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000654 >>> decimal.Decimal(1) / decimal.Decimal(7)
655 Decimal("0.142857143")
656
657The default action for error conditions is selectable; the module can either
658return a special value such as infinity or not-a-number, or exceptions can be
659raised::
660
661 >>> decimal.Decimal(1) / decimal.Decimal(0)
662 Traceback (most recent call last):
663 ...
664 decimal.DivisionByZero: x / 0
665 >>> decimal.getcontext().traps[decimal.DivisionByZero] = False
666 >>> decimal.Decimal(1) / decimal.Decimal(0)
667 Decimal("Infinity")
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000668 >>>
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000669
670The :class:`Context` instance also has various methods for formatting numbers
671such as :meth:`to_eng_string` and :meth:`to_sci_string`.
672
673For more information, see the documentation for the :mod:`decimal` module, which
674includes a quick-start tutorial and a reference.
675
676
677.. seealso::
678
679 :pep:`327` - Decimal Data Type
680 Written by Facundo Batista and implemented by Facundo Batista, Eric Price,
681 Raymond Hettinger, Aahz, and Tim Peters.
682
683 http://research.microsoft.com/~hollasch/cgindex/coding/ieeefloat.html
684 A more detailed overview of the IEEE-754 representation.
685
686 http://www.lahey.com/float.htm
687 The article uses Fortran code to illustrate many of the problems that floating-
688 point inaccuracy can cause.
689
690 http://www2.hursley.ibm.com/decimal/
691 A description of a decimal-based representation. This representation is being
692 proposed as a standard, and underlies the new Python decimal type. Much of this
693 material was written by Mike Cowlishaw, designer of the Rexx language.
694
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000695.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000696
697
698PEP 328: Multi-line Imports
699===========================
700
701One language change is a small syntactic tweak aimed at making it easier to
702import many names from a module. In a ``from module import names`` statement,
703*names* is a sequence of names separated by commas. If the sequence is very
704long, you can either write multiple imports from the same module, or you can use
705backslashes to escape the line endings like this::
706
707 from SimpleXMLRPCServer import SimpleXMLRPCServer,\
708 SimpleXMLRPCRequestHandler,\
709 CGIXMLRPCRequestHandler,\
710 resolve_dotted_attribute
711
712The syntactic change in Python 2.4 simply allows putting the names within
713parentheses. Python ignores newlines within a parenthesized expression, so the
714backslashes are no longer needed::
715
716 from SimpleXMLRPCServer import (SimpleXMLRPCServer,
717 SimpleXMLRPCRequestHandler,
718 CGIXMLRPCRequestHandler,
719 resolve_dotted_attribute)
720
721The PEP also proposes that all :keyword:`import` statements be absolute imports,
722with a leading ``.`` character to indicate a relative import. This part of the
723PEP was not implemented for Python 2.4, but was completed for Python 2.5.
724
725
726.. seealso::
727
728 :pep:`328` - Imports: Multi-Line and Absolute/Relative
729 Written by Aahz. Multi-line imports were implemented by Dima Dorfman.
730
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000731.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000732
733
734PEP 331: Locale-Independent Float/String Conversions
735====================================================
736
737The :mod:`locale` modules lets Python software select various conversions and
738display conventions that are localized to a particular country or language.
739However, the module was careful to not change the numeric locale because various
740functions in Python's implementation required that the numeric locale remain set
741to the ``'C'`` locale. Often this was because the code was using the C
742library's :cfunc:`atof` function.
743
744Not setting the numeric locale caused trouble for extensions that used third-
745party C libraries, however, because they wouldn't have the correct locale set.
746The motivating example was GTK+, whose user interface widgets weren't displaying
747numbers in the current locale.
748
749The solution described in the PEP is to add three new functions to the Python
750API that perform ASCII-only conversions, ignoring the locale setting:
751
752* :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_strtod(str, ptr)` and :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_atof(str, ptr)`
753 both convert a string to a C :ctype:`double`.
754
755* :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_formatd(buffer, buf_len, format, d)` converts a
756 :ctype:`double` to an ASCII string.
757
758The code for these functions came from the GLib library
759(http://developer.gnome.org/arch/gtk/glib.html), whose developers kindly
760relicensed the relevant functions and donated them to the Python Software
761Foundation. The :mod:`locale` module can now change the numeric locale,
762letting extensions such as GTK+ produce the correct results.
763
764
765.. seealso::
766
767 :pep:`331` - Locale-Independent Float/String Conversions
768 Written by Christian R. Reis, and implemented by Gustavo Carneiro.
769
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000770.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000771
772
773Other Language Changes
774======================
775
776Here are all of the changes that Python 2.4 makes to the core Python language.
777
778* Decorators for functions and methods were added (:pep:`318`).
779
780* Built-in :func:`set` and :func:`frozenset` types were added (:pep:`218`).
781 Other new built-ins include the :func:`reversed(seq)` function (:pep:`322`).
782
783* Generator expressions were added (:pep:`289`).
784
785* Certain numeric expressions no longer return values restricted to 32 or 64
786 bits (:pep:`237`).
787
788* You can now put parentheses around the list of names in a ``from module import
789 names`` statement (:pep:`328`).
790
791* The :meth:`dict.update` method now accepts the same argument forms as the
792 :class:`dict` constructor. This includes any mapping, any iterable of key/value
793 pairs, and keyword arguments. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
794
795* The string methods :meth:`ljust`, :meth:`rjust`, and :meth:`center` now take
796 an optional argument for specifying a fill character other than a space.
797 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
798
799* Strings also gained an :meth:`rsplit` method that works like the :meth:`split`
800 method but splits from the end of the string. (Contributed by Sean
801 Reifschneider.) ::
802
803 >>> 'www.python.org'.split('.', 1)
804 ['www', 'python.org']
805 'www.python.org'.rsplit('.', 1)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000806 ['www.python', 'org']
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000807
808* Three keyword parameters, *cmp*, *key*, and *reverse*, were added to the
809 :meth:`sort` method of lists. These parameters make some common usages of
810 :meth:`sort` simpler. All of these parameters are optional.
811
812 For the *cmp* parameter, the value should be a comparison function that takes
813 two parameters and returns -1, 0, or +1 depending on how the parameters compare.
814 This function will then be used to sort the list. Previously this was the only
815 parameter that could be provided to :meth:`sort`.
816
817 *key* should be a single-parameter function that takes a list element and
818 returns a comparison key for the element. The list is then sorted using the
819 comparison keys. The following example sorts a list case-insensitively::
820
821 >>> L = ['A', 'b', 'c', 'D']
822 >>> L.sort() # Case-sensitive sort
823 >>> L
824 ['A', 'D', 'b', 'c']
825 >>> # Using 'key' parameter to sort list
826 >>> L.sort(key=lambda x: x.lower())
827 >>> L
828 ['A', 'b', 'c', 'D']
829 >>> # Old-fashioned way
830 >>> L.sort(cmp=lambda x,y: cmp(x.lower(), y.lower()))
831 >>> L
832 ['A', 'b', 'c', 'D']
833
834 The last example, which uses the *cmp* parameter, is the old way to perform a
835 case-insensitive sort. It works but is slower than using a *key* parameter.
836 Using *key* calls :meth:`lower` method once for each element in the list while
837 using *cmp* will call it twice for each comparison, so using *key* saves on
838 invocations of the :meth:`lower` method.
839
840 For simple key functions and comparison functions, it is often possible to avoid
841 a :keyword:`lambda` expression by using an unbound method instead. For example,
842 the above case-insensitive sort is best written as::
843
844 >>> L.sort(key=str.lower)
845 >>> L
846 ['A', 'b', 'c', 'D']
847
848 Finally, the *reverse* parameter takes a Boolean value. If the value is true,
849 the list will be sorted into reverse order. Instead of ``L.sort() ;
850 L.reverse()``, you can now write ``L.sort(reverse=True)``.
851
852 The results of sorting are now guaranteed to be stable. This means that two
853 entries with equal keys will be returned in the same order as they were input.
854 For example, you can sort a list of people by name, and then sort the list by
855 age, resulting in a list sorted by age where people with the same age are in
856 name-sorted order.
857
858 (All changes to :meth:`sort` contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
859
860* There is a new built-in function :func:`sorted(iterable)` that works like the
861 in-place :meth:`list.sort` method but can be used in expressions. The
862 differences are:
863
864* the input may be any iterable;
865
866* a newly formed copy is sorted, leaving the original intact; and
867
868* the expression returns the new sorted copy
869
870 ::
871
872 >>> L = [9,7,8,3,2,4,1,6,5]
873 >>> [10+i for i in sorted(L)] # usable in a list comprehension
874 [11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19]
875 >>> L # original is left unchanged
876 [9,7,8,3,2,4,1,6,5]
877 >>> sorted('Monty Python') # any iterable may be an input
878 [' ', 'M', 'P', 'h', 'n', 'n', 'o', 'o', 't', 't', 'y', 'y']
879
880 >>> # List the contents of a dict sorted by key values
881 >>> colormap = dict(red=1, blue=2, green=3, black=4, yellow=5)
882 >>> for k, v in sorted(colormap.iteritems()):
883 ... print k, v
884 ...
885 black 4
886 blue 2
887 green 3
888 red 1
889 yellow 5
890
891 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
892
893* Integer operations will no longer trigger an :exc:`OverflowWarning`. The
894 :exc:`OverflowWarning` warning will disappear in Python 2.5.
895
896* The interpreter gained a new switch, :option:`-m`, that takes a name, searches
897 for the corresponding module on ``sys.path``, and runs the module as a script.
898 For example, you can now run the Python profiler with ``python -m profile``.
899 (Contributed by Nick Coghlan.)
900
901* The :func:`eval(expr, globals, locals)` and :func:`execfile(filename, globals,
902 locals)` functions and the :keyword:`exec` statement now accept any mapping type
903 for the *locals* parameter. Previously this had to be a regular Python
904 dictionary. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
905
906* The :func:`zip` built-in function and :func:`itertools.izip` now return an
907 empty list if called with no arguments. Previously they raised a
908 :exc:`TypeError` exception. This makes them more suitable for use with variable
909 length argument lists::
910
911 >>> def transpose(array):
912 ... return zip(*array)
913 ...
914 >>> transpose([(1,2,3), (4,5,6)])
915 [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)]
916 >>> transpose([])
917 []
918
919 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
920
921* Encountering a failure while importing a module no longer leaves a partially-
922 initialized module object in ``sys.modules``. The incomplete module object left
923 behind would fool further imports of the same module into succeeding, leading to
924 confusing errors. (Fixed by Tim Peters.)
925
926* :const:`None` is now a constant; code that binds a new value to the name
927 ``None`` is now a syntax error. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
928
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000929.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000930
931
932Optimizations
933-------------
934
935* The inner loops for list and tuple slicing were optimized and now run about
936 one-third faster. The inner loops for dictionaries were also optimized,
937 resulting in performance boosts for :meth:`keys`, :meth:`values`, :meth:`items`,
938 :meth:`iterkeys`, :meth:`itervalues`, and :meth:`iteritems`. (Contributed by
939 Raymond Hettinger.)
940
941* The machinery for growing and shrinking lists was optimized for speed and for
942 space efficiency. Appending and popping from lists now runs faster due to more
943 efficient code paths and less frequent use of the underlying system
944 :cfunc:`realloc`. List comprehensions also benefit. :meth:`list.extend` was
945 also optimized and no longer converts its argument into a temporary list before
946 extending the base list. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
947
948* :func:`list`, :func:`tuple`, :func:`map`, :func:`filter`, and :func:`zip` now
949 run several times faster with non-sequence arguments that supply a
950 :meth:`__len__` method. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
951
952* The methods :meth:`list.__getitem__`, :meth:`dict.__getitem__`, and
953 :meth:`dict.__contains__` are are now implemented as :class:`method_descriptor`
954 objects rather than :class:`wrapper_descriptor` objects. This form of access
955 doubles their performance and makes them more suitable for use as arguments to
956 functionals: ``map(mydict.__getitem__, keylist)``. (Contributed by Raymond
957 Hettinger.)
958
959* Added a new opcode, ``LIST_APPEND``, that simplifies the generated bytecode
960 for list comprehensions and speeds them up by about a third. (Contributed by
961 Raymond Hettinger.)
962
963* The peephole bytecode optimizer has been improved to produce shorter, faster
964 bytecode; remarkably, the resulting bytecode is more readable. (Enhanced by
965 Raymond Hettinger.)
966
967* String concatenations in statements of the form ``s = s + "abc"`` and ``s +=
968 "abc"`` are now performed more efficiently in certain circumstances. This
969 optimization won't be present in other Python implementations such as Jython, so
970 you shouldn't rely on it; using the :meth:`join` method of strings is still
971 recommended when you want to efficiently glue a large number of strings
972 together. (Contributed by Armin Rigo.)
973
974The net result of the 2.4 optimizations is that Python 2.4 runs the pystone
975benchmark around 5% faster than Python 2.3 and 35% faster than Python 2.2.
976(pystone is not a particularly good benchmark, but it's the most commonly used
977measurement of Python's performance. Your own applications may show greater or
978smaller benefits from Python 2.4.)
979
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000980.. pystone is almost useless for comparing different versions of Python;
981 instead, it excels at predicting relative Python performance on different
982 machines. So, this section would be more informative if it used other tools
983 such as pybench and parrotbench. For a more application oriented benchmark,
984 try comparing the timings of test_decimal.py under 2.3 and 2.4.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000985
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +0000986.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000987
988
989New, Improved, and Deprecated Modules
990=====================================
991
992As usual, Python's standard library received a number of enhancements and bug
993fixes. Here's a partial list of the most notable changes, sorted alphabetically
994by module name. Consult the :file:`Misc/NEWS` file in the source tree for a more
995complete list of changes, or look through the CVS logs for all the details.
996
997* The :mod:`asyncore` module's :func:`loop` function now has a *count* parameter
998 that lets you perform a limited number of passes through the polling loop. The
999 default is still to loop forever.
1000
1001* The :mod:`base64` module now has more complete RFC 3548 support for Base64,
1002 Base32, and Base16 encoding and decoding, including optional case folding and
1003 optional alternative alphabets. (Contributed by Barry Warsaw.)
1004
1005* The :mod:`bisect` module now has an underlying C implementation for improved
1006 performance. (Contributed by Dmitry Vasiliev.)
1007
1008* The CJKCodecs collections of East Asian codecs, maintained by Hye-Shik Chang,
1009 was integrated into 2.4. The new encodings are:
1010
1011* Chinese (PRC): gb2312, gbk, gb18030, big5hkscs, hz
1012
1013* Chinese (ROC): big5, cp950
1014
1015* Japanese: cp932, euc-jis-2004, euc-jp, euc-jisx0213, iso-2022-jp,
1016 iso-2022-jp-1, iso-2022-jp-2, iso-2022-jp-3, iso-2022-jp-ext, iso-2022-jp-2004,
1017 shift-jis, shift-jisx0213, shift-jis-2004
1018
1019* Korean: cp949, euc-kr, johab, iso-2022-kr
1020
1021* Some other new encodings were added: HP Roman8, ISO_8859-11, ISO_8859-16,
1022 PCTP-154, and TIS-620.
1023
1024* The UTF-8 and UTF-16 codecs now cope better with receiving partial input.
1025 Previously the :class:`StreamReader` class would try to read more data, making
1026 it impossible to resume decoding from the stream. The :meth:`read` method will
1027 now return as much data as it can and future calls will resume decoding where
1028 previous ones left off. (Implemented by Walter Dörwald.)
1029
1030* There is a new :mod:`collections` module for various specialized collection
1031 datatypes. Currently it contains just one type, :class:`deque`, a double-
1032 ended queue that supports efficiently adding and removing elements from either
1033 end::
1034
1035 >>> from collections import deque
1036 >>> d = deque('ghi') # make a new deque with three items
1037 >>> d.append('j') # add a new entry to the right side
1038 >>> d.appendleft('f') # add a new entry to the left side
1039 >>> d # show the representation of the deque
1040 deque(['f', 'g', 'h', 'i', 'j'])
1041 >>> d.pop() # return and remove the rightmost item
1042 'j'
1043 >>> d.popleft() # return and remove the leftmost item
1044 'f'
1045 >>> list(d) # list the contents of the deque
1046 ['g', 'h', 'i']
1047 >>> 'h' in d # search the deque
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001048 True
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001049
1050 Several modules, such as the :mod:`Queue` and :mod:`threading` modules, now take
1051 advantage of :class:`collections.deque` for improved performance. (Contributed
1052 by Raymond Hettinger.)
1053
1054* The :mod:`ConfigParser` classes have been enhanced slightly. The :meth:`read`
1055 method now returns a list of the files that were successfully parsed, and the
1056 :meth:`set` method raises :exc:`TypeError` if passed a *value* argument that
1057 isn't a string. (Contributed by John Belmonte and David Goodger.)
1058
1059* The :mod:`curses` module now supports the ncurses extension
1060 :func:`use_default_colors`. On platforms where the terminal supports
1061 transparency, this makes it possible to use a transparent background.
1062 (Contributed by Jörg Lehmann.)
1063
1064* The :mod:`difflib` module now includes an :class:`HtmlDiff` class that creates
1065 an HTML table showing a side by side comparison of two versions of a text.
1066 (Contributed by Dan Gass.)
1067
1068* The :mod:`email` package was updated to version 3.0, which dropped various
1069 deprecated APIs and removes support for Python versions earlier than 2.3. The
1070 3.0 version of the package uses a new incremental parser for MIME messages,
1071 available in the :mod:`email.FeedParser` module. The new parser doesn't require
1072 reading the entire message into memory, and doesn't throw exceptions if a
1073 message is malformed; instead it records any problems in the :attr:`defect`
1074 attribute of the message. (Developed by Anthony Baxter, Barry Warsaw, Thomas
1075 Wouters, and others.)
1076
1077* The :mod:`heapq` module has been converted to C. The resulting tenfold
1078 improvement in speed makes the module suitable for handling high volumes of
1079 data. In addition, the module has two new functions :func:`nlargest` and
1080 :func:`nsmallest` that use heaps to find the N largest or smallest values in a
1081 dataset without the expense of a full sort. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1082
1083* The :mod:`httplib` module now contains constants for HTTP status codes defined
1084 in various HTTP-related RFC documents. Constants have names such as
1085 :const:`OK`, :const:`CREATED`, :const:`CONTINUE`, and
1086 :const:`MOVED_PERMANENTLY`; use pydoc to get a full list. (Contributed by
1087 Andrew Eland.)
1088
1089* The :mod:`imaplib` module now supports IMAP's THREAD command (contributed by
1090 Yves Dionne) and new :meth:`deleteacl` and :meth:`myrights` methods (contributed
1091 by Arnaud Mazin).
1092
1093* The :mod:`itertools` module gained a :func:`groupby(iterable[, *func*])`
1094 function. *iterable* is something that can be iterated over to return a stream
1095 of elements, and the optional *func* parameter is a function that takes an
1096 element and returns a key value; if omitted, the key is simply the element
1097 itself. :func:`groupby` then groups the elements into subsequences which have
1098 matching values of the key, and returns a series of 2-tuples containing the key
1099 value and an iterator over the subsequence.
1100
1101 Here's an example to make this clearer. The *key* function simply returns
1102 whether a number is even or odd, so the result of :func:`groupby` is to return
1103 consecutive runs of odd or even numbers. ::
1104
1105 >>> import itertools
1106 >>> L = [2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 14]
1107 >>> for key_val, it in itertools.groupby(L, lambda x: x % 2):
1108 ... print key_val, list(it)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001109 ...
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001110 0 [2, 4, 6]
1111 1 [7]
1112 0 [8]
1113 1 [9, 11]
1114 0 [12, 14]
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001115 >>>
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001116
1117 :func:`groupby` is typically used with sorted input. The logic for
1118 :func:`groupby` is similar to the Unix ``uniq`` filter which makes it handy for
1119 eliminating, counting, or identifying duplicate elements::
1120
1121 >>> word = 'abracadabra'
1122 >>> letters = sorted(word) # Turn string into a sorted list of letters
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001123 >>> letters
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001124 ['a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'b', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'r', 'r']
1125 >>> for k, g in itertools.groupby(letters):
1126 ... print k, list(g)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001127 ...
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001128 a ['a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a']
1129 b ['b', 'b']
1130 c ['c']
1131 d ['d']
1132 r ['r', 'r']
1133 >>> # List unique letters
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001134 >>> [k for k, g in groupby(letters)]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001135 ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'r']
1136 >>> # Count letter occurrences
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001137 >>> [(k, len(list(g))) for k, g in groupby(letters)]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001138 [('a', 5), ('b', 2), ('c', 1), ('d', 1), ('r', 2)]
1139
1140 (Contributed by Hye-Shik Chang.)
1141
1142* :mod:`itertools` also gained a function named :func:`tee(iterator, N)` that
1143 returns *N* independent iterators that replicate *iterator*. If *N* is omitted,
1144 the default is 2. ::
1145
1146 >>> L = [1,2,3]
1147 >>> i1, i2 = itertools.tee(L)
1148 >>> i1,i2
1149 (<itertools.tee object at 0x402c2080>, <itertools.tee object at 0x402c2090>)
1150 >>> list(i1) # Run the first iterator to exhaustion
1151 [1, 2, 3]
1152 >>> list(i2) # Run the second iterator to exhaustion
1153 [1, 2, 3]
1154
1155 Note that :func:`tee` has to keep copies of the values returned by the
1156 iterator; in the worst case, it may need to keep all of them. This should
1157 therefore be used carefully if the leading iterator can run far ahead of the
1158 trailing iterator in a long stream of inputs. If the separation is large, then
1159 you might as well use :func:`list` instead. When the iterators track closely
1160 with one another, :func:`tee` is ideal. Possible applications include
1161 bookmarking, windowing, or lookahead iterators. (Contributed by Raymond
1162 Hettinger.)
1163
1164* A number of functions were added to the :mod:`locale` module, such as
1165 :func:`bind_textdomain_codeset` to specify a particular encoding and a family of
1166 :func:`l\*gettext` functions that return messages in the chosen encoding.
1167 (Contributed by Gustavo Niemeyer.)
1168
1169* Some keyword arguments were added to the :mod:`logging` package's
1170 :func:`basicConfig` function to simplify log configuration. The default
1171 behavior is to log messages to standard error, but various keyword arguments can
1172 be specified to log to a particular file, change the logging format, or set the
1173 logging level. For example::
1174
1175 import logging
1176 logging.basicConfig(filename='/var/log/application.log',
1177 level=0, # Log all messages
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001178 format='%(levelname):%(process):%(thread):%(message)')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001179
1180 Other additions to the :mod:`logging` package include a :meth:`log(level, msg)`
1181 convenience method, as well as a :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler` class that
1182 rotates its log files at a timed interval. The module already had
1183 :class:`RotatingFileHandler`, which rotated logs once the file exceeded a
1184 certain size. Both classes derive from a new :class:`BaseRotatingHandler` class
1185 that can be used to implement other rotating handlers.
1186
1187 (Changes implemented by Vinay Sajip.)
1188
1189* The :mod:`marshal` module now shares interned strings on unpacking a data
1190 structure. This may shrink the size of certain pickle strings, but the primary
1191 effect is to make :file:`.pyc` files significantly smaller. (Contributed by
1192 Martin von Löwis.)
1193
1194* The :mod:`nntplib` module's :class:`NNTP` class gained :meth:`description` and
1195 :meth:`descriptions` methods to retrieve newsgroup descriptions for a single
1196 group or for a range of groups. (Contributed by JĂĽrgen A. Erhard.)
1197
1198* Two new functions were added to the :mod:`operator` module,
1199 :func:`attrgetter(attr)` and :func:`itemgetter(index)`. Both functions return
1200 callables that take a single argument and return the corresponding attribute or
1201 item; these callables make excellent data extractors when used with :func:`map`
1202 or :func:`sorted`. For example::
1203
1204 >>> L = [('c', 2), ('d', 1), ('a', 4), ('b', 3)]
1205 >>> map(operator.itemgetter(0), L)
1206 ['c', 'd', 'a', 'b']
1207 >>> map(operator.itemgetter(1), L)
1208 [2, 1, 4, 3]
1209 >>> sorted(L, key=operator.itemgetter(1)) # Sort list by second tuple item
1210 [('d', 1), ('c', 2), ('b', 3), ('a', 4)]
1211
1212 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1213
1214* The :mod:`optparse` module was updated in various ways. The module now passes
1215 its messages through :func:`gettext.gettext`, making it possible to
1216 internationalize Optik's help and error messages. Help messages for options can
1217 now include the string ``'%default'``, which will be replaced by the option's
1218 default value. (Contributed by Greg Ward.)
1219
1220* The long-term plan is to deprecate the :mod:`rfc822` module in some future
1221 Python release in favor of the :mod:`email` package. To this end, the
1222 :func:`email.Utils.formatdate` function has been changed to make it usable as a
1223 replacement for :func:`rfc822.formatdate`. You may want to write new e-mail
1224 processing code with this in mind. (Change implemented by Anthony Baxter.)
1225
1226* A new :func:`urandom(n)` function was added to the :mod:`os` module, returning
1227 a string containing *n* bytes of random data. This function provides access to
1228 platform-specific sources of randomness such as :file:`/dev/urandom` on Linux or
1229 the Windows CryptoAPI. (Contributed by Trevor Perrin.)
1230
1231* Another new function: :func:`os.path.lexists(path)` returns true if the file
1232 specified by *path* exists, whether or not it's a symbolic link. This differs
1233 from the existing :func:`os.path.exists(path)` function, which returns false if
1234 *path* is a symlink that points to a destination that doesn't exist.
1235 (Contributed by Beni Cherniavsky.)
1236
1237* A new :func:`getsid` function was added to the :mod:`posix` module that
1238 underlies the :mod:`os` module. (Contributed by J. Raynor.)
1239
1240* The :mod:`poplib` module now supports POP over SSL. (Contributed by Hector
1241 Urtubia.)
1242
1243* The :mod:`profile` module can now profile C extension functions. (Contributed
1244 by Nick Bastin.)
1245
1246* The :mod:`random` module has a new method called :meth:`getrandbits(N)` that
1247 returns a long integer *N* bits in length. The existing :meth:`randrange`
1248 method now uses :meth:`getrandbits` where appropriate, making generation of
1249 arbitrarily large random numbers more efficient. (Contributed by Raymond
1250 Hettinger.)
1251
1252* The regular expression language accepted by the :mod:`re` module was extended
1253 with simple conditional expressions, written as ``(?(group)A|B)``. *group* is
1254 either a numeric group ID or a group name defined with ``(?P<group>...)``
1255 earlier in the expression. If the specified group matched, the regular
1256 expression pattern *A* will be tested against the string; if the group didn't
1257 match, the pattern *B* will be used instead. (Contributed by Gustavo Niemeyer.)
1258
1259* The :mod:`re` module is also no longer recursive, thanks to a massive amount
1260 of work by Gustavo Niemeyer. In a recursive regular expression engine, certain
1261 patterns result in a large amount of C stack space being consumed, and it was
1262 possible to overflow the stack. For example, if you matched a 30000-byte string
1263 of ``a`` characters against the expression ``(a|b)+``, one stack frame was
1264 consumed per character. Python 2.3 tried to check for stack overflow and raise
1265 a :exc:`RuntimeError` exception, but certain patterns could sidestep the
1266 checking and if you were unlucky Python could segfault. Python 2.4's regular
1267 expression engine can match this pattern without problems.
1268
1269* The :mod:`signal` module now performs tighter error-checking on the parameters
1270 to the :func:`signal.signal` function. For example, you can't set a handler on
1271 the :const:`SIGKILL` signal; previous versions of Python would quietly accept
1272 this, but 2.4 will raise a :exc:`RuntimeError` exception.
1273
1274* Two new functions were added to the :mod:`socket` module. :func:`socketpair`
1275 returns a pair of connected sockets and :func:`getservbyport(port)` looks up the
1276 service name for a given port number. (Contributed by Dave Cole and Barry
1277 Warsaw.)
1278
1279* The :func:`sys.exitfunc` function has been deprecated. Code should be using
1280 the existing :mod:`atexit` module, which correctly handles calling multiple exit
1281 functions. Eventually :func:`sys.exitfunc` will become a purely internal
1282 interface, accessed only by :mod:`atexit`.
1283
1284* The :mod:`tarfile` module now generates GNU-format tar files by default.
1285 (Contributed by Lars Gustaebel.)
1286
1287* The :mod:`threading` module now has an elegantly simple way to support
1288 thread-local data. The module contains a :class:`local` class whose attribute
1289 values are local to different threads. ::
1290
1291 import threading
1292
1293 data = threading.local()
1294 data.number = 42
1295 data.url = ('www.python.org', 80)
1296
1297 Other threads can assign and retrieve their own values for the :attr:`number`
1298 and :attr:`url` attributes. You can subclass :class:`local` to initialize
1299 attributes or to add methods. (Contributed by Jim Fulton.)
1300
1301* The :mod:`timeit` module now automatically disables periodic garbage
1302 collection during the timing loop. This change makes consecutive timings more
1303 comparable. (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1304
1305* The :mod:`weakref` module now supports a wider variety of objects including
1306 Python functions, class instances, sets, frozensets, deques, arrays, files,
1307 sockets, and regular expression pattern objects. (Contributed by Raymond
1308 Hettinger.)
1309
1310* The :mod:`xmlrpclib` module now supports a multi-call extension for
1311 transmitting multiple XML-RPC calls in a single HTTP operation. (Contributed by
1312 Brian Quinlan.)
1313
1314* The :mod:`mpz`, :mod:`rotor`, and :mod:`xreadlines` modules have been
1315 removed.
1316
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001317.. ======================================================================
1318.. whole new modules get described in subsections here
1319.. =====================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001320
1321
1322cookielib
1323---------
1324
1325The :mod:`cookielib` library supports client-side handling for HTTP cookies,
1326mirroring the :mod:`Cookie` module's server-side cookie support. Cookies are
1327stored in cookie jars; the library transparently stores cookies offered by the
1328web server in the cookie jar, and fetches the cookie from the jar when
1329connecting to the server. As in web browsers, policy objects control whether
1330cookies are accepted or not.
1331
1332In order to store cookies across sessions, two implementations of cookie jars
1333are provided: one that stores cookies in the Netscape format so applications can
1334use the Mozilla or Lynx cookie files, and one that stores cookies in the same
1335format as the Perl libwww library.
1336
1337:mod:`urllib2` has been changed to interact with :mod:`cookielib`:
1338:class:`HTTPCookieProcessor` manages a cookie jar that is used when accessing
1339URLs.
1340
1341This module was contributed by John J. Lee.
1342
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001343.. ==================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001344
1345
1346doctest
1347-------
1348
1349The :mod:`doctest` module underwent considerable refactoring thanks to Edward
1350Loper and Tim Peters. Testing can still be as simple as running
1351:func:`doctest.testmod`, but the refactorings allow customizing the module's
1352operation in various ways
1353
1354The new :class:`DocTestFinder` class extracts the tests from a given object's
1355docstrings::
1356
1357 def f (x, y):
1358 """>>> f(2,2)
1359 4
1360 >>> f(3,2)
1361 6
1362 """
1363 return x*y
1364
1365 finder = doctest.DocTestFinder()
1366
1367 # Get list of DocTest instances
1368 tests = finder.find(f)
1369
1370The new :class:`DocTestRunner` class then runs individual tests and can produce
1371a summary of the results::
1372
1373 runner = doctest.DocTestRunner()
1374 for t in tests:
1375 tried, failed = runner.run(t)
1376
1377 runner.summarize(verbose=1)
1378
1379The above example produces the following output::
1380
1381 1 items passed all tests:
1382 2 tests in f
1383 2 tests in 1 items.
1384 2 passed and 0 failed.
1385 Test passed.
1386
1387:class:`DocTestRunner` uses an instance of the :class:`OutputChecker` class to
1388compare the expected output with the actual output. This class takes a number
1389of different flags that customize its behaviour; ambitious users can also write
1390a completely new subclass of :class:`OutputChecker`.
1391
1392The default output checker provides a number of handy features. For example,
1393with the :const:`doctest.ELLIPSIS` option flag, an ellipsis (``...``) in the
1394expected output matches any substring, making it easier to accommodate outputs
1395that vary in minor ways::
1396
1397 def o (n):
1398 """>>> o(1)
1399 <__main__.C instance at 0x...>
1400 >>>
1401 """
1402
1403Another special string, ``<BLANKLINE>``, matches a blank line::
1404
1405 def p (n):
1406 """>>> p(1)
1407 <BLANKLINE>
1408 >>>
1409 """
1410
1411Another new capability is producing a diff-style display of the output by
1412specifying the :const:`doctest.REPORT_UDIFF` (unified diffs),
1413:const:`doctest.REPORT_CDIFF` (context diffs), or :const:`doctest.REPORT_NDIFF`
1414(delta-style) option flags. For example::
1415
1416 def g (n):
1417 """>>> g(4)
1418 here
1419 is
1420 a
1421 lengthy
1422 >>>"""
1423 L = 'here is a rather lengthy list of words'.split()
1424 for word in L[:n]:
1425 print word
1426
1427Running the above function's tests with :const:`doctest.REPORT_UDIFF` specified,
1428you get the following output::
1429
1430 **********************************************************************
1431 File ``t.py'', line 15, in g
1432 Failed example:
1433 g(4)
1434 Differences (unified diff with -expected +actual):
1435 @@ -2,3 +2,3 @@
1436 is
1437 a
1438 -lengthy
1439 +rather
1440 **********************************************************************
1441
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001442.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001443
1444
1445Build and C API Changes
1446=======================
1447
1448Some of the changes to Python's build process and to the C API are:
1449
1450* Three new convenience macros were added for common return values from
1451 extension functions: :cmacro:`Py_RETURN_NONE`, :cmacro:`Py_RETURN_TRUE`, and
1452 :cmacro:`Py_RETURN_FALSE`. (Contributed by Brett Cannon.)
1453
1454* Another new macro, :cmacro:`Py_CLEAR(obj)`, decreases the reference count of
1455 *obj* and sets *obj* to the null pointer. (Contributed by Jim Fulton.)
1456
1457* A new function, :cfunc:`PyTuple_Pack(N, obj1, obj2, ..., objN)`, constructs
1458 tuples from a variable length argument list of Python objects. (Contributed by
1459 Raymond Hettinger.)
1460
1461* A new function, :cfunc:`PyDict_Contains(d, k)`, implements fast dictionary
1462 lookups without masking exceptions raised during the look-up process.
1463 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
1464
1465* The :cmacro:`Py_IS_NAN(X)` macro returns 1 if its float or double argument
1466 *X* is a NaN. (Contributed by Tim Peters.)
1467
1468* C code can avoid unnecessary locking by using the new
1469 :cfunc:`PyEval_ThreadsInitialized` function to tell if any thread operations
1470 have been performed. If this function returns false, no lock operations are
1471 needed. (Contributed by Nick Coghlan.)
1472
1473* A new function, :cfunc:`PyArg_VaParseTupleAndKeywords`, is the same as
1474 :cfunc:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` but takes a :ctype:`va_list` instead of a
1475 number of arguments. (Contributed by Greg Chapman.)
1476
1477* A new method flag, :const:`METH_COEXISTS`, allows a function defined in slots
1478 to co-exist with a :ctype:`PyCFunction` having the same name. This can halve
1479 the access time for a method such as :meth:`set.__contains__`. (Contributed by
1480 Raymond Hettinger.)
1481
1482* Python can now be built with additional profiling for the interpreter itself,
1483 intended as an aid to people developing the Python core. Providing
1484 :option:`----enable-profiling` to the :program:`configure` script will let you
1485 profile the interpreter with :program:`gprof`, and providing the
1486 :option:`----with-tsc` switch enables profiling using the Pentium's Time-Stamp-
1487 Counter register. Note that the :option:`----with-tsc` switch is slightly
1488 misnamed, because the profiling feature also works on the PowerPC platform,
1489 though that processor architecture doesn't call that register "the TSC
1490 register". (Contributed by Jeremy Hylton.)
1491
1492* The :ctype:`tracebackobject` type has been renamed to
1493 :ctype:`PyTracebackObject`.
1494
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001495.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001496
1497
1498Port-Specific Changes
1499---------------------
1500
1501* The Windows port now builds under MSVC++ 7.1 as well as version 6.
1502 (Contributed by Martin von Löwis.)
1503
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001504.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001505
1506
1507Porting to Python 2.4
1508=====================
1509
1510This section lists previously described changes that may require changes to your
1511code:
1512
1513* Left shifts and hexadecimal/octal constants that are too large no longer
1514 trigger a :exc:`FutureWarning` and return a value limited to 32 or 64 bits;
1515 instead they return a long integer.
1516
1517* Integer operations will no longer trigger an :exc:`OverflowWarning`. The
1518 :exc:`OverflowWarning` warning will disappear in Python 2.5.
1519
1520* The :func:`zip` built-in function and :func:`itertools.izip` now return an
1521 empty list instead of raising a :exc:`TypeError` exception if called with no
1522 arguments.
1523
1524* You can no longer compare the :class:`date` and :class:`datetime` instances
1525 provided by the :mod:`datetime` module. Two instances of different classes
1526 will now always be unequal, and relative comparisons (``<``, ``>``) will raise
1527 a :exc:`TypeError`.
1528
1529* :func:`dircache.listdir` now passes exceptions to the caller instead of
1530 returning empty lists.
1531
1532* :func:`LexicalHandler.startDTD` used to receive the public and system IDs in
1533 the wrong order. This has been corrected; applications relying on the wrong
1534 order need to be fixed.
1535
1536* :func:`fcntl.ioctl` now warns if the *mutate* argument is omitted and
1537 relevant.
1538
1539* The :mod:`tarfile` module now generates GNU-format tar files by default.
1540
1541* Encountering a failure while importing a module no longer leaves a partially-
1542 initialized module object in ``sys.modules``.
1543
1544* :const:`None` is now a constant; code that binds a new value to the name
1545 ``None`` is now a syntax error.
1546
1547* The :func:`signals.signal` function now raises a :exc:`RuntimeError` exception
1548 for certain illegal values; previously these errors would pass silently. For
1549 example, you can no longer set a handler on the :const:`SIGKILL` signal.
1550
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00001551.. ======================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001552
1553
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00001554.. _24acks:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001555
1556Acknowledgements
1557================
1558
1559The author would like to thank the following people for offering suggestions,
1560corrections and assistance with various drafts of this article: Koray Can, Hye-
1561Shik Chang, Michael Dyck, Raymond Hettinger, Brian Hurt, Hamish Lawson, Fredrik
1562Lundh, Sean Reifschneider, Sadruddin Rejeb.
1563